Monday, July 6, 2009

Automaton's Sleeping

July 6, 2009 Ciudad de Panama

The city is noisy as most cities are, morning brings a steady flow of traffic past the window and the sun just keeps getting hotter, we are practically equatorial. Panama, Polonia, Estadas Unidos, we live in a car driven world.

There's a certain hum to the passing of automobiles that seems to imply money: the passage of cars is money. Being spent, being made, the earth being transformed, the entire industrial military complex is audible in that seemingly simple flow of money; traffic.

Mix automotives with construction and you have civilization. Construction with computers and air conditioning and you have the 21st century. Add a little business suave, space exploration , information technology and a planet with 2/3 of the populace living at or below the base of the capitalist economy and our world starts to take shape. The truth is though, the capitalist system is not based upon people as much as we would like to think it is. There exists no grand conspiracy to capture all of humanity in a giant pyramid scheme (at least not one all encompassing scheme). Our mode of life depends mostly on the abundant riches of the planet itself. We are the planet's children and we have hacked our life out of the flesh and pulled our wealth from metal ore, the river's clay, and the ocean's bounty.

Thursday, July 2, 2009

a few more days in Bocas

After a 15 minute experiment with my underwater camera, it appears I will be out of camera posts for a while, pending its return to functionality.... A friend told me to try some rice, so i guess Ill give it a shot...

otherwise,,, Things on the project are moving forwards, we are in the process of getting some aerial photos with which we (at this point I) will be creating maps of the community in which we are working (the community centered around Dos Bocas) in Bocas del Torro, Panama. The project is currently a preliminary study of the willingness of people living in the Comarca Ngobe to participate in a Reduced Emissions from Deforestation and Degredation (REDD) project. Wee are traipsing across the extant beaureaucratic framework, tenous as it is, in Bocas del Torro, getting information, maps and coordinating activities across different government departments. The process is resulting in getting a fairly clear image of the social forces active in the area, as well as complementary and competing economic interests that manifest in different attitudes and relationships with the environment. For instance, the main economic drivers in the area are agriculture (welcome to the home of Bocas Fruit Company, a major piece of Chiquita Banana), tourism, and a large marine fishery. Tourism and the marine fishery depend on the conservation of marine resources, whereas the fruit companies, think at least, that they need to fertilize, and apply aerial pesticides to their banana plantations to maintain a high profit margin. Should those practices change, i.e. responsible and ecological methods of agriculture being practiced, everybody stands to benefit... the trick of course being, a willingness of the agrigiants to change their practices. As is the story the world over, the paradigm of higher yield reigns supreme, though the alternatives, of ecological land management, have yet to be practiced on an appreciable scale (although they are being tested in some places). Thus we are faced with a choice resulting in definite environmental benefits and uncertain economic ones, can we really afford to not make that choice?

Thursday, June 18, 2009

Amalgams of belated thought, the work progresses, the world waits

Some said it could not be done, really, most said it could not be done. The park ranger scoffed, and gave some bogus account and psuedo terrifying story of rain, darkness, hunger and jaguars. Our host, the caretaker of the secret garden (Jardin Secreto), was also incredulous. Needless to say, after much encouragement from our friend (Kristin Fischer, aka KFi), as well as some tasty tidbits of knowledge from a Texas native english teacher, Jennifer (who told us that the annual race up and down Chirripo had a record time of 3 hrs and 20 minutes, much encouragement), we decided, that a one day peak and return was in fact, a good idea.

A late start (getting on the road, 2.5 k from the trailhead at around 6.20) was prompted by our burial in the valley, the sun had just broken the crest of the ridge as we shouldered our minimal gear (some water, some clothes, some tortillas, a tin of cherry wood smoked oyster, and a packet of walnuts) and proceeded on a brisk pace, summit bound. While I´ll leave the full accounting of the trek for a later date, let us suffice to say that at around 6.30 in the pm, a succesful summit attempt behind us (albeit in about 20 ft of visibility due to thorough ensconscement in water vapour), the light quickly fading we were still 10.5 k from home (a good 8 k from the trailhead). In our defense (maybe) we did have on lost (and found) backpack adventure about 2 k from the summit (during which I took a good 45 minute nap, waking up with a serious headache and feeling cold), and our headlamp had, sadly, been left at home. A stumbling kilometer from (7k to 6k) led us through near blackness to the realization that my camera´s LED light (for illuminating macro pictures) may have enough zing to light the way. A handheld bubble of light led us the rest of the way down to about half a klick from the trailhead, where our valiant source of illumination was finally exhausted. A stump and scuttlebut later (with no serious injuries), we limped into town to be greated by a local named Casper, who spoke a decent street english, fed us shots of Kosako vodka and arranged for his friend Luis, the owner of the Rockadura restaurant and hostel, to sell us a few beers "for the road." A bowl of granola and a hot shower later, we passed into darkness to awake at the crack of dawn to pack our limited luggage and catch the bus to San Isidro. While a full accounting of the vagaries of the Tiko travel system is beyond the scope of this narrative (at this time), it will suffice to say that Dave made his 2.30 flight back to Atlanta, and I am safe and sound in San Jose, at a friend named Marcos´ house, learning about freebording (check it out) and plotting good plans for the future.

