Sunday, June 30, 2024

The Best Posts of the Week of June 23, 2024.

The best posts of the week of June 23, 2024.

In Scotland, for the first time since the Reformation, the majority relgion is . . .




Report dead wild rabbits to Game and Fish

 Report dead wild rabbits to Game and Fish

Wyomingites are being asked to keep a lookout for dead rabbits in their yards, rural property and other outdoor areas. The Wyoming Game and Fish Department is collecting wild rabbit carcasses for Rabbit Hemorrhagic Disease Virus2 testing, known as RHDV2. While not found in Wyoming yet, the disease has been identified in neighboring states. Testing rabbits is key to monitoring the disease spread.

RHDV2 is a fatal disease of rabbits and hares. An estimated 35-50% of infected wild rabbits succumb to the disease.  

Samantha Allen, Game and Fish state wildlife veterinarian, said all of Wyoming’s rabbits and hares are susceptible — that includes game and nongame species like cottontail rabbits, jack rabbits and potentially, pygmy rabbits. Domestic rabbits are also at risk; however, other domestic pets and livestock are not at risk from the disease.

The first indication of RHDV2 infection in rabbits is dead animals.

“Any rabbit could become infected with the disease - so it could be a cottontail living in your yard or the one you see while hiking,” said Allen. “Please report any dead rabbits you find. Testing these carcasses is the only way to know if the disease is in Wyoming.”

The disease has been confirmed in California, Nevada, Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, Utah and Colorado. 

RHDV2 does not pose a threat to humans, but rabbits carry other diseases which can —  like tularemia and plague. The public is advised not to touch or pick up any dead wild rabbits. Rather, note the location and call the Game and Fish Wildlife Health Lab at (307) 745-5865 or the nearest regional office. Game and Fish personnel will evaluate the situation, and make plans to collect the rabbitLabels: , , , , , , 


Bookends





Last edition:

Best Posts of the Week of June 16, 2024.

Saturday, June 29, 2024

Saturday, June 29, 1974. Art and politics.


Isabel Perón was sworn in as the first female president of Argentina, replacing an ailing Juan Perón.

British and French troops landed on Tanna to end the attempted succession from the Anglo-French Condominium of the island in the New Hebrides.

President Nixon and Soviet General Secretary Brezhnev signed a ten year economic agreement in Moscow, and then flew on to Simferopal in Crimea for a trip to Brezhnev's beach home at Oreanada.

Mikhail Baryshnikov, Soviet ballet start, defected in Toronto.

Mexican Murualist Xavier Guerrero died at age 77.

Last prior edition:

Tuesday, June 11, 1974. The arrival of the end of Portuguese colonialism.

Thursday, June 29, 1944. Epsom stalls.

Pitch fighting occured between the British and the Germans as the Germans counterattacked forces that had gained ground due to Operation Epsom. The German attacks had been anticipated.  British losses, however, had been so high that Gen. Montgomery was contemplating halting the offensive.

German troops at La Hague surrendered to American troops.

BAR gunner Pfc. Floyd Rogers, 24, of Rising Star, Texas.  He was already credited with killing 27 German soldiers, some of whom were snipers.  Not too surprisingly, he'd be killed in action on July 12.  Of note, his BAR has had the bipod removed, which was typical, meaning that it was being used as an automatic rifle as originally designed, rather than as a light machinegun.  He's wearing a helmet cover, which is generally seen in US troops in Europe only during the early stages of Operation Overlord, although his cover is of an unusual pattern.  He's also wearing his cotton utility uniform over his wool service uniform.

Operation Bagration's initial objectives were reached.

The Battle of Vyborg Bay commenced between the Finns and the Soviets.

The Red Army liberated Petrozavodsk Concentration Camp, a Finnish concentration camp holding Russians.   The Finns had created these installations in anticipation of population exchanges with the Russians.

They were different from the German camps as their purpose was different, but wartime conditions did make conditions harsh in them and fostered malnutrition and disease.

The headquarters of the BBC World Service, Bush House, was hit by a V1.

The U-478 was sunk by Allied aircraft off of the Faroe Islands.

Two Marines from Texas on Saipan.

Last prior edition:

Wednesday, June 28, 1944. Nazi Germany begins to swallow its generals.

Going Feral: Emergency FRS/GMRS Channels

Going Feral: Emergency FRS/GMRS Channels

Emergency FRS/GMRS Channels

I thought I'd posted something on this, but I hadn't.  

