Wednesday, April 23, 2008
My first Windfest and Longboard
Windfest 08 was cool, despite the grumbling about the lack of wind. I especially enjoyed meeting the smart, friendly folks of the windsurfing community. It’s an interesting crowd from a variety of backgrounds; I met internet gurus, NASA guys, a navy pilot, an atomic clock guy, a criminal justice specialist, entrepreneurs, college kids, and so on.
But, what really impressed me about Windfest were all of the resources for beginners. There were free lessons in the water and on a gimbled board thingy. Vendors also had new boards for demo. I think the windsurfing community will grow because of this active recruiting.
The real watershed moment for me though, was when Marcy, who I’d just met didn’t think twice at letting me borrow her F-2 longboard rigged with her 9 m sail. I sailed that baby in the light 10kt breeze until I could barely make out the campground. It was total bliss.
Then, on the way home we (James, Sam, John and others) kept running into each other in a torturous shopping spree up the coast. I say torturous because of the tight purse strings in my family’s budget. However, this trek was not without fruit. I met this guy, another John, who had an extra Fanatic Ultra Cat for sale with dimensions similar to Marcy’s board. I told him that I was definitely interested, and when I got home I squeezed out the funds to make it happen. I met him at Buckroe Tuesday and did the deal. Now I’m the proud owner of a most awesome board that I hope to get wet today. Yes!
12'5" long, 250L, with a sliding mast track, this baby says, "Made in West Germany" - Does this mean that this thing was made before the fall of the Berlin Wall?
For more detailed accounts of Windfest, check out these posts by Catapulting Aaron and James.
My only regret, aside from my skirmish with the free beer, was that I didn’t have my family. There were lots of windsurfer dads, which, at my current age and status, I think is ultra-cool. I plan to bring them next year.
Tuesday, April 22, 2008
Kite surfing cargo ship?
Happy Earth Day!
Instead of listing all that we can do to save the planet, I give you this outlandish Earth Day story.
WTF will those crazy Germans think of next?! Is this real? I snoped it and didn't get a hit. Even if it's not real, I'm going to give kudos for creative thinking.
Instead of listing all that we can do to save the planet, I give you this outlandish Earth Day story.
WTF will those crazy Germans think of next?! Is this real? I snoped it and didn't get a hit. Even if it's not real, I'm going to give kudos for creative thinking.
Wednesday, April 9, 2008
Cool mutualism story in the NY Times
It's refreshing to see a story about the mutualism between a burrowing shrimp and a shrimp goby on the front page of the NY Times. Judson also mentions a smattering of other mutualism examples including our relationship with bacteria in our GI tract. Cool!
Friday, April 4, 2008
Sprawl hurting Bay...Duhhh!!!
The Daily Press featured a front page article about the Bay’s report card and it looks like our land use policies should be grounded. While James is right that overpopulation is a problem, it’s also true that sprawl is outpacing population growth, which is thrusting us ever more forcefully towards K.
In the DP article Bill Dennison (Maryland’s Center for Environmental Science) stated that “in the 1990s paved surfaces expanded by 42% in the watershed while population grew only 8%”.
And from the Bay Program news release:
“…if current development trends continue, an additional 250,000 acres of watershed land will become impervious between 2000 and 2010 and 9.5 million more acres of forests will be threatened by development by 2030.”
What’s depressing is that I feel we’re hampered by the sprawl industrial complex, analogous to the military industrial complex. Sprawl is a major economic force. People need jobs and building everything up provides jobs.
It doesn’t seem like we’re close to change, barring some catastrophic event, which may or may not already be underway (global warming). Regardless, we pay a huge cost. The ick that we produce sluices uninhibited over impervious surfaces into our waters, which kills our fisheries, degrades our water, reduces our quality of life, and makes us sick.
This is a huge problem that we’re all part of and it will take everyone’s efforts to change. Unfortunately, I fear that we’ll reap misery before we unite on this.
Here's a related story about watermen who are considering suing over the bay's pollution.
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