 |
Rice fields, mountains |
Last week was my first trip to the field: 2 days in Nueva Ecija and Pampanga provinces with a team planning to take river flow measurements at locations where water level sensors have been installed. This work is actually going to be quite important - we'll be using the measurements to improve the hydrological models which estimate flood flows in response to typhoon events.
 |
Levels on lamp post by road bridge |
 |
Local resident cools off in the shade |
Most of the time was spent driving to and from the mall for lunch; waiting around for other people to turn up; and, inexplicably, a trip to a buffalo milk processing plant. We did actually set up 3 GPS stations for static survey measurements (probably about 2 hours work all told); one of these blew over after 5 minutes, so we gave up on it.
 |
GPS survey set up - this one remained upright |
This is reminiscent of some of my experiences in Indonesia (see
here for for a typical example), and brought with it a possible revelation. Some people not only don't mind the endless waiting around, faffing and generally being a bit disorganised -
they actually enjoy it.
 |
Not much water in the rivers |
So in the end I didn't get to see any flow measurements being made - and this is something that I might have been able to help with. As it is, measuring flow at this time of year is a bit pointless anyway - it hasn't rained in 6 weeks and the rivers are almost dry. Hoping for better when I go to inspect a flood defence next week.
 |
Popular tourist resort - especially with watersports enthusiasts |
No comments:
Post a Comment