Monday, December 5, 2011

A Chapter from Working In The Northwest Woods


Rotary Creek




During my very early days with the Forest Service, I was introduced to the concept of the slash burn. This event is intended to rid the landscape of the debris left behind by the loggers after they had extracted everything they deemed valuable. The remainder, consisting of limbs and tops, broken and shattered logs, the undesirable chunks from a size or species perspective, all of these were termed “slash”. I find it interesting to note that during the 1970s and 1980s when I was working in the woods, loggers often extracted cedar logs that been left  lying on the ground after having been cut around the turn of the century, the 1900s, by the old-timers who found them too massive to drag out with the tools of the time. I recall one timber sale in particular where the most valuable wood on the sale was not the standing hemlock and fir but the downed cedar logs that had been lying for seventy years underneath it. Even now, we are beginning to see our earlier logging practices as unnecessarily wasteful. One hundred years ago, only the very best cedar was taken out. The other trees, if they weren’t needed for mining timbers or railroad ties, were simply left where they were cut in order to get them out of the way so the cedar could be extracted. Our contemporary practice of burning the leavings will no doubt be viewed as just as wasteful by the much more resource stingy thinking of the future. In some countries, the left over slash is already being utilized for both commercial power generation and as ground cover used during the logging operations to reduce site damage. But in 1976, we just set it on fire.

Forgetting for the time being the likely error of our ways and merely accepting fact as fact, let us return to the disposition of the slash that was left behind. Scientific forestry at the time preached that the only good clear-cut was one that had been cleaned and sanitized so the reforestation effort could proceed unimpeded by debris and leavings and, particularly in the Northwest, the residual mistletoe infestations that were commonly found among the old growth. This is not your Christmas time “kissing-under-the-mistletoe” variety but a relative that, like all parasitic mistletoe species, infects a host and draws its sustenance from it. This plant, officially known as dwarf mistletoe (Arceuthobium spp.) has long been considered a pest since it inhibits the growth of the big trees. In yet another irony of nature, it turns out that recent studies have determined this plant to be a keystone species, meaning it affects many other organisms in a way that far exceeds its relative biomass. Most ironic is the role it plays in nesting for the Spotted Owl, the current most popular indicator of forest health throughout the Northwest.

The mistletoe that infects the big timber of the Pacific Northwest is found in many tree species. I have never seen it in cedar or in any of the hardwoods, but the commercially more valuable fir and hemlock species suffer significantly from loss of growth caused by the strength-sapping effects of mistletoe. To a forester, this was always viewed as being akin to boll weevils in cotton or grasshoppers in the wheat fields. A very effective deterrent to the continued spread of the parasite is to reduce an area of infestation to carbon. This tends to remove any residual elements of the parasite from the immediate area and forces it to invade from neighboring, infected old-growth areas, assuming there is any remaining old growth. In any event, this slows the spread of the parasite. The process at the time was to dig a fire line around the perimeter of the clear-cut in order to have some definition of control, and to have a place for the fire crews to stand, and then light the entire thing on fire. This was, as bizarre as it may sound, a positively delightful experience.



My introduction to slash burning took place in an area known as Rotary Creek, located along the northwest slopes of Mt. Pilchuck, a far west pioneer mountain that extends as deeply into the Puget Sound lowlands as is permitted in this mountain chain. This is the same lovely mountain, visible from the parking lot in front of the Monte Cristo Ranger Station, that greeted me on my first day. There were a couple of things about this particular “unit”, as the clear-cuts were referred to, that were fortunate for me, the novice slash burner. First, it was relatively small. It covered only about twelve or fifteen acres as I recall. Secondly, it was nearly level. At least, it was level in the relative sense of the term as far as ground found in this part of the world. Size and slope are significant since lighting a slash fire consists of starting at the high point of the unit and making cross slope traverses with a drip torch.

