The all-purpose heavy duty Climate Chaos thread (sprinkled with hope).

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  • Meltdown99Meltdown99 None Of Your Business... Posts: 10,739
  • The salmon population in the PNW is declining.  We have known this for years.  There is a scientific patrol/catcher vessel heading out to try and understand why the fish are declining and becoming smaller.

    Canada and Alaska join efforts in this already and seem to be having some problems too.  It isn't even close to the Washington area but still have concerns.

    Alaskan Salmon I have preached about and its sustainability.  If that is threatened then we are in big trouble.
  • JB16057JB16057 Posts: 1,269
    The salmon population in the PNW is declining.  We have known this for years.  There is a scientific patrol/catcher vessel heading out to try and understand why the fish are declining and becoming smaller.

    Canada and Alaska join efforts in this already and seem to be having some problems too.  It isn't even close to the Washington area but still have concerns.

    Alaskan Salmon I have preached about and its sustainability.  If that is threatened then we are in big trouble.
    The government is really good at wasting money and pretending they care about certain issues. I live on the Skokomish River. It is the largest river flowing into Hood Canal. It used to thrive with fish. I've lived on the river for almost 20 years and my family has been there for over 100 years. The local and federal government has wasted millions of dollars on this river by doing "studies". We've had multiple studies done by the Army Corps of Engineers. What I've seen time and time again is that they'll get years and millions of $$$ into a study and then the head person leaves and a new person comes in. They start the studies all over again because this new guy has a new way of thinking. I've seen this happen many times.

    The local governments and the Army Corps finally came up with "their solution" about 8 years ago. It took years to get the funding to follow through with their plan. Every year they tell us that they are going to get boots on the ground next year to start the work. They have a few projects planned that will help make the river healthier.

    The issue with the river is that the logging companies cleared too much in the Olympic Mountains. When they logged, the debris all came down and has essentially filled the river with rock. The river doesn't have a strong enough current to push the rock and debris through so when the rock and silt comes down from the hills, it stays in the river and doesn't get pushed out. They are still logging in the hills. I've spoke with officials about this and they tell me that they are following the rules. I'm no scientist or engineer but I do know that shit falls downhill. If you log on a hillside, what happens to that debris? They aren't allowed to log right up against the river but they are still logging on hills above the river. Debris is still falling into the river even though this was the main cause of the issue in the first place. Seems like a no brainer.

    Either way, I have no faith in these studies that the government does. I've seen it time and time again where these agencies are more concerned with their paychecks than they are saving the earth. As long as they have money coming in, they will study something until it's death.

    One of the main projects they are proposing is on my property. My neighbor is a river biologist and used to work for the states creating salmon habitat. He told me that there was another river that was very similar to our river. The Army Corps came in and did the same thing to that river except they followed through with their projects. Guess what? Their projects failed and millions of dollars were wasted in the process. In order for the Army Corps to do these projects, they need my neighbor and I to sign half our property way as an easement. We have both asked for the science behind their projects. I can not read it but my neighbor does understand it because it is what he used to do. We've been waiting on this information for 7 months now. We haven't been contacted at all. They had a project all lined up behind my house. They wanted to put in a big woody debris structure in the river to try and help push it along. It has been years since they last set foot on my property. The area in which they wanted to put this project no longer looks anything like it did when they planned the project.

    About 10 years ago my neighbors and I went through the proper channels to put in a woody debris project to protect our banks. Where we live, the river is coming at us and bouncing off our property at less than a 90 degree angle. When it is flooding, our banks are getting hit hard. We did everything we could for this project. We were working on the permits for 4 years without getting approval. We were finally given approval under an emergency situation because our bank was about to blow out. This woody debris project was planned on creating essential salmon habitat and the government kept blocking our efforts. We were allowed to put our engineered project in but they wanted us to remove all of the woody debris a few months after we installed it because it was only a temporary emergency permit. We didn't remove anything. It has been a great environment that the fish needed but the government was making it damn near impossible to follow through with.

    Here we are 10 years later and we are running into the same situation. If the fish are a big deal, lets fix our river ecosystem. It seems pretty simple right? Not when the government gets involved. We go through moderate flooding multiple times a year. One solution that the government refuses to look at is dredging. The river has too much debris in it. There are sections of this river that go underground during the summer. Last time I checked, fish can not walk on land. If they dredged these areas, the water would have somewhere to go. When it dries up, you can't even see where the river was because the riverbed is completely flat. It is really sad. During the summer there are many areas that dry up and trap the juvenile fish in puddles that either dry up or heat up so much that the fish die.

    One issue we have that is unique with the river is that so many government entities own a piece of the pie. We have federal, state, county and tribe governments that all have a piece of the puzzle. It wasn't until recently that they started to agree. History has handed the tribe the short end of the stick for sure but it still makes me mad that the tribe is allowed to fish the river using nets. I understand this is how their ancestors used to fish but these jokers leave their nets and garbage in the river yearlong. Netting fish is only adding to the low salmon population.

    The low salmon population is getting worse and worse and at least in my area, so is the government's response.
  • JB16057 said:
    The salmon population in the PNW is declining.  We have known this for years.  There is a scientific patrol/catcher vessel heading out to try and understand why the fish are declining and becoming smaller.

    Canada and Alaska join efforts in this already and seem to be having some problems too.  It isn't even close to the Washington area but still have concerns.

    Alaskan Salmon I have preached about and its sustainability.  If that is threatened then we are in big trouble.
    The government is really good at wasting money and pretending they care about certain issues. I live on the Skokomish River. It is the largest river flowing into Hood Canal. It used to thrive with fish. I've lived on the river for almost 20 years and my family has been there for over 100 years. The local and federal government has wasted millions of dollars on this river by doing "studies". We've had multiple studies done by the Army Corps of Engineers. What I've seen time and time again is that they'll get years and millions of $$$ into a study and then the head person leaves and a new person comes in. They start the studies all over again because this new guy has a new way of thinking. I've seen this happen many times.

    The local governments and the Army Corps finally came up with "their solution" about 8 years ago. It took years to get the funding to follow through with their plan. Every year they tell us that they are going to get boots on the ground next year to start the work. They have a few projects planned that will help make the river healthier.

    The issue with the river is that the logging companies cleared too much in the Olympic Mountains. When they logged, the debris all came down and has essentially filled the river with rock. The river doesn't have a strong enough current to push the rock and debris through so when the rock and silt comes down from the hills, it stays in the river and doesn't get pushed out. They are still logging in the hills. I've spoke with officials about this and they tell me that they are following the rules. I'm no scientist or engineer but I do know that shit falls downhill. If you log on a hillside, what happens to that debris? They aren't allowed to log right up against the river but they are still logging on hills above the river. Debris is still falling into the river even though this was the main cause of the issue in the first place. Seems like a no brainer.

    Either way, I have no faith in these studies that the government does. I've seen it time and time again where these agencies are more concerned with their paychecks than they are saving the earth. As long as they have money coming in, they will study something until it's death.

    One of the main projects they are proposing is on my property. My neighbor is a river biologist and used to work for the states creating salmon habitat. He told me that there was another river that was very similar to our river. The Army Corps came in and did the same thing to that river except they followed through with their projects. Guess what? Their projects failed and millions of dollars were wasted in the process. In order for the Army Corps to do these projects, they need my neighbor and I to sign half our property way as an easement. We have both asked for the science behind their projects. I can not read it but my neighbor does understand it because it is what he used to do. We've been waiting on this information for 7 months now. We haven't been contacted at all. They had a project all lined up behind my house. They wanted to put in a big woody debris structure in the river to try and help push it along. It has been years since they last set foot on my property. The area in which they wanted to put this project no longer looks anything like it did when they planned the project.

    About 10 years ago my neighbors and I went through the proper channels to put in a woody debris project to protect our banks. Where we live, the river is coming at us and bouncing off our property at less than a 90 degree angle. When it is flooding, our banks are getting hit hard. We did everything we could for this project. We were working on the permits for 4 years without getting approval. We were finally given approval under an emergency situation because our bank was about to blow out. This woody debris project was planned on creating essential salmon habitat and the government kept blocking our efforts. We were allowed to put our engineered project in but they wanted us to remove all of the woody debris a few months after we installed it because it was only a temporary emergency permit. We didn't remove anything. It has been a great environment that the fish needed but the government was making it damn near impossible to follow through with.

    Here we are 10 years later and we are running into the same situation. If the fish are a big deal, lets fix our river ecosystem. It seems pretty simple right? Not when the government gets involved. We go through moderate flooding multiple times a year. One solution that the government refuses to look at is dredging. The river has too much debris in it. There are sections of this river that go underground during the summer. Last time I checked, fish can not walk on land. If they dredged these areas, the water would have somewhere to go. When it dries up, you can't even see where the river was because the riverbed is completely flat. It is really sad. During the summer there are many areas that dry up and trap the juvenile fish in puddles that either dry up or heat up so much that the fish die.

    One issue we have that is unique with the river is that so many government entities own a piece of the pie. We have federal, state, county and tribe governments that all have a piece of the puzzle. It wasn't until recently that they started to agree. History has handed the tribe the short end of the stick for sure but it still makes me mad that the tribe is allowed to fish the river using nets. I understand this is how their ancestors used to fish but these jokers leave their nets and garbage in the river yearlong. Netting fish is only adding to the low salmon population.

    The low salmon population is getting worse and worse and at least in my area, so is the government's response.
    This is interesting because the whole point of the projects is to get information and use it...

    Alaska hires "Observers" for the fishing seasons.  They track bycatch, sizes and samples of the fish.  From those samples they can tell you where the fish were from and depending on where they were caught, are they returning to spawn where they were from.

    In Louisiana they dredged a large area of a river to make passage for vessels.  In doing that it created a whole new biodiversity in the area and slowly destroying another.  They are still learning from this.

    I said all of that to say it appears that the government in your area has no clue to what they are doing...

    Dredging the soot is a must.  Salmon can run in a few inches of water but having a better waterflow makes their numbers a better success.  Think of "salmon ladders" and what they do at dams an locks.

    Is there a hatchery where the salmon come from or this is all just nature?  I'm sure the wading pools that salmon rely on to spawn are almost nonexistent in your area too?
  • JB16057JB16057 Posts: 1,269
    JB16057 said:
    The salmon population in the PNW is declining.  We have known this for years.  There is a scientific patrol/catcher vessel heading out to try and understand why the fish are declining and becoming smaller.

    Canada and Alaska join efforts in this already and seem to be having some problems too.  It isn't even close to the Washington area but still have concerns.

