Sunday, October 29, 2023

Pan and win

 I learned about this photographic contest from the Daily Mail ("The jaw-dropping winners of the 2023 panoramic photo awards revealed, from a dazzling lightning storm to a haunting shipwreck... so which one is YOUR favourite?"), but I went straight to the source for the winners:

Winners Gallery: the pano awards 2023

They are amazing; jaw-dropping, occasionally mind-blowing.  Great work providing a different way to view the world through a lens.

Here's a couple I noted in the Open - Nature / Landscapes category.  Top is by Nickolas Warner, USA; bottom is by Tal Vardi, Canada. 




Lighthouse of the Week, October 29 - November 4, 2023: Whitehead Island, Maine, USA

 

As noted last week, I'm featuring a few lighthouses from the state of Maine that I hadn't noticed before. This week's choice is one of the lighthouses somewhat near Rockland. It's actually called the Whitehead Light Station.

It has it's own website: Whitehead Light Station

And other pages: Whitehead Lighthouse (New England Lighthouses) 

Whitehead Lighthouse (Lighthouse Friends) 

Here is where it is located. 

And the Lighthouse Directory tells us this about it:
"1852 (station established 1804). Active; focal plane 75 ft (23 m); green light occulting every 4 s, day and night. 41 ft (12.5 m) unpainted round granite tower with lantern and gallery, attached to a red brick service room; 300 mm lens (1982). Fog horn (2 blasts every 30 s). The original 3rd order Fresnel lens is on display at the Maine Lighthouse Museum in Rockland. 1-1/2 story wood assistant keeper's house (1891); the principal keeper's house has been demolished. Square brick fog signal building (1888), oil house (1891), boathouse, and other light station buildings.

The original lighthouse, a wood tower, was replaced by a stone tower in 1830. Transferred under the Maine Lights program in 1998, this light station became part of a summer camp for high schoolers, who helped restore the historic buildings. Starting in August 2008 the keeper's house has been used for educational programs for adults."

The pictures are below.

 












Did they just leave these lying around?

 

Yet another amateur find of a cache of ancient gold, this time in Norway.

You'd think that the citizenry of that era would be a bit more careful with their valuable possessions, wouldn't you?

Amateur makes 'gold find of the century' in a farmer's field after buying a metal detector because his doctor told him to get more exercise

"He [the amateur metal searcher] was shocked to learn he had in fact dug up nine pendants, three rings and 10 gold pearls - some of which date back as far as the fall of the Roman Empire."

Ancient gold from Norway


Saturday, October 28, 2023

New falls - Nevele Falls

 

As I noted earlier, I've become acquainted with several waterfalls I never heard of before in the recent past. (And even more in the last couple of days!)  This is one of them.

It's really close to New York City, which is also a bit surprising.  Unusually, when you look it up on Google Maps, it's listed with both a Wawarsing and an Ellenville address, but it's closer to Ellenville.  It's roughly 80 miles from Central Park in Manhattan. It's just a bit south of the main part of the Catskill Mountains.

A couple of interesting things about this place. Nearby, there's an abandoned Borscht Belt resort, which closed in 2009.  And you might notice something about the name if you spell it backwards. There's a short story about that, but I'll let my dedicated readers (all dozen of them) figure that out.






It's Amy again!

 

It has been awhile since I commented on the beauteous Amy Jackson, first noticed on Supergirl, and also noted in an outstanding black-and-white glamour shot. She made most of her money and garnered fame doing Bollywood productions, so she doesn't get noted in the news that often, even in the Daily Mail.

(Actually, I found another post I did about her. With another outstanding black-and-white glamour shot, too.)

But they (the Daily Mail's cadre of paparazzi) found her out on the town.

Amy Jackson puts on a leggy display in a black thigh-split dress as she cosies up to boyfriend Ed Westwick at star-studded Kilian Fragrance PFW party


This is tragic. And this is climate change.

 





Though they aren't as highly endangered as other river dolphins (such as the Indus River dolphin), the Amazon's river dolphins aren't exactly thriving, population-wise.  And this event won't help that situation.

Lukewarmers don't think this constitutes a climate crisis. That's because most lukewarmers and do-nothingists are human-centric and ignore bad environmental news.

