Took the boys to check out the “drawdown” between the dams tonight. They thought it was pretty epic (their word). It’s filling up again, and it’s maybe 2 feet up since I was there at 4 a.m. this morning. Quite the scene.
A crowded Stone Arch Bridge around 6 p.m.
The water to the left was there 14 hours prior, but the water
in the right/middle wasn't - it had started filling back up.
This is usually all underwater.
We found a crayfish crawling around.
St. Anthony Falls in the distance.
Walking into Father Hennepin Park (all this stone is usually shallow, but underwater).
Trolls.
Heading home.
I went to Google Maps and found some images to show a bit what it USUALLY looks like:
That's the Stone Arch Bridge. All that water north of the bridge was
gone (that was the pic when we were walking into Fr. Hennepin Park).
In fact, there was only water in the lower left corner of this image.
For a few days last month, the bottom 1/3 of this image
was all beach (which is 3/4 of the visible water here).
There would have been virtually NO water visible in this pic during the drawdown.
Father Hennepin Park: this was all stone and sand.
During the drawdown from a TPT article: the view south of the Stone Arch Bridge.
(180 degrees from the last photo.)
Google already has a few views of the drawdown uploaded!
First I stopped by on Oct 7th, but there were a LOT of people around at 4 a.m., and at least some of them were on something. Others were there with angle grinders looking for metal to sell for scrap. Others had headlights and were looking for treasures. Here's a picture I made that morning before being scared off:
[click these following images to enlarge]
Then I got a photo of the fall colors from under the Hennepin Ave Bridge from Nicollet Island:
I went back 2 days later on the 9th because I wanted to capture more. I knew there was more I wanted to get. I asked someone to come with me (for at least some slight "safety in numbers"), which is something I've thought about before, but never actually done. But he was afraid of being too tired at work that day (understandably so) and decided not to. And because the drawdown was technically over (I think they closed the lower dam the night before), there weren't nearly the same number of people down there - I only saw 3 guys carrying some scrap, and 1 waved to me which made me not nearly as concerned about them. (You have to understand that I'm used to having the city to myself when I photograph mid-week during the 4 a.m. hour. Having all these people around was disconcerting to me.)
This is the driftwood you can see in the satellite view (normally surrounded by water).
Way down to the river, across a block or 2 of beach that usually isn't there.
(Past 5 or 6 arches of the bridge that are usually all underwater.)
The "under bridge lights" (which normally are NOT on this time of day)
turned off around 4:30 a.m., so I was able to make some lower-contrast images.
That slight blue cast on the bridge in the distance is from the I35W bridge lights nearly a 1/2 mile away.
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