If you spend quite a bit of time in the outback, you should pack along an FRS/GMRS capable radio, or at least a FRS one.  I.e., a "walkie talkie".

I like radios, and it's really easy to geek people out on the topic, or for that matter to get arrogant in regard to them, which is a frequent problem in radio communities.  What I'm going to start off noting is something that goes down the rabbit hole in GMRS communities, but its easy to set yourself up with these sorts of small handheld radios.  Midland in particular makes good sets for regular people.

Everyone has seen these sorts of radios, and a lot of children actually use them, particularly the FRS ones.  When you buy a "bubble pack" radio set at the sporting goods store, that's what you are getting.

Okay, for some technicalities.  From the FCC website:

The Family Radio Service (FRS) is a private, two-way, short-distance voice and data communications service for facilitating family and group activities. The most common use for FRS channels is short-distance, two-way voice communications using small hand-held radios that are similar to walkie-talkies. The service is licensed-by-rule so the general public can use the devices without having to obtain a license and channel sharing is achieved through a listen-before-talk etiquette.

Other services that allow similar communications include the CB Radio Service, General Mobile Radio Service (GMRS) and the Multi-Use Radio Service (MURS).

The FRS is authorized 22 channels in the 462 MHz and 467 MHz range, all of which are shared with General Mobile Radio Service (GMRS) which requires an individual license for use.

That's frankly a little deceptive, for reasons we'll discuss in a moment.

A lot of the the radios you buy now have the GMRS bands on them, and lots of people, as we'll see, buy GMRS radios intentionally, which require a license, as noted.  Regarding GMRS;

The General Mobile Radio Service (GMRS) is a licensed radio service that uses channels around 462 MHz and 467 MHz. The most common use of GMRS channels is for short-distance, two-way voice communications using hand-held radios, mobile radios and repeater systems. In 2017, the FCC expanded GMRS to also allow short data messaging applications including text messaging and GPS location information.

Services that provide functionality similar to GMRS include the Citizens Band Radio Service (CBRS), the Family Radio Service (FRS) and the Multi-Use Radio Service (MURS).

The GMRS is available to an individual for short-distance two-way communications to facilitate the activities of licensees and their immediate family members. Each licensee manages a system consisting of one or more transmitting units (stations.) The rules for GMRS limit eligibility for new GMRS system licenses to individuals in order to make the service available to personal users. (Some previously licensed non-individual systems are allowed to continue using GMRS.)

In 2017, the FCC updated the GMRS by allotting additional interstitial channels in the 467 MHz band, increased the license term from 5 to 10 years, allowed transmission of limited data applications such as text messaging and GPS location information and made other updates to the GMRS rules to reflect modern application of the service.

I"m not going to bother with MURS, which you don't run into that often.

GMRS is a far more capable two-way radio system than CB is.  If CB's are down in their legally restricted power range, they really only have a about a three-mile range, which is also pretty common range wise for FRS.  GMRS varies by terrain and is line of site, so it can be quite short as well, although it can be quite long.  I've hit a hand held gmrs from a 5 Watt gmrs radio from a distance of 20 miles away, and the other day I was picking up the local repeater from over 30 miles away when I actually quite listening to it.

Channel 3 is a FRS channel that doesn't require the GMRS license, and it's the channel that seems to be getting adopted for emergency radio use.  Colorado Search and Rescue has adopted it:


You can read more about that here:

FRS3 For Colorado Backcountry

Wyoming Search and Rescue has as well, but there's an added wrinkle with them.  Riffing off of the widely held weird belief in Wyoming that the area code is somehow cool, they've added the suggestion that people program in privacy code 7.


Colorado specifically asks that people not program in a privacy code.

Privacy codes are really easy to program into any of these radios.  It's just done with the keys.  What a privacy code does is filter out all the radio traffic not using it, so if you have it programmed in, you'll only hear transmissions using it.  People not using the code can hear everything, but they can't talk to you.

As noted, I like radios and I carry a hand held Midland GMRS radio (usually a Midland) out in the sticks all the time.  Both of my regular 4x4s have vehicle mounted GMRS radios as well.  One of those is the most powerful one you can have by law, which means it should be able to broadcast at distance, and it also allows the user to program in "split tones", which are useful for privately maintained repeaters.  Northern Colorado is jam packed with a really good repeater system, and it now extends as far north as Cheyenne which is linked into it.  The Torrington area has a repeater as well, but I've never been able to hit it.  Casper has a very good repeater which is part of the GMRS Live system, so through net linkage, you can hit all the way up into Montana on it.