At Least 125 River Dolphins Have Died Amid Drought and Heat in Brazilian Amazon

Though the pink animals’ cause of death is not confirmed, temperatures in the remote Lake Tefé reached 102 degrees Fahrenheit in late September

"It may be a while before scientists can officially determine what killed the dolphins, however. Lake Tefé is far from big cities with laboratories—it’s located some 2,000 miles from Rio de Janeiro and 1,850 miles from São Paulo, for example. The drought has also made transportation within the remote region even more difficult, as some smaller waterways and tributaries of the Amazon River have dried up, and the only way to get around would typically be by boat.

This has also cut off some local communities from supplies of drinking water, gas and food. As such, the state of Amazonas has declared a state of emergency for many of its municipalities, and the Brazilian government set up a task force to provide emergency aid, per Reuters."
That's climate change too, by the way.


Eva Longoria is STILL Eva Longoria!

 

Several years and one child removed from "Desperate Housewives", Eva Longoria maintains her caliente characteristics.


Eva Longoria, 48, exhibits her impressively toned physique in a strapless pink bikini during a beach day in Marbella

I don't think I have to quote from the article. This will summarize it.



Another reason for gun control

 








As I post this, it's only a couple of days since the mass shooting in Lewiston, Maine.  OBVIOUSLY, mass shootings are a reason for gun control. Especially a reason for assault weapons bans. They work. Though there have been mass stabbings -- and people have died -- it's nothing like what an assault rifle can do in a very short period of time. And they make places where people feel safe and should be safe:  like a bowling alley, a place of worship, a grocery store -- suddenly unsafe, and dangerous, and deadly.

So yes, ban assault weapons.  And also, end the "commonplaceness" of guns in our society. Because they are so common, events like the following can and do happen.

Taco Bell worker is left with 'life-threatening' injuries after being shot several times by customer who thought he'd been given the wrong amount of change

" 'Witness statements indicate that after ordering food, the suspect became aggressive in the drive-thru when he believed he had been given an incorrect amount of change,' said the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department.

Police identified the suspect as 68-year-old Doll McLendon and he has been charged with assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill, inflicting serious injury and discharging a weapon into occupied property."
As I've noted a few times before, having a gun with you (or available nearby) significantly raises the temptation to use it when one becomes angry, even when the circumstances don't warrant it. And this incident is yet another example of such a situation happening.  I don't know what happened to the Taco Bell employee (I searched but didn't find any updates), but I do know this 68-year-old man is probably going to jail over a very minor concern.  Not a great way to spend one's retirement. 

Doing something (a little) about space junk

 

Given all the junk that's up there orbiting Earth, I'm surprised more satellites don't get ringed and dinged by particles and pieces.  There are discussions and potential missions to do something about it.  But those aren't near launch at this point.

Well, the FCC did something - they fined Dish Network.

Space junk crackdown intensifies as FCC gives first-ever fine to Dish


"The Dish Network, a U.S. satellite television company, was ordered to pay a fine of $150,000 after an investigation by the agency found that it disposed of one of its satellites at an orbit “well below the elevation required by the terms of its license.”

Disposing equipment at a lower altitude potentially poses a threat, the FCC said."

One comment:  $150K is not a lot of money.  But still, as least they did something.













"Our bad."


Sunday, October 22, 2023

Pretty girl post: Emily Elizabeth

 

She's young and curvy and beautiful, like a lot of other "influencers" on Instagram and other social media. Her account is this: emmilyelizabethh

Below is a sampling of why she has about 2.5 million followers on Instagram.






Something new in something old

 










The James Webb Space Telescope took a look at the famous Orion Nebula, the middle of the three bright objects (the other two being stars) in the "sword" of constellation Orion.  It is a classic observational target, and numerous telescopes have looked at it.

But JWST found something new;  JuMBOs, Jupiter Mass Binary Objects

The Orion Nebula Is Full of Impossible Enigmas That Come in Pairs

"JuMBOs appear to be a smaller class of gaseous object. While brown dwarfs can grow to about 13 times the mass of Jupiter, the new objects can get as small as about half the planet’s mass, with temperatures of more than 1,000 degrees Fahrenheit. They are separated by about 200 times the distance between the Earth and the Sun, orbiting each other on paths that take more than 20,000 years to complete.

Were they alone in space, they might be easier to explain. But their appearance in pairs, 42 of which are seen by the Webb telescope in the Orion Nebula, is baffling. According to existing scientific models, it should not be possible to form single objects so small directly from clouds of dust and gas, let alone in pairs, Dr. Pearson said. Even if they were ejected planets — violently kicked from young stars because of gravitational forces — it is similarly unclear why there would be so many couplets."