    Alaskan Salmon I have preached about and its sustainability.  If that is threatened then we are in big trouble.
    The government is really good at wasting money and pretending they care about certain issues. I live on the Skokomish River. It is the largest river flowing into Hood Canal. It used to thrive with fish. I've lived on the river for almost 20 years and my family has been there for over 100 years. The local and federal government has wasted millions of dollars on this river by doing "studies". We've had multiple studies done by the Army Corps of Engineers. What I've seen time and time again is that they'll get years and millions of $$$ into a study and then the head person leaves and a new person comes in. They start the studies all over again because this new guy has a new way of thinking. I've seen this happen many times.

    The local governments and the Army Corps finally came up with "their solution" about 8 years ago. It took years to get the funding to follow through with their plan. Every year they tell us that they are going to get boots on the ground next year to start the work. They have a few projects planned that will help make the river healthier.

    The issue with the river is that the logging companies cleared too much in the Olympic Mountains. When they logged, the debris all came down and has essentially filled the river with rock. The river doesn't have a strong enough current to push the rock and debris through so when the rock and silt comes down from the hills, it stays in the river and doesn't get pushed out. They are still logging in the hills. I've spoke with officials about this and they tell me that they are following the rules. I'm no scientist or engineer but I do know that shit falls downhill. If you log on a hillside, what happens to that debris? They aren't allowed to log right up against the river but they are still logging on hills above the river. Debris is still falling into the river even though this was the main cause of the issue in the first place. Seems like a no brainer.

    Either way, I have no faith in these studies that the government does. I've seen it time and time again where these agencies are more concerned with their paychecks than they are saving the earth. As long as they have money coming in, they will study something until it's death.

    One of the main projects they are proposing is on my property. My neighbor is a river biologist and used to work for the states creating salmon habitat. He told me that there was another river that was very similar to our river. The Army Corps came in and did the same thing to that river except they followed through with their projects. Guess what? Their projects failed and millions of dollars were wasted in the process. In order for the Army Corps to do these projects, they need my neighbor and I to sign half our property way as an easement. We have both asked for the science behind their projects. I can not read it but my neighbor does understand it because it is what he used to do. We've been waiting on this information for 7 months now. We haven't been contacted at all. They had a project all lined up behind my house. They wanted to put in a big woody debris structure in the river to try and help push it along. It has been years since they last set foot on my property. The area in which they wanted to put this project no longer looks anything like it did when they planned the project.

    About 10 years ago my neighbors and I went through the proper channels to put in a woody debris project to protect our banks. Where we live, the river is coming at us and bouncing off our property at less than a 90 degree angle. When it is flooding, our banks are getting hit hard. We did everything we could for this project. We were working on the permits for 4 years without getting approval. We were finally given approval under an emergency situation because our bank was about to blow out. This woody debris project was planned on creating essential salmon habitat and the government kept blocking our efforts. We were allowed to put our engineered project in but they wanted us to remove all of the woody debris a few months after we installed it because it was only a temporary emergency permit. We didn't remove anything. It has been a great environment that the fish needed but the government was making it damn near impossible to follow through with.

    Here we are 10 years later and we are running into the same situation. If the fish are a big deal, lets fix our river ecosystem. It seems pretty simple right? Not when the government gets involved. We go through moderate flooding multiple times a year. One solution that the government refuses to look at is dredging. The river has too much debris in it. There are sections of this river that go underground during the summer. Last time I checked, fish can not walk on land. If they dredged these areas, the water would have somewhere to go. When it dries up, you can't even see where the river was because the riverbed is completely flat. It is really sad. During the summer there are many areas that dry up and trap the juvenile fish in puddles that either dry up or heat up so much that the fish die.

    One issue we have that is unique with the river is that so many government entities own a piece of the pie. We have federal, state, county and tribe governments that all have a piece of the puzzle. It wasn't until recently that they started to agree. History has handed the tribe the short end of the stick for sure but it still makes me mad that the tribe is allowed to fish the river using nets. I understand this is how their ancestors used to fish but these jokers leave their nets and garbage in the river yearlong. Netting fish is only adding to the low salmon population.

    The low salmon population is getting worse and worse and at least in my area, so is the government's response.
    This is interesting because the whole point of the projects is to get information and use it...

    Alaska hires "Observers" for the fishing seasons.  They track bycatch, sizes and samples of the fish.  From those samples they can tell you where the fish were from and depending on where they were caught, are they returning to spawn where they were from.

    In Louisiana they dredged a large area of a river to make passage for vessels.  In doing that it created a whole new biodiversity in the area and slowly destroying another.  They are still learning from this.

    I said all of that to say it appears that the government in your area has no clue to what they are doing...

    Dredging the soot is a must.  Salmon can run in a few inches of water but having a better waterflow makes their numbers a better success.  Think of "salmon ladders" and what they do at dams an locks.

    Is there a hatchery where the salmon come from or this is all just nature?  I'm sure the wading pools that salmon rely on to spawn are almost nonexistent in your area too?
    I can try to blame our local government but the feds are the main culprits(Army Corps of Engineers).

    There are 2 fish hatcheries(salmon and trout). They do stock this river with these fish. There are natural born fish but those numbers are getting smaller every year. Our local Fish and Wildlife installs a fish trap in our backyard every year. The fish trap cathces the juveniles and they figure out which ones are from the hatcheries and which are natural. They clip the hatchery fish fins so they can tell where they came from.

    The whole thing has made me very cynical. Fish and Wildlife has trespassed on my property. They installed that fish trap on my property without my permission. They've left their garbage in the river. It's just ridiculous.
  • JB16057 said:
    JB16057 said:
    The salmon population in the PNW is declining.  We have known this for years.  There is a scientific patrol/catcher vessel heading out to try and understand why the fish are declining and becoming smaller.

    Canada and Alaska join efforts in this already and seem to be having some problems too.  It isn't even close to the Washington area but still have concerns.

    Alaskan Salmon I have preached about and its sustainability.  If that is threatened then we are in big trouble.
    The government is really good at wasting money and pretending they care about certain issues. I live on the Skokomish River. It is the largest river flowing into Hood Canal. It used to thrive with fish. I've lived on the river for almost 20 years and my family has been there for over 100 years. The local and federal government has wasted millions of dollars on this river by doing "studies". We've had multiple studies done by the Army Corps of Engineers. What I've seen time and time again is that they'll get years and millions of $$$ into a study and then the head person leaves and a new person comes in. They start the studies all over again because this new guy has a new way of thinking. I've seen this happen many times.

    The local governments and the Army Corps finally came up with "their solution" about 8 years ago. It took years to get the funding to follow through with their plan. Every year they tell us that they are going to get boots on the ground next year to start the work. They have a few projects planned that will help make the river healthier.

    The issue with the river is that the logging companies cleared too much in the Olympic Mountains. When they logged, the debris all came down and has essentially filled the river with rock. The river doesn't have a strong enough current to push the rock and debris through so when the rock and silt comes down from the hills, it stays in the river and doesn't get pushed out. They are still logging in the hills. I've spoke with officials about this and they tell me that they are following the rules. I'm no scientist or engineer but I do know that shit falls downhill. If you log on a hillside, what happens to that debris? They aren't allowed to log right up against the river but they are still logging on hills above the river. Debris is still falling into the river even though this was the main cause of the issue in the first place. Seems like a no brainer.

    Either way, I have no faith in these studies that the government does. I've seen it time and time again where these agencies are more concerned with their paychecks than they are saving the earth. As long as they have money coming in, they will study something until it's death.

    One of the main projects they are proposing is on my property. My neighbor is a river biologist and used to work for the states creating salmon habitat. He told me that there was another river that was very similar to our river. The Army Corps came in and did the same thing to that river except they followed through with their projects. Guess what? Their projects failed and millions of dollars were wasted in the process. In order for the Army Corps to do these projects, they need my neighbor and I to sign half our property way as an easement. We have both asked for the science behind their projects. I can not read it but my neighbor does understand it because it is what he used to do. We've been waiting on this information for 7 months now. We haven't been contacted at all. They had a project all lined up behind my house. They wanted to put in a big woody debris structure in the river to try and help push it along. It has been years since they last set foot on my property. The area in which they wanted to put this project no longer looks anything like it did when they planned the project.

    About 10 years ago my neighbors and I went through the proper channels to put in a woody debris project to protect our banks. Where we live, the river is coming at us and bouncing off our property at less than a 90 degree angle. When it is flooding, our banks are getting hit hard. We did everything we could for this project. We were working on the permits for 4 years without getting approval. We were finally given approval under an emergency situation because our bank was about to blow out. This woody debris project was planned on creating essential salmon habitat and the government kept blocking our efforts. We were allowed to put our engineered project in but they wanted us to remove all of the woody debris a few months after we installed it because it was only a temporary emergency permit. We didn't remove anything. It has been a great environment that the fish needed but the government was making it damn near impossible to follow through with.

    Here we are 10 years later and we are running into the same situation. If the fish are a big deal, lets fix our river ecosystem. It seems pretty simple right? Not when the government gets involved. We go through moderate flooding multiple times a year. One solution that the government refuses to look at is dredging. The river has too much debris in it. There are sections of this river that go underground during the summer. Last time I checked, fish can not walk on land. If they dredged these areas, the water would have somewhere to go. When it dries up, you can't even see where the river was because the riverbed is completely flat. It is really sad. During the summer there are many areas that dry up and trap the juvenile fish in puddles that either dry up or heat up so much that the fish die.

    One issue we have that is unique with the river is that so many government entities own a piece of the pie. We have federal, state, county and tribe governments that all have a piece of the puzzle. It wasn't until recently that they started to agree. History has handed the tribe the short end of the stick for sure but it still makes me mad that the tribe is allowed to fish the river using nets. I understand this is how their ancestors used to fish but these jokers leave their nets and garbage in the river yearlong. Netting fish is only adding to the low salmon population.

    The low salmon population is getting worse and worse and at least in my area, so is the government's response.
    This is interesting because the whole point of the projects is to get information and use it...

    Alaska hires "Observers" for the fishing seasons.  They track bycatch, sizes and samples of the fish.  From those samples they can tell you where the fish were from and depending on where they were caught, are they returning to spawn where they were from.

    In Louisiana they dredged a large area of a river to make passage for vessels.  In doing that it created a whole new biodiversity in the area and slowly destroying another.  They are still learning from this.

    I said all of that to say it appears that the government in your area has no clue to what they are doing...

