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  • 30 of our most Recent Postings:

    1. Legacy Journal
    2. Legacy Journal: Billy and the Bike: A Memoire of Deschutes Country
    3. Legacy Journal: Memory Lane
    4. Legacy Journal: Water, Swimming, and going with the Tide.
    5. Legacy Journal: Haying in the upper John Day River Valley
    6. Legacy Journal: Mother’s Day, Tessa’s 4th BD, and the Lilacs are Blooming in Highland Pk
    7. Legacy Journal:  the Professional Specialists v the Gentlemen PolyMaths: Having it All?
    8. Legacy Journal: May Day Musings: Muddling through the Maize
    9. Legacy Journal:  Wednesday Leanings
    10. Legacy Journal: Sunday Big Sur International Marathon
    11. Legacy Journal: Saturday Prep
    12. Legacy Journal: Fremont in Oregon
    13. Legacy Journal: Saturday West timeline, first Native American “fossil” and Tracktown.
    14. Legacy Journal: Hooray of the train.
    15. Legacy Journal: Steve Chu of the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
    16. Legacy Journal: Klamath in Triplicate-- 1846 Carson, Fremont and Gillespie
    17. Legacy Journal:Ranch Memoires
    18. Legacy Journal: Mustang- Myths, Mascots and Machines
    19. Legacy Journal: Darwin’s Man at Harvard: Asa Grey, Botony : collectioning and writing.
    20. Legacy Journal:  Saturday Science Session
    21. Legacy Journal: Rochester Rites of Spring: Squash, Squash, and more Squash
    22. Legacy Journal: Saturday Style and Substance
    23. Legacy Journal: Friday Final Edition:  Philanthropy, mandates, and Spring in the Rockies
    24. Legacy Journal: Tuesday Lessions: Maps, Tall Tales, Western Trails
    25. Legacy Journal:  Mellow Monday
    26. Legacy Journal:  Spring, Easter, and NCAA MBB
    27. Legacy Journal: Race, Coals to Newcastte, and Wednesday Technology
    28. Legacy Journal: Economic Moral Hazard
    29. Legacy Journal: Happy St. Patrick’s Day and Go Green
    30. Legacy Journal: Sunday Shoot Out

    LogRoller® : Keyword searching our LegacyJournal postings begins here.

    [ Thursday, May 15, 2008 08:06 ]

    Legacy Journal: Water, Swimming, and going with the Tide.

    Section:

    Watercooler

    Summary:

    A run up to the Olympic Games 080808

    Main:

    I do not recall a time that I have not regarded water from a mostly positive point of view. Maybe it it the surname Fisk, Swedish for fish; maybe it is a vestigial DNA remnant from a former Chinook salmon tree of life ancestor.

    Oh, there was a little chop along the way. I recall the time I had to pull my two year old sister out of the deep freeze drink when she fell through an ice bridge while crossing a rushing Strawberry Creek that ran through Grandpa’s place where we were otherwise spending a traditional, safe , cozy, kid centered eastern Oregon Christmas. Today, she has no recollection of the event. 

    Come to think of it, I have experienced some seasick moments crossing the bar at the mouth of the Columbia River at Astoria, and rolling with the waves in a storm while waiting to dock at the lime stone cliffs Dover after an English Channel ferry crossing on.  But, those were mostly no harm - no foul events.

    Water for me is all about fun, motion, beauty and power. 

    My Rites of Passage included climbing up Horsetail Falls with a full pack into the Desolation Wilderness Area above Lake Tahoe to the granite moonscape of the high Sierra that is the snowy source of the American River, fishing behind beaver dams on the Klamath Indian Reservation, SCUB diving solo in mile high alpine Lake Strawberry, spring time water skiing on Lake Shasta with all of my 34 Malin H.S. senior classmates, and carving a pattern of syncopated 15 ft rooster tails behind a single fiberglass slolom ski while skimming across glassy smooth surface of Lake-of-the-Woods during quiet midweek evening after work at the Klamath Fall molding plant. 

    Watching white water pound over the spillways at Grande Coulee, Bonneville, and Hoover Dams was also part of my experience exploring the American west .

    Another part of my expanding experience included the waves of the warm Atlantic in Southern Florida.  Even the wind driven, poison laden Portuguese Men-of-War cast up on the beach could not deter youthful curiosity. 