The drip torch is a metal can that contains a bit more than a gallon of a mix of gasoline and diesel that is “dripped” through a foot long, spiraling metal tube that culminates with a nozzle containing a fiberglass wick, which has been set alight. The amount of fuel fed to this wick is greater than the wick can absorb so the excess is leaked out, ignited as it passes through the burning nozzle, and “drips” onto the ground. The gasoline gives the necessary volatility and the diesel prevents instantaneous explosive ignition. The “glop” that falls on the ground, or more likely on the slash, burns long enough and hot enough to ignite whatever object it contacts. Typically, three to five people will make a pass across the slope, each somewhat behind and below the person ahead. Spacing between these individuals determines just how much slash will be set on fire at a time, thus controlling to some degree, the size and enthusiasm of the blaze. The process of beginning at the top of a hill makes sense when you envision the results of subsequent passes across the hill at lower and lower elevations. The heat from the fire tends to pull the burn toward the top of the hill. One of the fascinating aspects of fire is its singular ability, among elemental components of earth to defy the laws of gravity. Starting at the top means that by the time (in theory) you reach the bottom of the area, the upper portions have had time to burn most of the residue clear, thus providing an ever widening fire line against the top of the clear-cut, which typically provides protection to whatever timber lies uphill from the conflagration.

Even though the Rotary Creek fire was relatively small and, as I mentioned, relatively flat, a great amount of time was expended in preparation for igniting the remaining slash. Not only had many hours been consumed in building the hand line around the perimeter, but several days before the event, the district fire crew had started positioning hoses, pumps and hand tools and planning for delivery of as much water as possible. This included setting up a portable water tank, in this case the Fol-da-tank, which is rather like a square version of the back yard above ground swimming pool. This was filled by a combination of tanker truck delivery and pumping from nearby streams. After all of this preparation and approval from the air quality folks at the state, and after the careful development of a plan and a thorough review by all parties, the big day arrived.



On the morning of the lighting of the Rotary Creek slash fire, everyone, it seemed, knew every move. As the procession of Forest Service “green rigs” made their way up the gravel road to the scene, the event began to unfold like a well-rehearsed play. The district fire crew was the earliest to arrive and they had laid out several hundred feet of one and one-half inch hose along the road that bisected the unit, as well as a length or two up and down the fire lines on each side. This provided a reasonably complete coverage of the timber along both sides. This hose lay stretched not all the way to the top or to the bottom, but about halfway. As the crews arrived, trucks were positioned at safe locations, yellow Nomex fire shirts were slipped on over t-shirts, hard hats were donned and water bottles were attached via web belts so that each worker could remain fairly independent. Everyone knew exactly what their job was, what their position was to be, and how to proceed. Everyone, that is, except me.

As the new guy, I was dispatched to attend to relatively minor tasks. Presumably, I would do things that were useful but not critical and certainly not dangerous. I was also assigned to the watchful eye of an experienced crew-member who could serve both to demonstrate what to do and when to do it, but could also keep an eye on me to prevent me from creating a problem of any kind or finding a way to injure myself or others. Essentially, my task this first day was one of observation. Watch how the job is done. Watch what people do. Listen to the radio chatter. Perhaps then, I could be of some real use the next time.

Once the drip torch crew began work and ignition progressed gradually down the slope, I did in fact begin to get more of the picture and from time to time would do something of value, such as throw a few shovels full of dirt on a spot fire that had crept outside of one of the side lines and begun burning in the adjacent timber. These events were never allowed to become more than minor episodes but still, I had the chance to participate.

As the final few passes were made along the very bottom part of the unit, the crew had become somewhat jammed up in the lower reaches of the area since the top portion, above the road, was more or less burned out. By then it was midafternoon and all parties were growing weary and were eager to move ignition along at a pace that would allow sending most of the crew home after a reasonable day. This was caused not so much by the kind nature of the management on the district, but the very real need to conserve finances and avoid paying overtime for crews when it was not essential. That money needed to be held on to in case of real fires, the wildfires not the controlled burns, and the need to fund the suppression efforts for them. This budgetary emphasis caused the drip torch crew to be moved at a considerably faster pace than had taken place up to this point. With the increased number of people available to staff the fire lines and with the top two-thirds already burned clear of slash this was a sound decision on the part of the District Ranger and the Fire Management Officer, who were immediately responsible for such activities.