But this is NOT NEW

 

I'll admit that I read about this first in the Daily Mail in this article.  But I decided to be more scientific about it and get an article from Science News.

But before I do that, it has been known for a long time that the Deccan Traps volcanism preceded the Chicxulub impact, and probably caused climate and ecological stress. While some researchers have advocated that the Deccan Traps volcanism was the whole entire reason for the extinction, and Chicxulub was just a punctuation mark, a lot of them have said that the Deccan Traps set the stage and Chicxulub delivered the killing blow.

So this seems to be confirmation, rather than a big surprising breakthrough. 

New computer analysis hints volcanism killed the dinosaurs, not an asteroid

"But many scientists are not convinced that these findings provide the ultimate answer to this long-standing, complex question. “It’s an elegant way to address this problem,” says Sierra Petersen, a geochemist at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor. Modeling in this way “gives the freedom to find the consensus solution, taking multiple proxy records into account. However, like any model, output depends on input.”

Petersen notes that foraminifera shells are not an ideal proxy for ancient temperatures: The oxygen isotope ratios in foraminifera shells can change not only due to temperature but also due to seawater composition. Different temperature proxies would likely lead to different patterns of gas release reproduced in models, Petersen says."
If you're not familiar with the Deccan Traps, the image below shows where they happened (in India) and what they look like today.  Somewhat similar to the layers of ash and lava visible in the Columbia River Gorge of Washington State, the result of the Columbia River flood basalt period.




Still together, so she says


A post in my continuing series of checking in with Prince Albert and Princess Charlene of Monaco.  Rumors had the princess moving to Switzerland and only going back to Monaco for special appearances, so that she wouldn't have to live in the palace with him.

However, she apparently tried to quell those rumors.

Princess Charlene of Monaco denies 'exhausting' rumours about trouble in her marriage to Prince Albert - and reveals the reason she deleted her Instagram account

"The comments come after she told a publication in Monaco that she is 'serene and happy' in her marriage - denying rumours that surfaced in German and French media that she was now 'living in Switzerland' and that her marriage was 'ceremonial'.

Speaking to South Africa's News24, the princess, who shares twins Jacques and Gabriella with Prince Albert, said: 'I find the rumours [about my marriage] tiring and exhausting.'

In particular, she was referring to claims made in German newspaper Bild and French outlet Voici that she had moved to Switzerland and returned to Monaco 'by appointment' to carry out official engagements with the prince.

Insisting there is 'nothing wrong' with her marriage, the former Olympic swimmer said: 'I just don't understand where these rumours come from.'

OK, so that's good. At least it seems so.


Saturn has rings. How did it get them?

 








If you've read the novelization of 2001: A Space Odyssey by Arthur C. Clarke, you already know that the Saturnian rings are the leftover construction material from building the Stargate.  I'm sorry if that's a spoiler, but the movie (and the novel) came out in 1968.  

Now there's a different explanation, though I sure like the 2001 story.

How Saturn got its rings: Simulations suggest they evolved from the debris of two moons which collided a few hundred million years ago

"By simulating almost 200 different versions of the impact, the research team discovered that a wide range of collision scenarios could scatter the right amount of ice into Saturn's Roche limit, where it could settle into rings as icy as those of Saturn today.

Since other elements of the system have a mixed ice-and-rock composition, alternative explanations haven't been able to explain why there would be almost no rock in Saturn's rings.

The findings were published in The Astrophysical Journal."
And here's that paper.



A related article:






Lighthouse of the Week, October 22-28, 2023: Curtis Island Lighthouse, Maine, USA

 

In the past week or so, I've become aware of a couple of Maine lighthouses that I hadn't noticed before. Now, obviously, Maine has a lot of lighthouses, so the discovery of a couple of unnoticed ones isn't a big deal.  But considering that I haven't featured a Maine lighthouse for awhile, I decided to go back to the lighthouse state. 

This lighthouse is near Camden, and pretty well-known, apparently. It has numerous pictures and art pieces and such, and Web sites about.  I'll add links to a couple of them below the main info on it from the Lighthouse Directory.

First, though, let's locate it.

Now let's learn about it.