Tuesday, June 2, 2009

buscaros los veinto frescos

The Quest For Fresh Air
Chapter 1, Leaving Hobbiton

The day is early and the sky is dark. A whole world is left behind when one embarks to Central America, and a new one is discovered. Good and bad, ill and healthy, hale, whole and disconnected. Get on a plane, allow yourself to be swindled and utterly dismember your sense of self, self confidence etcetera, go to a place where you don´t speak the language and allow yourself to be opened, literally opened to a new way of life and a new way of thinking.

In short, discover the scrub forest, the heat, the rain, the bugs and the humanity behind our existence on this planet. The ludicrity, the hilarity, insanity and the niceties of being a human being, a transformer of our habitat, and one with enormous potential to effect positive change. Cast aside the idiocy of self limitation, of socially constructed metaphors for existence and allow yourself to see things as they are. Pierce the disgust and disconnectedness of our sheltered little existence and ramble on through, and if, you are lucky, or if your quest is true, you might just find what you are looking for.

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

working in the working world

It's tuesday in the a.m. and the empty regurgitation of yesterday's thoughts and feelings are all too prone to catch you when least expected. In short, a world that is empty of true feeling and understanding will bear the consequences of its lack of connection to things that are Real. Hence, the advent of cubicle life... on to the next...

Sunday, March 29, 2009

Belated Tuckerman's Post

Amidst the hustle and bustle of life and family disentegration we managed to get a reasonably well put together trip up to Tuckerman's Ravine, the week of March 8th. Conditions were a bit dicey at times, though one day of fairly decent skiing was had, after the morning's rain on tuesday. The trip got off to a rocky start and we left significantly later than our 5 am ETD (see below, Lena serenely threatening to chop Nick's head off should he be unable to fix the ski rack), though we managed to get on the road once we had resolved our organizational and technical difficulties.
Driving at a steady 75 miles an hour, encumbered by the Thule and ski rack (and not our normal ~95), we managed to get up to N. Conway and get through EMS with even more winter gear, most notably the ice axes, which came in handy later.












Having made it, at night to Hermit lake shelters uneventfully (besides Vlad dumping his skis and boots trailside about halfway due to encumbrance) we settled in for some well deserved rest.
to make a long story short, we had one day of decent conditions (Wednesday), with high avalanche danger which kept us on the little headwall and the sherby. Air however, was fresh (not like PNW, but some of the best in NE), spirits were high and the food was incredible. Thursday found us with awaking from subzero sleeping conditions to a 0 degree day and absolutley 0 avalanche danger, as everything had turned to solid ice from Wednesday's rain. Such is fate. We skiid the lower snowfields anyways, as well as an insane variation of The Sluice, unfortunatley, without crampons, reaching the lip of the ravine was next to impossible, as it was, we were chopping out footholds on the way up. As it was, we survived to tell the tale, and I made my flight to Poland the next day. We plan or returning early april to revisit in friendlier conditions.

you don't get lichens like this in CT: nor mountains like these (the view from my perch
newly dubbed, hootenanny's hotspot, before our
descent of the solid ice of Tuck's, march 12, 0 F):

Monday, February 23, 2009

Real Food, Real Snow, Real Love

After a successful real food summit workshop we decided to set up a sort of question/answer network for people working for 'real' food at their college campuses, high schools and communities, we may need to get in touch with the real food organizers, but I was thinking we could start small and see where this takes us: basically we need a google group that can post questions and answers, issues and thoughts on the subject of increasing food quality, food justice and environmental justice at all levels of human existence: Megh and I are in the process of putting that together, so y'all have something to look forward to.

