Tuesday, March 01, 2005
Alerts - September/October 2002 Planet Newsletter - Sierra Club
By Tom Valtin
CedarDespite a growing chorus of editorial skepticism from newspapers across the country about the Bush administration's pro-logging 'Healthy Forests Initiative,' the president and his Senate allies have been burning up the airwaves blaming environmental protection for this summer's forest fires.
In late July, before the fires usurped the headlines, Senator Maria Cantwell (D-Wash.) introduced the Roadless Area Conservation Act of 2002, S. 2790, which joined its House counterpart, H.R. 4865."
Alright ... breakout the pens, keyboards and telephones! Get your comments and opinions out to your local members of Congress. Let them know you WANT you Outdoor Heritage Protected and NOT wasted for the sake of making a few $$.
If you don't take action, then don't complain when you head for your favorite backwoods area and it's nothing more than a grassland at best - or a wasteland at worst. But neither of them will provide you with the 'forest of your dreams'.
ACT NOW .. or CRY for the rest of your life.
O'fieldstream
$1,000,000 and 1,000's of hours of volunteer work ... WASTED!
Sun 02-27-2005 , 9:27 pm
Dozens of fish have turned up dead over the weekend in the West Branch of the Sugar River.
A Dane County River just removed from a list of polluted waterways is contaminated again."
Friday, January 14, 2005
QPR Institute: Life is too precious to NOT be pro-active
I have lost 4 close friends, several associations and 2 revered authors to the finality of suicide. There are as many 'causes' of suicide as there are people to who make this fatal decision. However, all of them have one thing in common: "Life, to them, becomes unbearable." The one thing we cannot replace - no matter how much sci-fi one consumes, it is still in the imagination and out of touch with reality that humans can restore life. Once Life is gone - it is gone. That is final.
However, like many other social ills we, in our fast-paced, time-crunched and over-anxious society experience, there IS solution! And, amazingly it -like the proverbial 'forest' - is, right in front of our noses; but we can't - or choose not - to see it. Amazing and aggonizingly frustrating - but true.
For those who have experienced the loss that comes with a committed suicide, I need not 'pound the podium' to drum up response - your attention to this subject is surface-oriented and ever present. For those who have only 'read about it' or 'observed it in the media', will need a bit more cajolling - however, I hope not too much. Because as the statistics show, ever 18 minutes - of every, single day - 24/7/365 - another American dies at their own hands. This need not happen.
The QPR site offers expert advice on the 'signs' we can all be aware of - personally and socially - that will allow us to head-off a potential act of the 'Forever Choice' : Suicide. Take the time to visit the site. Read their information; thoroughly.
I also strongly encourage all of us to become educated in the skill of Suicide Prevention. Many of us in the world of OUTDOOR RECREATON are aware of the benefits CPR certification. What most of do not know is there is equally a need for QPR's Certifications. These are tools anyone can be taught to use that can and will save lives.
As a QPR-trained Gatekeeper you will learn to:
- recognize the warning signs of suicide
- know how to offer hope
- know how to get help and save a life
Visit their site today - get the facts - and make the committment to become QPR Certified. The life you save - may very well be someone you care deeply about - possibly even your own.
- QPR: Question - Persude - Refer
- URL: http://www.qprinstitute.com
- Contact: 1-888-726-7926 or qinstitute@qwest.net
Arthur O'fieldstream
Tuesday, November 23, 2004
Being Thankful, unfortunately, has it's difficult side these days
There is but one word that calls all of these together and binds them into understanding. That word is GREED. There is an old story of how to catch a monkey with a jar of cookies. Put several cookies in the jar and leave it in the open. When you see a monkey reach in, you will also see him just set there. You will be able to walk right up to the monkey and dispatch him without bother. Why? Why would this, otherwise, shrewd and warry animal not flee at the approach of a human? The answer is simple. The monkey had too many cookies in its hand to get it out of the jar and would not drop the cookies to make his escape.
This describes the very act of knowingly destroying the land, air and water on which our very life depends. And why those who do so, do it with doctored science and statistics. Knowing full well that the truth-of-the-matter will be devastating in the end. Yet, they will - for the short-term - suck the life out of what is avaiable for their gain today.
