Archive for the ‘Organizations/Programs’ Category

U.S. Forest Service and Ad Council Launch Campaign to Reconnect “Tweens” with Nature

Saturday, July 25th, 2009

The U.S. Forest Service joined with the Ad Council to launch this campaign. It’s a positive move toward motivating parents to get outside with their kids more. According to an article on the “Children and Nature” website:

The campaign primarily aims to reach “tweens” (children aged 8-12) and their parents. The goal is to encourage children to get outside and experience nature first-hand, instilling a life-long love for nature by fostering a connection with urban and national forests.

Children spend less time outdoors due to safety concerns, an increase in the number of working parents and the development of new technologies that capture free time indoors. As a result of this limited interaction with the outdoors, many children are unaware of the benefits that nature provides, including improving their physical and mental health and emotional well-being.

Hmm, a heck of a lot of adults should listen up too. The true figures state children spend 50% less time out of doors. Nonetheless, research showed that the “vast majority of children had a positive association with nature and wished they could spend more time out of doors.” Safety concerns just don’t allow children to hop on their bikes with buddies and go fishin’ somewhere for the day with stops at the local neighborhood market for penny candy or an ice cold Coca Cola. Sad isn’t it? We’ve let our society degrade far enough to limit activity that makes us better people—physically, mentally, and emotionally.

But I digress. I checked out the U.S. Forest Service website. There is a section “Just for Kids” wit-a-share-the-experience-photo contest. Trying to capture photos of wildlife is a great way to connect children with nature. I’ve been trying to do that myself. It doesn’t take a terrific camera to begin with, mostly time and patience watching nature. How many times we encounter something absolutely beautiful in nature and say, “If only I had a camera”

If you or your kids are on the PC all day anyway, check out U.S. Forest Service website and “Just for Kids.” They list fee free weekends at 100 national parks and just about everything else including maps, and all types of activities at parks near you.

Read more:

http://www.childrenandnature.org/news/detail/targeting_tweens_the_u.s._
forest_service_and_ad_council_launch_national_cam

Safari Club International Behind Policies That Interfere with Science and the Endangered Species Act

Monday, June 29th, 2009

Most of us know by now that decisions in congress have little to do with our will and much to do with powerful deep pocket lobbyists. Safari Club International a U.S. organization of trophy hunters is one such group that contributes primarily to the Republican Party and ingratiated itself with the Bush Administration and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Services at that time. I’ve written before that it was a travesty of justice for animals when the second Bush Administration elected Matthew Hogan as the acting director of U.S. Fish and Wildlife Services when he was formerly a SCI lobbyist. That was indeed the fox tending the henhouse.

But the SCI is nothing more than rich trophy hunters that seek the heads and skins of any type of animal whether endangered or not. If they had their way they would be hunting polar bears. According to Michael Satchell, a consultant to the Humane Society of the U.S., “With the help of friendly members of Congress and officials in USFWS, SCI has consistently attempted to navigate around the intent of the Endangered Species Act (ESA) and the Marine Mammal Protection Act (MMPA) and import once-banned trophies of endangered and threatened wildlife. Sometimes, the club has succeeded, sometimes not.”

It’s apparent SCI believes its hunting rights are above the law and works to make sure the law goes its way. And it did when the law to allow guns in our national parks was passed. This lovely little edict I wrote about was tucked inside a totally unrelated bill. I kept asking what good guns were inside a national park except to kill the animals that are supposed to be protected there, specifically wolves.

SCI saw it the same way. SCI just announced it will throw its money and power against any type of wolf protection in the courts, and help with planned wolf hunts in the Northern Rockies according to Defenders of Wildlife. Why is this not a surprise? SCI is behind Sarah Palin’s brutal attack on wolves and bears in Alaska. My guess is the plane she did not sell on Ebay, is now employed for some of these hunting ventures. SCI is still fighting for the right to kill the imperiled polar bears! Nice bunch of guys huh? You kinda want to float them out on a piece of ice and take pot shots at em and see how they like it.

As early as this fall hundreds of wolves are on the line. Pups as young as 5 months old can be targeted in hunts approved in Idaho. Of course SCI will be there with bells on.