"1896 (station established 1835). Active; focal plane 52 ft (16 m); green light occults every 4 s. 25 ft (7.5 m) round cylindrical brick tower with lantern and gallery; solar-powered 300 mm lens (1994). Tower painted white, lantern and gallery black. The original 4th order Fresnel lens is on display at the Camden Town Hall. The original 1-1/2 story wood keeper's house, occupied by a caretaker, has a conspicuous red roof. Barn (1889), oil house (1895), and other light station buildings. ... The lighthouse was automated in 1972 and the town acquired the station except for the light tower in that year. The lighthouse itself was transferred to the town in 1998 under the Maine Lights program. Located on an island in the entrance to Camden Harbor from West Penobscot Bay."

Websites:

Curtis Island, ME (Lighthouse Friends)

Curtis Island Lighthouse (New England Lighthouses: A Virtual Guide)

Curtis Island Light, Maine (Lighthouse Guy Photo's and Gifts - lots of pictures, including the original Fresnel lens)


Pictures and a short drone video appear below.


















Sunday, October 15, 2023

Will there be a super El Niño this winter?

 

Quick answer:  Maybe.

But there's one sentence I want to yank out of this article, as I remind to the deniers that keep denying this simple fact.

One of the most intense El Niños ever observed could be forming

This is the sentence:

"Scientists have already established a strong connection between planetary temperatures and precipitation intensity, because warmer air is capable of holding more moisture."

Of course. 

Lighthouse of the Week, October 15-21, 2023: Lover's Leap Lighthouse, Jamaica

 

Jamaica has some noteworthy lighthouses, which I have featured earlier in the history of this blog:  Negril, historical Morant Point, and scenic Folly Point.  To this I am adding legendary Lover's Leap lighthouse, the location of which is so named because of the legend of the lovers who leapt there.

It's in Jamaica's St. Elizabeth Parish. A sojourn to the world of maps provides this location for it (zoomed out so you can see where this is on the island).

The Lighthouse Directory provides this information on it:

"Date unknown (1960s?). Active; focal plane 530 m (1739 ft); white flash every 10 s. 30.5 m (100 ft) round cylindrical steel (?) tower with lantern and octagonal gallery. Tower painted with red and white horizontal bands; lantern white, gallery red. ... This is the highest lighthouse in the Western Hemisphere; in good weather its light can be seen for 40 nautical miles (74 km or 46 mi). JNHT says this is also the newest Jamaican lighthouse, evidently built after Jamaica became independent (1962). The area has been developed as a tourist attraction with a restaurant and observation deck near the lighthouse."

As you might be able to figure out, it's located at the top of a high cliff overlooking the ocean.

So let's leap to the pictures.












And I'll finish with a view of the lighthouse AND the leap.













Saturday, October 14, 2023

Hard to believe this place exists

 

I just became acquainted with Ban Gioc Waterfall in Vietnam.

It's astonishing, like something out of an Avatar movie.  See the picture below.  










For some reason, over the past couple of weeks I've seen pictures of a few waterfalls I had not ever heard of (or seen) before.  So in the near future I'm going to do a short set about these "new" waterfalls.



Time-traveling box

 

I learned about this from the Daily Mail, so I'll provide that first. And there is also a video about it, which I'll provide second.

'World's oldest time capsule' - dating back to 1726 - is found in Polish church spire, containing 300-year-old coins, Latin documents and a lead bullet

"'The time capsule consisting of four packages from 1726, 1786, 1884 and 1914 was extracted from the sphere at the top of the tower of the parish church.'

Here is the video:

Good news (for a change)

 

There is a lot of dire environmental news these days:  climate change, pollution, ecosystem degradation, extreme weather getting more extreme, biodiversity declining, rare animals getting rarer or disappearing ...

it's a lot to think about.

So when there's a good news story, even if it is a small contribution to the fight against a trend, it's worth noting.

And they are really cute.

Real copycats! Rare Siberian Tiger twins play with their mom Talya days after she gave birth to them at Toledo Zoo



















Unfortunately, there are only about 500 of this tiger subspecies, the Amur tiger, left in the wild. So it is good that the breeding program had this small success times two. 


Thursday, October 12, 2023

BOOM boom

 

Volcanic eruption clouds generate lightning, and there are spectacular pictures of lightning in a volcanic ash cloud. It's pretty common, and something I would enjoy viewing (from a minimum safe distance, obviously). 

This video of ash clouds from Fuego volcano being struck by lightning is nonetheless very spectacular.

I wonder what it really sounds like (the music is nice, but I'd be interested in the real sound effects.)

I wouldn't have a chance

 

I'll be honest here.  I'm average when it's time to be, no more than that, but no less either. However, I don't present well in my unexcited state.