    The lure of water adventuring matured into vacations to Makaha Beach for viewing the Surfing Championships and weekend sailing in western San Francisco Bay from a berth in Sausalito, and bare-boat cruising in the the U.S. and British Virgin Islands.  Free diving the reefs, challenging the surge of the surf and tides among the lava flows and cavorting with the dolphins around the Capt Cook Memorial in Hawaii’s Kialakekua Bay was part of the fun and part of the adventure challenge. 

    However, the best was yet to come with a two year experience with the DAM swimming club in Davis, CA.  A local, the non Marvel comic character, Ironman Triathlete Dave Scott, was the founding coach of that group, now largest Masters Club in the U.S.A.  For two years on a 0545 and 1000 AM x 7 day x 52week schedule, I learned about the power of swimming, I had missed watching Johnny Weismuller on Tarzan B-W films, taking summer polio season swimming lessons at the Redmond Community Pool , or later doing after work laps in the Malin Community pool in hopes of making a University frosh swimming team.

    What I had previously missed was the power of good technique, proper coaching, disciplined practice and group support.  Much of my group support came from charter Davis DAM members and workout regulars like Steve Watson, Harry Colvin, Susan Munn, and Lucille Richards.  They, and others, were youthful beyond their seventy plus years.  One result was a trip to St. George, Utah, the Huntsman Senior Games, and a swimming event metal.

    Among our group, there was a running debate as to who or what had launched our shared love of the water.  Truth to be told, in the men’s dressing room, the usual winner was the ever youthful Esther Williams.  I can not speak to the conversations in the women’s dressing room.

    However, I can guarantee that the DAM dressing room chatter will be focused on Olympic Swimming times and records come August, 2008 in Bejiing China

    More:

    Footnotes:

    [ Tuesday, May 13, 2008 11:36 ]

    Legacy Journal: Haying in the upper John Day River Valley

    Section:

    Environment

    Summary:

    “Hay is the foundation of civilization in the northern climes"---- futurist, physicist, and Templeton Award winner Freeman Dyson

    image

    image

    Main:

    Going Green at Sixteen by Doug Fisk, May 2008

    For the Fisks and the Forrests mid-July in the fifies was a time for three generations to gather and Go Green.

    On working cattle ranches in the upper John Day Valley of eastern Oregon, haying season was and is serious business and a heck of a lot of fun.

    The Forrest ranch is 4,000 acre spread located just up river to the east of the pioneer village of Prairie City.  In its “hayday” “the ranch” was a cow and calf operation that shipped 1200 lb, lean and meaty 2year old grass fat steers to the Portland market or to a buyer from Safeway markets.  The deal was usually make on a handshake,

    One square mile of the ranch was green irrigated wild natural meadow grass that was mowed, sun dryed, winnow raked into rows, bucked up in bunches, and piled into loose two story high mounds using an overshot stacker. It was kind of a 2 weeks blitzkrieg that was hopefully free of thundershowers.  The harvest result became winter fodder and the only feed for the herd of carefully bred Herefords.  Home grown, individually selected, broad beamed cows, their gestating calves to be, range bulls imported from Red Bluff, CA, this year’s weaners, and last year’s yearlings were all the beneficiaries of open field winter feedings that were hand pitched daily from a low-rider hay wagon.  It was a cycle that was self sustaining, season driven and largely powered by machines that had replaced the preWWII one, two, and four horse powered teams hitched to primative iron wheeled implements.

    Now, rubber shod Ford tractors were fitted with mowing machines and blades that were carefully sharped daily, a canvas canopyed WWII jeep pulled the winnow rack, and the power hay bucks, pickup victims of road kill that were rescued, repaired and given new life in the winter shop. darted about the field like hounds fetching rabbits.  A big green stationary John Deere diesel was outfitted with a long ponderosa pine fork received the catch for stacking.

    The machine operators were mostly family high schoolers who gathered from around the state to bunk out at Uncle Orrin’s ranch, help in the kitchen, feast and put on weight around Auntie Christina’s huge table, man the equipment, and shoot some spirited pool in the basement after the evening chores were finished.  Teen age cousin John was an only child, so he particularly benefited from the kid gathering.

