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30 of our most Recent Postings:
- Legacy Journal
- Legacy Journal:Trifecta: Olympic Games, Democratic Convention, Quad State visit
- Legacy Journal: Olympic Swimming Prep
- Legacy Journal:080808: The China Olympic Games
- Legacy Journal:080808: The China Olympic Games
- Legacy Journal: B&B on the Erie Canal
- Legacy Journal: Summer Swing
- Legacy Journal: Thursday Thoughts: Twitter, Triathlons for Horses, and Obama One on Tour
- Legacy Journal: High Finance, Bad Loans, and Banking Reform
- Legacy Journal: Sunday Chatter x 3: ABC, NBC, and CBS
- Legacy Journal: Monroe County: Politics, the Carousel, and the Onterio Beach
- Legacy Journal: 50th Malin High School Reunion
- Legacy Journal: 2008 mid-point
- Legacy Journal: Walking with Religion---Walking with Nature
- Legacy Journal: Sunday Supplement
- Legacy Journal: Would you believe that ----?
- Legacy Journal: Tiger Woods: Mental Toughness, Physical Fitness, and Winner with Warriors.
- Legacy Journal: Defending the First Amendment
- Legacy Journal: Food for Thought and Summer Snow
- Legacy Journal: Toxic Planet or Better Living thru Chemistry?
- Legacy Journal: The Toughest Job in America
- Legacy Journal: Controlling Carbon: You Go First
- Legacy Journal: The U.S. Senate: Paying Attention to the Details with Dianne Feinstein.
- Legacy Journal: More Music from Rochester and the Village of Fairport
- Legacy Journal: Water: the Wilds of Wyoming and Beijing, China---A western perspective.
- Legacy Journal: Neurosurgery-- A Short Memoire
- Legacy Journal: Pops Music at the Eastman in Rochester
- Legacy Journal: Sounding Off on the Shape of Things to Come.
- Legacy Journal: Summit Dr. Flowers of Spring
- Legacy Journal: The facts on Global Warming
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[ Tuesday, July 01, 2008 08:51 ]
Legacy Journal: 2008 mid-point
Section:
Commentary
Summary:
At the mid-point of 2008 where have we been and where are we going? ∞ is not the answer.
* At the 4th of July break, it is time for BB, BBQ, and Root Beer.
** The Olympic Trials are underway and the summer rec programs, including swimming lessons for the kids are underway.
Main:
Meanwhile, there is really little new News.
The politicians are traveling abroad; western wild rivers are benefiting from record snow packs in the the Sierra, the Cascades, and the Rockies. The babies, the mail, and FedEx packages are still being delivered, strawberries are in the fields and markets, people are mowing their lawns and going about their business, and the U.S. continues to be the destination of choice for the world’s young, mobile, and talented elites. Life is good.
More:
Footnotes:
Bottom Line: • Cal Water New: • Calendar: • Tuesday: • Climate: • Forecasting: • Fact Check: • Features: • Graphic: • Image: • Have a Good Day!: • IT3 Tech: • Internet Tech: • Google: • Calendar: • Political Watch: • Swimming: • Training: • Washington Watch: • Young at Heart: • (0) Comments: • (0) Trackbacks: • Permalink:
[ Tuesday, May 13, 2008 11:36 ]
Legacy Journal: Haying in the upper John Day River Valley
Section:
Environment
Summary:
Main:
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 primitive iron wheeled implements.
Now, rubber shod Ford tractors were fitted with mowing machines and blades that were carefully sharped daily, a canvas canopied 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 overshot loose hay stacking in the field
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. My red haired teen age cousin John was an only child, so he particularly benefited from the youthful annual gathering of the youthful hay crew.
One memorable summer, Jimmy Howard , a Prairie City townie, and I were the designated power hay buck jockeys. We had a spirited racing competition. Our cockpit perches were open air, the wind was in our unprotected faces, the bugs between out teeth , and our 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 today, he would be 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 out of Madris on the Deschutes River near Billy Chinook Resevoir. The tribe is now the largest private land owners in the state.