    Dredging the soot is a must.  Salmon can run in a few inches of water but having a better waterflow makes their numbers a better success.  Think of "salmon ladders" and what they do at dams an locks.

    Is there a hatchery where the salmon come from or this is all just nature?  I'm sure the wading pools that salmon rely on to spawn are almost nonexistent in your area too?
    I can try to blame our local government but the feds are the main culprits(Army Corps of Engineers).

    There are 2 fish hatcheries(salmon and trout). They do stock this river with these fish. There are natural born fish but those numbers are getting smaller every year. Our local Fish and Wildlife installs a fish trap in our backyard every year. The fish trap cathces the juveniles and they figure out which ones are from the hatcheries and which are natural. They clip the hatchery fish fins so they can tell where they came from.

    The whole thing has made me very cynical. Fish and Wildlife has trespassed on my property. They installed that fish trap on my property without my permission. They've left their garbage in the river. It's just ridiculous.
    So Army Corps are not NOAA, I'll tell you that.  They build shit.

    As far as F&W wandering on your property unannounced?  They have more power than the FBI.

    Alaska has done an amazing job at figuring out the fish problem before.  They made sure that the king crab numbers thrived after near extinction.

    They can fix it but everyone or the right one needs to be in charge.
  • brianluxbrianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 40,594
    ^^^ Interesting conversation, JB and tn'g. 
    I lived in Sequim from around 1989 to 1993 and the whole Dungeness Valley area has tremendous views of the Olympic Mountains.  At that time, the logging only took place in the lower elevations of the mountains on U.S. Forest lands (and I hope that's still the case).  Nevertheless, it was really a drag watching these giant clear cuts being slashed into the slopes.  I use paper, I have pencils, etc., so I would be a hypocrite to say I'm against logging (although logging could be hugely reduced by growing hemp instead), but there are less invasive ways to log that even to this day are not always followed.  I swear, sometimes it seemed to me that the logging in the lower Olympic mountains was carried out by trolls.  One time there was a huge clear-cut made in the shape of a question mark.  My thought was, "Well, OK, wtf is with that?"  
    I spent a lot of free time at the Railroad Bridge Park that crosses the Dungeness Rive and don't recall that river having a lot of silt blockage or debris.  I wonder if that has begun to change? 
    Such a beautiful area.  I'm sorry to hear there are these issues going on there.
    “The fear of death follows from the fear of life. A man [or woman] who lives fully is prepared to die at any time.”
    Variously credited to Mark Twain or Edward Abbey.













  • JB16057JB16057 Posts: 1,269
    brianlux said:
    ^^^ Interesting conversation, JB and tn'g. 
    I lived in Sequim from around 1989 to 1993 and the whole Dungeness Valley area has tremendous views of the Olympic Mountains.  At that time, the logging only took place in the lower elevations of the mountains on U.S. Forest lands (and I hope that's still the case).  Nevertheless, it was really a drag watching these giant clear cuts being slashed into the slopes.  I use paper, I have pencils, etc., so I would be a hypocrite to say I'm against logging (although logging could be hugely reduced by growing hemp instead), but there are less invasive ways to log that even to this day are not always followed.  I swear, sometimes it seemed to me that the logging in the lower Olympic mountains was carried out by trolls.  One time there was a huge clear-cut made in the shape of a question mark.  My thought was, "Well, OK, wtf is with that?"  
    I spent a lot of free time at the Railroad Bridge Park that crosses the Dungeness Rive and don't recall that river having a lot of silt blockage or debris.  I wonder if that has begun to change? 
    Such a beautiful area.  I'm sorry to hear there are these issues going on there.
    Sequim is a beautiful city and area. I understand the need to log for both the products we use and how it can be beneficial to the environment. The local logging companies around here are just going to town. I have a friend that is surrounded by the US Forest lands. They are going through and clear cutting a ton of trees. Nowadays they don't have to cut the trees down with chainsaws by hand. They have those big machines that grab the trees and cut them. They can demolish a whole forest in a day. The whole situation is really sad because they should be looking into the less invasive ways of logging but money always corrupts.

  • brianluxbrianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 40,594
    JB16057 said:
    brianlux said:
    ^^^ Interesting conversation, JB and tn'g. 
    I lived in Sequim from around 1989 to 1993 and the whole Dungeness Valley area has tremendous views of the Olympic Mountains.  At that time, the logging only took place in the lower elevations of the mountains on U.S. Forest lands (and I hope that's still the case).  Nevertheless, it was really a drag watching these giant clear cuts being slashed into the slopes.  I use paper, I have pencils, etc., so I would be a hypocrite to say I'm against logging (although logging could be hugely reduced by growing hemp instead), but there are less invasive ways to log that even to this day are not always followed.  I swear, sometimes it seemed to me that the logging in the lower Olympic mountains was carried out by trolls.  One time there was a huge clear-cut made in the shape of a question mark.  My thought was, "Well, OK, wtf is with that?"  
    I spent a lot of free time at the Railroad Bridge Park that crosses the Dungeness Rive and don't recall that river having a lot of silt blockage or debris.  I wonder if that has begun to change? 
    Such a beautiful area.  I'm sorry to hear there are these issues going on there.
    Sequim is a beautiful city and area. I understand the need to log for both the products we use and how it can be beneficial to the environment. The local logging companies around here are just going to town. I have a friend that is surrounded by the US Forest lands. They are going through and clear cutting a ton of trees. Nowadays they don't have to cut the trees down with chainsaws by hand. They have those big machines that grab the trees and cut them. They can demolish a whole forest in a day. The whole situation is really sad because they should be looking into the less invasive ways of logging but money always corrupts.


    That's very sad to hear.  What's particularly frustrating is that I'm told much of that lumber is not even used for domestic purposes but instead is shipped out of the country.  Selling off our forests for profit seems like a hugely unwise idea.
    “The fear of death follows from the fear of life. A man [or woman] who lives fully is prepared to die at any time.”
    Variously credited to Mark Twain or Edward Abbey.













  • brianlux said:
    JB16057 said:
    brianlux said:
    ^^^ Interesting conversation, JB and tn'g. 
    I lived in Sequim from around 1989 to 1993 and the whole Dungeness Valley area has tremendous views of the Olympic Mountains.  At that time, the logging only took place in the lower elevations of the mountains on U.S. Forest lands (and I hope that's still the case).  Nevertheless, it was really a drag watching these giant clear cuts being slashed into the slopes.  I use paper, I have pencils, etc., so I would be a hypocrite to say I'm against logging (although logging could be hugely reduced by growing hemp instead), but there are less invasive ways to log that even to this day are not always followed.  I swear, sometimes it seemed to me that the logging in the lower Olympic mountains was carried out by trolls.  One time there was a huge clear-cut made in the shape of a question mark.  My thought was, "Well, OK, wtf is with that?"  
    I spent a lot of free time at the Railroad Bridge Park that crosses the Dungeness Rive and don't recall that river having a lot of silt blockage or debris.  I wonder if that has begun to change? 
    Such a beautiful area.  I'm sorry to hear there are these issues going on there.
    Sequim is a beautiful city and area. I understand the need to log for both the products we use and how it can be beneficial to the environment. The local logging companies around here are just going to town. I have a friend that is surrounded by the US Forest lands. They are going through and clear cutting a ton of trees. Nowadays they don't have to cut the trees down with chainsaws by hand. They have those big machines that grab the trees and cut them. They can demolish a whole forest in a day. The whole situation is really sad because they should be looking into the less invasive ways of logging but money always corrupts.


    That's very sad to hear.  What's particularly frustrating is that I'm told much of that lumber is not even used for domestic purposes but instead is shipped out of the country.  Selling off our forests for profit seems like a hugely unwise idea.
    Positive is our forests are overgrown and come drought season can burn down very easily.

    Negative is Loggers are there to cut down trees, not worry about environmental impacts.

    Another downfall is if you don't replant.  Cut down one and plant 2, then weed them out so you get good growth spurts.
  • JB16057JB16057 Posts: 1,269
    brianlux said:
    JB16057 said:
    brianlux said:
    ^^^ Interesting conversation, JB and tn'g. 
    I lived in Sequim from around 1989 to 1993 and the whole Dungeness Valley area has tremendous views of the Olympic Mountains.  At that time, the logging only took place in the lower elevations of the mountains on U.S. Forest lands (and I hope that's still the case).  Nevertheless, it was really a drag watching these giant clear cuts being slashed into the slopes.  I use paper, I have pencils, etc., so I would be a hypocrite to say I'm against logging (although logging could be hugely reduced by growing hemp instead), but there are less invasive ways to log that even to this day are not always followed.  I swear, sometimes it seemed to me that the logging in the lower Olympic mountains was carried out by trolls.  One time there was a huge clear-cut made in the shape of a question mark.  My thought was, "Well, OK, wtf is with that?"  
    I spent a lot of free time at the Railroad Bridge Park that crosses the Dungeness Rive and don't recall that river having a lot of silt blockage or debris.  I wonder if that has begun to change? 
    Such a beautiful area.  I'm sorry to hear there are these issues going on there.
    Sequim is a beautiful city and area. I understand the need to log for both the products we use and how it can be beneficial to the environment. The local logging companies around here are just going to town. I have a friend that is surrounded by the US Forest lands. They are going through and clear cutting a ton of trees. Nowadays they don't have to cut the trees down with chainsaws by hand. They have those big machines that grab the trees and cut them. They can demolish a whole forest in a day. The whole situation is really sad because they should be looking into the less invasive ways of logging but money always corrupts.


    That's very sad to hear.  What's particularly frustrating is that I'm told much of that lumber is not even used for domestic purposes but instead is shipped out of the country.  Selling off our forests for profit seems like a hugely unwise idea.
    I think there's a balance somewhere in there but they've never been able to get it right. How many years does it take to fix this kind of damage that has been done? And then get government money involved and everyone wants a piece of that pie.