That should do it.

I would not want to be on this show, because when it got down to the important details, I would be outmanned.

'Craziest s*** I EVER watched on TV': Infamous UK dating show Naked Attraction featuring full frontal nudity makes its US debut on HBO Max causing outrage over 'horrible' premise


Back a few years I read an article that noted while men are interested in the naked female body because it's naked, women are more interested in the naked male body when it is expressing interest, and in the case of this show, it's not (fortunately). So, I don't see why this works for both genders, if in fact it does. And I'm not going to bother to watch.  And I'm going to be glad I'm not a participant on the show, too.


Lighthouse of the Week, October 8-14, 2023: Trwyn Du Lighthouse, Wales, UK

 

I noted the first time that I featured a lighthouse in Wales that there are a lot of lighthouses in Wales, despite it not being a very large area, as it has a lot of coastline.  While I've featured a few lighthouses in Wales since, I've featured less than I thought I had.

So here's another one. It happens to be the lead lighthouse picture in the Lighthouse Directory section on Wales, so I figured this would be a good one to note. There are many, many, many artsy photography pictures of this one, so if that's something you like, search away.

Here's where it is located (in Wales, of course). It's west of Liverpool and north of Eryri National Park. There are many great Welsh villages around it.

So the Lighthouse Directory says this about it:

"1838 (James Walker). Active; focal plane 19 m (63 ft); white flash every 5 s. 29 m (62 ft) round cylindrical castellated stone tower with lantern and gallery, painted with black and white horizontal bands; the lantern is white. The historic 178 kg (392 lb) fog bell remains in place but it was replaced by a foghorn in 2019. ... The lighthouse stands at the northeastern corner of the Isle of Anglesey marking the northern entrance to Menai Strait, which separates the island from the Welsh mainland. In 1996 Trinity House renovated the lighthouse by converting it to solar power and installing a mechanism to operate the fog bell. A foghorn was installed (to the dismay of neighbors) when this mechanism became unreliable in 2019. In 2022 one of the two privately-owned onshore keeper's houses was for sale for £1.7 million. Located just off the point of Trwyn Penmon about 1200 m (3/4 mi) northeast of Penmon. It is possible to walk to the lighthouse at low tide, although the rough shingle beaches are rather difficult walking."
Below I provide four pictures of this landmark lighthouse.







Sunday, October 8, 2023

It's back

 

Yes, I know I missed noting it the day it happened.  But the BIG DAY is when they show what the stuff inside looks like (and maybe what it's made of). 

So anyway, the OSIRIS-REx sample return capsule landed successfully and intact in the Utah desert.










This article shows the capsule being released from the spacecraft.


Why not Tampa?

 

A new fairly fast (I don't know if I'd call it a bullet train) train from Orlando to Miami just started operations.  That's pretty cool.

But I wonder why they didn't also extend it to Tampa (or if it's in their plans).  Because that would link major tourist destinations in Florida together. 

Brightline opens $6 billion line to Orlando, expands U.S. rail market

"Sally Patrenos, president of advocacy group Floridians for Better Transportation, said the Miami-Orlando corridor is an ideal spot for the investment in a rail connection that she said has potential to reduce congestion and give locals and visitors the option to skip traffic."

 


 

And it's worse now

 

An article in the New York Times discussed the prospects for the end of American democracy.

And after a few far-right wingers overthrew Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy, and with us facing the horrendous prospect of Jim Jordan as Speaker, the danger to democracy is even greater.


The Authors of ‘How Democracies Die’ Overestimated the Republicans

A couple of excerpts to ponder:


" “Societal diversity, cultural backlash and extreme-right parties are ubiquitous across established Western democracies,” they write. But in recent years, only in America has a defeated leader attempted a coup. And only in America is the coup leader likely to once again be the nominee of a major party."

"The Constitution’s countermajoritarian provisions, combined with profound geographic polarization, have locked us into a crisis of minority rule."

"Liberals — myself very much included — have been preoccupied by minority rule for years now, and you’re probably aware of the ways it manifests. Republicans have won the popular vote in only one out of the last eight presidential elections, and yet have had three Electoral College victories. The Senate gives far more power to small, rural states than large, urbanized ones, and it’s made even less democratic by the filibuster. An unaccountable Supreme Court, given its right-wing majority by the two-time popular-vote loser Trump, has gutted the Voting Rights Act. One reason Republicans keep radicalizing is that, unlike Democrats, they don’t need to win over the majority of voters."

