Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Cottonwood Request

Since not too many of you are going to go back and read the old post on possible uses for cottonwood cotton, I'm posting the comment that was put on that post today by Tobin.


Does anyone have any cottonwood cotton saved up for some reason or another? I'm looking to use it in a study to protect cooling equipment from contamination via cotton.

Contact me at tomck at vestas.com

If this works, Alaska  would have another renewable harvestable resource.   Tobin, if you don't get what you need now, come next summer you can get more than you need just from my backyard.  

[UPDATE:  Tobin emailed me and I misread the intent of his research.  It won't use cottonwood, it's to prevent contamination from cottonwood.  So we're still lookiing for people to find a use for all the cottonwood cotton.]

Monday, January 25, 2010

Pocketmod - Cool, Clever Pocket Notepad



Pam at Grass Roots Science sent me a link to pocketmod a long time ago, and as we were getting ready for Juneau, I decided it was just what I needed.

Rather than write things down on a piece of scratch paper, I prefer to have a little notebook in my pocket and just keep everything in the same place.  And everyting stays in chronological order.  And I try to date things.  "Hmmm, I met him at the film festival, that was in December, so it should be around....here."

Pocketmod offers a tiny, but very handy way to make a little notebook out of one piece of paper.  It has a template and you can make different types of pages - lined, a calendar by week, by day, a to do list, etc.  You can even stick in a Sudoku.



It prints out on one page, and then you cut it - following their instructions (upper middle left) and then fold it into a little book.  I was even able to put a jpeg form map of Juneau on the back page.   And presto, you have a notebook for a week.




To see how easy it is to make your own customized pocket notebook click the link.

And since it only uses one side of the paper, it's a great way to use the back side of a paper you don't need.  And I would imagine that kids would love this too.

New Run Route - Eagles and Other Sights

Scrondahl commented on the Stay off the Flume post, that I should not rule out the Flume, but check the Juneau Avalanche Forecast. Here's Sunday's forecast:





The flume trail itself is pretty short, I'd really like to go further up Basin Road. But today, before getting to the avalanche forecast site, I took HarpboyAK's suggested and ran out Glacier Highway and back. It was not in the woods, but it was a nice run.





There are eagles in Anchorage from time to time.




But today I saw about ten in my hour run.  That
wouldn't happen in Anchorage.

 

 

 


 






Almost home now as I pass the Evergreen cemetery.
That's the name, not my description.


When I got home I was able to take a quick shower before Juneau friends arrived.  We haven't seen them since Zoe was born in Anchorage (she was early).  So we went down to Capitol Park.  We saw this bumper sticker on the way. 






Here's Sky, the older brother,  moving much faster than
I can easily catch him with the camera.



Sunday, January 24, 2010

Ring Around the Moon

Saturday night there was a ring around the moon.  I tried to capture it with my camera, but I just got the moon and black.  But playing around with it in iPhoto I got this white shadow of the trees and in the upper right hand corner it could be some of the ring.  (I used the shadow button to boost whatever was in the shadows.)  To the naked eye it was easy to see, but my camera had more trouble. A ring around the sun is easier to catch on camera. The moon ring was all the way around. I should mention that Juneau's night sky is definitely darker than Anchorage's.  



Home Hiwaay has a page describing rings around the moon and other interesting moon effects.
A Ring Around The Moon
The ring around the Moon is caused by the refraction of Moonlight (which of course is reflected sunlight) from ice crystals in the upper atmosphere. The shape of the ice crystals results in a focusing of the light into a ring. Since the ice crystals typically have the same shape, namely a hexagonal shape, the Moon ring is almost always the same size.
Less typical are the halos that may be produced by different angles in the crystals. They can create halos with an angle of 46 degrees.
Moon Ring Weather Folklore
Folklore has it that a ring around the moon signifies bad weather is coming, and in many cases this may be true. So how can rings around the moon be a predictor of weather to come? The ice crystals that cover the halo signify high altitude, thin cirrus clouds that normally precede a warm front by one or two days. Typically, a warm front will be associated with a low pressure system which is commonly referred to as a storm. It is believed that the number of stars within a moon halo indicate the number days before bad weather will arrive. Give it a try the next time you observe a moon halo.

We'll see if there is a storm in the next few days.

STAY OFF THE FLUME


That was the subject line on an email from a Juneau reader after last week's post about the Flume Trail.  I thought others ought to hear his message too.  With his permission I’m posting an edited version of the email.
Steve, a serious warning:

STAY OFF THE FLUME.  It's at the bottom of the biggest avalanche chute on Mt. Juneau, and the chute is loaded.