Things heated up in a real hurry as the rate of ignition was increased and in almost the time it takes to tell it, the slash was burning very hot and fires began to spot on the outside of the line where I was working. Being on the downwind side, we were subjected to both the drift of the smoke and the flying embers that were causing these spot fires. Within a few minutes, everyone assigned to my side was busy. The call went out for half of the crew from the opposite side to move over and reinforce in order to prevent a real fire from starting in the old growth that bordered the unit. As the radio call was made for these people, the District Ranger walked up to where my mentor and I were busy throwing dirt at a burning fir tree. We had at this point dropped below the end of the lowest hose that had been placed along the fire line.

“Willard, hustle up to the road and bring down two lengths of the black rubber hose,” he barked at me and then without pausing for breath he instructed my partner to get connectors and attach the hose that I would be bringing to the end of the inch and one-half that ended a short distance above where we stood. Things were beginning to get interesting. This being my very first experience with fire in the woods, I had no idea if this was routine, unusual or an impending disaster. I assumed in my enthusiasm that it was the latter. I raced away, moving as quickly up the incline as I could, trying to remember where I had seen the fire crew stack the hose that I was charged with retrieving.

Finding it once I hit the road turned out to be no problem and I grabbed two coiled bundles, threw one over each shoulder and turned back down the hill. The hose coils were one hundred foot lengths of heavy-duty one inch rubber garden hose. It is the same kind you have hanging on the side of your house, maybe just a bit sturdier. Together, taken with the task of climbing down the hill along the hand dug fire line, they were a load and I was panting and sweating by the time I reached the end of the inch and one-half run. Standing there was the Ranger, my partner with the necessary hardware already attached to the bigger hose and several others, ready to use the water on the ever-growing fires outside the line. I felt like I had done a fine job and had impressed the Ranger with the speed of my return until I looked at him, noticed that he wasn’t smiling and heard him say,

“Uncoil them.”

That was all. No smile. No "well done”. A flat stare, a sense of error, and for me, complete surprise. With my emotions in total confusion and having no clue what I had done wrong, I dropped both coils to the ground and kneeled to being untangling the hose. As I removed the proper end for my partner to connect to the larger hose, he looked at me and said,

“You should have uncoiled them on the road and drug them down the hill, male end in your hand. We’ll play hell trying to untangle them down here.”  No one, of course, had mentioned a thing about that in the confusion and the rush to get water to the fire. He was right. It took a good fifteen minutes to unroll and stretch the very stiff rubber hoses down the slope, made the more difficult by the twisting, stump and brush filled terrain. Several times during this exercise, I saw the Ranger looking at me. His expression told me that he had clearly identified me as a complete bumbling city-bred idiot and he would make certain to keep an eye on me in the future. I do not think he was impressed.

In spite of my mistake, the fire was eventually controlled and only a few of the trees outside the line were scorched. The water from my late arriving hoses was useful but all parties indicated to me that the results would probably have been the same even without it. This did nothing to soothe my bruised ego. From that day on, I asked questions when I didn’t understand, moved as fast as I could up and down the hill, threw more dirt than anyone who stood near me, and in general, tried every way I could to redeem myself in front of the Ranger. Whether I succeeded or not I cannot say. He never told me.                       

Thursday, November 17, 2011

Band of The Week - The Rainmakers


As a native of the fine state of Missouri, I am embarrassed to have to admit I had never heard of these guys until I saw a Facebook post by an old high school buddy. Thanks to Steve Weiss for uncovering a missed opportunity for me.