More:
Footnotes:
Backgrounder: • Biography: • Black and White: • Boot Camp: • Calendar: • Tuesday: • Chronicles: • Climate: • Northern Exposure: • Culture Clash: • Energy: • Alternative Sources: • Environment: • Water: • Expressions: • Western: • Family: • Features: • Graphic: • Photo: • Video Link: • Fitness: • Food: • Harvest: • Have a Good Day!: • IT3 Tech: • Internet Tech: • Google: • Calendar: • Keystone Concepts: • Memory Lane: • Mile Post: • Oregon: • Perpetual Green: • Show and Tell: • Tall Tales: • Traditions: • Transitions: • Values: • Voice: • Original: • Warriors: • Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow: • (0) Comments: • (0) Trackbacks: • Permalink:
[ Sunday, April 27, 2008 08:09 ]
Legacy Journal: Sunday Big Sur International Marathon
Section:
Sports
Summary:
The ultimate in spring time weekend warrior events in California includes The Big Sur International Marathon. The Triathlon tribal gathering at Wild Flower, and the DamFast open water swim at Lake Berryessa would be other examples.
Main:
: The start is at 0700 at Ranger Station on Hiway 1 high above the foggy Pacific Ocean. The finish is at Camel Village at the entrance to Carmel Valley just south of Carmel-by-the-Sea.
This is Mission Ranch, Junipero Serra, and Clint Eastwood country. The vaqueros and the Padres are not running today.
:: Damon Fisk is bib# 3888. If the support crew does its job and the knees hold up, he should finish before the 6 hour closing time at 1300 PDT.
::: Meanwhile, Bill Clinton has been entertaining the locals in Junction City, Oregon 3 weeks before the state mail-in primary. The results may be interesting.
This weekend, Barak is hanging out closer to home. His exercise plans may include some Chicago hoops with his brother-in-law, the new MBB Beaver coach at Oregon State University in Corvallis, Benton County, Oregon. To the best of our knowledge, Obama has not used up his NCAA eligibility.
More:
Footnotes:
Calendar: • Sunday: • Chronicles: • Exercise and Health: • Features: • Graphic: • Photo: • Have a Good Day!: • IT3 Tech: • Internet Tech: • Google: • Calendar: • News: • Sports: • Well Seasoned: • Young at Heart: • (0) Comments: • (0) Trackbacks: • Permalink:
[ Thursday, March 20, 2008 11:44 ]
Legacy Journal: Spring, Easter, and NCAA MBB
Section:
FrontPage
Summary:
The Definition of the Perfect Trifecta -
* Spring Cleaning:
** Easter Weekend:
*** NCAA Men’s BB Tournament:
Main:
: Happiness in Spring can be defined as starter plant seeds in the nursery beginning to sprout young shoots, sighting the neighborhood marmot coming out of hibernation, watching the house cat eye the returning Cardinals in the bear berry brush outside the window, a bracing circle walk with a hot chocolate pit stop with Miss Emma. The wind chill reading was 10 degrees at 0800.
:: The Easter Sunday will include some pool laps, Church Music and a trip to the Finger Lakes for a Birthday Brunch.
::: Meanwhile, the first round brackets of March Madness are the real deal if the first day is any indication. The quality of the coaching, the caliber of play, and the parity are all impressive. Now it is time to put in the supply of hot dogs and some munchies for those late night contests.
Meanwhile, Revkin of Dot Earth blog at the nytimes has noted that the sun as returned to the Arctic region and that the annual summer encampment of scientists studying the ice, water and ocean floor will soon be returning. Strategic issues like continental shelf territorial claims , Northwest Passage, and Northeast Passage shipping lanes at at stake. The science is preliminary at best.
On the carbon front, it appears that the Norwegians has taken up the fine ART of creative carbon accounting. They offset their oil production and consumption with carbon credits from the planting of trees in Africa.
