Never heard of a water bear? Well, they are very small, and very, very peculiar animals. Dr. Carl Johansson, from Fresno City College, spent some time at Hastings in late May, collecting water bears. Carl and crew have that rare sense of appreciation for these tiny "water bears". They are distinct enough to have earned placement by some in their own Phylum. How so? They require a good dissecting microscope to see, appear to be related to arthropods, are cute as buttons, but can be dried out entirely and not die. This "cryptobiotic state" allows them to get through the dry California summers. During the winters, they bob around in mosses, under lichens and in cracks of rocks, shingles, and detritus. They are clumsy, creep awkwardly and their muscles are made of only one or a few cells. They bound around, putting food in a mouth where it enters a
Wednesday, July 11, 2007
Never heard of a water bear? Well, they are very small, and very, very peculiar animals. Dr. Carl Johansson, from Fresno City College, spent some time at Hastings in late May, collecting water bears. Carl and crew have that rare sense of appreciation for these tiny "water bears". They are distinct enough to have earned placement by some in their own Phylum. How so? They require a good dissecting microscope to see, appear to be related to arthropods, are cute as buttons, but can be dried out entirely and not die. This "cryptobiotic state" allows them to get through the dry California summers. During the winters, they bob around in mosses, under lichens and in cracks of rocks, shingles, and detritus. They are clumsy, creep awkwardly and their muscles are made of only one or a few cells. They bound around, putting food in a mouth where it enters a
We know we had 30,000 gal. of water in the storage tanks on June 5 at night and the next morning, it was gone. Headquarters was out of water. No cold showers, in fact, no showers at a
So, we worked with the fine folks at the Berkeley campus in Physical Plant and we arranged a contract with Maggiora Bros. from Watsonville. On July 9 they started work (photos). This may take a while. Huge stones and boulders were found by the entry gate to the Lower Barn. But, that was all and the trenching has gone smoothly since they broke a chain on those rocks.
This will finally replace all the original Hastings pipes and we now have an accurate map of all the junctions, valves and pipes. We are doing this work with a desing to accomodate the future (hope!) funding that will allow us to start using the Arnold Spring again. This spring stopped in 1989 at the Loma Prieta earthquake. We switched entirely to the well, but the spring is back on. If we can refurbishg the other 2.1 miles of pipe, we could stop pumping. But for now, we have to fix the lines from the Hastings well to the Lower Barn.