Mosquitoes Put Bite on Cape

I wrote a story for Page One of the July 11, 1967,  Missourian that must have contained every bad pun about mosquitoes ever written. If you discount that, though, it wasn’t all that bad. It was good enough that  Editor John Blue gave me a byline, something you got about as often as (or in lieu of) a raise.

Are the taxpayers getting stung?

Spraying cost about $80 a day. The city spent $1,400 in 1966 and was projected to spend $2,500 in 1967.  Russell Matzen, health officer, said, “I think the spraying is helping out a lot. Believe it or not, there are actually places in town where people can sit outside without swatting.”

The spray from the fogger is harmless, Matzen assured, unless it is breathed for a prolonged time. He warned parents, though, not to allow their children to play or ride bicycles near the foggers because motorists may not see them.

St. Louis mosquitoes REALLY bad

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported that city was launching an all-out assault against “perhaps the heaviest plague of mosquitoes in 15 years.” Crews spreading larvacide there were run out by the insects and had to return with fogging equipment “just to even up the fight.”

 

Mississippi River Towboat Launch

With this splash, the Mississippi River gained a new towboat. A cursory search of the Google News Archives didn’t turn up a story about the launch, but I know The Missourian did a story. If and when I find it, I’ll post an update.

The launch happened just south of the Missouri Dry Docks, shown in the photo. Note St. Vincent’s College and Seminary, now River Campus, in the background of some of the pictures.

Gallery of launch photos

Click on any photo to make it larger, then click on the left or right side to move through the gallery. The gallery is in time sequence order.

Mississippi River Photography

Based on other frames filed with this one, I was on my way to another river assignment when I saw these tourists (I assume) shooting a family portrait on the riverfront.

I shoot a lot of family photos on the fly when I’m on my bike. When I spot what are obviously tourists lining up for a group shot, I always stop to see if they’d like me to shoot something with their camera so they can all be in the picture. Since this fellow had his camera on a tripod, maybe he was setting it up so he could run into the frame before the shutter tripped.

Strack Quarry on Hwy 74

I grew up around construction equipment, so I’ve always been fascinated by big holes in the ground. Every time I go down Bloomfield Rd. on the way to Dutchtown, I crane my neck to see if I can get a glimpse of the Strack Quarry at the intersection of Bloomfield and Hwy 74.

When Ernie Chiles and I flew around Cape in November, I asked him to make a pass over the Strack quarry so I could get a feel for how deep it was and how close it was to the Dalhousie subdivision that was carved out of the Elmwood estate.

(We didn’t have time to make a pass of the area that’s been the source of controversy over a request by Strack Excavating and Heartland Materials to establish two new quarries near Saxony Lutheran School at Fruitland.)

That’s a small, deep hole

Because of the shadows, it was hard for me to see all the way to the bottom. I never could get a feel for how steep the haul road was to get the stone out of the bottom of the pit. I didn’t see any sign of a conveyor like the cement plant uses.

No fences nor signs

A few days later, on the way to Dutchtown, I pulled off to see what was visible from the road. I was surprised to see there weren’t any fences separating the highway from the pit. A low row of rocks and a little berm was all that kept you out of a very deep hole. I didn’t spot any No Trespassing signs, either, but I decided not to press my luck. (I’ve been known to “overlook” such signs on occasion, but there really WEREN’T any here.)

Photo Gallery

Here’s a collection of photos taken from a number of different angles. Click on any image to make it larger, then click on the left or right side of the photo to move through the gallery. If you like holes in the ground like I do, stay tuned for coming stories on SEMO Stone and the cement plant quarries.

Other aerial photos

Here are links to some other aerial photos we took on this flight: