Wednesday, June 27th, 2007
Gusty winds have caused the ongoing Lake Tahoe fire to jump barrier lines today. 2000 more residents are literally running from their homes. The fire is facing winds that are much greater than those that caused the fire to spread. It seems incredible doesn’t it, that a Lake area can actually burn? It’s a scary thought for Michigan residents, especially when it’s been dry around here.
Monday I was in a shopping area at Allen and West Rds., and passed a median in a parking lot, covered with what apparently was some pretty dry mulch that was smoking and on fire. Someone may have innocently flicked a cigarette butt out his or her window. I think we need to watch where we use any type of fire on hot, dry days like this, especially since we know that lake areas can burn.
I caught a little bit of an interview with a person who lost his home in one of the fires that admitted he used to think and practice what many of us still think and practice; it isn’t me, isn’t going to happen to me, or it doesn’t concern me. And then it happens. He said the reality is numbing. There is absolutely nothing left of a lifetime. Everything is in cinders or melted. He and his family are displaced. They are going through any savings they had, waiting for insurance benefits to kick in. They have pets and need to find housing. They have very little in clothing. The reality is devastating.
I think we need to concentrate on important things in the news. There are fellow citizens everywhere whose lives are being ripped out from under them because of natural disasters. Texas is flooding; the Missouri area has been flooding. Fires in Florida really took a toll in the Lake Okeechobee area. The news reports these things of course, but immediately following new clips like this, is the latest news about Paris Hilton. With all the important things going on in the world, when a 16 year old married her 40-year-old coach from high school, abcnews.com got 80,000 hits on that one piece. What’s wrong with this picture? Everyone’s got an opinion about a 16 and 40 year old marrying, but nothing about all the cuts being made in the federal budget that affects our lives and our environment? Or maybe it’s because government news isn’t being reported as readily as it should be. What is reported appears to be watered down. Does anyone else think we’re getting selective news in the media these days?
Posted in Drought, Environmentalism, Extreme Weather in U.S., Fires, Floods, Global Warming, Michigan/Great Lakes, Morality, Nevada, Soaring Temperatures, The Media, Weather, Weather/Climate | 2 Comments »
Monday, May 28th, 2007
One of my blogs was about the forests lost to forest fires and that it was really odd to see the woods of Minnesota burn since the state is noted for its many inland lakes. Then I read that the global warming impact of forest fires in our western states is the equivalent of a more severe hurricane season in the gulf. But hurricanes are over in a few days, forest fires can burn for months. About.com stated: “Researchers at the Scripps Institution of Oceanography and the University of Arizona found four times as many large wildfires occurred in Western forests between 1987 and 2003 compared to the previous 16 years.”
Everything about fires has increased due to global warming. The latest fires burned 6.5 times more land, increased from around 8 days to 37 days in duration, and the whole fire season has expanded 78 more days. Here’s the interesting part. You know there are television personalities like Regis Philbin who make fun of a one degree weather change, but most of the increase in our fires corresponds with a simple 1.5 degree rise in temperature out west during the same time frame of 87 to 2003. The slightly warmer temperatures lead to longer, drier seasons that are ideal for a flash fire.
This is the first study that links global warming and forest fires. According to the San Francisco Chronicle, “The researchers examined U.S. Forest Service and National Park Service records of every forest fire that burned at least 1,000 acres from 1970 to 2003. They found that of 1,166 fires in that period, four-fifths of them, or about 900, occurred after 1987.” The article went on to say, “Steven Running, a professor in the School of Forestry at the University of Montana who wrote an accompanying article about the report for Science hopes to include Westerling’s findings in a report on the ecological consequences of climate change for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.”
I don’t doubt that sooner or later science will find a link between all major eruptions on earth such as volcanoes, and earthquakes with the rise in hurricanes, flooding, fires, etc., that are due to man’s impact on this same environment with some form of pollution. We simply haven’t given much thought to our ever increasing world population in ratio to its output of pollution. Imagine if every growing population turned into a capitalist society like ours where demand for everything under the sun in huge amounts is an everyday occurrence. Capitalism to me is more a throw away society than a recycling society right now. It doesn’t have to be that way, however. We’re into supply and demand and haven’t caught on that some of the supply can come from what has already been used. It’s simply not a good thing for the earth to start from scratch every time when there is perfectly good base material out there to be recycled.