The hunting and killing of animals, the Endangered Species Act, and the USFWS, should be lead by science and based on scientific approaches to wildlife management, not at the whim of wealthy trophy hunters contributing to members of congress. It appears our Dept. of Interior, and USFWS is continuing to follow the lead of the Bush Administration and its all out assault on our national treasures, the animals. Wolves are meant to live and thrive and maintain a natural balance within all sorts of our ecosystems. Because they do their job well, wolves are continuously the target of hunters who claim there won’t be enough to hunt. Taking out the wolves in our national parks will cause many of the ecosystems that began to return because of the wolves’ presence to diminish once again.

We’re so busy being a superior group in the animal chain that our arrogance overlooks the great ability of nature to do a better job on many fronts. I’m sickened by those that would hunt animals that are already suffering because of mankind. What kind of soul do they, can they have? We’d be a better country if we followed the ideas of Dr. Albert Schweitzer instead of the likes of the NRA or SCI. In the aftermath of WWII many looked to Schweitzer’s philosophy for “the restoration of hope and sanity,” according to Ann Cottrell Free’s book, Animals, Nature & Albert Schweitzer.

And in 1952 Dr. Schweitzer was awarded the Nobel Prize for Humanitarianism. He said in his acceptance speech: “There could be no peace, no harmony among men and nations unless prejudice and nationalism were laid aside, and all human kind recognized and embraced the universality of life—specifically, ‘all living creatures.’”

To quote Schweitzer:

“The human spirit is not dead. It lives on in secret….It has come to believe that compassion, in which all ethics must take root, can only attain its full breadth and depth if it embraces all living creatures and does not limit itself to mankind.”

I started to write so much for congress, the USFWS, the military, our health/research agencies, but the list was just too long. Our ethics are in the tank in this country if they are supposed to be rooted in compassion, because the last time I read my mail it was an ever-growing barrage of animal rights groups screaming for help from every direction.

Michael Satchell, “A View to a Kill: How Safari Club Int’l Works to Weaken ESA Protections”, Humane Society US, undated, accessed August 2005.

Cottrell Free, Ann, Animals, Nature & Albert Schweitzer, Washington, D.C: The Flying Fox Press, 1990.

http://www.defenders.org/

Thursday, June 25th, 2009

Nova Science Now Season Premiere on PBS

The new season of Nova Science Now premieres on PBS Tuesday, June 30th, at 9:00 pm on PBS (Public Broadcasting Station) following the regular Nova show. If you don’t get subscription TV and a lot of people do not these days, then PBS’s offerings on WGTE, both the Nova series, and Nova Science Now are shows to catch in lieu of Discovery, History, and/or Nat Geo. Nova Science Now is good viewing for the whole family.

Check out the You Tube video of the new season and don’t forget to watch:

Catch audio and video podcasts online if you miss the new season premiere: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/sciencenow/

Madagascar land grab we’re not hearing much about in the news

Saturday, June 20th, 2009

Korea’s “Daewoo Logistics” is attempting to lease HALF the agricultural land in Madagascar for 99 years for the industrial farming of palm oil and maize (corn), some 1.3 million acres according to an article on Care2.com. Of all the stupid things a country could do at this time of environmental uncertainty is kill off habitat for some of the most diverse creatures on the planet. Madagascar is a treasure chest for scientists and holds a key to biological changes occurring as the planet’s climate changes.

But the biggest travesty is that the people on this island off the SE coast of Africa are already suffering a severe food crisis. Naturally they are protesting because they may soon be losing THEIR land. This in turn is causing a governmental crisis. The world needs to let the people of Madagascar and those CEO’s of Daewoo know we are watching and will not in any way stand around and let this happen. We know about the wonderful biodiversity there and the plight of the people. What business does Korea have intruding on an island off of Africa anyway? We’re worried about N. Korea, and S. Korea proposes to do this? This is just not getting enough media attention considering the biodiversity issue at stake. Some of the world’s most rare creatures are found in Madagascar ONLY.

Anyone with children has seen the animated features “Madagascar and Madagascar II.” Like “Charlotte’s Web” these animated animal icons in Madagascar films are far removed from the horror the creatures they imitate suffer in real life. Little pigs like the one in “Charlotte’s Web” more than not will be found rotating in their whole bodily form on some rotisserie barbeque somewhere this summer. And the animals in “Madagascar” are no different. The lemur is already endangered. We’ve watched the Discovery, Science, Nat Geo, and Sundance Channels, Jeff Irwin and Jack Hanna enough to catch presentations about Madagascar and hopefully comprehend that Madagascar is a biological wonder http://www.wildmadagascar.org/overview/FAQs/.
That notwithstanding, the hostile takeover of any people’s agricultural property by another country, especially a people already suffering a food crisis, should be a call for intervention by the U.N. if their own country doesn’t soon support them.