    Here's a funny and unique video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YFZbciPzAYk

    This happens every year. I live about 3.5 miles past this point in the road. The river floods and tons of salmon get displaced. Many of them end up in this area and cross the road to realize that they took a wrong turn. All of these fish are trying to get back to the river. We dodge salmon multiples times. It's sad to see the fish out of the river but it does attract the bald eagles. Last October/November this area has around 30 bald eagles sitting in those fields eating salmon. Unfortunately, the water table is rising every year. Those fields used to grow hay. Now they are just swamps because the water table is so high. The rotting fish used to fertilize the fields. I guess they still do but you can't grow anything in them anymore. It was about 20 years ago that these fields started to deteriorate and have only gotten worse. I feel bad for the farmers that have been out in this valley to see their land go to shit. Meanwhile the logging companies are raking in the cash and destroying the ecosystem.
  • brianluxbrianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 40,594
    brianlux said:
    JB16057 said:
    brianlux said:
    ^^^ Interesting conversation, JB and tn'g. 
    I lived in Sequim from around 1989 to 1993 and the whole Dungeness Valley area has tremendous views of the Olympic Mountains.  At that time, the logging only took place in the lower elevations of the mountains on U.S. Forest lands (and I hope that's still the case).  Nevertheless, it was really a drag watching these giant clear cuts being slashed into the slopes.  I use paper, I have pencils, etc., so I would be a hypocrite to say I'm against logging (although logging could be hugely reduced by growing hemp instead), but there are less invasive ways to log that even to this day are not always followed.  I swear, sometimes it seemed to me that the logging in the lower Olympic mountains was carried out by trolls.  One time there was a huge clear-cut made in the shape of a question mark.  My thought was, "Well, OK, wtf is with that?"  
    I spent a lot of free time at the Railroad Bridge Park that crosses the Dungeness Rive and don't recall that river having a lot of silt blockage or debris.  I wonder if that has begun to change? 
    Such a beautiful area.  I'm sorry to hear there are these issues going on there.
    Sequim is a beautiful city and area. I understand the need to log for both the products we use and how it can be beneficial to the environment. The local logging companies around here are just going to town. I have a friend that is surrounded by the US Forest lands. They are going through and clear cutting a ton of trees. Nowadays they don't have to cut the trees down with chainsaws by hand. They have those big machines that grab the trees and cut them. They can demolish a whole forest in a day. The whole situation is really sad because they should be looking into the less invasive ways of logging but money always corrupts.


    That's very sad to hear.  What's particularly frustrating is that I'm told much of that lumber is not even used for domestic purposes but instead is shipped out of the country.  Selling off our forests for profit seems like a hugely unwise idea.
    Positive is our forests are overgrown and come drought season can burn down very easily.

    Negative is Loggers are there to cut down trees, not worry about environmental impacts.

    Another downfall is if you don't replant.  Cut down one and plant 2, then weed them out so you get good growth spurts.

    Forest management (I have issues with that term because we are so arrogant as to think we can manage nature better that nature can) seems to vary from place to place.  I haven't kept up on things up there enough to say how it is now, but Washington has had some terrible management in the past.  I remember one time seeing a U.S. Forest Service sign on a road leading into the rain forest area in the western Olympics that was "revised" from saying "Managed Forest" to "Manged Forest".  There was a thin strip of evergreens all along the road but beyond that facade, utter forest devastation. 
    “The fear of death follows from the fear of life. A man [or woman] who lives fully is prepared to die at any time.”
    Variously credited to Mark Twain or Edward Abbey.













  • brianlux said:
    brianlux said:
    JB16057 said:
    brianlux said:
    ^^^ Interesting conversation, JB and tn'g. 
    I lived in Sequim from around 1989 to 1993 and the whole Dungeness Valley area has tremendous views of the Olympic Mountains.  At that time, the logging only took place in the lower elevations of the mountains on U.S. Forest lands (and I hope that's still the case).  Nevertheless, it was really a drag watching these giant clear cuts being slashed into the slopes.  I use paper, I have pencils, etc., so I would be a hypocrite to say I'm against logging (although logging could be hugely reduced by growing hemp instead), but there are less invasive ways to log that even to this day are not always followed.  I swear, sometimes it seemed to me that the logging in the lower Olympic mountains was carried out by trolls.  One time there was a huge clear-cut made in the shape of a question mark.  My thought was, "Well, OK, wtf is with that?"  
    I spent a lot of free time at the Railroad Bridge Park that crosses the Dungeness Rive and don't recall that river having a lot of silt blockage or debris.  I wonder if that has begun to change? 
    Such a beautiful area.  I'm sorry to hear there are these issues going on there.
    Sequim is a beautiful city and area. I understand the need to log for both the products we use and how it can be beneficial to the environment. The local logging companies around here are just going to town. I have a friend that is surrounded by the US Forest lands. They are going through and clear cutting a ton of trees. Nowadays they don't have to cut the trees down with chainsaws by hand. They have those big machines that grab the trees and cut them. They can demolish a whole forest in a day. The whole situation is really sad because they should be looking into the less invasive ways of logging but money always corrupts.


    That's very sad to hear.  What's particularly frustrating is that I'm told much of that lumber is not even used for domestic purposes but instead is shipped out of the country.  Selling off our forests for profit seems like a hugely unwise idea.
    Positive is our forests are overgrown and come drought season can burn down very easily.

    Negative is Loggers are there to cut down trees, not worry about environmental impacts.

    Another downfall is if you don't replant.  Cut down one and plant 2, then weed them out so you get good growth spurts.

    Forest management (I have issues with that term because we are so arrogant as to think we can manage nature better that nature can) seems to vary from place to place.  I haven't kept up on things up there enough to say how it is now, but Washington has had some terrible management in the past.  I remember one time seeing a U.S. Forest Service sign on a road leading into the rain forest area in the western Olympics that was "revised" from saying "Managed Forest" to "Manged Forest".  There was a thin strip of evergreens all along the road but beyond that facade, utter forest devastation. 
    Forrest management was done by the native Americans quite successfully for years.  Aborigines would do control burns to prevent massive wild fires.

    I have said we should learn or take a page from their books or hire them to continue the practice.

    Trees that are on top of each other and grow like thickets aren't very productive forests to me.  I am open to a conversation about them.

    I am also for cutting and replanting .
  • JB16057 said:
    brianlux said:
    JB16057 said:
    brianlux said:
    ^^^ Interesting conversation, JB and tn'g. 
    I lived in Sequim from around 1989 to 1993 and the whole Dungeness Valley area has tremendous views of the Olympic Mountains.  At that time, the logging only took place in the lower elevations of the mountains on U.S. Forest lands (and I hope that's still the case).  Nevertheless, it was really a drag watching these giant clear cuts being slashed into the slopes.  I use paper, I have pencils, etc., so I would be a hypocrite to say I'm against logging (although logging could be hugely reduced by growing hemp instead), but there are less invasive ways to log that even to this day are not always followed.  I swear, sometimes it seemed to me that the logging in the lower Olympic mountains was carried out by trolls.  One time there was a huge clear-cut made in the shape of a question mark.  My thought was, "Well, OK, wtf is with that?"  
    I spent a lot of free time at the Railroad Bridge Park that crosses the Dungeness Rive and don't recall that river having a lot of silt blockage or debris.  I wonder if that has begun to change? 
    Such a beautiful area.  I'm sorry to hear there are these issues going on there.
    Sequim is a beautiful city and area. I understand the need to log for both the products we use and how it can be beneficial to the environment. The local logging companies around here are just going to town. I have a friend that is surrounded by the US Forest lands. They are going through and clear cutting a ton of trees. Nowadays they don't have to cut the trees down with chainsaws by hand. They have those big machines that grab the trees and cut them. They can demolish a whole forest in a day. The whole situation is really sad because they should be looking into the less invasive ways of logging but money always corrupts.


    That's very sad to hear.  What's particularly frustrating is that I'm told much of that lumber is not even used for domestic purposes but instead is shipped out of the country.  Selling off our forests for profit seems like a hugely unwise idea.
    I think there's a balance somewhere in there but they've never been able to get it right. How many years does it take to fix this kind of damage that has been done? And then get government money involved and everyone wants a piece of that pie.

    Here's a funny and unique video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YFZbciPzAYk

    This happens every year. I live about 3.5 miles past this point in the road. The river floods and tons of salmon get displaced. Many of them end up in this area and cross the road to realize that they took a wrong turn. All of these fish are trying to get back to the river. We dodge salmon multiples times. It's sad to see the fish out of the river but it does attract the bald eagles. Last October/November this area has around 30 bald eagles sitting in those fields eating salmon. Unfortunately, the water table is rising every year. Those fields used to grow hay. Now they are just swamps because the water table is so high. The rotting fish used to fertilize the fields. I guess they still do but you can't grow anything in them anymore. It was about 20 years ago that these fields started to deteriorate and have only gotten worse. I feel bad for the farmers that have been out in this valley to see their land go to shit. Meanwhile the logging companies are raking in the cash and destroying the ecosystem.
    Oh man that is cool.  A simple Salmon ladder built beneath the rd would eliminate this.

    In India they build animal crossings underneath the freeways and guess what?  The animals use them!
  • brianluxbrianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 40,594
    brianlux said:
    brianlux said:
    JB16057 said:
    brianlux said:
    ^^^ Interesting conversation, JB and tn'g. 
    I lived in Sequim from around 1989 to 1993 and the whole Dungeness Valley area has tremendous views of the Olympic Mountains.  At that time, the logging only took place in the lower elevations of the mountains on U.S. Forest lands (and I hope that's still the case).  Nevertheless, it was really a drag watching these giant clear cuts being slashed into the slopes.  I use paper, I have pencils, etc., so I would be a hypocrite to say I'm against logging (although logging could be hugely reduced by growing hemp instead), but there are less invasive ways to log that even to this day are not always followed.  I swear, sometimes it seemed to me that the logging in the lower Olympic mountains was carried out by trolls.  One time there was a huge clear-cut made in the shape of a question mark.  My thought was, "Well, OK, wtf is with that?"  
    I spent a lot of free time at the Railroad Bridge Park that crosses the Dungeness Rive and don't recall that river having a lot of silt blockage or debris.  I wonder if that has begun to change? 
    Such a beautiful area.  I'm sorry to hear there are these issues going on there.
    Sequim is a beautiful city and area. I understand the need to log for both the products we use and how it can be beneficial to the environment. The local logging companies around here are just going to town. I have a friend that is surrounded by the US Forest lands. They are going through and clear cutting a ton of trees. Nowadays they don't have to cut the trees down with chainsaws by hand. They have those big machines that grab the trees and cut them. They can demolish a whole forest in a day. The whole situation is really sad because they should be looking into the less invasive ways of logging but money always corrupts.


    That's very sad to hear.  What's particularly frustrating is that I'm told much of that lumber is not even used for domestic purposes but instead is shipped out of the country.  Selling off our forests for profit seems like a hugely unwise idea.
    Positive is our forests are overgrown and come drought season can burn down very easily.

    Negative is Loggers are there to cut down trees, not worry about environmental impacts.

    Another downfall is if you don't replant.  Cut down one and plant 2, then weed them out so you get good growth spurts.