I know. When you put it like this - it's obviously insane. And you'll say, "They can't possibly be doing that!" My response - and the response of many others in the scientific, outdoor recreation, environmental, agricultural and many other areas - is simply this, '... take a look at what is happening. The facts do tell as very scary truth.'
So, at this season of the Thanksgiving holiday, as yourself this simple question. At time when more people are concerned with 'big sales' and buying gifts for the upcoming Xmas season, than they are for the health and safety of their very own environment, do we actually have ANYTHING ... or ANYONE!... to be Thankful; for?
Well... more all the time - a thinking person must weigh-that-question-out... longer and longer. But the overriding answer is still .. YES!
We STILL have he opportunity to put a halt to the insanity. We STILL have the power of Free Speech. We STILL have the ability to move toward a 'grass roots' movement. We STILL have the financial freedom to 'make things happen'. The QUESTION that remains is still the same one that's been asked for the last 34 years of my memory - and who knows how long before that ... "Will we ACT?" Not just, "Will we ACT IN TIME?" But, simply, "WILL WE ACT?", at all... ?
But IF we wait much longer, we won't have the air for the breath it will take to speak-out or take action. We will go thirsty for want of water - and all efforts will wither. In the end there won't be any land worth fighting for. Then - YES THEN - we will no longer need a Thanksgiving Day ... we'll then be crying for a DAY when we once could be Thankful.
Act NOW ! Let's not wait until there is NO time left. And let's realize that time IS very close. A LOT CLOSER than most realize.
--------------------
Be Thankful. Have a Pleasant Thanksgiving. But, also be in a state-of-mind that is determined to KEEP THAT FOR WHICH WE HAVE TO BE THANKFUL!!
A. O'fieldstream
Monday, November 22, 2004
A Picture of Outdoor Heritage .. in ACTION
There were four generations of Richeys gathered at our home today. My father, Lawrence, at 92 years old, is the patriarch of our family. Me, at 65, was the next oldest. My son Guy, soon to be 35, brought his six-week-old son, Joshua David, to our home for a mini-family reunion. It was the first time my father had a chance to meet his great-grandson, and for us to get all four generations together." READ ON
Wednesday, November 17, 2004
Dan Small Outdoors: "Blogging The Road"
It's just not everyday that your read something like this. And then, it's not every day you get to read .. oh, wait just scaulded-dog minute! You do! You do get to read this .. every day - and sometimes twice a day.
How? You ask ... (Ok .. .OK.. O K !! That's your cue .. !!!) How ? YOU ASK ... ???
Whew! For a moment I didn't think you'd catch on ... but since you asked .. and so kindly, tune into an Outdoor Writer's Network Blog .. that's how.
Never heard of the Outdoor Writers Network? And what's a BLOG? Well, I'm not surprised - they are both still pretty new - and for the most part quite rare, too. But they are out there. In fact - if you're actually reading this - then you've found one: The O'fieldstream Blog.
The Outdoor Network Blog: Blog The Road, comes from Dan Small, from up-Wisconsin-way. Each day, during Dan's regular activity as an outdoor communicator, he uncovers and discovers interesting details that he passes onto his reading public by way of his Blog.
I've yet to read one of his Blog-o-ports (that's a report-by-Blog .. by, Blog!) that isn't both enlightening and entertaining. And that's pretty much why I read this stuff anyway. It's fun. Engaging. And it's downright informative.
NO. I didn't say News Aggravator !! I said NEWS AGGREGATOR.
OK, I see it's time for an 'official' definition for the question:
- A news aggregator is "software that periodically reads a set of
news sources, in one of several XML-based formats, finds the new
bits, and displays them in reverse-chronological order on a single
page." - You open the Aggregator and read the short-blips on what a 'blogger' has written and then you descide if you want to read any more. It's pretty cool. You don't have to go trapsing around the Internet or try to remember how you filed those Bookmarks, to find your information. It is serverd - right to you. Personal like.
- From : Dave Winer's, DaveNet Oct 8 2002, What is an Aggregator
Unlike the "sludge" - you'd expect to find at the 'bottom-of-something' - this is more like fine wine that improves with time and stored in a cellar while it ages and matures. You'll find some really 'good stuff' down in the, Blog The Road 'cellar'.. Just wait 'til you read the story that goes with this one !!