Back in 1983 the band "Steve, Bob and Rich" burst onto the scene. Pretty cool name, eh? By '86 they had added a drummer and released their first album which Newsweek magazine called "the most auspicious debut album of the year". I guess not reading Newsweek explains how I missed this one. Here's one from that album.... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=65oq2C4PJmA&feature=related

Here was a shocker for me - filmed at the Backstage in Ballard - which is actuall Seattle - in 1988. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EPWnNDFbv74&feature=related

But fast foward to today...here is a soon to be classic tune - enjoy!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CRBo18Q7BwM

Tuesday, November 15, 2011

The Mission - Ski Washington


I had a vision this past winter of skiing every lift in the state. I managed that but still have a couple of rope-tow only ski hills to go (Echo Valley, Badger Mountain and Hurricane Ridge). I ran into a reporter for the News Tribune who shared my vision - he wrote up this short piece in last week's edition of the paper - http://www.thenewstribune.com/2011/11/11/1902157/six-little-ski-gems-of-washington.html

Craig - I hope to see you one of the hills this coming winter!

Tuesday, November 8, 2011

Working In The Northwest Woods


I've been rather busy of late finishing up writing my first book. Consequently, entries here have fallen on lean times although I think that should change a bit now that I've passed that milestone. The next phase of this project is the marketing aspect - figuring out how to bring attention to the book.

Here is the list of available versions -
For you Kindle readers - http://www.amazon.com/Working-Northwest-Woods-ebook/dp/B005YNH876/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1320770110&sr=8-1

If your eReader is the Barnes and Noble Nook go here - http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/working-in-the-northwest-woods-dennis-willard/1106995642?ean=2940013229730&itm=1&usri=working%252bin%252bthe%252bnorthwest%252bwoods

The softcover edition can be had at either of these sites:
1) - http://www.amazon.com/Working-Northwest-Woods-personal-Northwest/dp/1466388897/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1320770110&sr=8-2
2) - https://www.createspace.com/3698744

A hardcover edition can be ordered here:
http://www.lulu.com/product/hardcover/working-in-the-northwest-woods/18168626?productTrackingContext=search_results/search_shelf/center/1

I hope you enjoy the read!

Friday, July 22, 2011

Band of the Week

James McMurtry....

Having grown up in the sixties, I have a very soft spot in my heart for the singer songwriters who still manage to take a stab at social issues and do it with both talent and passion.  There are still plenty such musicians around, but too few that seem to reach anything like serious penetration of popular music.  James McMurty is one such performer who manages to reach deep into his soul and pull out songs that seem to absolutely leave a trail of West Texas dust behind them.  His distinctive voice and right-to-the-heart lyrics have won him serious musical acclaim, yet there are still so many folks who have not yet had the privilege of listening to him.

His 1989 album - Too Long in the Wasteland - had some real gems - like this one that seems to sum up our gypsy ways that see us moving from place to place  -
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_JOwHt7uOzA&feature=related

In 1992 he followed up with an album titled Candyland that continued that gruff and gritty tale of life just a bit under our comfort zone.  Here's a tune about a trip across the border from Eagle Pass Texas to the town of Piedras Negras ... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fZRdVv8CJSc

After his two initial albums, which were produced by John Mellancamp who met McMurtry while working on a film written by Larry M's father novelist James (Terms of Endearment, The Last Picture Show, Lonesome Dove, etc), he continued to generate considerable critical praise while staying just below the radar.  In 2006 his album Childish Things received song and album of the year at the Americana Music Awards.  From that album came this little zinger: the song of the year that year.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jTW0y6kazWM  Much like many of the songs from the sixties and seventies, McMurty makes you a bit uncomfortable while he asks us "what, exactly, is going on?".

Lots of good tunes and good musicians.  Lyrics that will make you ponder things and make you think.
Check out James McMurtry.



Friday, July 15, 2011

A New Feature - Band of the Week

It seems I'm always listening to some group that borders on the not-too-well-known, or maybe even the un-known, or according to Suzanne "why are you listening to that crappy jazz again?".  Regardless of disagreements over my obviously mature musical tastes, I thought it would be fun to drop a new group on you every week just to (a) offer you some different tunes and (b) to help move you toward a more open-minded, less Hollywood directed collection of music.  So here is the inaugural week's nomination.

 

              The Boomers.