    Forest management (I have issues with that term because we are so arrogant as to think we can manage nature better that nature can) seems to vary from place to place.  I haven't kept up on things up there enough to say how it is now, but Washington has had some terrible management in the past.  I remember one time seeing a U.S. Forest Service sign on a road leading into the rain forest area in the western Olympics that was "revised" from saying "Managed Forest" to "Manged Forest".  There was a thin strip of evergreens all along the road but beyond that facade, utter forest devastation. 
    Forrest management was done by the native Americans quite successfully for years.  Aborigines would do control burns to prevent massive wild fires.

    I have said we should learn or take a page from their books or hire them to continue the practice.

    Trees that are on top of each other and grow like thickets aren't very productive forests to me.  I am open to a conversation about them.

    I am also for cutting and replanting .

    Good point.  Malcolm Margolin talks about this in his book about Bay Area native Americans, The Ohlone Way and the descriptions given be early European visitors to the area that Margolin dug up gives a clear image of how well balance ecosystems were her out west in those days long ago.  The differences in the picture the author paints for us as to what the ecosystems looked like here a mere 175 to 200 years ago as compared to today is overwhelming.
    The indigenous tribes did do some control burning and what also helped was that fires in the Sierras started by lightning were not suppressed and so naturally allowed fires to sweep through underbrush often enough to keep a good balance. 
    Everything got thrown off out here after Europeans moved in and proliferation to the point of overpopulation.  The indigenous peoples had very stable and reasonable population numbers.
    “The fear of death follows from the fear of life. A man [or woman] who lives fully is prepared to die at any time.”
    Variously credited to Mark Twain or Edward Abbey.













  • JB16057JB16057 Posts: 1,269
    JB16057 said:
    brianlux said:
    JB16057 said:
    brianlux said:
    ^^^ Interesting conversation, JB and tn'g. 
    I lived in Sequim from around 1989 to 1993 and the whole Dungeness Valley area has tremendous views of the Olympic Mountains.  At that time, the logging only took place in the lower elevations of the mountains on U.S. Forest lands (and I hope that's still the case).  Nevertheless, it was really a drag watching these giant clear cuts being slashed into the slopes.  I use paper, I have pencils, etc., so I would be a hypocrite to say I'm against logging (although logging could be hugely reduced by growing hemp instead), but there are less invasive ways to log that even to this day are not always followed.  I swear, sometimes it seemed to me that the logging in the lower Olympic mountains was carried out by trolls.  One time there was a huge clear-cut made in the shape of a question mark.  My thought was, "Well, OK, wtf is with that?"  
    I spent a lot of free time at the Railroad Bridge Park that crosses the Dungeness Rive and don't recall that river having a lot of silt blockage or debris.  I wonder if that has begun to change? 
    Such a beautiful area.  I'm sorry to hear there are these issues going on there.
    Sequim is a beautiful city and area. I understand the need to log for both the products we use and how it can be beneficial to the environment. The local logging companies around here are just going to town. I have a friend that is surrounded by the US Forest lands. They are going through and clear cutting a ton of trees. Nowadays they don't have to cut the trees down with chainsaws by hand. They have those big machines that grab the trees and cut them. They can demolish a whole forest in a day. The whole situation is really sad because they should be looking into the less invasive ways of logging but money always corrupts.


    That's very sad to hear.  What's particularly frustrating is that I'm told much of that lumber is not even used for domestic purposes but instead is shipped out of the country.  Selling off our forests for profit seems like a hugely unwise idea.
    I think there's a balance somewhere in there but they've never been able to get it right. How many years does it take to fix this kind of damage that has been done? And then get government money involved and everyone wants a piece of that pie.

    Here's a funny and unique video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YFZbciPzAYk

    This happens every year. I live about 3.5 miles past this point in the road. The river floods and tons of salmon get displaced. Many of them end up in this area and cross the road to realize that they took a wrong turn. All of these fish are trying to get back to the river. We dodge salmon multiples times. It's sad to see the fish out of the river but it does attract the bald eagles. Last October/November this area has around 30 bald eagles sitting in those fields eating salmon. Unfortunately, the water table is rising every year. Those fields used to grow hay. Now they are just swamps because the water table is so high. The rotting fish used to fertilize the fields. I guess they still do but you can't grow anything in them anymore. It was about 20 years ago that these fields started to deteriorate and have only gotten worse. I feel bad for the farmers that have been out in this valley to see their land go to shit. Meanwhile the logging companies are raking in the cash and destroying the ecosystem.
    Oh man that is cool.  A simple Salmon ladder built beneath the rd would eliminate this.

    In India they build animal crossings underneath the freeways and guess what?  The animals use them!
    Yes but the salmon still have to make it another 100 yards to get back to the river so the salmon ladder would only stop them from getting ran over.

    They built some animal crossings on I-90 heading towards Eastern Washington. It's pretty cool. The conceptual drawing had all the animals crossing at once which didn't make sense to me but I would imagine they all take their turns.

  • JB16057 said:
    JB16057 said:
    brianlux said:
    JB16057 said:
    brianlux said:
    ^^^ Interesting conversation, JB and tn'g. 
    I lived in Sequim from around 1989 to 1993 and the whole Dungeness Valley area has tremendous views of the Olympic Mountains.  At that time, the logging only took place in the lower elevations of the mountains on U.S. Forest lands (and I hope that's still the case).  Nevertheless, it was really a drag watching these giant clear cuts being slashed into the slopes.  I use paper, I have pencils, etc., so I would be a hypocrite to say I'm against logging (although logging could be hugely reduced by growing hemp instead), but there are less invasive ways to log that even to this day are not always followed.  I swear, sometimes it seemed to me that the logging in the lower Olympic mountains was carried out by trolls.  One time there was a huge clear-cut made in the shape of a question mark.  My thought was, "Well, OK, wtf is with that?"  
    I spent a lot of free time at the Railroad Bridge Park that crosses the Dungeness Rive and don't recall that river having a lot of silt blockage or debris.  I wonder if that has begun to change? 
    Such a beautiful area.  I'm sorry to hear there are these issues going on there.
    Sequim is a beautiful city and area. I understand the need to log for both the products we use and how it can be beneficial to the environment. The local logging companies around here are just going to town. I have a friend that is surrounded by the US Forest lands. They are going through and clear cutting a ton of trees. Nowadays they don't have to cut the trees down with chainsaws by hand. They have those big machines that grab the trees and cut them. They can demolish a whole forest in a day. The whole situation is really sad because they should be looking into the less invasive ways of logging but money always corrupts.


    That's very sad to hear.  What's particularly frustrating is that I'm told much of that lumber is not even used for domestic purposes but instead is shipped out of the country.  Selling off our forests for profit seems like a hugely unwise idea.
    I think there's a balance somewhere in there but they've never been able to get it right. How many years does it take to fix this kind of damage that has been done? And then get government money involved and everyone wants a piece of that pie.

    Here's a funny and unique video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YFZbciPzAYk

    This happens every year. I live about 3.5 miles past this point in the road. The river floods and tons of salmon get displaced. Many of them end up in this area and cross the road to realize that they took a wrong turn. All of these fish are trying to get back to the river. We dodge salmon multiples times. It's sad to see the fish out of the river but it does attract the bald eagles. Last October/November this area has around 30 bald eagles sitting in those fields eating salmon. Unfortunately, the water table is rising every year. Those fields used to grow hay. Now they are just swamps because the water table is so high. The rotting fish used to fertilize the fields. I guess they still do but you can't grow anything in them anymore. It was about 20 years ago that these fields started to deteriorate and have only gotten worse. I feel bad for the farmers that have been out in this valley to see their land go to shit. Meanwhile the logging companies are raking in the cash and destroying the ecosystem.
    Oh man that is cool.  A simple Salmon ladder built beneath the rd would eliminate this.

    In India they build animal crossings underneath the freeways and guess what?  The animals use them!
    Yes but the salmon still have to make it another 100 yards to get back to the river so the salmon ladder would only stop them from getting ran over.

    They built some animal crossings on I-90 heading towards Eastern Washington. It's pretty cool. The conceptual drawing had all the animals crossing at once which didn't make sense to me but I would imagine they all take their turns.

    Make the ladder the additional 100 yards then.  A simple 3' Pipe would suffice.
  • brianlux said:
    brianlux said:
    brianlux said:
    JB16057 said:
    brianlux said:
    ^^^ Interesting conversation, JB and tn'g. 
    I lived in Sequim from around 1989 to 1993 and the whole Dungeness Valley area has tremendous views of the Olympic Mountains.  At that time, the logging only took place in the lower elevations of the mountains on U.S. Forest lands (and I hope that's still the case).  Nevertheless, it was really a drag watching these giant clear cuts being slashed into the slopes.  I use paper, I have pencils, etc., so I would be a hypocrite to say I'm against logging (although logging could be hugely reduced by growing hemp instead), but there are less invasive ways to log that even to this day are not always followed.  I swear, sometimes it seemed to me that the logging in the lower Olympic mountains was carried out by trolls.  One time there was a huge clear-cut made in the shape of a question mark.  My thought was, "Well, OK, wtf is with that?"  
    I spent a lot of free time at the Railroad Bridge Park that crosses the Dungeness Rive and don't recall that river having a lot of silt blockage or debris.  I wonder if that has begun to change? 
    Such a beautiful area.  I'm sorry to hear there are these issues going on there.
    Sequim is a beautiful city and area. I understand the need to log for both the products we use and how it can be beneficial to the environment. The local logging companies around here are just going to town. I have a friend that is surrounded by the US Forest lands. They are going through and clear cutting a ton of trees. Nowadays they don't have to cut the trees down with chainsaws by hand. They have those big machines that grab the trees and cut them. They can demolish a whole forest in a day. The whole situation is really sad because they should be looking into the less invasive ways of logging but money always corrupts.


    That's very sad to hear.  What's particularly frustrating is that I'm told much of that lumber is not even used for domestic purposes but instead is shipped out of the country.  Selling off our forests for profit seems like a hugely unwise idea.
    Positive is our forests are overgrown and come drought season can burn down very easily.

    Negative is Loggers are there to cut down trees, not worry about environmental impacts.

    Another downfall is if you don't replant.  Cut down one and plant 2, then weed them out so you get good growth spurts.

    Forest management (I have issues with that term because we are so arrogant as to think we can manage nature better that nature can) seems to vary from place to place.  I haven't kept up on things up there enough to say how it is now, but Washington has had some terrible management in the past.  I remember one time seeing a U.S. Forest Service sign on a road leading into the rain forest area in the western Olympics that was "revised" from saying "Managed Forest" to "Manged Forest".  There was a thin strip of evergreens all along the road but beyond that facade, utter forest devastation. 
    Forrest management was done by the native Americans quite successfully for years.  Aborigines would do control burns to prevent massive wild fires.

