It is one of the better liked of his earlier works, indicative of what critics dubbed Jacques' main addition to the artistic lexicon, "Temporal Cubism." The actual work survived for only a few years before Jaques entered his "slump." About four paintings into the "slump," Logan decided that it would be much better to use the painting as a raincoat, but it wasn't quite big enough, so he just burned it in a effort to cause global warming to shift the area to a desert. Unfortunately, it had the opposite effect, and average rainfall for the year increased by .027 percent. When he quizzed his neighbor (the building meteorologist) on the effect, he simply said, "it's blastedly hard to get global warming to do you any good."