essays

State Should Require Companies to Remove Logging Trash from Trails

One of my pet peeves is state lands is where there has been a recent clear-cut timber harvest and hiking trails are not cleared of logging trash. Logging is important part of managed forests, but it’s one of many uses.

Along the Long Path

Unsalable tree tops and other brush or so-called “logging trash” has an important role as wildlife habitat. The logging trash will rot away and leave valuable soil for trees and forest to grow up and around. Leaving logging trash on steep slopes will help prevent erosion.

Following the Long Path Thru a Clear Cut

If a hiking trail, a campsite, a road, or other public access-way exists in a forest, the DEC should preserve access to it. Hunters, hikers, campers, and outdoorsmen need access. Trees marked previous for trail crossings, camping, or other signs, and then timbered should be replaced with other signs or markers.

White Birch and White Pine Logged

… it’s just good practice for lands that are supposed to be multi-use lands.

Japan’s Rebirth May Save the Planet

Japan’s partial meltdown and destruction of three or more nuclear reactors at the Fukushima I Power Plant may finally force the world to rethink it’s energy policies. Japan’s future relating to these destroyed nuclear plants looks grim, with a great possibility of that at least some nuclear plant operators will die, and other residents around the plant will die slow and horrific deaths from cancer. Crops will be contaminated and animals will get sick and die. Nuclear radiation is nasty stuff.

Much of Japan’s recent history is surrounded by tragic consequences of Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombings, that not only killed thousands upon their initial explosion, but killed thousands more in the following years as the doses of radiation stimulated cancers and caused miscarriages. While the dropping of the atomic bomb and the lives it took is a distance memory, and evil potentially just as great if not greater has been unleashed over Japan. There ought to be a realization that the nuclear age must end.

Tugg Boat and Nuclear Plant

The Japanese are certain to search for new energy sources to replace these existing nuclear plants. While Japanese are ready adopters of high technology, they are certainly are now aware of dangers of nuclear power and are going to want to shy away from it. Being an island nation, and being so aware of the dangers of climate change, they probably are not going to welcome in a large coal or natural gas plant that produces large carbon emissions to replace the now destroyed and forever unusable nuclear plants. Likewise, Japan has to import almost all of it’s fossil energy, so becoming more dependent on fossil fuels is a recipe for economic stagnation.

What can Japan do to replace these destroyed power plants? It’s not clear, although the unconventional alternatives to new fossil and nuclear generation seem likely. Japan can go on a massive campaign to reduce electricity consumption and build out renewables. They can build a smarter grid, where appliances reduce their electrical load automatically to ensure a need for less surplus capacity. They can make massive investments in renewable energies like off-shore wind and wave turbines. They can require buildings to have solar cells. They can make saving electricity a national priority.

Power

Japan may have the chance to build the energy infrastructure only dreamed and theorized by Climate Activists in other countries. Yet, if Japan can do it, other countries will not be far behind in copying their successes. Whatever Japan does to rebuild will be an indication for energy industry of the future.

Another Place I Want to Go Back To

One of the places I really want to visit this next summer is T-Lake Falls in the West Canada Creek Wilderness. As a Boy Scout in 1998, I went up there for a week, and we made camp at a campsite about a 1/4 mile below the water falls. I have good memories of climbing up the last 10 feet of the waterfall, and sliding down it into the pool below. The black flies were awful but experience was great.

There is no marked trail back there, although most of the route follows old roads and unofficially marked herd paths. I vaguely remember parts of the route, and I have been studying the map and description from Barbara McMartins’ Discover the West Central Adirondacks. Much to my memory it’s about 6 miles each way, although being relatively flat, should be hikable in about 3 hours each way. It can be done in a long day.

Unlike as a Boy Scout I probably will not overnight out there. I will probably get up early one morning, drive up there, hike in, stop at the falls, grab some pictures and sit back for some memories. Then I will hike back to Mountain Pond Road and do some roadside camping, in one of the six campsites. I much prefer the comforts of roadside camping, and not carrying in gear all that way. While the Boy Scout trip was fun, the gear sure was heavy for that distance hike.