We’re hardly hearing about this advance on Madagascar in the news. Please sign petitions to let both Korea and Madagascar know the world is watching and protesting. The people of Madagascar have managed to keep the biodiversity of their island country in tact forever. Just last year they agreed to “sell more than nine million tons of carbon offsets to fund rainforest conservation in a newly established protected area. Conservationists say the deal protects endangered wildlife, promotes sustainable development to improve the economic well-being of people living in and around the park area, and helps fight global warming” according to the website “wildmadagascar.org.” And this is how they are repaid by the world community? Much of that biodiversity could be lost with one bad decision, the decision to look the other way instead of protesting along with the people of that country. The U.S. should have much to say to S. Korea about this proposed plan.

To sign petitions: http://www.care2.com/c2c/share/detail/1172161.

http://www.regenwald.org/international/englisch/.

The Lazy Environmentalist

Wednesday, June 10th, 2009

 

 

Josh Dorfman’s program the “Lazy Environmentalist,” on the Sundance Channel takes on environmental skeptics, “experts in fields as diverse as food, architecture and business — to prove that there are innovative, cost-effective, ecologically sound alternatives that also meet high professional standards.” If you don’t get the Sundance Channel, or haven’t caught episodes of “The Lazy Environmentalist,” then check out Dorfman’s website: http://www.sundancechannel.com/lazy/ you can catch up. where

 

Josh promotes using the least amount of effort for the greatest gain in going green. Tune in and find out some fairly easy ways to help the environment. Josh seems to ferret out skeptics from every walk of life and shows them how they, as well as, the rest of us adversely impact the environment and how easy it is to change a few things. Most people are shocked at how much trash they produce. Eliminating one carbon footprint at a time may be the way to get people moving. It doesn’t take a whole lotta effort.

 

I don’t know about anyone but I realized a long time ago that continuous small, even baby steps forward are better than nothing at all. In time, those small steps amount to big results. And most of the time along the way, innovation takes place where any one of us is capable of inventing the next big green product. No one else can take the steps for us. We have to start somewhere and just like an exercise program the least amount of effort for the greatest gain is the best way to start.

 

$475 Million for the Great Lakes; How Would You Use It?

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009

I get email alerts and newsletters from a lot of different groups. One of them is the Great Lakes Townhall meeting notes. The Great Lakes Townhall website is interactive. You can post a response to an editorial there or write your own. Now and then they run polls at Great Lakes Town Hall and this month’s question is:

“President Obama allotted $475 Million for the Great Lakes. If you were in charge, what would be your top priority?”

The responses are:

  • Clean up toxic hot spots
  • Restore coastal wetlands
  • Restoring tributaries to the Great Lakes
  • Improving sewage treatment in major Great Lakes cities
  • Focus on removing invasive species
  • Other…This is where you can comment about how you would spend the money

I was surprised but a big, big majority of people want better sewage treatment. What do they know that we don’t? Check out the website and vote or comment on what you would do for the Great Lakes.

http://greatlakestownhall.org/3340

Slaughtering Wildlife

Tuesday, June 2nd, 2009

I truly believe our democracy is broken at the hands of special interest groups. If we do not get rid of lobbying forever, the good with the bad lobbyists, all of them unfortunately, we will no longer be a nation of the people by the people with resolute honest representation in congress. I say this because I have petitioned, written, called, and donated so much money to efforts to protect our wildlife that I could probably own my own wolf pack, polar bear family, whale, dolphin, etc., yet nothing much happens on their behalf, or the going is so slow as to be baby steps. And in the interim, we lose more wildlife. I know I am not alone. I’ve read more than one place for example that 70% of Alaskans are against the wolf aerial hunting program depicted in my blog today, and that Governor Palin has plans to not only continue the program but to escalate it beyond normal hunting seasons, and to include bears now.

It takes so much activism by citizens of this country to stop atrocities against wildlife and for the preservation of all we hold dear in this country like our peaceful forests and parks against the likes of the NRA and big time hunting consortiums, that I’m beginning to believe America has lost its way. We simply do not present ourselves as a decent, Christian nation any longer. Our talk is cheap. We’re known for our deeds and the picture is not pretty when it comes to wildlife and habitat.

Do we as this supposed Godly nation realize the Lord specifically mentions the word wolf/wolves 13 times in the bible? In every instance He makes it perfectly known that wolves are to exist as predators. They have a purpose and in no way are they to be extinct in the world to come. They will indeed lay down with the lamb.

