Sunday, October 21, 2012

Jon and Sam and Johanna's Excellent Day

THIS SIGN IS AT THE BEGINNING OF THE TRAIL
THE ELEVATION HERE IS ABOUT 7,900 FEET
            On Wednesday 10/17, we made the 90 mile drive to Crater Lake National Park.  None of us had been in the park for a dozen or more years and none of us had climbed Mt. Scott.  The trail begins from the East Rim Drive Road, about a third of the way around the Lake from Rim Village.  We spent fifteen minutes at the Park Headquarters visiting with the ranger on duty and stocking up on 25-cents postcards.  (The price was posted as .25c but I didn't quibble and the lady at the counter didn't seem to see the difference between four for a penny and four for a dollar.)


          It's about 12 miles from Headquarters to the trailhead and we arrived there at about noon.  We had some snacks and started up the mountain a little later.

VIEW OF MT. SCOTT FROM ABOUT 100 FEET FROM THE BEGINNING OF THE TRAIL
THE LOOKOUT IS ON THE HIGHEST PEAK, ABOUT IN THE MIDDLE OF THE RIDGE LINE.
THE CHUTE LOOKS LIKE IT MAY HAVE BEEN A GARBAGE CHUTE OVER THE YEARS.


          The trail loops to the right from the starting place and rises at a fair pitch all along.  About an eighth of a mile into the climb you lose sight of the top and don't see it again until about two hundred yards before you are there.

THERE WAS LITTLE OTHER TRAFFIC ON THE
MOUNTAIN
          It only took  us about an hour and fifteen minutes to go the two and a half miles and about a thousand vertical feet.  The views are well worth the little energy expended.



THEY SAY MT. SCOTT IS THE ONLY PLACE ON THE GROUND WHERE YOU CAN GET ALL OF THE WIDTH OF THE LAKE INTO ONE FRAME

THE PEAK DIRECTLY ACROSS THE LAKE IS CALLED WATCHMAN PEAK (8013').  THE HIGHEST POINT ON THE NEAR SIDE OF THE LAKE IS CLOUDCAP (7865').  IF YOU JUMPED INTO THE LAKE FROM CLOUDCAP YOU WOULD BE VERY NEAR TO THE DEEPEST PLACE IN THE LAKE (1943') IF ANYONE EVER FOUND YOU.


MT. THIELSEN BUT THROUGH MUCH HAZE AND WITH THE ZOOM ON THE CAMERA



ON THE SWITCHBACKS GOING BACK DOWN

FROM THE BOWL NEAR THE BASE OF THE MOUNTAIN
          About 20 miles from Mt. Scott, generally northwest, is Rabbit Ears.  Everyone who has traveled Hwy. 230 from Union Creek to Diamond Lake has seen it.  None of us had been closer than the highway so we decided to drive closer.
          The base of the pointed ear is about 300 yards along a trail from a Forest Service road turnout about six miles from the highway.

RABBIT EARS FROM HERSCHBERGER LOOKOUT

We walked in to the base of the ears where you see that the pointed one is maybe 300 feet higher than the surrounding forest.  I learned later that if we had continued along the trail we could have walked between the ears.  Rock climbers apparently climb them and they are very inviting.  The possibility made me wish I was in better shape, or maybe 40 years younger.


THE POINTED RABBIT'S EAR FROM ITS BASE.


THE POINTED RABBIT'S EAR FROM THE ROAD ABOVE
          We continued along Forest Service roads until we arrived at Herschberger Mountain Lookout.  The views from there are spectacular.  The lookout has been decommissioned but the building is in good shape and you can go in and enjoy the views from where the fire table once was located in the attic.



HERSCHBERGER LOOKOUT

RABBIT EARS BETWEEN US
I hadn't realized how dumpy I have gotten, as if I'm getting old and about to fall down, until I saw the photos of me here.  The solution is to not have any more photos taken.















