Thanks Karl; As I watched it, it reminded me of Seismics' eruptions in the mid 1960's. But then again I was a mere lad at the time. It did make me ponder, however, if those similarities might have something to do with something going on underground in that area. Probably not, but still something for sharper minds than mine to contemplate. Can anyone think of other situations like that where a group (even 2) of geysers have similar looking eruptions in reasonably close proximity to one another? ( ie: Fountain and Morning, Daisy and Splendid) If so, why are these eruptions similar in form? It is way too early in the morning for me to be thinking like this. Just something else for you all to ponder. John Warnock From: Go_Utes at comcast.net To: geysers at lists.wallawalla.edu Subject: Re: [Geysers] 1986 Fantail video Date: Sun, 22 Aug 2010 21:03:03 -0600 That was wonderful, Karl...keep 'em coming. Probably the closest I will ever get to seeing Fantail. But then again, I said the same thing years ago about Cascade, and Silex, and Butterfly Spring, and even Giant once upon a time. So who knows? Dan Roach From: Karl and Lori Hoppe Sent: Sunday, August 22, 2010 8:15 PM To: geysers at lists.wallawalla.edu Subject: [Geysers] 1986 Fantail video I'm in the process at attempting to transfer my parents' (Warren and Pat Hoppe) old Super 8 film movies to digital video formats. While the process is still in "development", I've posted my first attempt on YouTube. Fantail Geyser from 1986. Others will follow over time. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=brsxNl-2gN0 Karl Hoppe _______________________________________________ Geysers mailing list Geysers at lists.wallawalla.edu _______________________________________________ Geysers mailing list Geysers at lists.wallawalla.edu -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: </geyser-list/attachments/20100824/59bb56ab/attachment.html>