Chad Kennedy, a former Alberta highway patrol officer, is walking from Cranbrook B.C to Saint John’s in Newfoundland. His journey recently passed through Lethbridge on Friday, and he is now on his way towards Taber and Brooks.
been there. i probably would have been the one to get off, to check the pump. why would anyone want to hurt him? i can t find a reason why someone would want to do it, to kill him. and this bomber, whoever it might be, came very close to also murdering fabian ayala. if you want your for it, bring a child into it. d. a. poyner found this to be particularly heart breaking. i couldn t imagine being seven years old and seeing my dad blow up. and running all that way. people don t understand, it was like maybe a couple of miles as the crow flies. but to run through colusa mud, which is what we call the mud in the rice fields, he had to take his shoes off, you can hardly walk through it. and for him to run all that way, who is amazing. i remember asking him if he knew it 9-1-1 was? and he told me that, he was right. and i said did he know how to use a cellphone? and i asked if the dad had a cell phone.
their appearance is changing dramatically as the glacial ice that marks their summit melts away, all within the lifetime of the people who live in their shadow. we used to wake up in the morning and time that specific hour in the morning where you would be able to see the glacier in its shining form. but now you can just wake up and see it. that is one visible change, one actual change that you can see. instead of seeing the snow, you see that the mountain has gone grey like that. there is no glacier any more. you only have to go to specific places now to be able to view it, and at particular times. hydrogeologist richard taylor, who has co led expeditions to the rwenzori, says because temperatures show little seasonal variability here, the disappearing glaciers are a clear sign of climate change. ice fields in the tropics have a generally stable ice mass in the absence of changing climate, just because of that, if you will call it, seasonal stability and temperature.
there is no glacier any more. you only have to go to specific places now to be able to view it, and at particular times. hydrogeologist richard taylor, who has co led expeditions to the rwenzori, says because temperatures show little seasonal variability here, the disappearing glaciers are a clearsign of climate change. ice fields in the tropics have a generally stable ice mass in the absence of changing climate just because of that, if you will call it, seasonal stability and temperature. and so departures from that such as climate change you can see very distinct changes or recessions in those in the areal extent, or the terminal position, or ideally in the total mass