JCE

Sunday, April 15, 2012

100 THINGS TO DO

          The 100 places to go list that has been making the rounds on Facebook seems to me to just be a list made by someone who used a travel agent as his main resource.  I think that the 100 most important places to go will be different for each person.  There are certainly cities and places we all should see, but even those places will be different for different cultures.  A more personal and, therefore, more meaningful 100 places list would take into account your roots and your likes and interests.  The American National Balls of String Museum  probably wouldn't make many professionally done lists but it might be the one place in America you really want to see before you die.
          There's no way provided here to check the places you've visited and get immediate recognition, so each of you will have to tell the rest of us how you're doing.  Some of the options have more than one place to go or see and I hope you all see that when you visit New York City that will include the Statue of Liberty, Wall Street, Times Square, MMA, Broadway Plays, and on and on until you've exhausted the things to do and see that interest you in NYC.  I think there are 75 headings but there are probably twice that many important and interesting places and things to see if you visit them all.  So those of you who want to score highest and to show your worldliness, or that you just like high scores, can report way over 100.
          Finally, if you want to add places that should be included, note them somehow.  


  1.  The five places you most want to go to.
  2.  The home country(ies) of your ancestors.
  3.  Your antipode on earth (or the nearest accessible landfall.)
  4.  The setting of your favorite book, movie, play, TV show, one or all.
  5.  The hometown or museum or hangouts of your favorite author/actor/performer
  6.  A live event of your favorite performer.
  7.  Your State's capitol, your representatives' offices, the gallery for a live house or senate meeting, etc.
  8.  A meeting of your local City Council.
  9.  A local jury trial.
10.  Your favorite local TV station
11.  Your local jail (just to visit.)
12.  A local homeless shelter/soup kitchen.
13.  A term on the volunteer board of your choice
14.  The top of your local hills/mountains.
15.  The five places or events that make your town/area/region famous.
16.  The presidential library of your favorite President.
17.  The home field/court/arena/track of your favorite team or group.
18.  The national shrine of your favorite sport or thing.
19.  The national or world championship competition of your favorite event.
20.  The ultimate periodic event in your professional area.


21.  The Amazon River Basin
22.  The American cemeteries in France
23.  Cape Canaveral
24.  Cape Horn/Straight of Magellan
25.  Cape of Good Hope/ Cape Town
26.  A car factory
27.  Chesapeake Bay
28.  Crater Lake
29.  Erie Canal
30.  A commercial farm or ranch
31.  A food processing plant
32.  Gibraltar
33.  Glacier/Yellowstone
34.  Grand Canyon
35.  Great Lakes
36.  Lake Baikal
37.  Steamboat tour on the Mississippi
38.  A movie sound stage (in use)
39.  Mt. Rushmore
40.  The Nile River area
41.  Summer/Winter Olympics
42.  Ride the Orient Express
43.  Panama Canal
44.  Suez Canal


45.  Barcelona
46.  Beijing/Great Wall
47.  Berlin
48.  Boston/Concord, etc.
49.  Brasilia/Rio
50.  Chicago
51.  Dubai
52.  Detroit (plus Edison museum)
53.  Havana
54.  Honolulu/Pearl Harbor
55.  London
56.  Los Angeles
57.  Madrid
58.  Mexico City
59.  Moscow
60.  Natchez
61.  New Delhi
62.  New Orleans
63.  New York City
64.  Paris
65.  Perth
66.  Philadelphia
67.  Prague
68.  Rome/Vatican City
69.  San Francisco/Silicon Valley
70.  Savannah
71.  Seattle
72.  Seoul
73.  Sydney
74.  Tokyo
75.  Vienna
75.  Washington, D.C. 





Sunday, January 15, 2012

EVOLUTION I

          Evolution  [3.  Biol.  a. change in the gene pool of a population from generation to generation by such processes as mutation, natural selection and genetic drift.  b. the development of a species or other group of organisms; phylogeny.  c. the theory that all existing organisms developed from earlier forms by natural selection; Darwinism.
          Natural Selection  n.  the process in nature by which forms of life having traits that better enable them to adapt to specific environmental pressures, as changes in climate or competition for food or mates, will tend to survive and reproduce in greater numbers than others of their kind, thus perpetuating those traits in succeeding generations (c 1885)
          Genetic Drift.  random changes in the frequency of alleles in the genetic pool, usually of small populations. (c 1955)]


       
          Does everyone understand that the idea of evolution (without regard to your individual beliefs) doesn't have anything to do with planning on the part of the species involved?  Apparently not.  I just finished reading a book (Omnivore's Dilemma) whose author speaks of mushrooms, "learning to hide from our view."  In another book, whose authors should know better, (The Beak of the Finch) about birds on the Galapagos Islands, proof of evolution is claimed when birds hatch young with stronger beaks whenever a bumper crop of hard seeded plants is "anticipated."