    One memorable summer, Jimmy Howard , a towny, and I were the designated power hay buck jockys.  We had a spirited racing competition.  Our cockpit perches were open ai, the wind and bugs were in your face, and your saddle like seats were unbelted.  The game was to see who could deliver the most hay to the stacker from soggy and slippery ditch banks and from the far fences bordering the fields. The hazards included the ignomy of getting stuck in the mud or running a fork down a gopher hole.  The competition continued after dinner around the green felt pool table in ranch house basement with Uncle Orrin quietly and approvingly looking on.
    .
    His ancient fiddle and his player piano was by that time mute and unused upstairs in the parlor where Strawberry Mountain to the south was framed in a picture window.

    The times, they do change.  The ranch was a major part of my uncle’s life.  He had passed on college to inherit the property from Grandpa Clyde.  That was the verbal bargain they made made many years prior and he had no regrets.  However, were he alive, he would have been saddened, if not despirited, by recent news.  The ranch has been sold by the third generation to the Consolidated Indian Tribes of the Warms Springs, now the largest private land owner in the state.

    More:

    Footnotes:

    [ Saturday, May 10, 2008 08:22 ]

    Legacy Journal: Mother’s Day, Tessa’s 4th BD, and the Lilacs are Blooming in Highland Pk

    Section:

    Arts and Culture

    Summary:

    Erika Little, daughter Tessa, live in the Lilac Festival, Highland neighborhood so this May weekend is to be a perfect Trifecta trice celebrated

    image

    Main:

    image

    image

    * First, Tessa Little is now officially four years old.  The California Princess has made the Rochester transition in style and is preping for KG in the Brighton School District in the Fall of 2009.  Meanwhile, she is continues to play the role of Emma's younger sister, best friend and student, cat tormentor, and non-stop asker of questions about how stuff works. 

    ** The Lilac Festival around the corner in Highland Park is in full bloom and the weekend music is swinging.  The opening parade with Strong Drum and Bugle Corps from the upstate region, is now history.

    *** Meanwhile, Erika Little has earned the title Mother of the Year.  Relocating cross country from California, finding and updating the perfect house, guiding the kids, working at the URMC, in a Clinical Research Unit, and hosting guests and visitors is only part of the Little story of the past eight months.

    The truth is, Mom’s tend to be the world’s most passionate warriors and best truth tellers.

    More:

    Footnotes:

    [ Thursday, May 08, 2008 13:29 ]

    Legacy Journal:  the Professional Specialists v the Gentlemen PolyMaths: Having it All?

    Section:

    None

    Summary:

    Peak performance across the board is difficult whether one is dancing with the stars or training as a triathlete.  Gina Koleta of the nytimes continues to impress with her columns on exercise and competition. 

    Main:

    The same can be said of country naturalists, like Charles Darwin, working and writing from home at in Kent during the haydays of 19th century Victorian England.  The amateurs with all their enthusiasm for beatles and barnicles, reputations protected by a coterie of friends and family, and popular publishing success , were being replaced by the professional academics, societies, laboratories, and the latest in German instrumentation and organized science research

    Meanwhile, the University of Rochester had a one day meeting at the City Convention Center for health care professionals treating women who are are pbese, diabetic or both. Guess what?

    * American women are eating more, exercising less ,and gaining weight just like the Pina Indians did after they gave up their hunting and gathering more than a century ago.

    * Fat woman are a risk for early death, growing big babies during pregnancy, having wound infections, and being difficult to manage during anesthesia and fetal evaluation exams like ultrasound.

    * They may even break standard delivery room and operating room tables.  Whoa!

    * Gastric bypass and banding surgery many have better, faster and more cost effective than medical therapy for morbid obesity in a properly selected population. 

    More:

    Footnotes:

    [ Saturday, April 12, 2008 06:38 ]

    Legacy Journal:Ranch Memoires

    Section:

    Sons and Daughters

    Summary:

    * Mission Ranch, Carmel, CA

    ** “Make my Weekend !”

    *** The sea side Gathering Place.

    Main:

    More:

    Footnotes:

    [ Tuesday, April 08, 2008 12:28 ]

    Legacy Journal: Darwin’s Man at Harvard: Asa Grey, Botony : collectioning and writing.