Some general thoughts about people's experiences were that we all seem to be following a fairly similar course of action: from food production to food consumption... while this may seem like a closed loop, we forget how many other inputs typically go into the agricultural systems we participate in, never you mind our dollars and sense, but time, transportation and most importantly (in my mind) land use: I think one of the stronger arguments for changing our food system, besides those of concerns of immediate human health and well being are those of a more fundamental nature: we cannot afford to destroy any more arable land on this planet, and by destroy I mean desertify (undergo the process of desertification, and not the sweet one either), salinize (I may have made this word up, but I think you get the drift), render toxic, nutrient imbalanced or depleted. In addition, our agricultural systems are tightly linked with our overall environmental health both in the bio-geo-chemical sense: as they leach tremendous amounts of nutrients and pesticides into surrounding bodies of water, effects that cascade and aggregate into toxic algal blooms and anoxic zones in such places as the Chesapeake bay, Gulf of Mexico and many others (check out this link to a Nasa site), as well as contaminating ground water, eutrophying local water systems (and contributing to species invasions and the collapse of local fisheries), but organismal/ecological as well: our agricultural systems should be repositiories of biodiversity and aggregate human knowledge (seeds have been passed down for millenia, and were priorly selected upon in a myriad number of ways), as well as partnerships with plants and animals that naturally control "pests," increase their resilience (the agricultural system's), and provide medicine as well as food, and finally economic: fertilizer runoff, excess -cide usage and soil erosion all directly translate to the wastage of millions of dollars per annum (sorry about the long sentence, special apologies to the text/instant mssg generation). However, all is not lost! There exist a large number of solutions to our general method of agriculture, available to anybody with an internet connection (there are too many links to list here, check google on your own (though the Land Institute, and some of Vandana Shiva's work are good places to start, as is "The One Straw Revolution" by Masonobu Fukuoka), from no/conservation/reduced tillage, poly/permi-culture, ecological and organic farming practices to IPM (even the EPA is clued into this), and the use of vegetative buffers to protect waterways. The overall point is to increase the total health of the ecosystem in a manner that allows us to practice sustainable methods of agriculture (which, when you really think about it, is in Everybody's best interest, in the long term).

On a lighter note, I skipped school on Monday (stayed Sunday night in a wood heated cabin with no electricity) and went skiing for most of the daylight hours, I had to quit around 2. 'Twas an absolutley phenomenal day at Mt. Snow USA. From being waist deep in the drifts on Ripcord and the Plunge, to a constant snowgasm on practically any trail I went down, I felt that I am exploring my true love for spaces relatively unspoiled by the works of man (for some info on why you should use non-toxic ski wax check out enviro-mountain sports). 1 late day 5 later, I feel ready to get serious into the reportage on the Quest For Fresh Air (more on this later), but alas, for now, the requirements of the academe curtail my ability to spread my enjoyment of the deep snow and clean sky. Let it suffice to say, for now, that our internal motivations should always outweigh our external motivations, if we are to find the peace that makes life on this planet worth living. Then again, if we did so, the entire contemporary system of human relations (en masse) may just collapse, but if you are at all like me and have spent the last two days either listening to Eckhart Tolle's "A New Earth," skiing, eating local foods, drinking local brews, taking snow baths or sleeping, it might not seem to bad after all...

Friday, February 13, 2009

Obama on mercury and hot spots

In the windy city and I get an email from friend Christian asking me what I think about Obama's recent decision to enforce tighter controls on mercury emissions to avoid hotspots that may occur under a cap and trade system: here's what came to mind:

I honestly don't like cap and trade for that very reason: there is no guarantee that capping and trading leads to real emissions reductions: and no guarantee that the price per unit C is reflected in the damages that it causes: i.e. the price is arbitrarily decided by the market: i think a national policy that sets a national cap on CO2 however may be somewhat effective:

I also think that mercury and CO2 are somewhat different, b.c mercury contributes to fairly serious health disorders: however, the linkage between the two should not be overlooked: I think it would be more appropriate to revamp the clean air act with legislation that addresses CO2 emissions as a pollutant, Past a certain level: fundamentally a carbon tax would have to tax people on certain levels of emission, or else all mammals and other aerobic respirators would be taxed (or tazered)...

what the Europeans seem to be doing is regulating pollutants and CO2 separately, but i also think this is because they have had a tighter control on pollutants (though Scandinavian countries still have a pretty serious issue with heavy metal contamination of the atmosphere, as does much of the old eastern bloc, and pollution persists in all major industrialized areas)...

where I'm really going with all of this is towards a systematic shift in addressing ecosystem services: of which Climate regulation is a subset: if we want to have earth's ecosystems regulate our climate we will have to acknowledge the holistic ways in which they do so: i.e. regulating weather patterns, water movement, Nitrogen and Carbon cycling, etc...