I don’t know who gave you the advice, but they haven't lived here long enough to know...  See the maps and photos at

http://www.juneau.org/manager/documents/Juneau_urban_avalanche_photos_part2.pdf


where Page 11-12-13 is the result of a big avalanche coming down that chute.  I was in the Capitol Building at the time, and it was like an eclipse as the snow cloud enveloped downtown.  The runout filled the canyon and came up above the road where the trees are still missing.

I've lived here all my life, and I won't go up Basin Road after any significant snow build up on the top of Mt. Juneau.  I certainly would not now go past the Gold Creek bridge, nor on the flume side of the canyon.

I also wouldn't go running out Thane Road, which is a beautiful run/bike ride when it's not avalanche season.  Once there is significant snow buildup on Mt. Roberts, Thane Road is an avalanche zone once you pass the GCI earth station and the Thane Campground, which are right on the edge of the avalanche runout.  See
http://arcticglass.blogspot.com/2007/03/more-avalanche-photos.html

[avalanche photo from the link]
The best running alternative this time of year is Old Glacier Highway past the high school to Twin Lakes.  The highway is relatively low traffic and has wide shoulders and good sidewalks.

But please, if you value your life, stay off the flume until April.  Just look at the avalanche runout above the flume from the Basin road side as you go around the corner to the causeway.

BTW, one of my ancestors built that flume.  The water goes to a power house below the Gov's mansion, across the parking lot from the Federal Building.  It's been generating power since the early  1920s.

HarpboyAK

So, despite the fact that these trails are steps from our house, I guess I'll be exploring other running paths.

Capitol Art and History 1



The Juneau Capitol Building, which houses the Legislature and the Governor's Office, is also a gallery of Alaskan art and history.  The walls are lined with old photographs, paintings, and carvings. 

The main halls appear to be of historical significance.  The stairwells have more current art - some by school children and some appears to be available to buy through art galleries.

This post has a number of historical photos that are on the wall around the office I'm in on the east wing of the first floor.  The building is on a hill.  There is a side door on the first floor that goes out to the street.  But the columns entrance leads to the ground floor.

I've merged the titles onto the photos so they pretty much speak for themselves.  These are most of the photos in our wing, though a couple had so much reflection on the glass I left them out.  Double click to enlarge them.



 

 












 

 


 

Saturday, January 23, 2010

Another Way to Make (not much) Money from My Blog

Here's an email I got yesterday.
Hi,

My name is XXX XXXX and I run a WWWW business in Alaska.
Since you run a blog in Alaska, I'd like to ask if you'd be interested
in working out an advertising relationship with me.

It's pretty simple. All I'd ask for is a blogroll link pointing to my
website, ZZZZZZ.org, or a blog post with a link to my
website from your blog. And after the links up, I'll send you $5 with Paypal. Easy as that.

And I'll also throw in free WWWWWWWW quotes for you! ;o)

Thanks for your time, and let me know if you're interested!

-XXX
Rest assured, I'm not likely to endorse a product or 
put up a link because someone is willing to pay me for it. 
If I will make sure readers know the relationship. 
And mostly I'll do it, like this post, just to let people 
know ways people surreptitiously advertise on blogs.
 
If I write about something or someplace, it's because I
think it's interesting. If I endorse it, it's because I think it's good.
 
That's not to say that XXXXX doesn't run a legitimate business 
and he is just being creative about ways to advertise.  
Skepticism is always healthy.  

Saturday and More Sun



Our basement apartment has most of its windows facing south. There are a couple other versions of this view of our yard and street up on this blog. I guess I better find out what that mountain is because it's in a number of pictures here.



And this is looking out the side window up the street to Mt. Juneau.



And here's the sun streaming into the windows of our entry way. 

Friday, January 22, 2010

More Blue Sky and Sun in Juneau


Blue sky over the capitol building on Wednesday


Blue sky Thursday morning walking to work.


Clear sky ahead and sun walking to work on Friday


Sun shines on anti-abortion demonstration
in front of Capitol Building Friday.

It's a Totally New Game

First, please be patient with me.  I'm working in an environment where trust is very important. Some people feel they've been burned by the media and they know of blogs that focus on dishing dirt. I've got to gain some trust before I can blog about work.  That said, most  people have been incredibly nice, both at work and in town. I've also been working long hours, which leave little access to non-work topics and little time to write.  I barely even got to see the blue sky and sunshine that was out part of the day.

But I have  been expecting the Supreme Court's decision in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission. I've had some thoughts as this decision was coming up. They've all probably been made by others, but I haven't seen anything.

1. I think with this decision, the fiction that the Conservative court would be a strict constructionist court and not an activist court is revealed to all who are open to the obvious.
2. When  the majority says this is about free speech and people's right to hear all views,  they are either:
a. exceptionally duplicitous,
b. ideologically blind, or
c. incredibly naive.