It should be fun. They say one can not go back to a place in time, but somehow revisiting the memories of yesteryear and my younger self should be well worth it.

My Idea of the Perfect Day

There is a lot of talk these days about the trendy resorts where everything is provided for you. The kind of place where they offer structure for your complete day, including defined recreation areas and supervision. That couldn’t be farther from what I would view the perfect day. I hate structure, I hate acting like an adult, I hate following schedules–especially on vacation.

I’d rather wake up in the middle of nowhere than in any city on earth.
— Steve McQueen

  1. Have no firm schedule or plans, just limited by the rhythms of nature and daylight.
  2. Drive somewheres up in the woods where I could hike up a fairly remote mountain, starting before most people are even awake.
  3. Arrive up to the top of the mountain, peer down into the valleys below.

East

  1. Spend some time looking down into the wilderness or farmland below.
  2. Take lots of pictures for my scrapbook to look back at.
  3. Descend the mountain and enjoy the fresh air of the afternoon.

Pond Lillies on the Marsh and Mush

  1. Paddle around on a lake or flatwater stream in my kayak for a couple of hours into the evening, while sipping a beer and enjoying the wilderness around.
  2. Snaps some pictures, maybe even toss a fishing line over and do some fishing.
  3. When I get too hot, hop out of the kayak and go for a swim for a while.

Camping Down By Otter Brook

  1. Find a roadside campsites along the way, somewhere far away from anybody else, where I won’t be bothered by anyone else or noise of other groups.
  2. Park my truck with it’s fiberglass cap/shell, unload my gear.
  3. Set up my lights, Christmas lights and other appliances.
  4. Build a campfire and cook some dinner on it.

Reading in the Rain

  1. Enjoy the flickering fire, listen to some music as the night goes by.
  2. Drink some beer, look up at the stars.
  3. Read a book, stay up as late as I want, listen to music as loud as I want to.

… my perfect day is not expensive or formalized,
it’s just wild and free.

41 Degrees

Today’s average high is supposed to be 41 degrees.
Much warmer then the cold weather of recent.

Snowy Day!

41 degrees may not be warm
but it’s warm enough to be melting the snow.

Watching the Snow Melt

Exposing the bare ground
and showing the first signs of spring.

Frame 59

It may be cold and snowy today,
but spring is most certainly just around the corner.

March vs April

Last year, I happened to hike Severance Hill above Schroon Lake on March 7th, and also on April 11th. Being roughly one month apart, I figured it would be an interesting study in how the seasons change between these months.

Paradox Lake, March.

 Paradox Lake

Paradox Lake, April.

 Paradox Lake

Southern Schroon Lake, March.

Mountains

Southern Schroon Lake, April.

 Southern Schroon Lake

Deep Bay, March.

Ice Fishing on Schroon Lake

Steep Bay, April.

Steep Bay

Childhood Dreams, Adult Nightmares

As a child I dreamed the city of the future would look a lot like the State Office Campus, located Uptown, next to SUNY Albany. I envisioned a world where people could commute freely from home and to work and shopping without ever stopping at a traffic light.

Cities would consist of networks of one lane streets, where cars would freely merge in and our of the traffic pattern without ever stopping. Traffic would always be free flowing, there would never be any congestion. Fuel prices would inexpensive, cars would be quiet and non-polluting. Roads would be safe to drive and there would never be any car accidents. Its a world that really does not exist.


View Larger Map

While in later years, sidewalks and crosswalks where installed across the the ring road, but literally anyone who tries to cross these three lanes in each direction arterials, is taking their lives in their own hands. There is the constant noise and pollution from circulating cars coming and leaving the state office campus. Those unfamiliar with the campus will find themselves driving around in circles, try to get where they want to go.

The reality is the state office campus is a pretty hideous place. My childhood dreams of a city without stoplights or traffic control besides merge lanes, is not a place where anyone really would want to live, much less visit or recreate in it. In a world where the automobile is so dominate is not a desirable place for humans to be. Its also not a particularly good place for a limited planet where we should be conserving and not wasting resources.