a policy that treats technology as separate and distinct from ecosystem services is sort of doomed from the get go: as it is drawing an artificial boundary between industrial and ecosystem processes: Now: to incorporate this into some sort of public policy is tricky, and not even being thought about (to the best of my knowledge)... we should really be taxing people on polluting the air period: and the overall tax a function of the types of different pollutants being emitted (i.e. there are different costs to emitting clean CO2, and emitting high particulate, NOx, SOx, Hg, etc....) then, there has been quite a bit of scientific study on the movement/cycling of these pollutants in the environment: and using this information it would be possible to set prices based upon the real consequences of emitting each type of pollutant: That would be science and policy, hard to hammer out a consensus on: but once agreed upon, it would be fairly robust, and technically heavy (i.e. harder to legally wrangle out of)...

the idea of trading emissions seems to me a way of people who are in the C intensive industries to capitalize on their activities: the requirement of additionality basically translates to "if you can make money on the carbon market by undertaking this procedure (as versus making money on the manufacturing, or direct operational side of things) then this project is additional" i.e. emit a little less than you were before, and now get paid to emit.... which is a strange way of looking at it I admit, but then again, I'm not running a cement plant...

However, the payment system makes sense from a psychological point of view: as you are rewarding people who emit less than they formerly did, i.e. there is reward associated with a directional activity: reducing one's GHG emissions. And we come full circle to price: a cap and trade system will only be effective if two criteria are met: a) caps are set at meaningful levels and increase periodically to meet a well defined long term goal, and b) the price per unit is regulated and agreed upon by environmentalists, economists and industry, all having an equal say.

Ideally this would work out through some fantastically complex model that takes into account the environmental costs associated with certain rates of emission and sets prices accordingly: i.e. should emissions continue at this rate the risk of property loss, damage to human health, etc.. is in this range: and therefore prices should be set in this range: however this concept would need to be developed.

I see at present at least one way in which the energy market in the States

The current energy grid operates off of the principle of economic dispatch, in that baseline load (of the grid) is met by the most efficient plants that can afford to run at the lowest price per unit of energy. As demand increases, other plants come on line that can only afford to operate at higher per unit prices, the final plants coming on line being those that operate at the least cost efficiency. Now, there is no strict correlate between price and GHG emissions in that scenario: but that would change if prices reflected GHG emissions either via cap and trade or a carbon tax.

Monday, January 26, 2009

older thoughts looking for extension into global mind space...


in the effect of: you can't just sit and think, if you're going to sit on what you think, here are some recent thoughts on Carbon sequestration methods:

Political realization of local desires is what leads to sustainability: due to an alleviation of tension between global market forces and on the ground land use changes. Fundamental to this goal is understanding the socio-economic and cultural characteristics of the target population (CCB, 2008), however, understanding a people’s need for self-legitimization as well as the socio-economic concerns currently operating on the region are a key aspect of sustainable development that is often overlooked. The central question here is what exactly is development? Who decides who needs to be developed? If we look at Quality of life, rather than just economic metrics to define development: I really think we need to address this question qualitatively if we are to not devise the same set of “development” standards to which American and European societies have conformed. A rise in purchasing power, per capita income and technological sophistication are not defacto measurements of social and environmental development. To get a true measure of in which way people wish to develop I think the solution is relatively simple: we need to ask them. Fortunately, we have a basic framework that is somewhat adapted to local conditions, the World Health Organization Quality of Life evaluation (WHOQOL), which is accepted by the United Nations, and should be involved in any so called social development projects accepted by the CDM.

A more radical but also more practical and locally sensitive solution is to determine the current structure of landholding, identify capital and service flows into and out of the area, and make sure that they reach a truly equitable level: i.e. there is an equitable amount of capital flow in to service flow out: and there is an equitable amount of capital remaining in the area: i.e just compensation.

Presently, many problems still stem from a fundamental iniquity in the distribution of capital around the planet: We tend to have high amounts of financial and institutional capital in areas that have had depleted natural capital (i.e. one has been transferred to the other) and hence a subsequent cycle of the depletion of natural capital in other regions of the globe in order to continue an unsustainable method of development: unsustainable being the inability to balance energetic and material budgets within the zone of influence.

Extension of information networks will contribute to project success:

However, the real goal of disseminating information is to spread the necessary skills, tools and knowledge for individuals interested in developing such projects for themselves. This may be the role of an NGO or developmental entity/entrepreneur, but the end goal would be to disseminate a) knowledge of the possibility of true clean development projects, b) the necessary steps to implement such a project, and c) a realized connection to the global community which allows for further dissemination of methodology as well as registry (input from global capital flows) , and representation in the globa l decision making body.

