Posts filed under "Blog"
Housekeeping
It is the nature of life that the bulk of our time is spent maintaining the infrastructure. Perhaps you have mused on this from time to time: I work to afford the car payment, to pay for the car, that I need to get to work. That’s a simple flow chart, if you will, but […]
Read MoreSecrets
When I was telling some of my friends at Surfrider about this summer’s expedition, they all wanted to make sure that we wouldn’t be giving away any secrets about which beaches along the Olympic coast were the best for waves. I assured them that we would give out information only on a need-to-know basis and […]
Read MoreSaturday the 14th
After surviving another Friday-the-13th, I’m heading off to Anderson Island for an overnight with the Ikkatsu crew. In addition to the main group objectives – mostly having to do with camera and sound questions related to the filming process – each of us has our own little projects for this short trip. I know Steve […]
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Survey gear
The type of beach survey we’ll be doing on this summer’s Ikkatsu Expedition will follow the protocol laid out in the NOAA Marine Debris Shoreline Survey Field Guide. The particular method we’ll be using is called a Standing-stock Survey, a method based on counting the flotsam without actually removing it. There’s an element of random […]
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Morning medicine
If you feel under the weather, If you feel a little bit peeved, Take Granny’s stand-by potion, For any old cough or wheeze. It’s a cure for hepatitis, it’s a cure for chronic insomnia, It’s a cure for tonsillitis and for water on the knee. Tea in the morning, tea in the evening, tea at […]
Read MorePractice
Coming up this weekend is another overnight trip, a short paddle but a long camp (if that makes any sense.) In preparing for the Ikkatsu Expedition, we are trying a bunch of different camera techniques, experimenting with new gear and trying to work out some of the other things that will go into the survey […]
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Firewood round-up
With the days getting longer, and light getting here earlier and sticking around a little later, I’m hoping to enjoy a few more morning paddles that don’t require as much night vision. This morning was idyllic: flat calm water, slack current and no wind. I took the Bark 14 out for a spin, went south […]
Read MoreSchoolwork
One of the classes I’m teaching this semester is a small group project that is going to produce a guide book to the trails of Point Defiance Park. (I keep saying that because, as the end of the semester approaches, it seems less likely that it will happen.) No, I don’t mean that. It will […]
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Because we shoot things
The Japanese fishing vessel that was spotted off of Haida Gwaii is now 6000 feet deeper down, on the bottom of the sea. A US Coast Guard ship unloaded its ordnance on the drifting hulk; she never stood a chance. You can, if you have not already heard of the sinking, read the summary here. […]
Read MoreMany things
The full moon is a glowing platter in the early morning sky. The water in the Narrows is bathed in light, in the way that only a full moon can do. Somehow, in some arcane and pagan calculation, this particular full moon means that tomorrow is Easter Sunday. (Am I the only one that finds […]
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