More:
Footnotes:
Dressing Room: • Have a Good Day!: • Leap of Faith: • Mood: • Predictions: • Traditions: • Truth Telling: • (0) Comments: • (0) Trackbacks: • Permalink:
[ Friday, January 25, 2008 12:59 ]
Legacy Journal: Science on the Run, Media Muddle, and the Local Weather
Section:
Environment
Summary:
* New junkies are getting whiplash. First ABC evening news nice guy, Charlie Gibson, polishes his exit with a pretty picture of the first sign of spring. It is a brief view of the sun peaking over the horizon at Pt Barrow Alaska. Then the ABC GMA sunrise crew chirps in with a full light clip on the use of mobile Arctic Norwhales being tagged by a research team with temperatures sensors. The sensors record realtime water temperatures as the pod cruises for food in the open Arctic channels off the west coast of Greenland. The team is assisted by noble and knowledgeable native kayak builders, paddlers, and hunters. Franz Boas of Baffin Bay fame must be smiling. Yet another early morning weekend crew the recent California rain, snow and avalanche deaths to yet further evidence of AGW . They almost came unglued over pictures of a cute Zoo born Polar bear cub.
The disconnect is the light. Most fifth graders know that the Arctic regions are cold and dark in winter. Yet, the GMA report fails to date and time their picture. Is there a problem here?
** Meanwhile, primary politics is piling up and piling on. It is five men standing on the Republican side. One woman, two men and one proxy standing on the
Democrat side. The good news is that one field of candidates appear to be serious about civility and putting their best public faces, feet, and voices forward. The controversy focused media is not pleased, but voters are ecstatic.
*** Today the D&C and ABC WHAM, weather guy, Glenn Johnson explains that space satellites can report images, infrared date, and atmospheric water vapor information. That data can report on jet engine contrails and open ocean water channels through the summer Arctic Ocean ice packs. Apparently, satellites are not able to accurately report the temperature on the earth side of clouds. Nor are they able to take photographs of the North Pole in the dark of winter.
Main:
: Meanwhile, Revkin of the nytimes Dot Earth blog has a piece that outlines the scientific framework of his views. His lead is begins, The world’s largest group of earth scientists says “the human footprint on Earth is apparent.” The UGS, incorporated in Washington, D.C., and its active 12 subgroup leadership including the Atmosphere group are examples. Revkin also mentions the AGS and includes part of their October 2006 policy statement.
“The Geological Society of America (GSA) supports the scientific conclusions that Earth’s climate is changing; the climate changes are due in part to human activities; and the probable consequences of the climate changes will be significant and blind to geopolitical boundaries. Furthermore, the potential implications of global climate change and the time scale over which such changes will likely occur require active, effective, long-term planning. GSA also supports statements on the global climate change issue made by the joint national academies of science (June 2005), American Geophysical Union (December, 2003), and American Chemical Society (2004). GSA strongly encourages that the following efforts be undertaken internationally:
(1) adequately research climate change at all time scales,
(2) develop thoughtful, science-based policy appropriate for the multifaceted issues of global climate change,
(3) organize global planning to recognize, prepare for, and adapt to the causes and consequences of global climate change,
(4) organize and develop comprehensive, long-term strategies for sustainable energy, particularly focused on minimizing impacts on global climate.”
:: TimeInc has a Climate Change piece called Winds of Change. It is not serious science. Sadly, the article is sophomoric in style, superficial in analysis, and scant in originality. Here is an example.
“You have Republicans and Democrats getting on board with this,” says Eileen Claussen, president of the Pew Center on Global Climate Change, “and the reason why is because the public is increasingly there already.” Think about the logic and the grammar: “ increasingly there already”. As Mrs Van taught in the fourth grade, “ Either we have arrived at the station, or we have not.” End of story.
::: Finally, a very cool blog. Snow biking in Alaska. Now there is something that Californians transplanted to western upstate New York can identify with.
