Sunday, 8 January 2012

MELLOW YELLOW -DANDELION WINE



If you can't lick them, Join 'em!

DANDELION WINE

From page 45 of Fleischmann's Recipes, c.1915 by the Fleischmann Company

This book has the signature of my Aunt, she must have been about ten years old at the time, so it really was my Grandmother's little cookbook. I know my father said he got a bottle of Dandelion Wine for a wedding present. Could be from the same instructions.
 He may have finished it off the night Orson Wells broadcast his War of the Worlds from his MercuryTheatre on the Air :
 . http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_War_of_the_Worlds_(radio_drama)

Then I think he left the supper dishes and went down to the harbour with some of his buddies to wait for the Martians. My mother and the rest of us were off visiting and never heard it.

  • Pour one gallon of boiling water over three quarts of dandelion flowers.
  •  Let stand twenty-four hours.
  •  Strain and add five pounds of light brown sugar, juice and rind of two lemons, juice and rind of two oranges. 
  •  Let boil ten minutes and strain.
  •  When cold, add half a cake of Fleischmann's Yeast.
  •  Put in crock and let stand until it commences to work. 
  •  Then bottle and put corks in loose to let it work.
Spare the grape.

  • In each bottle put one raisin, after it stops working.  Cork Tight.

HAVE WE WALKED OVER THE CLIFF?

Taken from the summation address by John Walters, Director, University of British Columbia Research Forest. Professor, Faculty of Forestry, UBC . As the first of two wrap-up statements prepared for "Tomorrow's Forests... Today's Challenge?" ( A conference on adequate Forest Renewal in Canada) Quebec City, 1977, October 19-21.
This is from his #3 talking point: Incentive for investment. " In forestry, with its unique and long time dependency, this requires security which private ownership seems to offer. Certainly, governments have not demonstrated an interest in long term forestry on public land."

He refers to:
  •  the Forest Act of 1912 (British Columbia).
  • 1937 statement by F.D. Mulholland asking for more successful reforestation and regulations to the cut in British Columbia.
  •  The 1956 Royal Commission.
  • The 1976 Royal Commission (British Columbia)
" We have been reaping what nature produced - we have been practicing "wildland forestry". The banquet is over. Wildland forestry is coming to an end. Now, as Ken Armson emphasized, we have to start growing managed forests using the same principles which were responsible for the incredible productivity of agriculture.  We no longer work with our hands and grub-hoes. - today we rely on machines. But we are the same Canadians who helped produce the North American agricultural miracle. Jim McLeod spoke of a quantum leap in the uses of wood. As oil and gas are used up, they will be replaced by wood derivatives. We have the private capital - we have the individual will to do in forestry what we did in agriculture. But we can only attract the capital of long term commitments so vital to forestry by the security and proud stewardship of land ownership. To deny that Canadians will not agree to do for trees what they did so successfully for wheat is to believe they will walk open- eyed over a cliff. To say that the transfer of forest land to industrial ownership is too complicated to arrange at this stage in our history is to admit we are administratively illiterate."

"We must obtain the large investment which only security of tenure can attract."

Fast Forward to June 1986:  The Forest Scene, Vol 17, Number 2

Ian D. Bird was president of the Ontario Forest Industries Association. He spoke to the Rotary Club of Oakville, Ontario.

" He explained that Crown Forest represents about 90% per cent of Ontario's forest land. "

" Sound management of Crown forests is the key to the future wood supply".

  • Protection of the land base against inroads by expansion of the provincial park system at the expense of productive forests;
  • Protection of the forest from fire and insects
  • Harvesting of the timber crop
  • Renewal of the forest
  • Tending the new forest

    Neglect of any one or all of the above would result in a threatened wood supply.
Ontario's spending on silviculture had increased from $31.9 million in 1977 to $95.5 million in 1984.

A 1986  national Gallup Poll shows Canadians ranking forestry second to agriculture in importance as a national industry. 1001 people were polled.
Perceived threats to Canada's forests:
  • Fire
  • insects
  • man and his activities
  • lack of reforestation
  • acid rain and other pollutants

Mass media in 1986, was the prime source of information: TV;Magazines;newspapers;and radio.

Now in 2012 we can likely add the Social Media and WWW.

If Gallop polled this generation,2012,  where would Forestry be?

Friday, 6 January 2012

Clouds in passing

Cloud watching.


Normal clouds at the end of day.



Clouds make a nice background to break up the blue day sky.




White Apple blossoms, Tiger Swallowtail, blue sky and white clouds.




Storm passing.


The following series of photographs I call
"Shakespearean Sky" .
 Much ado about nothing, as it passed over without rain or hail.


































Rolling under-belly of heaven.




Another day, another sky full of clouds.




Not often do we see these rows of clouds, when we have a camera.
As an artist I find clouds fascinating.
And after heroic battles with my paints I settle for a blue sky.
Some day...

Thursday, 5 January 2012

NO ONE ANSWERED THE CALL in Canada

INTERNATIONAL JUNIOR FOREST CONTEST

FOR STUDENTS 14 TO 20 YEARS OLD  this link will get you to the winners of last year's contest and where to look for more information.

http://www.rosleshoz.gov.ru/english/media/news/80 

The purpose of this contest is to promote cooperation between the youth from different countries of the world, developing their ecological focus , exchanging silvicultural and ecological knowledge and practical experience.
And, above all: ATTRACTING ATTENTION OF THE WORLD COMMUNITY TO THE PROBLEMS OF THE FOREST.

This will be the 9th annual contest organized by the Federal Forestry Agency with assistance of State Dama of RF, Federation Council of RF, Russian Society of Foresters, UN FAO and some other organizations.

Canada, who  boasts of its large Boreal Forests from sea to sea, has NEVER participated. Canada has been invited every year. In 2010 they sent the invitation to Peter Besseau, chief of international department of Canadian Forest Service by e-mail. No reaction.

As the Deputy Head , International Department, Russian Federal Forest Agency, of Moscow, Russia, said, "We invite students from Canada every year but nobody has come. That's really a pity! Canada is one of the greatest forestry countries and it is important to have communications about forestry issues on different levels."

37 countries of the world participated in 2011.

Wednesday, 4 January 2012

Following the money

Some people can really read a tax form, maybe we should thank the I.R.S.

http://www.ourdecision.ca/

The more who know the better.  See the comments at Small Dead Animals:
 
These are Sites that discuss foreign money being used to lobby Canadian businesses, firms and governments all in the name of "charity".
 
The "small dead animals" Site has comments that might be upsetting, but they are made by people who are upset.
Viewer discretion is advised.

Tuesday, 27 December 2011

IN HIGH PLACES

WYOMING A FEW DECADES PAST















This was likely about 1984 and every mountain had snowdrifts still melting into August. As it was we got hail and rain both but fortunately no lightning very close. Same time same range two years later very little snow and by the following two years almost non-existent.



























We built a pile of rocks. It was a wonderful flat mountain top.












Taking time to enjoy the view.





The temperature seems to have been either cold, hot or just right.




From the top down.

From the bottom up.



Wednesday, 21 December 2011

GLORY OVER THE NIPIGON




A fleeting moment.



At Sawmill Point.




Spring 2006




I had the chance to be in the right place at the right time
 and waited  for the rays.