This has just given me an idea to blog about what is currently offered in the recycled goods market and for what use. I do know that recycled plastics offer picnic tables, park benches, and even parking curbs out of high density plastic material instead of wood that rots or concrete that eventually cracks. Every Parks and Recreation Commission in all cities should be looking into recycled products like these for all of our recreational areas. It would make all of us feel a little better about all the plastic products we consume and throw away into a trash dump versus the local park or for some future use wouldn’t it? We should see how truly efficient we can be. After all our country should be viewed as a business and isn’t that the essence of business anyway to garner the greatest profit with the least overhead, and the least waste?
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Posted in Conservation, Drought, Earthquakes, Environmental Legislation, Environmentalism, Extreme Weather in U.S., Fires, Global Warming, Green Products, National Forest, National Parks and Forests, Nature, Plants, Public Lands, Recycling, Science, Soaring Temperatures, Tornadoes, Trees, U.S. Weather Patterns, Volcanoes, Weather, Weather/Climate | No Comments »
Friday, November 24th, 2006
There are all types of casualties we endure on a daily basis especially during times of war. Losing someone or something precious can happen moment to moment. And although our lives are upset to the point we don’t think we’ll recover, we do. I just wonder how many people realize the biggest casualty of all is happening in small increments every day that none of us will recover from if we don’t turn it around.
Our environment is taking hit after hit, and many of us still do not know that when it’s stated we have 10 years to do something, it does not mean we have ten years before we start doing something. It means if we do not start today toward reversing global warming by controlling our pollution it will be irreversible within 10 years. It’s a good idea to control pollution to begin with. By all the water bottles I see these days, I realize that everyone does get the idea that maybe our water isn’t all that clean, and probably our air. What I also see by those same water bottles is that we really aren’t getting it at all. Where do you think those plastic bottles go? If your community recycles that’s great. If you recycle on your own, then bless you, but unfortunately only 70% of all our garbage is recycled. Those bottles end up in landfills of which there are approximately 6000 in the U.S. Plastic takes around 500 years to decompose. Do we love our children, grandchildren, and great grandchildren? Then what are we doing?
The intent of this news blog is to be in your face about our world because we’re all in this together, and if you or my other neighbors don’t jump in and help, the experience of living won’t be what we once knew. Right now it is what it is “An Inconvenient Truth” as Al Gore aptly named it. Many of our little conveniences in life may have to be abandoned to save our earth, save ourselves. It’s a rude awakening, but the sooner we snap out of it, the sooner we turn it around. No more burying our heads in the sand or waiting for “they or them” to do something. They or them is us, all of us.
Anyone who has any questions about anything environmental feel free to blog. If you know something you don’t think the rest of us are aware of blog it. If you don’t quite believe in global warming yet let us know why. Anyone who has already adapted his or her lifestyle differently to save on anything let us know how, so we might adapt. One idea becomes a ripple that becomes a wave and the whole community benefits.
None of us are perfect angels about the environment. I still drive a gas hog, although I’m looking at all hybrids and beseeching Ford to revive the cobra body style with an electric/ethanol motor. I’m a baby boomer that wants a hybrid sports car. Any baby boomers out there want to weigh in on that? Doesn’t an environmentally friendly sports car sound good? My tip to any other gas hog drivers out there, consolidate your running around. I’m down to 2 days per week. Group up and ride to work together. Quit running your kids around and enjoy family nights. Quitting our rat race can help the environment.
Posted in Al Gore, Alternative Energy Sources, Animals and Extinction, Artists for the Environment, Birds, Bush Administration, CO2 Emissions, Clean Air Act, Clean Water Act, Coal Mining, Coalburners, Diesel Fuel Pollution, Drought, Energy Infrastructure, Environment and Jobs, Environmental Capital, Environmental Spin, Environmentalism, Extreme Weather in U.S., Fires, Floods, Food Supply Contamination, Fossil Fuel, Geothermal Power, Global Warming, Global Warming Policy, Global Warming Reports, Great Lakes Pollution, Great Lakes Water, Green Construction, Hybrids, Jet Fuel, Jet Fuel Pollution, Marine Life, Mercury, Methods for Lowering Energy Costs, Michigan Energy Legislation, Michigan Environmental News, Michigan Environmental Policy, Michigan Pollution, Monroe Environmental News, Monroe Pollution, Morality, NASA, Nature, Ocean Pollution, Oil Drilling, Oil Lobby, Oil Spills, Pandemics, Pest Populations and Global Warming, Polar Ice Melt, Pollution, Protecting Wetlands, Protesting Pollution, Refineries, Science, Self-regulation, Soaring Temperatures, Solar Energy, State Gov't., Truck Pollution, U.S. Automakers, U.S. Dept. of Energy, U.S. Food Supply, U.S. Weather Patterns, Urban Sprawl, Water Shortage, Weather, Wetlands, Wildlife, Wind Power | 152 Comments »