Not that most people want to do any of that.  But the recommendations are really good ones.  The hand held radios can be bought fairly inexpensively (although you can get a really expensive one if you wish) and if you are lost, or hurt yourself out in the sticks, and much of the sticks in Wyoming is without cell service, it could be a life saver.

Friday, June 28, 2024

Blog Mirror: Joe Biden should drop out.

 

Joe Biden should drop out

Denying Joe Biden's decline has put Democrats in a terrible position.

Wednesday, June 28, 1944. Nazi Germany begins to swallow its generals.

The Bobruysk Offensive, Mogilev Offensive and Vitebsk–Orsha Offensive ended as Soviet victories. Hitler relieved Ernst Busch and replaced him with Walter Model as commander of Army Group Centre on the Eastern Front.

Model.

Model was rising as Germany's defensive commander.

Busch had ignored the Red Army build up opposite Army Group Centre and refused to allow some of his subordinates to shorten their lines before Bagration.  He refused to allow for retreats in the face of the offensive, which followed Hitler's orders, resulting in the loss of over 250,000 men in two days, the biggest German defeat on the Eastern Front.  That loss resulted in his being removed from command.  The sacking resulted in Busch becoming depressed, perhaps because he was effectively sacked by Hitler for following Hitler's orders.

He was returned to service in March 1945 and ended up surrendering to the British on May 4, 1945.  He died shortly thereafter, July 17, 1945, as a prisoner of war at age 60.  He was buried in the United Kingdom.

German General, and former Austrian officer, Robert Martinek on the Eastern Front.  Warned about touring the front, Martinek had enigmatically cited the proverb "God blinds those he would destroy".

Hard fighting was going on for Hill 112 near Caen, with temporary commander Gen. Friderich Dollmann throwing in his last reserves.  Rommel and von Rundstedt were in Berlin, having been summoned by Hitler.  Dollmann's effort turns into a route for the Germans.

Dollmann was unaware that he had been relieved by Hitler that day, with Hitler angered by earlier failures, as well as the fall of Cherbourg.  Both Rommel and von Rundstedt had argued against it, but upon their departure from their meeting, Hitler replaced Dollman with Waffen-SS general Paul Hausser, a sign of what was increasingly to come in the Wehrmacht.

Dollmann never knew.  He died that night, or early the following morning, under disputed circumstances, with some claiming he suffered a heart attack and some claiming he committed suicide.  Hitler awarded him the Knights Cross of the Iron Cross posthumously.

Like many more obscure German military figures, and also because of the Clean Wehrmacht myth, the extent of Dollmann's support for the Third Reich is disputed.  Be that as it may, he was noted to have insisted that the wives of his officer be involved in Nazi Party activities and he harangued Catholic Chaplains for not being ardent in their support of Nazism.


The Republican National Convention nominated Thomas E. Dewey.

French poet and Vichy official Philippe Henriot was assassinated by the French Resistance.  

Extremely conservative and politically active, Henriot had been strongly anti-German at the start of the war but had turned in favor of them after Barbarossa, due to his view that Communism was the premier enemy of Christianity.

Harry S. Truman spoke to the Kiwanis Club in Denver.

Last prior edition:

Tuesday, June 27, 1944. Angelo Klonis or Thomas E. Underwood?

Saturday, June 28, 1924. Retrograde.


Proposals to participate in the League of Nations and denounce the Ku Klux Klan failed at the Democratic National Convention.

There was a destructive tornado outbreak in Ohio.











Last prior edition:

Friday, June 27, 1924. The Aventine Secession.

Labels: 

Thursday, June 27, 2024

Tuesday, June 27, 1944. Angelo Klonis or Thomas E. Underwood?

A famous photograph was taken of Saipan, which popularly is now claimed to be of Greek immigrant Angelo S. Klonis, was taken on this day, on Saipan.  

Or, maybe not.

First the Klonis claim, which was not advanced by Konis during his lifetime.

Painted Bricks: Evangelo's, Santa Fe New Mexico

Over on one of our other blogs, we posted this item:

Painted Bricks: Evangelo's, Santa Fe New Mexico:



Tavern sign for Evangelo's in Santa Fe, New Mexico, featuring the famous Life Magazine cover photograph of Angelo Klonis, the founder of the tavern. The late Mr. Klonis was a soldier during World War Two when this photograph of him ws taking by Life photographer Eugene Smith.  Konis, a Greek immigrant, opened this bar in his adopted home town in the late 1960s, at which time his identify as the soldier photographed by Smith was not widely known.
We also posted this on our blog Some Gave All.