    Section:

    Education

    Summary:

    * Collecting:

    ** Writing:

    *** Legacy: HUH.

    **** Memorium:

    Main:

    A chronology of Gray’s life follows:
    Born Nov. 18, 1810 in Sauquot, N. Y. (Paris, Utica, Oneida CO)
    Studied at Clinton Grammar School under Orlando Kirkland, 1823-1824
    Studied at Fairfield Academy one year, probably 1824-1825
    Studied at College of Physicians and Surgeons, Fairfield, N.Y., starting autumn 1826; received degree of doctor of medicine in January 1831
    Began exchange of plants with John Torrey, 1830
    Taught science at Utica Gymnasium, May-July 1832, Jan-July 1833, Jan-July(?) 1834
    Collected for Torrey, summer 1833; worked for him in his house, fall 1833
    Taught at Hamilton College, summer 1834
    Visited Philadelphia with Torrey and collected in New Jersey for him, Sept. 1834; returned to Torrey’s house
    Worked on Elements of Botany in New York; finished April 1836
    Made librarian of New York Lyceum of Natural History, Feb. or March 1836
    Planned to participate in U.S. south seas expedition but delays led him to withdraw
    Appointed professor of botany at newly formed University of Michigan, 1838
    Traveled to Europe to buy books for Univ. of Michigan and to visit herbaria, Nov. 1838- Nov. 1839
    Began correspondence with George Engelmann, 1840
    Began a new textbook, 1841
    Appointed professor at Harvard, 1842
    Finished Manual, Dec. 1847
    First volume of Genera of the Plants of the U.S., appeared 1848
    Engaged to Jane Lathrop Loring, May 1847; married May 4, 1848
    June 1848 wedding trip to Washington, D.C.
    Went to Europe, June 1850 - Sept. 1851
    Botanical Textbook revised 1850, 1853, 1858
    To Europe, late summer 1855, for 21 days
    Second edition of Manual appeared 1856
    First Lessons in Botany and Vegetable Physiology, 1857
    How Plants Grow, 1858
    Involved in defense of Darwin starting 1859
    Field, Forest and Garden Botany, about 1867
    Went to Europe, Sept. 1868- Nov. 1869
    Went to California and came back by way of Dubuque, June - Aug., 1872
    How Plants Behave, 1872
    Gift of C.S. Sargent and H.H. Hunnewell allowed him to retire to work on North American Flora, 1873
    Traveled to southern U.S., March 1875-April 1875
    Darwiniana, 1876
    Traveled to southern Alleghenies, Aug. 1876 - Sept. 1876
    Traveled to California, July 1877 - Sept. 1877, with Hooker
    Traveled to southern Allehenies, June 1879
    Traveled to Europe, Sept. 1880- Oct. 1881; received LLD’s from Oxford, Cambridge and Edinburgh
    Traveled to Montreal, August 1882 for meeting of British Association for the Advancement of Science
    Traveled to St. Louis, May 1884; to Virginia, Sept. 1884
    Traveled to Mexico and southern California, Feb. - May 1885
    Received vase in honor of his 75th birthday, Nov. 18, 1885
    Traveled to Europe, April - Oct. 1887
    Died Jan. 30, 1888

    More:

    Footnotes:

    [ Saturday, April 05, 2008 05:25 ]

    Legacy Journal:  Saturday Science Session

    Section:

    Science and Technology

    Summary:

    image

    “I am quite conscious that my speculations run quite beyond the bounds of true science.” - From a letter to Asa Gray, Harvard biology professor, cited in Charles Darwin and the Problem of Creation, N.C. Gillespie, p.2)

    “A scientific man ought to have no wishes, no affections,—a mere heart of stone”

    “How paramount the future is to the present when one is surrounded by children”

    --------- Charles Darwin

    The preserved collection of the voluminous correspondence of Charles Darwin fills volumes and is the source of much of the current spate of publications on the man, his methods and his motives.  Part of that legacy can be found in the UK at the Darwin Correspondence Project.

    Main:

    : Asa Gray, Born 1810 in Oneida C. NY ,Fisher Professor of natural history, and Herbarium Director, Harvard University, 1842–88. Wrote numerous botanical textbooks and works on North American flora. President of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 1863–73; president of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, 1872; a regent of the Smithsonian Institution, 1874–88. Foreign member, Royal Society of London, 1873. One of his collectors was John C. Fremont.

    The Herbarium is part of the Harvard Museum of Natural History which shares its site with the Peabody Museum of Archeology and Ethnography.  The botany department, museum and medical school have graduated the drug culture cult hero, Andrew Weil of Philadelphia, San Francisco, and Arizona.

    Recently, part of the Gray Darwin correspondence, quote #2) has been lifted from Gillespie and used to attack the scientific (hypothesis, theory) of evolution and elevate the “theory of Creation Science”.

    More:

    Footnotes:


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