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unixronin: Galen the technomage, from Babylon 5: Crusade (Default)
Unixronin

December 2012

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Friday, February 29th, 2008 06:33 pm

Icicles are nothing new if you live in a northerly climate.  Our new house turns out to have an inadequately insulated roof¹, leading to some pretty sizeable ones.

This is one of the cooler ones.  It's outside the kitchen window, on the [north-facing] front of the house.  It's about two inches in diameter, and about eight feet long.  I haven't tried to get a photo of the entire icicle, because it's only when you look at it close up that you see how neat it is.

This happens on some stalactites, too, although of course it takes much longer to develop there.  There was a discussion a few months back in New Scientist about how and why it happens, but the long and the short of it is that the mechanism is still poorly understood, though it's believed to be related to periodic flow ripples.  Both stalactites and icicles are unstable with regard to ripple formation, though — once ripples begin to form, they tend to become more pronounced and seldom level out again.

[1]  A problem which we're going to have to address when money and weather permit, probably by having the roof re-insulated, although there is also the air-gap tandem roof approach.

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Saturday, March 1st, 2008 12:01 am (UTC)
last ice storm, they went around for 3-4 days with cherry pickers to fix the ice dams/etc that formed; nothing like that has happened in over 15 years according to the staffers.

some of them were easily six inches thick and over 8 feet long. i got some pictures of some of the pretty ones, all lit with sunlight and so forth. will have to upload those soonly.

yours is pretty lovely. that kind of rippling, and other patterns i've observed for years, is one of the reasons i get annoyed when people break them just to break them; in places where they can grow and thrive unmolested (like cliffs and such), some of them are magnificent. frozen rivers with waterfalls are a good thing too.

#
Saturday, March 1st, 2008 01:28 am (UTC)
I like breaking them. Take one of the bukoto and give it a light tap and *snap!* :-) But the cool ones like that get to stay. We had one that looked like a waverying sheet of ice. That got to stay too.
Sunday, March 2nd, 2008 01:20 am (UTC)
Not having to deal with ice storms or snow, please forgive this comment:

That is sooo cool!
Sunday, March 2nd, 2008 02:56 am (UTC)
That's why I posted it :)
Sunday, March 2nd, 2008 11:39 pm (UTC)
Cymru gives you a fried peanut.