From a scientific viewpoint, wolves inhabited the U.S. for 750,000 years; one would think that by now in the 21st century we as “the smartest of the animal chain” would have figured out how to live with them. Stop the carnage as seen in the video below:

Science is not a part of Alaska’s wolf hunting program. There is no official wolf count. Alaska only guesses as to how many wolves it has or has not. To continue to escalate a hunting program like this with no clear figures as to how little or much the wolf populations there are being decimated is criminal.

Read about the history of wolf control in Alaska: http://www.defenders.org/programs_and_policy/wildlife_conservation/imperiled
_species/wolves/wolf_recovery_efforts/alaska_wolves/background/history_of_wolf
_control_in_alaska/index.php?ht=

An excellent read about the history of wolves in the U.S. http://www.ferrum.edu/philosophy/wolfproject.htm

Some people have wolves for pets. Amazing: http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20090528075841AAiDs2U.

Can Mega Wind Farms Inhibit a Tornado or Defer Its Path?

Thursday, May 14th, 2009

I was watching ABC news about the 900 mile swath of 21 tornadoes that were active from western Michigan to Missouri last night and remembered watching a special on TV about one of climatologist’s biggest fears, tornadoes that unite to become multi-vortex mega storms. Is this what we’re beginning to experience? The NOAA website reports: “There is a statistical trend (as documented by NSSL’s Harold Brooks) toward wide tornadoes having higher damage ratings. This could be related to greater tornado strength, more opportunity for targets to damage, or some blend of both. However, the size or shape of any particular tornado does not say anything conclusive about its strength.” So there is a trend but it appears to be downplayed, while tornadoes are becoming rampant across the heartland of our country, destroying more and more properties every year, and occurring out of season.

Residents in the Missouri area said they witnessed 4 distinct heads of the multi vortex tornado that covered a 5-mile swath of land. This tornado was also described by the newscaster as a bouncer, touching down, going up, and then touching down again. The same NOAA website states that tornadoes don’t literally skip. It says: “By definition [] a tornado must be in contact with the ground. There is disagreement in meteorology over whether or not multiple touchdowns of the same vortex or funnel cloud mean different tornadoes (a strict interpretation). In either event, stories of skipping tornadoes usually mean

1. There was continuous contact between vortex and ground in the path, but it was too weak to do damage;
2. Multiple tornadoes happened; but there was no survey done to precisely separate their paths (very common before the 1970s); or
3. There were multiple tornadoes with only short separation, but the survey erroneously classified them as one tornado.

So was this multi-vortex, bouncing tornado possibly a new phenomena? Is there anything that can be done to limit the increasing velocity and strength of tornadoes? Well, “Daniel Barrie and Daniel Kirk-Davidoff of the University of Maryland concocted an experiment. They took the pattern of expanding turbine fields to an extreme, and used a computer model to calculate what might happen if all the land from Texas to central Canada, and from the Great Lakes to the Rocky Mountains were covered in one massive wind farm,” according to an article on Discovery Channel website. It said, “[They] acknowledged the hypothetical wind farm was far larger than anything humans are likely to build. But meeting the Department of Energy’s goal of wind power generation by 2030 would require that scores of huge wind farms be built throughout the Midwestern United States. The total disturbance caused by turbines could be enough to steer storms.”
Interesting!

Although the NOAA website states that it is unlikely we could ever come up with anything that could stop a tornado that wouldn’t be worse than the tornado itself, it does talk about dissipating one, which means to slow down or cause it to break up. The website’s FAQ’s page said that tornadoes do need a source of instability and a “larger-scale property of rotation (vorticity) to keep going.” It went on to say that a lot of processes surrounding a storm could rob the area around a tornado of either instability or vorticity. Cold outflow is one. This is the flow of wind out of the precipitation area of a shower or thunderstorm. It’s been observed that cold outflow causes a tornado to go away. It also says: “For decades, storm observers have documented the death of numerous tornadoes when their parent circulations (mesocyclones) weaken after they become wrapped in outflow air — either from the same thunderstorm or a different one.”