          Darwin wrote nothing to support either of these anticipating results.  As far as anyone knows, plants and fungi and most animals don't plan or anticipate anything, they respond to environmental cues such as day length, temperature changes, precipitation, etc. but they certainly don't plan to learn how to hide from people or produce young with stronger beaks.

          The simple fact that Morels have a shape and color and texture that make them harder to see than if they were bright yellow and shaped like tea cups may be the result of evolution, or it might not.  Evolution is generally thought of as a positive thing.  A species evolves to better function in its environment.  In Morels, the shape/color/texture attributes (if indeed the original Morel was different) may better indicate a devolution.  Not literally, as in disappearing from our view; ie. hard to see, but, in this instance actually being detrimental to the survival of the species.  The fruiting bodies of mycelium, mushrooms, are the means of spreading the fungus beyond its present site, which may be an acre or more, almost all underground.  If no eater of Morels can see it and if the wind doesn't blow, the spores may not disburse far.  So, by "learning to hide" the Morel has done itself a disservice.

          In the case of the Galapagos finches, the variation in beak size and strength is probably always present with every nesting.  When the plants that produce harder seeds have a particularly good year, to the detriment of other, softer seeded plants, the stronger beaked birds find more nourishment and are able to breed better.  Some will breed with wimpy beaked mates and some will breed with stronger beaked mates. The result, over time, may be an evolved (fixed) trait of a stronger beaked finch.  As long as hard seeds dominate the available feed, these birds will have a competitive advantage.  But these bird's parents certainly didn't set out to produce stronger beaked young in anticipation of hard seeds.

          The traits that result in the evolution of a species are generally thought to be  genetic accidents or, possibly in the finch beak, the result of some natural variation within a species being given a competitive advantage by an environmental change.

          For over a hundred years, archaeologists thought the Woolly Mammoth disappeared from North America because it couldn't cope with climate change.  From an evolutionary perspective the Mammoth population didn't contain enough natural variation to have some individuals who could survive the changes.  That always sounded wrong to many thinkers because the Woolly Mammoth was highly mobile and could have moved.  The theory covered that problem by deciding that the Mammoth's habitat was first surrounded by this hostile environment before it closed in, leaving the Mammoth no place to go.  Recently, new thinkers think that climate change had nothing to do with the Mammoth's demise.  There was, however, apparently a surrounding hostile environment in the form of humans. The Clovis People, it is now thought, hunted the Woolly Mammoth to extinction.  Supporting evidence includes the disappearance of the Clovis People shortly after the Woolly Mammoth disappears from the record.

          What does the Woolly Mammoth have to do with evolution?  Probably nothing by itself but it may be the ultimate cause of the extinction of the Clovis People, who apparently also had insufficient natural variation to adapt to a different food source.  If that's the case, the Clovis People are an anomaly among humans.  Humans are possibly the most adaptable species on earth.  Of course, we now know how to cheat by carrying our environment along with us anywhere we decide to go.  But the Eskimo peoples thrived north of the Arctic Circle, especially before Europeans discovered that Eskimos had no whiskey.  Humans can thrive in polluted air, on polluted water, in unsanitary conditions, while eating unhealthy food.

          So does it really make sense that the Clovis People ate every last Woolly Mammoth and then just sat at the mouth of their caves and starved to death?  Well, you say, of course not.  Their wives sent them out every day to hunt.  As everyone got hungrier and hungrier the wives began to wonder if the men were just going out far enough to be out of sight and were really playing cribbage all day.

          Meanwhile, there is historical evidence of native peoples eating bugs to get through the hard times until they could hunt or the dogs got a little fatter.  So what's with these elitist Clovis People?

          I don't know.  But if the Woolly Mammoth/Clovis People link is true it is one of the earliest instances of a specialized diet, like Koala Bears and eucalyptus leaves.

          If you could take an active part in planning and executing your own species' evolution, wouldn't the Woolly Mammoth and the Clovis People still be around?  Woolly Mammoths would have developed a disgusting taste and odor so no one, not just Clovis People, would want to eat them, and the Clovis People would have banned cribbage boards.  But who was to know?