For starters, there is a party band in Florida that claims this name.  That is not who I'm referring to.  The Boomers I enjoy are from Ontario.  That's in Canada eh, not the one in California.  The core of this group is a fellow named Ian Thomas.  He has a well known brother, Dave Thomas, who was half of the SCTV Bob and Doug McKenzie - "Hey - Take off hoser!".  You might remember them.   While brother Dave was feigning being a beer-swilling Canadian hockey fan (and making a pile of dough on tv and the movies), brother Ian was making some incredible music.  He was in a number of bands before joining up with the group that in 1991 became The Boomers.

Let's start with their biggest hit - at least here in the Lower 48 -
 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PxEmnYFvAm0

Here is another wonderful tune - four guys in a classic two guitar / bass / drum band with an absolutely pure and simple song that incorporates clean solid rhythm, some fabulous bass playing and crisp vocal harmonies -
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y_2ZT7QzwAw&feature=related

And here is a song that I just can't play loudly enough while I'm driving in the car.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uKMcVHFZlYI&feature=related

Here's a tasty little tune that just makes you want to bounce..
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8FO0hIQ_bkU&feature=related

When I bought my first Boomer's album, I found myself categorizing it as Rock-Psychology since so many of the lyrics are deeply personal, penetrating and exceptionally thoughtful.  The band has four albums.  Check them out.

More info at - http://www.almarecords.com/artist.php?id=15

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Doing the Impossible...

I have a friend who is climbing Mt Baker this coming weekend and is making ready for the trip with training both mental and physical.  I noted today she had a post on her Facebook page about having a conversation with the climbers she is going with and she mentioned it was like "climbing with 5 Ueli Stecks".  I recognized the name of Ueli Steck having just recently seen a video of his made while climbing a Swiss mountain.

Take a few minutes and watch this video....then ask yourselft what, exactly, in any of our lives is so difficult as to be impossible.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xdHlyjM_8_E

Friday, July 8, 2011

The World's Smallest Political Quiz

If you're at all unsure of your political position - and who wouldn't be given the complete idiocy in the current political arena - here's a tiny quiz to take that will clearly define to you just where you stand in the political spectrum.

http://www.theadvocates.org/quiz

I scored as as Liberal.  Guess that's no surprise to anyone.  What choice do I have? I'm not rich enough to be a Republican.

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Have I slipped back in time???

I've been a satellite radio subscriber for several years now.  I spend a lot of time wandering the channels but I have several that are favorites including one called Margaritaville.  You can guess who the mainstay of that one is.  It turns out that Jimmy B and I have a number of things in common, including (a) being old (b) we're both pilots (c) both members of the airplane crash survivor's club (d) we've both been shot at and (e) both are writers.  I have to admit, he's had a bit more success at publishing his works that me but still, we're obviously kindred spirits in this nutty world that expects more adherence to convention than either of us have been able to adopt.  Oh, ond we both like the odd and sometimes offbeat musician.

So last night, while doing my best to confirm to a common sense approach to life and driving to Famous Project Manager's school, the folks at Margaritaville popped on a tune by a band called "The Explorer's Club".  That caught my attnention because, of course, the Explorer's Club - the real one not the band - is an extra cool bunch of adventurers the likes of Robert Peary (first to the North Pole), Roald Amundsen (first to South Pole), Sir Edmund Hillary (first to the summit of Everest), and Neil Armstong, Buzz Aldrin, and Michael Collins and if you don't know what they were first at I think you might be hopeless.  Anyway, the "new" Explorer's Club seems to have decided to channel the Beach Boys.  These South Carolina guys stopped me cold when I heard them sing. 

Check this out - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cgLiYy5uYhw

Then, just to show you I'm not really nuts - give a listen 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7QB2Ck00YZ8&feature=fvst

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Game Seven...What a Series!!!

Game Seven for the cup....
At times I find myself comparing life to a hockey game, or more correctly comparing life to a series such as we are seeing played out now.  Some days I just don't want to get up and keep pushing, I'd rather lay around and watch a little tv, read the paper and then maybe go for a hike.  I don't think it works that way either in life, or in hockey.  It certainly hasn't for the teams from Boston and Vancouver, who somehow manage to keep finding the strength to skate one more time.  Maybe those plus one million dollar salaries help, but still, after being pounded for six hours, I think I might just drift off to the side and try to be invisible.