More:
Footnotes:
Bright Lights: • Calendar: • Friday: • Chances are ---: • Certainty: • Cherry Picking: • Climate: • Climate Change: • Critical Questions: • Northern Exposure: • Counter Currents: • Data: • Numbers: • Earth Sciences:: • Environment: • Advocacy: • Studies: • Fact vs Fiction: • Features: • Graphic: • Image: • Have a Good Day!: • Hot and Cold: • Lights Out: • Media Watch: • Smarter than a 5th Grader?: • TV Journalism: • Missing Parts: • Nature: • News: • Good News: • Northern Lights: • Political Watch: • Really? A Reality Check: • Science and Technology: • Natural Sciences: • Physical Sciences: • Show and Tell: • Snow Flakes: • Tall Tales: • Filling in the Blanks: • Tenure: • Truth Telling: • Winter Watch: • (0) Comments: • (0) Trackbacks: • Permalink:
[ Saturday, January 19, 2008 15:37 ]
Legacy Journal: Real Cold in Carolina, Coal, and ABR
Section:
Almanac
Summary:
* Some media pundits are predicating that the weather in the northwest corner of South Carolina may effect the Huckaby turnout. They may not be aware of the North Dakota effect. A National Geographic writer made the mistake of appearing to dis the state in a recent article. The temperate response of the state’s citizenry and leadership prompted Charlie Gibson of ABC News to name the state “Person of the Week” Have a good weekend.
** Scots have been using coal for a long time. Coal, iron and willing workers helped build the railroad lines that allowed the for the rapid and reliable delivery of mail, newspapers and people a throughout the British Isles. Books publishing flourished and station book sales boomed as a result.
*** Meanwhile, look for a ABR movement early this year. It will have stealthy and crafty anti-Mormon tone. But, it is a dangerous and unpopular tactic. Recently, the grandson of M. Gandhi, a resident of Brighton, NY was asked to resign his position with a University of Rochester affiliated peace and non-violence foundation after he wrote a web piece offensive to local Jews with holocaust sensitivities.
Main:
: Folks in most parts of the country are not intimidated by weather. Nor are they fearful of cyclic ice age climate change that moves at a glacial geologic creeping pace.
A recent biography of van Allen of Iowa has a picture of him and other scientists working on defense related missile and satellite research at the South Pole in 1958 where the average temperature was reported as - 58 degrees. His former grad student, James Hanson of NASA Goddard is not mentioned in the book.
:: The slums of Glasgow, Scotland were fertile recruiting grounds for early Mormons including Brigham Young. The Eccles family is one example. Mariner Eccles was in the FDR administration and was part of the first draft of the Federal Reserve System.
::: And yes, there is a small book out on the life and record of Mitt Romney. Predictably, it is modest, polite, and plain spoken.
:::: And aside. The Swedish firm, MySQL will become part of Sun Micro of Silicon Valley. To the best of our knowledge, the deal is Carbon Neutral.
More:
Footnotes:
Biography: • Calendar: • Saturday: • Climate: • Northern Exposure: • Culture Clash: • Energy: • Coal: • Have a Good Day!: • Leap of Faith: • MySQL: • News: • Good News: • Personalities: • Political Watch: • Predictions: • Religion: • Christian: • Judism: • Snow Flakes: • Straight Talk: • Voice: • Hired Guns: • Weather Watch: • (0) Comments: • (0) Trackbacks: • Permalink:
[ Monday, December 24, 2007 13:05 ]
Legacy Journal: On Christmas Eve, Peace and Good Will.
Section:
Briefs
Summary:
The snow is fresh in Rochester, NY. The moon is full, shoppers are out and about, music and good will are in the air.
So, bake some cookies with the kids, take a bracing walk, write a note, wrap a gift, have some oyster stew. Gather and celebrate.
Main:
Take a break from worry and woe, and be of good cheer.
More:
Footnotes:
Amazing: • Calendar: • Monday: • Community Service: • Counter Currents: • Family: • Food for Thought: • Have a Good Day!: • IT3 Tech: • Internet Tech: • Google: • Calendar: • Leap of Faith: • News: • Good News: • Winter Watch: • Virtues: • Charity: • (0) Comments: • (0) Trackbacks: • Permalink:
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