Two conflicting problems: 1 is the constant involvement of the CDM executive board; which can not hope to thoroughly evaluate all possible projects: the second is a lack of trust or real independent verification process; as both validator, verifier and project developer have a vested interest in the voluntary market (TNI). The second becomes an issue when you cannot trust ‘lower level’ validation or verification procedures: if there were smaller more efficient teams that adhered to CDM standards (which themselves are evolving) they could validate and verify projects with the implicit trust that they adhered to the overall executive procedure: if they did not, there should be an efficient system for registering complaints (from any stakeholder) all the way to the executive board. In this sense, the executive board would serve more in an oversight capacity than in an actual executive capacity, greatly alleviating the bureaucratic burden and time lag of project approval. However, a large caveat comes with such a proposed process; it will simply not work unless there is a complete disambiguation of financial interest between the validation and verification entities, and the project implementers. Again though, this necessary elimination of shared financial interest does not mean there is no vested interest in for the project implementer, verification/validation entity, national government and the CDM Exec. Board; quite the contrary: it is in all parties best interest to generate projects that meet social, environmental and economic goals. The only reason to disambiguate financial interest is to prevent corruption from significantly altering the project process. In order to achieve the financial separation of operational entity and project implementer; there should be a set rate for validation and verification process which is funded by either a national carbon tax that goes into a pool specific to energy efficieny/environmental and social development projects: or a set percentage of profits from the sale of all carbon credits within the specified registry; this model may actually be a better idea because it cuts out funneling money through unstable and potentially corrupt institutions, and it makes the registry an entity with integrity (though this may be a naïve hope)…

Friday, January 23, 2009

reasoning behind skiing cont...




Oddly enough, it seems like in a few days you can sample a wide variety of the twists and turns the ski world has to offer, a hike up an unnamed abandoned resort in affords all the early season powder you can stomach in southern Vt, take it as a precursor, or trial of the true backcountry. or as a way of attaining true peace and quiet...




To get almost the exact opposite effect, get up really early to drive even farther north to make it to the races by 7.30, so that night your friends can pour cheap canadian whiskey from the balcony of a house down your throat (while you wear ski goggles), or shotgun beers out of an old ski boot (pics edited out,,,) so the next morning, 8.00 am in Ascutney Ville you will find yourself:

Music roaring, the vacuum cleaner sucking up the detritus of early early morning fun, the peace and quiet must out there somewhere; gazes shell shocked from the night before sit in deliberation, coffee brewing, a strong stomach wrenching pot takes the place of breakfast; Not a race day for the URI ski team due to an insurance mix up provides Max and I with free tickets on 6 to 8 inches of freshies... It could be an opportunity for all to get back in the roots, but new jersey, new york and rhode island beckon on a long humming ride home... Spirits are high on one end of things, and very low on the other. We get ready to depart the nightmare of a Taoist sage ("in the time of ruin the lord's children shall drink and make merriment long into the night while the lands are ravaged, the granaries full and the people hungry...")

snow the night before, around 2 am:



The deep spruce woods on the peak of Ascutney mountain are far from ravaged, and the land flush with prime real estate, cold and lovely. Last night served up a particularily lovely dinner from the Seedhouse cafe (http://www.bennetts1815.com/), is still going strong in this boy's belly. The food was delicious to the point of absurdity, served by a man named Peter who sported full chef atire and a Harvard Class ring (reason's for going North included straight economics, as well as a need to get out of the partially megalomaniacal metropolis of Boston/Cambridge). Twould be hard to find a more well traveled and rounded restauranteur, or one willing to cater in such a fine manner to two very grungy looking ski bum types... He did however seem grateful for our company, on a cold and rather empty Saturday night, but then again, everything about the place spoke low key: I feel this is somehow integral to the driving vision; i.e. people willing to go to great lengths to obtain a particular quality of life, or a quality of experience...

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

The Reasoning Behind (or in front of) Skiing

Just sitting down after a few weeks in serious flux, in between CT and VT, the computer a slightly foreign creature tugging at my attention like a tenous internet connection, it occurs to me that I would still rather be skiing.

As fascinating as the world's problems may be, and as attention consuming the solutions likewise are; it does not fail to amaze me the number of solutions and efforts appearing on the global and local scene like mushrooms after a rain. I only hope that the same ethic that drives me into the snow covered forest can find footing in a tumultous global situation that somehow manages to stave off global chaos with well thought out changes in human lifestyle and ambition. Rather than the ceaseless quest for more we shall engage in a fruitful quest for quality of life which acknowledges the value inherent in a) not creating larger amounts of suffering in the world to satisfy material needs and wants but also b) to engage with the world in a way that increases the positive, even evolutionary, impacts of our daily decisions.

Alas the sun is shining and the shiny box has held me answering emails for too long on such a day and I must away, though I shall return to finish an essay detailing the original subject of this post...