Tonight is the final meeting of the teams for the 2011 Stanley Cup when Vancouver meets Boston in Rogers Arena in Vancouver.  I'm hoping to see a bit more of what's pictured in the attached photo with the puck somehow managing to slip past the incredible wall of Tim Thomas.  It's hard to wish defeat on him given the completely unbelievable performance he has had in this series, but I do wish the best for the "almost" hometown Canucks.

After this, no more hockey until October.  Grrr.

Thursday, May 12, 2011

The Stanley Cup

Hockey. In my opinion there is simply no other sport to rival it. The speed, the intensity, the barely contained violence, the grace, the skill - all these things combined into one high speed, high-def, tecnicolor expression of the most elemental competitive spirit exhibited by man.  And the Stanley Cup represents the culmination of all those things. 
The Stanley Cup - The Cup, Lord Stanley's Cup, or even the Holy Grail it's sometimes called - is the reward for a season of skating and hitting and, ultimately, winning more than any other team.  The original cup was awarded to the top ranked Canadian amateur team - the Montreal Hockey Club - in 1893.  Since then it's passed to the professional teams in the NHL - starting in 1926. 

In the NHL each team plays 82 regular season games.  That's 82 games of intensity and pain.  The reward for the teams with the best records at the end of the regular season is the chance to play more.  The top eight teams from the two conferences - East and West - have three playoff rounds of best-of-seven series to qualify for the Stanley Cup game.

Tonight - May 12 - the San Jose Sharks and the Detroit Redwings face off in game seven of the Western Conference semifinals.  The winner advances to play the Vancouver Canucks in the Western Conference finals.  In the Eastern Conference it's between the Boston Bruins and the Tampa Bay Lightning.

The last few games of the year will dial up the intensity of an already intense game.  Take the time to tune in for some of these contests and see for yourself if you can imagine what it takes to invest the energy required into this line of work. 


Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Tired of the Big City??


There was mention in the paper last week about a dispute between the citizenry of Lost Springs Wyoming and the Census Bureau.  It turns out the official count was wrong - Lost Springs has tripled it's population to 3!!!!

That got me to thinking about small towns.  I mean REALLY small towns.  After a bit of exploring thanks to Google (bless you Al Gore) here is a collection of fascinating information you can use when planning your move to the quiet, rural paradises we didn't know about.

Other towns in the US with a claimed population of 1 from the 2010 census:
Criehaven, Maine. 
Hibberts Gore, Maine
Keil Township, Minnesota
Township 157-30, Minnesota (should also be awarded something for the weirdest town name)
Dix's Grant, New Hampshire
Greens' Grant, New Hampshire
Bonanza, Utah (wonder what Little Joe Cartwright things of this one?)
Hanks, North Dakota (only one town in this state?)
Hobart Bay, Alaska
Holy City, California (this one surprised me - California??)
Laurier, Washington (I've even been here but must have blinked)
Monowi, Nebraska
and the oddly named Oil Springs Reservation, New York

The winner of the smallest town in the US is Hoot Owl Oklahoma.  They actually claimed a population of 0 in the 2000 census.  That's zero, down from a high of 5 in 1990.  By 2010 it has returned to a crowd of 4.

Next time you're feeling overwhelmed by traffic as you try to drive I-5 into Seattle, just remember Lost Springs.

Monday, March 14, 2011

Japanese Tragedy

I hardly know what to say about this.  Obviously there has been plenty written already along with hours and hours of video coverage on television and on youtube.  I look through the videos and can hardly comprehend what I'm seeing.  Makes you wonder just how good a grip we actually have on our lives when you see how quickly it can all just go away.

Obviously we need to help these people.  And just hope we aren't the next in line to live through a horror like this.

Do what you can to help and do what you can to prepare yourselves.