    I have said we should learn or take a page from their books or hire them to continue the practice.

    Trees that are on top of each other and grow like thickets aren't very productive forests to me.  I am open to a conversation about them.

    I am also for cutting and replanting .

    Good point.  Malcolm Margolin talks about this in his book about Bay Area native Americans, The Ohlone Way and the descriptions given be early European visitors to the area that Margolin dug up gives a clear image of how well balance ecosystems were her out west in those days long ago.  The differences in the picture the author paints for us as to what the ecosystems looked like here a mere 175 to 200 years ago as compared to today is overwhelming.
    The indigenous tribes did do some control burning and what also helped was that fires in the Sierras started by lightning were not suppressed and so naturally allowed fires to sweep through underbrush often enough to keep a good balance. 
    Everything got thrown off out here after Europeans moved in and proliferation to the point of overpopulation.  The indigenous peoples had very stable and reasonable population numbers.
    They more than anyone understood sustainability.  If you hunt/fish it all out then it won't return.

    I am reminded of the part in Lord of the Bushwillies(Flies) when they kill the momma boar.  They now left all the piglets to die without momma to take care of them.
  • brianluxbrianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 40,594
    brianlux said:
    brianlux said:
    brianlux said:
    JB16057 said:
    brianlux said:
    ^^^ Interesting conversation, JB and tn'g. 
    I lived in Sequim from around 1989 to 1993 and the whole Dungeness Valley area has tremendous views of the Olympic Mountains.  At that time, the logging only took place in the lower elevations of the mountains on U.S. Forest lands (and I hope that's still the case).  Nevertheless, it was really a drag watching these giant clear cuts being slashed into the slopes.  I use paper, I have pencils, etc., so I would be a hypocrite to say I'm against logging (although logging could be hugely reduced by growing hemp instead), but there are less invasive ways to log that even to this day are not always followed.  I swear, sometimes it seemed to me that the logging in the lower Olympic mountains was carried out by trolls.  One time there was a huge clear-cut made in the shape of a question mark.  My thought was, "Well, OK, wtf is with that?"  
    I spent a lot of free time at the Railroad Bridge Park that crosses the Dungeness Rive and don't recall that river having a lot of silt blockage or debris.  I wonder if that has begun to change? 
    Such a beautiful area.  I'm sorry to hear there are these issues going on there.
    Sequim is a beautiful city and area. I understand the need to log for both the products we use and how it can be beneficial to the environment. The local logging companies around here are just going to town. I have a friend that is surrounded by the US Forest lands. They are going through and clear cutting a ton of trees. Nowadays they don't have to cut the trees down with chainsaws by hand. They have those big machines that grab the trees and cut them. They can demolish a whole forest in a day. The whole situation is really sad because they should be looking into the less invasive ways of logging but money always corrupts.


    That's very sad to hear.  What's particularly frustrating is that I'm told much of that lumber is not even used for domestic purposes but instead is shipped out of the country.  Selling off our forests for profit seems like a hugely unwise idea.
    Positive is our forests are overgrown and come drought season can burn down very easily.

    Negative is Loggers are there to cut down trees, not worry about environmental impacts.

    Another downfall is if you don't replant.  Cut down one and plant 2, then weed them out so you get good growth spurts.

    Forest management (I have issues with that term because we are so arrogant as to think we can manage nature better that nature can) seems to vary from place to place.  I haven't kept up on things up there enough to say how it is now, but Washington has had some terrible management in the past.  I remember one time seeing a U.S. Forest Service sign on a road leading into the rain forest area in the western Olympics that was "revised" from saying "Managed Forest" to "Manged Forest".  There was a thin strip of evergreens all along the road but beyond that facade, utter forest devastation. 
    Forrest management was done by the native Americans quite successfully for years.  Aborigines would do control burns to prevent massive wild fires.

    I have said we should learn or take a page from their books or hire them to continue the practice.

    Trees that are on top of each other and grow like thickets aren't very productive forests to me.  I am open to a conversation about them.

    I am also for cutting and replanting .

    Good point.  Malcolm Margolin talks about this in his book about Bay Area native Americans, The Ohlone Way and the descriptions given be early European visitors to the area that Margolin dug up gives a clear image of how well balance ecosystems were her out west in those days long ago.  The differences in the picture the author paints for us as to what the ecosystems looked like here a mere 175 to 200 years ago as compared to today is overwhelming.
    The indigenous tribes did do some control burning and what also helped was that fires in the Sierras started by lightning were not suppressed and so naturally allowed fires to sweep through underbrush often enough to keep a good balance. 
    Everything got thrown off out here after Europeans moved in and proliferation to the point of overpopulation.  The indigenous peoples had very stable and reasonable population numbers.
    They more than anyone understood sustainability.  If you hunt/fish it all out then it won't return.

    I am reminded of the part in Lord of the Bushwillies(Flies) when they kill the momma boar.  They now left all the piglets to die without momma to take care of them.

    Exactly!  Is as though they had a natural inborn sense of maintaining balance heightened by learned experience. 
    “The fear of death follows from the fear of life. A man [or woman] who lives fully is prepared to die at any time.”
    Variously credited to Mark Twain or Edward Abbey.













  • brianlux said:
    brianlux said:
    brianlux said:
    brianlux said:
    JB16057 said:
    brianlux said:
    ^^^ Interesting conversation, JB and tn'g. 
    I lived in Sequim from around 1989 to 1993 and the whole Dungeness Valley area has tremendous views of the Olympic Mountains.  At that time, the logging only took place in the lower elevations of the mountains on U.S. Forest lands (and I hope that's still the case).  Nevertheless, it was really a drag watching these giant clear cuts being slashed into the slopes.  I use paper, I have pencils, etc., so I would be a hypocrite to say I'm against logging (although logging could be hugely reduced by growing hemp instead), but there are less invasive ways to log that even to this day are not always followed.  I swear, sometimes it seemed to me that the logging in the lower Olympic mountains was carried out by trolls.  One time there was a huge clear-cut made in the shape of a question mark.  My thought was, "Well, OK, wtf is with that?"  
    I spent a lot of free time at the Railroad Bridge Park that crosses the Dungeness Rive and don't recall that river having a lot of silt blockage or debris.  I wonder if that has begun to change? 
    Such a beautiful area.  I'm sorry to hear there are these issues going on there.
    Sequim is a beautiful city and area. I understand the need to log for both the products we use and how it can be beneficial to the environment. The local logging companies around here are just going to town. I have a friend that is surrounded by the US Forest lands. They are going through and clear cutting a ton of trees. Nowadays they don't have to cut the trees down with chainsaws by hand. They have those big machines that grab the trees and cut them. They can demolish a whole forest in a day. The whole situation is really sad because they should be looking into the less invasive ways of logging but money always corrupts.


    That's very sad to hear.  What's particularly frustrating is that I'm told much of that lumber is not even used for domestic purposes but instead is shipped out of the country.  Selling off our forests for profit seems like a hugely unwise idea.
    Positive is our forests are overgrown and come drought season can burn down very easily.

    Negative is Loggers are there to cut down trees, not worry about environmental impacts.

    Another downfall is if you don't replant.  Cut down one and plant 2, then weed them out so you get good growth spurts.

    Forest management (I have issues with that term because we are so arrogant as to think we can manage nature better that nature can) seems to vary from place to place.  I haven't kept up on things up there enough to say how it is now, but Washington has had some terrible management in the past.  I remember one time seeing a U.S. Forest Service sign on a road leading into the rain forest area in the western Olympics that was "revised" from saying "Managed Forest" to "Manged Forest".  There was a thin strip of evergreens all along the road but beyond that facade, utter forest devastation. 
    Forrest management was done by the native Americans quite successfully for years.  Aborigines would do control burns to prevent massive wild fires.

    I have said we should learn or take a page from their books or hire them to continue the practice.

    Trees that are on top of each other and grow like thickets aren't very productive forests to me.  I am open to a conversation about them.

    I am also for cutting and replanting .

    Good point.  Malcolm Margolin talks about this in his book about Bay Area native Americans, The Ohlone Way and the descriptions given be early European visitors to the area that Margolin dug up gives a clear image of how well balance ecosystems were her out west in those days long ago.  The differences in the picture the author paints for us as to what the ecosystems looked like here a mere 175 to 200 years ago as compared to today is overwhelming.
    The indigenous tribes did do some control burning and what also helped was that fires in the Sierras started by lightning were not suppressed and so naturally allowed fires to sweep through underbrush often enough to keep a good balance. 
    Everything got thrown off out here after Europeans moved in and proliferation to the point of overpopulation.  The indigenous peoples had very stable and reasonable population numbers.
    They more than anyone understood sustainability.  If you hunt/fish it all out then it won't return.

    I am reminded of the part in Lord of the Bushwillies(Flies) when they kill the momma boar.  They now left all the piglets to die without momma to take care of them.

    Exactly!  Is as though they had a natural inborn sense of maintaining balance heightened by learned experience. 
    I am very big on conservation.  My family will ask "why" i threw it back or let it go.  I explain that there are rules and regulations for a reason and if everyone breaks them there won't be anything left for me to catch at all...
  • brianluxbrianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 40,594
    brianlux said:
    brianlux said:
    brianlux said:
    brianlux said:
    JB16057 said:
    brianlux said:
    ^^^ Interesting conversation, JB and tn'g. 
    I lived in Sequim from around 1989 to 1993 and the whole Dungeness Valley area has tremendous views of the Olympic Mountains.  At that time, the logging only took place in the lower elevations of the mountains on U.S. Forest lands (and I hope that's still the case).  Nevertheless, it was really a drag watching these giant clear cuts being slashed into the slopes.  I use paper, I have pencils, etc., so I would be a hypocrite to say I'm against logging (although logging could be hugely reduced by growing hemp instead), but there are less invasive ways to log that even to this day are not always followed.  I swear, sometimes it seemed to me that the logging in the lower Olympic mountains was carried out by trolls.  One time there was a huge clear-cut made in the shape of a question mark.  My thought was, "Well, OK, wtf is with that?"  
    I spent a lot of free time at the Railroad Bridge Park that crosses the Dungeness Rive and don't recall that river having a lot of silt blockage or debris.  I wonder if that has begun to change? 
    Such a beautiful area.  I'm sorry to hear there are these issues going on there.
    Sequim is a beautiful city and area. I understand the need to log for both the products we use and how it can be beneficial to the environment. The local logging companies around here are just going to town. I have a friend that is surrounded by the US Forest lands. They are going through and clear cutting a ton of trees. Nowadays they don't have to cut the trees down with chainsaws by hand. They have those big machines that grab the trees and cut them. They can demolish a whole forest in a day. The whole situation is really sad because they should be looking into the less invasive ways of logging but money always corrupts.