There's some interesting things going on in this scene, that are worth at least noting.  For one thing, we have an iconic photograph of a U.S. soldier in World War Two, which is often mistaken for a photograph of a Marine given the helmet cover, appearing on the sign for a cocktail lounge in 2014.  Sort of unusual, but the fact that it was owned by the soldier depicted explains that.

Note also, however, the dove with the olive branch, the symbol of peace.  Interesting really.  Perhaps a reflection of the views of the founder, who was a Greek immigrant who located himself in Santa Fe, went to war and then  came back to his adopted home town.

All on a building that is in the local adobe style, which not all of the buildings in downtown Santa Fe actually were when built.

I don't know what all we can take away from this, but it sends some interesting messages, intentional or not, to the careful observer.

It's an interesting story, which I took at face value at the time.  I no longer do.

The problem is, it is supposedly known that Klonis, who didn't talk about his military service during his lifetime hardly at all, and who returned to Greece for a long period of time after the war, and came back during the 1960s, was supposedly also on Omaha Beach on June 6, 1944.  Advocates for this photograph being Klonis maintain that he must have been part of a secret Army unit, probably part of the OSS.

Hmmm . . . that doesn't pass the smell test, quite frankly.  Getting a soldier from Normandy to Saipan in just a few days would have been a monumental effort in 1944.  It wouldn't be easy now.  And while Saipan was an important strategic objective, it was just that. There's nothing that was so wildly consequential in Saipan that the War Department would have needed to transfer enlisted men from one front to another.  Moreover, the Army had specialized troops, Rangers, in the Pacific already.

I don't believe it.

Originally, the figure in the photo was identified as Marine Thomas Ellis Underwood.  The Klonis claim didn't come until many years later.

And I'm not the only one who doesn't believe it.

First of all, the guy in that photograph is a Marine, not a soldier. The article explains this in detail, but the helmet cover alone makes that clear.  And there's quite a bit more.

More than anything, however, transferring a soldier from France to Saipan in 44?  No way.

The Klonis story, however, has really had legs, and It's expanded out to include all sorts of elements, including that Klonis had joined the Army then asked to switch to the Marines, but upon learning of the German murder of his family in Greece, he asked to fight in Europe.  Frankly, while the service did allow some switching around inside the service, for example from infantryman to paratrooper, the giant endeavor of the Second World War meant that regular enlisted men were sent where the service put them, not where they wanted to go as a special request.  Moreover, as noted, getting anyone from Europe to the Pacific in just a few days simply wasn't going to happen, and it simply wouldn't be needed.

As a final note, the photograph is probably not only Klonis, but Underwood, but it was likely actually taken in July, in spite of being attributed to this day.

The British took Cheux and Rauray and established a bridgehead across the Odon.

Fighting continued in Cherbourg even though the city had been surrendered.

U.S. Army captain observing the body of a German in Cherbourg who had killed three of the captain's troops.  Fighting continued on in Cherbourg after it had been surrendered due to the unwillingness of German diehards to quit.

The Red Army took Vitebsk and Petrozavodsk.  German 9th Army Commander Gen. Hans Jordan was relieved.

The Veterans' Preference Act was enacted, requiring the Federal Government to give preference to returning war veterans for employment.

Milan Hodža, 66, Prime Minister of Czechoslovakia from 1935 to 1938, died in exile in the United States.

Last prior edition:

June 26, 1944. Cherbourg surrenders.

Friday, June 27, 1924. The Aventine Secession.

123 opposition members of the Italian Chamber of Deputies walked out and demanded that the government take responsible for fascist crimes and that the Blackshirts be abolished.  Ten minutes of silence were observed all over Italy for Giacomo Matteotti.

Last prior edition:

Thursday, June 26, 1924. Nominating Al Smith.

Saturday, June 27, 1874. The Second Battle of Adobe Walls

On this day, 28 buffalo hunters at the abandoned trading post of Adobe Walls, Texas, fought the Comanche, who numbered around 700.  Fortified behind the post's walls, and armed with powerful large caliber buffalo hunting rifles, they successfully defended their party, with buffalo hunter Billy Dixon killing an Indian combatant at the amazing range of 1,538 yards.   Four of the hunters were killed in the engagement, and approximately 30 Comanche.


Last prior edition:

Sunday, June 14, 1874. Calling for an Indian War.