Could that different outflow of air possibly be produced by large wind farms in the near future? Could they produce enough wind to replicate the outflow air of a thunderstorm? If so, it’s incentive enough to develop wind power. There are far too many homes and properties destroyed every year from increasingly bad weather. If we thought the stock market dive was bad, imagine insurance companies going bust?

http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory?id=7582543

http://dsc.discovery.com/news/2008/11/25/wind-farms-weather.html

http://www.spc.noaa.gov/faq/tornado

Labor Unions Celebrate Earth Week

Tuesday, April 21st, 2009

The Apollo Alliance, a coalition of labor, business, environmental, and community leaders are working to jump-start a clean energy revolution. They know that it will produce millions of jobs and help the economy. Apollo Alliance claims the Apollo Space program as its inspiration to “promote investments in energy efficiency, clean power, mass transit, next-generation vehicles, and emerging technology, as well as in education and training. Working together, we will reduce carbon emissions and oil imports, spur domestic job growth, and position America to thrive in the 21st century economy.”

That’s a real “we can” attitude. Among Apollo Alliance’s partners “focused on generating green collar jobs” are the nation’s union halls. The union program is called Earth Week in the Union Halls. It launched Saturday, April 18th with the goal of creating support from unions on a national level for clean energy investments and green collar job training.

The weeklong event of the participating 70 union halls nationwide will host the movie “The Greening of Southie” that I blogged about recently with video of the trailer. The DVD documents the trials of renovating an old Boston building into a green Boston building by union construction crews.

The Apollo Alliance website has quite a long article titled “How to Find a Green Job” that states:

The New Apollo Program is a comprehensive economic investment strategy to build America’s 21st century clean energy economy and dramatically cut energy bills for families and businesses. It will generate and invest $500 billion over the next ten years and create more than five million high quality green-collar jobs. It will accelerate the development of the nation’s vast clean energy resources and move us toward energy security, climate stability, and economic prosperity. And it will transform America into the global leader of the new green economy.

I’m impressed. And I know there are at least two big-time alliances like Apollo working toward the same goal. The article goes on to say that Americans are at a crossroads. Do we keep going with our outdated fossil fuel ideas that will ultimately come to an end some time in the future while putting us at greater and greater risk for severe climate conditions, or do we seize this time as an opportunity for change for the better. We will be healthier as a result of the earth becoming a healthier place. It’s really up to us.

We’re not doing so well now anyway. People are looking for new jobs and are willing to relocate. Many have little to nothing left because of the economic crunch while others have been victims of devastation from increasingly violent weather conditions already. Still others are looking ahead for their children’s health and well-being. What better time to change? And that’s what America decided in the last election. We just need to move forward and keep moving forward—no looking back.

The Apollo article and website might be helpful for many. There is much more to read at:

http://www.apolloalliance.org/index.php?s=ervin

ACES Bill Introduced; Make Sure It Includes Wildlife and Habitat

Monday, April 20th, 2009

Thursday, April 16th, House Energy & Commerce Committee Chair Henry Waxman and Subcommittee Chair Ed Markey introduced The American Clean Energy and Security Act of 2009 (ACES). This is a first step for a cleaner future that will benefit all of us in the long run. It will be an uphill battle of course because the oil and coal industry have been the status quo for energy in the U.S. since the last major transformation in our country—the industrial revolution. And with quarterly earnings that netted upwards of 40 billion dollars for some of them not long ago, there are some mighty deep pockets to push propaganda and thwart efforts for new innovative replacements for petro/coal based energy. So be prepared to see all types of ads this week since April 22 is EARTH DAY.

The new ACES bill addresses global warming concerns but will it also embrace measures to safeguard wildlife and habitat? We’ve seen them left out in the cold before. According to Defenders of Wildlife, “Scientists warn that global warming could threaten one-third of the world’s plant and vertebrate animal species with extinction by 2050.”

I’ve already done blogs about reductions in fish, bird, and bat populations. The apes are always at risk, as are elephants mainly due to loss of habitat by increasing populations of people and their needs. We destroy and do not replace, and we pollute and do not clean up after ourselves.

Defender’s urges: “That’s why it’s crucial that comprehensive global warming legislation include dedicated policies and funding to ensure wildlife can survive in a changing climate.

Please contact your Representatives to urge them to support this bill and strengthen the legislation by dedicating 7 billion dollars of the revenues from it to safeguard both wildlife and natural resources from the impacts of climate change.

Monroe’s Rep. is John Dingell – (313) 278-2936 or click on Defender’s of Wildlife link on my home page.

I’ve already called this morning and evidently Rep. Dingell is getting a lot of calls about this. His office stated he is very much interested in this bill and the future of wildlife and habitat.