A. O'fieldstream
Tuesday, November 16, 2004
Whitefish Studio & TMAR .. Outdoor Heritage Boosters
'Got a black magic woman
Got a black magic woman
I've got a black magic woman, got me so blind I can't see.
That she's a black magic woman, she's trying to make a devil out of me.'
-Carlos Santana
I recently received a visit from a reader of the Thursday Morning Art Review who happened to be in the area on business and took the time to stop by.
We'd just exchanged pleasantries when I was called down to the house for a few minutes.
'Sorry to bail out on you like that.' I said upon my return. 'Not a problem.' He replied. 'It was fun to look around the place. Even though we've just met, I feel like I know quite a bit about you. There's the box of rocks that you wrote about last week.' He nodded toward the corner. 'But, there's more than just rocks...'"
-- from the Whitefish Studio web site's -"Thursday Morning Art Review ...
This exerpt, is from the site of a gentle man - and I do mean that in that way - who is both a collegue and a friend. He is also an incredibley talented person who is able to share with others through his art and his writing the experiences of a lifetime streamside and afield. His name is Bob White.
Bob and his wife Lisa own and operate Whitefish Studios out of their home in Marine on St. Croix, Minnesota. Bob is a 20+ year veteran of guiding both fishing and hunting in some of the most beautiful areas on earth: Alaska and Argentina. He brings to the canvas and watercolor paper the revelations of his years of passionate attention to detail and the experiences with some of the most colorful characters imaginable. He and Lisa then make them available to us - the waiting and yearning public, who only dream of such experience - in the forms of original art, reproduction prints and note cards.
Recently - over the past 2 years - Bob has been experimenting with a new medium: writing. Bob has shown, in that time, that he is as at-home with a computer keyboard as he is with his brushes and palettes. Each week, nearly 2000 eager souls wait for their email to inform them they have 'mail'. Because they know they will be getting the new - hot-off-the-press visions of Bob in his regular weekly publication, "Thursday Morning Art Review" .. or TMAR as we've come to fondly refer to it.
TMAR is a word story that flows from the images of Bob's artwork - through his years of experience - and colored by his very fertile imagination and storehouse of knowledge. Each story carries with it the images of thousands of experiences - yet focused though one image - a print - which Bob promotes, each week.
As an artist myself, I can appreciate the talent it takes to make these images and prose come to life for me and hundreds of others. As an outdoorsman, I relish in the experiences Bob allows me to experience vicariously. As a promoter and evangelist of the Outdoor Heritage I am not only thankful .. I am awed .. by the power Bob brings to the statements one can make for the grandeur, the majesty, the magic .. the sheer wonder of it all: the beauty of the natural world.
The ancient chinese philosopher Confucious is credited with the saying, "A picture is worth a thousand words" .. and it is so true. Imagine, then, how gifted one must be to be able to say a thousand words and create a picture in your mind of the very picture your are looking upon, but ... from another perspective. That is the art and talent of Bob White.
Experience the Whitefish Studios. Experience the 'Thursday Morning Art Review'. Experience the great Outdoors. And then step-to-the-plate to ensure they will always be there ... for us - and for future generations. Support efforts to protect and preserve our resources. Take steps to insure each of your actions- in or out of the outdoors- does the same. Teach a child, pass-on-to a friend and strengthen within yourself - the Outdoors Code ... to be respectful of and towards the natural resources. Embue this effort through being engaged in the Outdoor Heritage Activities.
Experience the magic through the visuals and words of those like Bob White. Support those who work diligently to feed their passions - those that bring to all of us the wonders of nature - in their various forms: of artwork , as stories in print, as photographs, in movies, as online productions, and by whatever media they use.
Support the Outdoor Communicators. Those who ply their craft as artists of pen and brush - and those who today use the modern technological versions. For it is through their efforts we have a legacy - a visual, oral and written - record of our wonderous Outdoor Heritage. It will be through those 'pictures' with which we will launch a thousand words - that will reconstitute our memories of the wildlife and times that inhabit the streams, fields and mountains. All of which we so deeply hold dear .. and for many, as the burning words of a wise man once said still prod us today;