    That's very sad to hear.  What's particularly frustrating is that I'm told much of that lumber is not even used for domestic purposes but instead is shipped out of the country.  Selling off our forests for profit seems like a hugely unwise idea.
    Positive is our forests are overgrown and come drought season can burn down very easily.

    Negative is Loggers are there to cut down trees, not worry about environmental impacts.

    Another downfall is if you don't replant.  Cut down one and plant 2, then weed them out so you get good growth spurts.

    Forest management (I have issues with that term because we are so arrogant as to think we can manage nature better that nature can) seems to vary from place to place.  I haven't kept up on things up there enough to say how it is now, but Washington has had some terrible management in the past.  I remember one time seeing a U.S. Forest Service sign on a road leading into the rain forest area in the western Olympics that was "revised" from saying "Managed Forest" to "Manged Forest".  There was a thin strip of evergreens all along the road but beyond that facade, utter forest devastation. 
    Forrest management was done by the native Americans quite successfully for years.  Aborigines would do control burns to prevent massive wild fires.

    I have said we should learn or take a page from their books or hire them to continue the practice.

    Trees that are on top of each other and grow like thickets aren't very productive forests to me.  I am open to a conversation about them.

    I am also for cutting and replanting .

    Good point.  Malcolm Margolin talks about this in his book about Bay Area native Americans, The Ohlone Way and the descriptions given be early European visitors to the area that Margolin dug up gives a clear image of how well balance ecosystems were her out west in those days long ago.  The differences in the picture the author paints for us as to what the ecosystems looked like here a mere 175 to 200 years ago as compared to today is overwhelming.
    The indigenous tribes did do some control burning and what also helped was that fires in the Sierras started by lightning were not suppressed and so naturally allowed fires to sweep through underbrush often enough to keep a good balance. 
    Everything got thrown off out here after Europeans moved in and proliferation to the point of overpopulation.  The indigenous peoples had very stable and reasonable population numbers.
    They more than anyone understood sustainability.  If you hunt/fish it all out then it won't return.

    I am reminded of the part in Lord of the Bushwillies(Flies) when they kill the momma boar.  They now left all the piglets to die without momma to take care of them.

    Exactly!  Is as though they had a natural inborn sense of maintaining balance heightened by learned experience. 
    I am very big on conservation.  My family will ask "why" i threw it back or let it go.  I explain that there are rules and regulations for a reason and if everyone breaks them there won't be anything left for me to catch at all...

    Excellent!
    “The fear of death follows from the fear of life. A man [or woman] who lives fully is prepared to die at any time.”
    Variously credited to Mark Twain or Edward Abbey.













  • brianluxbrianlux Moving through All Kinds of Terrain. Posts: 40,594
    Instead of focusing so much on fools who lure us so frequently with their nonsense, it's refreshing to see words in the news like these by true heroes like Terry Tempest Williams:


    Terry Tempest Williams

    What my body knows

    The story my body wants to tell is that my body and the body of Earth are One.

    Our power and the power of Earth are intrinsically bound in generosity and regeneration, not scarcity and sacrifice. Renewal, abundance, retreat and restoration are the seasons within us.

    But we forget what real power looks like – because the power of the patriarchy has disguised what hurts us as what we deserve. The assaults on my body are akin to the assaults wounding the body of Earth, but I am human and that alone makes me complicit in the degradation and sacrilege of Nature. Atonement is possible.

    The story my body wants to tell is that she is tired.

    She is tired of running on fumes, the same fumes killing the planet by burning coal and oil and gas. The story of my body is exhaustion. Am I listening? She is telling me that the energy I count on is a false energy, a lie sputtering from the flames of sheer will, fear and illusion.

    The story my body wants to tell is that she is grieving.

    She is sick from not being heard, or seen, or cared for, while I am taking care of everyone else except my own beloved body, my one and only body – flesh of my flesh called Earth.

    My body understands I take her for granted, and why wouldn’t I? We are conditioned, as women, to believe there is divine purpose in busyness and distraction – forgetting ourselves, forgetting the soul-needs of our children: the soil, the air, savannas and forests, wetlands and oceans. My body is my collaborator, whether I think about her or not. She continues to construct my health and wellbeing in the blood and bones of my body, even as my nervous system registers danger and adrenal glands sound the alarm. Every muscle and organ is inflamed with the heartache of this burning world.

    The story my body wants to tell is a warning.

    Our bodies and the body of Earth are changing quickly, alchemically, through the violence of climate collapse. We are supporting a collective death by suicide. But our indigenous sisters, like the Women of Bears Ears, mentors in the red rock desert of southern Utah, are committed to “the rematriation of Mother Earth”, bringing forth harmony and wholeness from the wisdom and ceremonies passed on to them through generations. New rituals tapping the hearts of women worldwide are being born commensurate with this moment. Our ancestors are with us. With our hands on the Earth, we will know what to do. Earth care is self-care.

    The story my body wants to tell is a story of love.

    It is time to lay our bodies down on the Mother and defend her creation – we breathe – we breathe ourselves back into the insistence of Beauty. Our tears will fall as rain in the desert, in sorrow and relief. We will rise, drenched in joy, and lead. Our bodies on Earth, of Earth, for Earth will be fearless – keening and singing, chanting and dancing, circling the planet in defiance and prayer, as our stay against extinction, both human and wild. We locate the pulse that refuses to cease – because what my body knows is: life follows life.

    Terry Tempest Williams is a writer, conservationist and activist





    “The fear of death follows from the fear of life. A man [or woman] who lives fully is prepared to die at any time.”
    Variously credited to Mark Twain or Edward Abbey.













  • mickeyratmickeyrat up my ass, like Chadwick was up his Posts: 35,422
    _____________________________________SIGNATURE________________________________________________

    Not today Sir, Probably not tomorrow.............................................. bayfront arena st. pete '94
    you're finally here and I'm a mess................................................... nationwide arena columbus '10
    memories like fingerprints are slowly raising.................................... first niagara center buffalo '13
    another man ..... moved by sleight of hand...................................... joe louis arena detroit '14
  • Halifax2TheMaxHalifax2TheMax Posts: 36,481
    mickeyrat said:
    Green New Deal? Imagine that? Fucking AOC.
    09/15/1998 & 09/16/1998, Mansfield, MA; 08/29/00 08/30/00, Mansfield, MA; 07/02/03, 07/03/03, Mansfield, MA; 09/28/04, 09/29/04, Boston, MA; 09/22/05, Halifax, NS; 05/24/06, 05/25/06, Boston, MA; 07/22/06, 07/23/06, Gorge, WA; 06/27/2008, Hartford; 06/28/08, 06/30/08, Mansfield; 08/18/2009, O2, London, UK; 10/30/09, 10/31/09, Philadelphia, PA; 05/15/10, Hartford, CT; 05/17/10, Boston, MA; 05/20/10, 05/21/10, NY, NY; 06/22/10, Dublin, IRE; 06/23/10, Northern Ireland; 09/03/11, 09/04/11, Alpine Valley, WI; 09/11/11, 09/12/11, Toronto, Ont; 09/14/11, Ottawa, Ont; 09/15/11, Hamilton, Ont; 07/02/2012, Prague, Czech Republic; 07/04/2012 & 07/05/2012, Berlin, Germany; 07/07/2012, Stockholm, Sweden; 09/30/2012, Missoula, MT; 07/16/2013, London, Ont; 07/19/2013, Chicago, IL; 10/15/2013 & 10/16/2013, Worcester, MA; 10/21/2013 & 10/22/2013, Philadelphia, PA; 10/25/2013, Hartford, CT; 11/29/2013, Portland, OR; 11/30/2013, Spokane, WA; 12/04/2013, Vancouver, BC; 12/06/2013, Seattle, WA; 10/03/2014, St. Louis. MO; 10/22/2014, Denver, CO; 10/26/2015, New York, NY; 04/23/2016, New Orleans, LA; 04/28/2016 & 04/29/2016, Philadelphia, PA; 05/01/2016 & 05/02/2016, New York, NY; 05/08/2016, Ottawa, Ont.; 05/10/2016 & 05/12/2016, Toronto, Ont.; 08/05/2016 & 08/07/2016, Boston, MA; 08/20/2016 & 08/22/2016, Chicago, IL; 07/01/2018, Prague, Czech Republic; 07/03/2018, Krakow, Poland; 07/05/2018, Berlin, Germany; 09/02/2018 & 09/04/2018, Boston, MA; 09/08/2022, Toronto, Ont; 09/11/2022, New York, NY; 09/14/2022, Camden, NJ; 09/02/2023, St. Paul, MN;

    Libtardaplorable©. And proud of it.

    Brilliantati©
  • tempo_n_groovetempo_n_groove Posts: 38,853
    mickeyrat said:
    They just started building the infrastructure for windmills off our coast here on Long Island a few weeks ago.  This obviously wasn't part of the current deal that went through.
  • Halifax2TheMaxHalifax2TheMax Posts: 36,481
    Journey to the Center of the Earth, anyone? Seems like it might possibly split the earth in two but who knows, maybe we'll all become Mole People? Crazy.

    In an effort to ease fossil-fuel reliance, an MIT spinoff plans to dig the deepest holes on Earth

    By David Abel Globe Staff,Updated March 18, 2022, 8:49 a.m.

    Miles below ground, where pressures are intense and temperatures far exceed the boiling point of water, dense layers of super-hot rocks offer the promise of a natural, inexhaustible supply of clean energy.

    Environmentalists have long dreamed of a way to reach those depths to tap the potential geothermal energy in those rocks, but the technological and financial barriers have been too great.

    Now, officials at an MIT spinoff say they believe they’ve figured out how to drill as deep as 12 miles into the Earth’s crust, using a special laser that they say is powerful enough to blast through granite and basalt.

    In the coming years, Quaise Energy, named for a section of Nantucket, plans to dig some of the deepest boreholes in history to reach rocks that can exceed temperatures of 1,000 degrees and surface a kind of heavy steam that has the potential to provide enormous quantities of energy. By the end of the decade, their hope is to capture the steam and use it to run turbines at power plants.