Friday, February 4, 2011

The Wolverine Way

For some odd reason, wolverines have been getting my attention of late, with a recent lecture by a USFS biologist regarding research in the Cascades and then this book, which I stumbled onto in the local library. I have to admit, I'm baffled as to why this is the first book by Doug Chadwick I've read. It was not, however, the last. Let me sum up this work by saying it is an incredible read with information about what is clearly one of the most interesting animals on the planet and by quoting Mr Chadwick on his summary of this animal.....

"If wolverines have a strategy, it's this: Go hard, and high, and steep, and never back down, not even from the biggest grizzly, and least of all from a mountain. Climb everything: trees, cliffs, avalanche chutes, summits. Eat everybody: alive, dead, long-dead, moose, mouse, fox, frog, its still-warm heart or frozen bones."

Douglas Chadwick

I'm glad I'm not a frog in Indonesia....

When I was a young and idealistic university student of Wildlife Biology at the time when the term "ecology" was just being invented, there were still salmon and swordfish aplenty. Not only could you order either fish at a restaurant and feel no anguish over impacting a population, we didn't even grasp the concept of impacting a population. If there were farmed salmon, I'd never heard of them. If there was a dramatic decrease in the size of swordfish taken in the Atlantic fishery, it hadn't been realized yet.


Fast forward a few years and I still won't order the sword at dinner - although I have given up criticizing those who do. And not only has sportfishing for salmon fallen on hard times, the commercial venture from California to Oregon has all but disappeared. Alaska is feeling it as well and as we all know, there are salmon species that travel the Columbia that are still listed as endangered. So what do you suppose we have learned from our years and years of overfishing and the stunning impact it had on the marine fishery? Apparently nothing.

It seems that somewhere between 200 million and 1 billion (that's with a 'B') frogs are eaten every year. Indonesia leads the export market, so being a frog there makes it a real challenge to live a long and prosperous froggy life. While I am not a particular fan of frog legs and feet, it would seem there are plenty of folks that are. Having eaten them, I can confirm that they taste like chicken - as long as the chicken spent it's life in a pot of water. So it's sort of like eating a wet, fishy chicken.

It might be worth trying to remember the lessons we've learned in the world's oceans. Or maybe our froggie friends really will croak.
For more details on this whole unpleasant amphibian disaster - read this - http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/28876555

Saturday, January 22, 2011

Wenatchee Outdoors.ORG

The main reason I work to hang on to Black Bear Lodge (aka Pine River Cabin) is to be able to access the incredible country in Central Washington. At the headwaters of the Wenatchee River at Lake Wenatchee, and just a short drive from Stevens Pass, the cabin places you in one of the most varied and scenic locales in all of the United States.

That may sound like a bold statement, but consider what you can find there.

A half hour west of the cabin and you are at the Cascade Crest for either skiing at Stevens or striking out on the Cascade Crest Trail. Dozens of other access points along the way provide access to hiking, mountain biking, snowshoeing into some of the most dramatic scenery you can imagine. Head north and you can make your way to trailheads on Phelps Creek and into the Spider Meadows country or to Trinity and the trails along the Chiwawa River that lead directly into the Glacier Peak Wilderness.

Head east and thirty minutes takes you beyond Leavenworth into the drying ponderosa forest that eventually opens into the sunny and lovely Wenatchee Valley with the Columbia River. Rainfall drops from over a hundred inches to about ten and the terrain is suddenly open and expansive. The two rivers - the Wenatchee and the Columbia - offer mulitple opportunities for any kind of water recreation you can imagine.

Here is a link to a fabulous website that offers extensive information on the area.

http://www.justgetout.net/Wenatchee/

For a quick intro check out this video from the website.
http://vimeo.com/7235177

Let me know when you are ready to visit so we can get you hooked up with Black Bear Lodge!!

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Mammoth Mountain

On Thursday the 13th, Larry O'keefe, Berl Nussbaum and myself flew to Mammoth Lakes CA via San Jose and enjoyed the free beer passed out on Horizon Airlines. It was Larry's first trip on Horizon and he was like a kid in a candy store once he realized he was traveling with an airline that actually encouraged you to drink beer.