We know from modern advertising, from the Nazi, Soviet, and North Korean Propaganda machines, and from Fox News, that if you say something often enough, if you know how to appeal to their emotional fears, you can get many of them to believe anything. With corporate interests unleashed to spend as much as they want on political propaganda, the idea of free speech, the idea of democracy is endangered by a huge imbalance of money to shape how people see the world. (I haven't read the decision yet, so if you have, please make appropriate adjustments where I mischaracterize the scope of the decision.  If you haven't read it either, take what I say about the specific direct consequences with a grain of skepticism.)

3. Is this the end of democracy in the US and the beginning of a corporate dictatorship? Not necessarily. There are still some limits.
a. There are things like the internet, though if corporate interests can buy laws that favor them to take over and control access and content, the internet may not last as a mild west of free speech.
b. Nothing lasts forever. Even the powerful become smug and fall. But how bad will it get before that happens?
c. There are already people working on a Constitutional Amendment to limit individual constitutional rights to living human beings and not corporate entities.  But will corporate America's new expanded spending freedom create advertising against such an amendment kill it?
d. Will there be an unexpected vacancy on the Supreme Court that would allow Obama to shift the balance? Probably not.
e.  Will the perceived-as-more-enlightened corporate wealth at the Googles and Apples counter  the more conservative companies?  I suspect their messages may sound somewhat different, but they also, are large corporations, that have common interests with the Bechtels and Exxons.

My parents grew up in Germany, so it is a reference that I have some knowledge of. I don't raise these analogies lightly.  My comparisons here are not to concentration camps, but to the manipulation of language to shape people's view of the world.  The Nazis were elected to power democratically. In his two volume diary, I Shall Bear Witness, Victor Klemperer (cousin of the conductor Otto Klemperer), documents his daily life as a Jewish professor in Germany during World War II. His parents had converted to Christianity and he had been baptized if I remember right.  He was married to an Aryan. He'd also seen combat in WW I. All these factors gave him more protection, longer than most other Jews. He writes about daily life, how he slowly loses parts of his University job until it is totally gone.  He chronicles the erosion of other rights as his options are restricted more and more.  But he also documents the use of language by the regime to encourage support for the government and the war effort through manipulation of language to disguise setbacks on the battlefield and to create the idea of a great Aryan nation and the racially inferior others.

While these ideas are spread throughout Witness, they are extracted and expanded in Klemperer's Language of the Third Reich (LTI: Lingua Tertii Imperii).  The link is to the Google book version.  It is pretty academic as it attempts, through exhaustive counting of the use of words and the evolution of the meanings, to show how language was manipulated to control what the German people thought.  (You can enlarge the text below by clicking on it.)






You can already see this happening among many Fox addicts. They live in a Fox shaped reality.   A more accessible, though limited, glimpse into LTI is in Wikipedia's coverage of this book.  
 
My great concern about this court decision is how it takes off the limits on corporations' ability to shape how we view the world, using the tools they've perfected by selling us cars and deodorant and, increasingly, candidates.   Up to now, there have been limits on how much corporations can spend,  But now they will market their sacred role in society and demonize those who oppose them with far more power at elections.  One has to twist logic to the extreme to believe this is about first amendment rights.


Here's a related BBC video on Sigmund Freud's nephew, Edward Bernays, who took his uncle's ideas from psychology and used them to create what we know today as public relations. (Thanks for this link goes to a commenter on the Victor Lebow post.)




Wikipedia says of Bernays:
Combining the ideas of Gustave Le Bon and Wilfred Trotter on crowd psychology with the psychoanalytical ideas of his uncle, Dr. Sigmund Freud, Bernays was one of the first to attempt to manipulate public opinion using the subconscious. . .
Adam Curtis's award-winning 2002 documentary for the BBC, The Century of the Self, [the video above] pinpoints Bernays as the originator of modern public relations, and Bernays was named one of the 100 most influential Americans of the 20th century by Life magazine.[2]
Already, there is scurrying to study how this decision is going to affect a myriad of state laws across the country, including in Alaska.  The most obvious impact will be on campaign limits and campaign disclosure laws.  This may well prove to be among the most significant Supreme Court decisions of the century.  I take solace in the fact that nature seems to move toward balance, and when a system goes off into one extreme, it comes back.  So, Nazi Germany fell as did the Soviet Union.  But if this tips the balance as greatly as I suspect, and in a way that allows sophisticated marketing techniques to shape the thinking patterns of enough people to win elections into the future, then how far will this swing us, before we come back to some semblance of the sort of democracy we know today?