In 2006, RoadTrip America sponsored the Kinetic Sculpture Race. A three day event where human-powered sculptures compete by driving their creations over highways, rivers, sand dunes, and ocean. For a variety of reasons, our coverage was never published on RTA, but here are some of the highlights…
Day One, Launch, Slippery Slope and the infernal mosquito dunes
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Start Line with Rutabega Queen
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Safety Checks at Start
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Complex Gearing
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The crowd is getting huge
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Ready! Set!…..
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Go! And they are off!
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Heading for turn one!
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They are going 3-Wide!
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Outriders and Bees?
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Intriguing Design
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Sliding on the Slippery Slope
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Peddling is hard in sand
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Pushing hard in the dunes
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End of Day One
Mark Sedenquist Arcata, Eureka, Ferndale, KSR, memorial day weekend
Those with a Facebook account may be interested to learn of an update to the Terms & Conditions applied to your content. At the beginning of February, Facebook basically assumed an “irrevocable, perpetual, non-exclusive, transferable, fully paid, worldwide license (with the right to sublicense)” to do what they want with any content you put up there, and to use “your name, likeness and image” for whatever they want.
The big change however, is that they can do this forever. Previously, if you terminated your Facebook account, all their rights ceased at the same time. This is no longer the case.
This probably doesn’t matter for most people – it’s just a bit of fun social networking – but you might want to think twice about posting any photos or creative content. There’s a more detailed explanation of it all on the MarketingVox website.
Peter Thody
I was fortunate in the fact that while returning from one of our jaunts down to the West country we happened to be passing Stonehenge as the sun was about to set.
Within half an hour it had gone from this

Stonehenge by Dave Gomm
To this

Sunset.

Stonehenge by Dave Gomm
Unfortunately the light was changing so quickly I struggled to capture it fully in film but it was an amazing sight, even though I have passed by many times before.
If you “cut to the chase” they are just some rather large rocks in a field, yet they “entertain” people from all over the world and still baffle scientists and archeologist’s as to how they got there and for what purpose. They do know they are very,very old and some of the large rocks found there way to this site from across the water in Wales. It has been suggested they were used for worship, or by early Astronomers, even placed there by the devil himself. It has been said that over 300 million hours of labour was used. Who works that one out ?
Whatever it is, it still captures the imaginations of millions of tourists. Hey, wait a minute ! Is this the first man made tourist trap ever built.
Dave Gomm
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LA Co Fire Bell 412 (Copter 11) dropping water on hand crew
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CDF Grumman S2F West Edge of Fire at 1971 hours on Saturday
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West Edge of the Fire above Sierra Madre Park (1946 hours)
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Aeroi-Union Lockheed P3
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Tanker 55 (Lockheed P2V Neptune)
These vivid fire photos were shot in April, 2008 while covering a wildfire that burned within 1/4 mile of homes in Sierra Madre, California.
Bruce Jones sierra madre, wildfire