That's all ponderable -- and ponder that a right-wing minority might re-elect a criminal conman rapist as President.

Which is not something I want to think about.



Thursday, October 5, 2023

But does she smile?

 

Gorgeous actress Salma Hayek has a maturing daughter, Valentina, who at age 16 is also quite attractive. I'll leave it at that, and wait to see how she looks at 18.

But, despite her attractiveness, she never seems to smile in front of the camera. I think she's be even prettier if she flashed her pearly whites occasionally.  But, given her age, it's possible that she's got braces or some other dental work going on.

Salma Hayek's daughter turns 16! The actress marks Valentina's milestone birthday with a heartwarming video montage: 'Keep shining your beautiful light'

This is fairly typical of her glamorous appearances with her mother.

















But after a short effort searching, I did find this shot from a YouTube video, and she can smile -- and her teeth look just fine. If you watch the video, where they speak in Spanish and the subtitles are in French -- so I didn't follow much of it, but they talked about accessories and perfume and makeup -- you can see she has a very nice smile.

So smile for the nice photographers, Valentina!



Wednesday, October 4, 2023

Visit to the Midway shipwrecks

 

In September, a research vessel that performs numerous deep sea dives (with Remotely Operated Vehicles), based out of Hawaii, visited shipwrecks that resulted from the World War II battle of Midway.  They surveyed the aircraft carrier USS Yorktown, and the Japanese aircraft carriers Akagi and Kaga. The other two Japanese carriers, the Hiryu and the Soryu, have not been located. 

Deep sea surveys of three shipwrecks from Battle of Midway

Here are 20 minutes of highlights from the visit to the Kaga.



A guide to beer through history

 

If you're interested, the Washington Post provided an interactive article about beer through the history of mankind's making of it.

Though I'm only an occasional beer drinker, I like a tasty one (leaning toward sweet with less bitter) every now and then. So this was a nice historical taste tour.


Explore the evolution of beer, from Stone Age sludge to craft brews

Regarding brewing:

"Beer is basically fermented grain. First, moisture makes the grain sprout, priming its enzymes to transform starch into sugar. Yeast then converts the sugar into alcohol.

Humans would have discovered this process by happy accident, probably in many places around the world at different times: A pile of grain sat out in the rain and sun, some wild yeast latched onto its sugar, and a few days later — whoa! They learned to replicate the process, creating beer traditions nearly everywhere."

Unfortunately, the beer I liked the most in my experience is not made anymore. Still looking to find a new favorite.

And after all, it is Oktober.




Sunday, October 1, 2023

Burning it up

 

Despite the rain (there was a lot), the Burning Man festival event still took place. And Demi Rose was there.  And when she's anywhere, she stands out.

Demi Rose leaves little to the imagination in MINISCULE racy red lingerie as she shares sexy snaps from Burning Man... before the festival descended into chaos

She didn't wear that red number all the time;  she also wore this gold genie outfit, and even posed in front of a stylized bottle.





If 
had 
three 
wishes ...


Lighthouse of the Week, October 1-7, 2023: Mayport Lighthouse, Florida, USA

 

I've driven through Jacksonville, Florida once, and I've been near it a few times, but I didn't know if it had a lighthouse in proximity (despite the proximity of the coast).  Well, it does. It's a lighthouse that's easy to see, but you can't tour it, because it's on a naval base. 

This is where it is -- Mayport Lighthouse

Let's here from the Lighthouse Directory:

"1859 (station established 1830). Inactive since 1929. 81 ft (24.5 m) round brick tower, extended from 66 ft (20 m) in 1887 by expanding the top of the tower and adding a taller lantern. Tower painted bright red, watch room white; the lantern is black with a greenish metallic roof. During World War II the Navy raised the ground level so that the tower now appears to be about 65 ft (20 m) tall; the door is buried and access to the tower is through a window. ... In January 2000 the association reached an agreement with the Navy to use a nearby building as a visitor center and museum, but the base has been closed to the public for security reasons since the 9/11 attacks in 2001. Efforts to obtain a state grant for restoration were not successful during 2004. The Association disbanded, but in 2021 it was revived and efforts to involve the Navy in assessing the condition of the lighthouse and working toward restoration and public access are underway. In 2023 there were plans to move the lighthouse to a waterfront location open to the public, if funding can be found."

Lighthouse Friends on this one.

So now a few pictures.





 





















And here's the StreetView from the street, where you can view it.