For all of us it was the first trip to this beautiful location and it required spending some time with a map to figure out where it was even located. I've heard of Mammoth for years and knew it was somehow associated with LA so had assumed it to be somewhere nearby, but I was actually surprised at the location on the east slopes of the Sierra Nevada, just southeast of Yosemite.

That close to the rugged peaks near that wonderful park it comes as no surprise that Mammoth is a stunning location. It is a bit of surprise, however, when you ski down mid-mountain and discover a fenced off area with warning signs encouraging you to avoid the toxic fumes spewing from an active volcanic vent. Imagine that! Skiing in Southern California on a volcano! Spectacular.

It's called Mammoth for a good reason, the mountain is enormous with 3500 acres and 28 lifts. Of course, on weekends the crowds are also mammoth since it's only about five hours or so from the nearest LA suberbs. We were told that on Saturday the 14th there were 36,000 skiers on the hill. As you might imagine, the lift lines were huge.

On Friday, however, it was fantastic. No lines, no clouds, no way it could have been better. Snow conditions were absolutely perfect in spite of the 40 degree weather and we were able to sample nearly the entire mountain. It's just too huge to cover all in one day unless the only objective is to traverse the area, so there are still many lifts I have yet to lay eyes on. Another trip is most certainly in the future.

We avoided the crowds on Saturday - remember this was MLK weekend so it was particularly nuts - by going 20 miles north to a small local hill, also owned by Mammoth Ski Corp - called June Mountain. Again, beautiful weather, completely manageable lines, and a fabulous time.

Friday, January 7, 2011

A Springboard Event

In January of 1996 the company I worked for was acquired by one of Ross Perot's gigantic corporations and underwent the typical remake to mirror the image of the new owner. We went from a small, privately held firm of about 120 people to being a part of an international company of many thousands.

The upside to such an acquisition is typically one of financial solvency and the adoption of a series of new tools, systems, processes and a remake of the culture. In this case, I had no interest in joining this particular firm for reasons that really no longer matter. As soon as the change was announced I began laying plans for my departure and next adventure.

When the changeover took place, the new owners, in a moment of generosity granted us all our full year's worth of vacation effective immediately. I think this was meant as an act of thoughtfulness and an opportunity for folks to take a little time off to readust to the new much more rigid culture. I took them up on it. I took my entire four weeks and disappeared for the month of February. I then returned. And quit.

I spent that year, from the first of March through about mid-September working with a partner to create a website devoted to boating in the salt water of the Northwest. We flew all over the place, from Olympia to Point Roberts, taking pictures of all the islands and bays and marinas and then built what would still be considered a first class website today. It subsequently sold to a couple of ambitious guys from Microsoft, but it kept me busy for months before that.

What I learned from that spring and summer, in addition to how to build websites and how to try to sell advertising on them, was that what seems like a lot of time when you are at the beginning of it somehow turns into not very much as you near the end. I promised myself that if I ever again was offered a chance to have time all to me, just to do what I wanted with it, I'd not waste as second of it, but dive right in and get busy.

This past Wednesday I was relieved of command at my job. Here I am, with time handed me, and another opportunity to invest my energy into the things I am deeply interested in. So I'm getting started.

There are a couple of ski trips in the next week. There is a lot of writing to ramp back up and complete. There is the opportunity to learn some new things - like classes in writing and publishing, like piano lessons. A chance to focus on my own health and spend time outdoors and get together with family and friends - this list goes on and on.

Expect a bit more activity here on this blog in the coming weeks. I'll keep you posted on things as we progress, share a few bits of writing with you, take you along on some of these terrific ski trips and generally just do a better job of connecting with the rest of the world.

As I was describing all this to my son Zeke, he said to me, "Wow - this is really a springboard event for you!". I like that phrase. It sort of sums up where I am right now and offers a picture of what this means. I'm on the end of the board, bouncing up and down, trying to decide if it will be a back flip or a full gainer of a one and a half. And even if it ends up in a belly flop, I can't wait to get busy!!!!

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