    “By drilling deeper, hotter, and faster than ever before possible, Quaise aspires to provide abundant and reliable clean energy for all humanity,” said Carlos Araque, a former MIT student and employee, whose new company has raised $63 million to prove its technology. “This could provide a path to energy independence for every nation and enable a rapid transition off fossil fuels.”

    Like nuclear fusion, a perennially elusive effort to harness the energy that powers stars, deep geothermal wells have long been viewed as a panacea for those hoping to displace our dependence on oil and gas with the energy from super-hot rocks. Shallower geothermal wells, which rely on the consistent heat underground, have long been a source of energy.

    https://www.bostonglobe.com/2022/03/18/science/an-effort-rid-world-fossil-fuels-an-mit-spinoff-plans-dig-deepest-holes-earth/


    09/15/1998 & 09/16/1998, Mansfield, MA; 08/29/00 08/30/00, Mansfield, MA; 07/02/03, 07/03/03, Mansfield, MA; 09/28/04, 09/29/04, Boston, MA; 09/22/05, Halifax, NS; 05/24/06, 05/25/06, Boston, MA; 07/22/06, 07/23/06, Gorge, WA; 06/27/2008, Hartford; 06/28/08, 06/30/08, Mansfield; 08/18/2009, O2, London, UK; 10/30/09, 10/31/09, Philadelphia, PA; 05/15/10, Hartford, CT; 05/17/10, Boston, MA; 05/20/10, 05/21/10, NY, NY; 06/22/10, Dublin, IRE; 06/23/10, Northern Ireland; 09/03/11, 09/04/11, Alpine Valley, WI; 09/11/11, 09/12/11, Toronto, Ont; 09/14/11, Ottawa, Ont; 09/15/11, Hamilton, Ont; 07/02/2012, Prague, Czech Republic; 07/04/2012 & 07/05/2012, Berlin, Germany; 07/07/2012, Stockholm, Sweden; 09/30/2012, Missoula, MT; 07/16/2013, London, Ont; 07/19/2013, Chicago, IL; 10/15/2013 & 10/16/2013, Worcester, MA; 10/21/2013 & 10/22/2013, Philadelphia, PA; 10/25/2013, Hartford, CT; 11/29/2013, Portland, OR; 11/30/2013, Spokane, WA; 12/04/2013, Vancouver, BC; 12/06/2013, Seattle, WA; 10/03/2014, St. Louis. MO; 10/22/2014, Denver, CO; 10/26/2015, New York, NY; 04/23/2016, New Orleans, LA; 04/28/2016 & 04/29/2016, Philadelphia, PA; 05/01/2016 & 05/02/2016, New York, NY; 05/08/2016, Ottawa, Ont.; 05/10/2016 & 05/12/2016, Toronto, Ont.; 08/05/2016 & 08/07/2016, Boston, MA; 08/20/2016 & 08/22/2016, Chicago, IL; 07/01/2018, Prague, Czech Republic; 07/03/2018, Krakow, Poland; 07/05/2018, Berlin, Germany; 09/02/2018 & 09/04/2018, Boston, MA; 09/08/2022, Toronto, Ont; 09/11/2022, New York, NY; 09/14/2022, Camden, NJ; 09/02/2023, St. Paul, MN;

    Libtardaplorable©. And proud of it.

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  • tempo_n_groovetempo_n_groove Posts: 38,853
    A few billion dollar land lease was passed last month for offshore turbines here in NY/NJ.
  • mickeyratmickeyrat up my ass, like Chadwick was up his Posts: 35,422
    Journey to the Center of the Earth, anyone? Seems like it might possibly split the earth in two but who knows, maybe we'll all become Mole People? Crazy.

    In an effort to ease fossil-fuel reliance, an MIT spinoff plans to dig the deepest holes on Earth

    By David Abel Globe Staff,Updated March 18, 2022, 8:49 a.m.

    Miles below ground, where pressures are intense and temperatures far exceed the boiling point of water, dense layers of super-hot rocks offer the promise of a natural, inexhaustible supply of clean energy.

    Environmentalists have long dreamed of a way to reach those depths to tap the potential geothermal energy in those rocks, but the technological and financial barriers have been too great.

    Now, officials at an MIT spinoff say they believe they’ve figured out how to drill as deep as 12 miles into the Earth’s crust, using a special laser that they say is powerful enough to blast through granite and basalt.

    In the coming years, Quaise Energy, named for a section of Nantucket, plans to dig some of the deepest boreholes in history to reach rocks that can exceed temperatures of 1,000 degrees and surface a kind of heavy steam that has the potential to provide enormous quantities of energy. By the end of the decade, their hope is to capture the steam and use it to run turbines at power plants.

    “By drilling deeper, hotter, and faster than ever before possible, Quaise aspires to provide abundant and reliable clean energy for all humanity,” said Carlos Araque, a former MIT student and employee, whose new company has raised $63 million to prove its technology. “This could provide a path to energy independence for every nation and enable a rapid transition off fossil fuels.”

    Like nuclear fusion, a perennially elusive effort to harness the energy that powers stars, deep geothermal wells have long been viewed as a panacea for those hoping to displace our dependence on oil and gas with the energy from super-hot rocks. Shallower geothermal wells, which rely on the consistent heat underground, have long been a source of energy.

    https://www.bostonglobe.com/2022/03/18/science/an-effort-rid-world-fossil-fuels-an-mit-spinoff-plans-dig-deepest-holes-earth/



    ok, have a basic understanding of its benefits. first question, what could go wrong? what if enough of these holes are drilled, the redulting release fundamentally alters that system underground, then what,
    _____________________________________SIGNATURE________________________________________________

    Not today Sir, Probably not tomorrow.............................................. bayfront arena st. pete '94
    you're finally here and I'm a mess................................................... nationwide arena columbus '10
    memories like fingerprints are slowly raising.................................... first niagara center buffalo '13
    another man ..... moved by sleight of hand...................................... joe louis arena detroit '14
  • Halifax2TheMaxHalifax2TheMax Posts: 36,481
    mickeyrat said:
    Journey to the Center of the Earth, anyone? Seems like it might possibly split the earth in two but who knows, maybe we'll all become Mole People? Crazy.

    In an effort to ease fossil-fuel reliance, an MIT spinoff plans to dig the deepest holes on Earth

    By David Abel Globe Staff,Updated March 18, 2022, 8:49 a.m.

    Miles below ground, where pressures are intense and temperatures far exceed the boiling point of water, dense layers of super-hot rocks offer the promise of a natural, inexhaustible supply of clean energy.

    Environmentalists have long dreamed of a way to reach those depths to tap the potential geothermal energy in those rocks, but the technological and financial barriers have been too great.

    Now, officials at an MIT spinoff say they believe they’ve figured out how to drill as deep as 12 miles into the Earth’s crust, using a special laser that they say is powerful enough to blast through granite and basalt.

    In the coming years, Quaise Energy, named for a section of Nantucket, plans to dig some of the deepest boreholes in history to reach rocks that can exceed temperatures of 1,000 degrees and surface a kind of heavy steam that has the potential to provide enormous quantities of energy. By the end of the decade, their hope is to capture the steam and use it to run turbines at power plants.

    “By drilling deeper, hotter, and faster than ever before possible, Quaise aspires to provide abundant and reliable clean energy for all humanity,” said Carlos Araque, a former MIT student and employee, whose new company has raised $63 million to prove its technology. “This could provide a path to energy independence for every nation and enable a rapid transition off fossil fuels.”

    Like nuclear fusion, a perennially elusive effort to harness the energy that powers stars, deep geothermal wells have long been viewed as a panacea for those hoping to displace our dependence on oil and gas with the energy from super-hot rocks. Shallower geothermal wells, which rely on the consistent heat underground, have long been a source of energy.

    https://www.bostonglobe.com/2022/03/18/science/an-effort-rid-world-fossil-fuels-an-mit-spinoff-plans-dig-deepest-holes-earth/



    ok, have a basic understanding of its benefits. first question, what could go wrong? what if enough of these holes are drilled, the redulting release fundamentally alters that system underground, then what,
    From what I can gather, earthquakes are one downside. But yea, uncharted territory and who knows? Break the earth in two?
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  • mickeyratmickeyrat up my ass, like Chadwick was up his Posts: 35,422
    mickeyrat said:
    Journey to the Center of the Earth, anyone? Seems like it might possibly split the earth in two but who knows, maybe we'll all become Mole People? Crazy.

    In an effort to ease fossil-fuel reliance, an MIT spinoff plans to dig the deepest holes on Earth

    By David Abel Globe Staff,Updated March 18, 2022, 8:49 a.m.

    Miles below ground, where pressures are intense and temperatures far exceed the boiling point of water, dense layers of super-hot rocks offer the promise of a natural, inexhaustible supply of clean energy.

    Environmentalists have long dreamed of a way to reach those depths to tap the potential geothermal energy in those rocks, but the technological and financial barriers have been too great.

    Now, officials at an MIT spinoff say they believe they’ve figured out how to drill as deep as 12 miles into the Earth’s crust, using a special laser that they say is powerful enough to blast through granite and basalt.

    In the coming years, Quaise Energy, named for a section of Nantucket, plans to dig some of the deepest boreholes in history to reach rocks that can exceed temperatures of 1,000 degrees and surface a kind of heavy steam that has the potential to provide enormous quantities of energy. By the end of the decade, their hope is to capture the steam and use it to run turbines at power plants.

    “By drilling deeper, hotter, and faster than ever before possible, Quaise aspires to provide abundant and reliable clean energy for all humanity,” said Carlos Araque, a former MIT student and employee, whose new company has raised $63 million to prove its technology. “This could provide a path to energy independence for every nation and enable a rapid transition off fossil fuels.”

    Like nuclear fusion, a perennially elusive effort to harness the energy that powers stars, deep geothermal wells have long been viewed as a panacea for those hoping to displace our dependence on oil and gas with the energy from super-hot rocks. Shallower geothermal wells, which rely on the consistent heat underground, have long been a source of energy.

    https://www.bostonglobe.com/2022/03/18/science/an-effort-rid-world-fossil-fuels-an-mit-spinoff-plans-dig-deepest-holes-earth/



    ok, have a basic understanding of its benefits. first question, what could go wrong? what if enough of these holes are drilled, the redulting release fundamentally alters that system underground, then what,
    From what I can gather, earthquakes are one downside. But yea, uncharted territory and who knows? Break the earth in two?

    initial thought is that heat + steam trapped for a purpose, release it?
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