Tuesday, September 28, 2010

What is a generation and why is that important now?


Hi again from the Bastion on the Puget Sound. Well, I just read ~ in one of the most respected magazines in North America and certainly one of my favorites ~ an essay entitled The Least We Can Do.

It both excoriated and praised both “the Greatest Generation” and the one it produced, “Baby Boomers.” In four pages, it smacked of every retrospective I’ve ever seen or read and almost every stereotype. Ironically, it ended with a call to action that assumed that either or both generations were responsible for what’s happening now.

With all due respect to my Muscovite mother, that’s guilt tripping and I’m sorry, Masha, that doesn’t work this time. The reality is every generation does the best “it” could, made some inordinate sacrifices, committed some tragic and horrific mistakes and then tried, as best they could, to correct for course. Historically, they are hardly unique and it’s been going on now that way for some while.

This article irritated me because it assumed differences and divisions I don’t see and, for the most part, don’t experience where I live. It’s like the assumptions they’re making and the conundrums they’re posing (and to which I’m apparently expected to respond) and I’m going, “On what planet is this going on and why are you wasting my time with this, again?”

But what really got me? This article ended by saying that if we (the two generations involved) really regretted the mistakes we made, there are several ways, in the few years we have left, by which we could make amends.

Excuse me? Maybe that’s how it works where you live but on the shores of the Salish Sea, it’s just about people of all ages, races, genders and gender preferences, etc. pulling together all the time and as a matter of lifestyle. If you want a slice of that, visit one of our local food banks and see University of Washington students working along side retired people and the spectrum in-between.

Since we’re also ~ albeit sometimes reluctantly, Americans as well, my sense is whether it’s race, religion, political party, etc. as long as we’re going to continue to look for someone to blame ~ rather than, as a nation ~ to accept remediation responsibility, I’m sorry, but at least on this side of the Mississippi, we’re going to have to do better than a generation gap.
IN OTHER NEWS

Last week, we linked you up to a story about a million cars in Canada’s British Columbia province being electric by 2030. In the States, San Francisco is well on its way to making private, single-occupant transportation a last resort. If the tide flows south on this one, even those might hum softly. To my neighbours in Lake Merced and on Geary Street, and to the rest of the Golden Gate, nice going folks. Finest kind. Yep, for the details, go here.

We applaud American television station NBC and their Today Show for a week-long program, “
Education Nation,” focused on the crisis in education in the United States. Monday morning, Matt Lauer interviewed President Obama for half an hour in the White House Green Room and unfortunately, blaming the Republicans for the abysmal state academia is in today occupied way too much of that half hour. Partisan politics (again, sigh) notwithstanding, the people of America are galvanizing behind the need to lift their education standards out of the Grand Canyon into which they appear to have sunk. Education Nation offers a fine, comprehensive and well produced overview of how this is happening from Alabama to Wyoming, so yep, for more, go here.

In its ongoing war against terrorism, the American national law enforcement establishment is seeking the same powers to “wiretap” the Internet as they now do telephone and broadband communications.
The Obama administration intends to present a comprehensive bill to Congress next year which will require Internet providers who do not have the ability to intercept user communications to acquire it and to be prepared to share the technology if so required by court order. Yep, for more on this one, go here.

Despite our resident cougars’ spin on farmers (see Cougars Corners below), ours here on the shores of the Salish Sea, have been a mainstay of the community since the first plow broke ground.
Now, they’re working with local schools to see that some of what they produce winds up in the stomach of our children at lunch. Yep, for the proactive among you, this is a chance to see what they’re doing and how that might fit where you live. So yep, go here for this one.

For those who enjoy a little mudslinging in their politics,
it should come as real good news that the Democrats have apparently launched a campaign to discredit the opposition by digging into the pasts of said opponents for sins of the past as it were. This is being ballyhooed as something new in the history of the party and it isn’t. What bothers me is that it’s also the hallmark of a party in disarray, just like an individual who, losing an argument, resorts to name calling and other tactics which have absolutely nothing to do with the discussion at hand. I’m not recommending you go here, but if you want the details, here’s where to find them.

SURVIVING HARD TIMES

Sometimes, surviving hard times is knowing what not to do and as more and more of us join the Internet to look for work, promote a home business or otherwise engage, this warning about what kinds of websites to avoid certainly seems timely. So yep, for more, go here.

HEALTH NEWS

Okay, even as nutritious conscious as I’ve become, this hit me weird. How many of you have heard of or about kefir, chia and/or purslane? Come on, let’s see a show of hands. One…two…three…wait, you’re putting your hand down, sort’ve. Okay two and a half. And that’s what I thought. According to You Docs Daily, these three foods that most of us have never heard of before are among the most nutritious a human being could eat and they’ve all apparently been around since ancient times. I don’t intend to try any of these personally but I’d be delighted to hear from a more adventurous soul in these regards, especially if you can describe how it tastes in terms of something I might possibly have eaten if I’d grown up in Minneapolis. Here’s the link to what these are and here’s my email address for any comments.

Alzheimer’s is one of the most frightening conditions a human can face and as the largest generation in American history reaches the age of susceptibility, the fact that a drug already being used to treat cancer has also been found to prevent the formation of the plaque which covers the brain cells of those afflicted with what is also known as “dementia” should come as good news. Yep, for more on this, go here.

ON THE CANCER FRONT

Ovarian cancer is particularly insidious because it shows few if any early symptoms. Therefore, it is extremely difficult to diagnose until it has reached the advanced stage. Therefore, a cancer-prevention lifestyle is all the more important. Tomatoes have proven a definite anti-carcinogen and there are two more foods that will really help. For more on this one and to learn about the risk factors and symptoms of ovarian cancer, please go here.

RESOURCES AND RELATED LINKS:
Cancer Research Journal
National Cancer Institute (American)
Fighting Breast Cancer: Breast Cancer Survivor Stories
Science Daily: Health & Medicine News
American Cancer Statistics 2009
Canadian Cancer Statistics 2009

SEATTLE SCENES


Cowen and adjoining Ravenna Park are a ten-minute bike ride from the University of Washington. It’s a fine example of what can happen when the land is preserved in its essentially original state. Off in the distance is the start of a trail which leads down into a ravine and a stretch of northern rain forest. For more on Cowen & Ravenna Parks, go here.
We’re delighted to report that the American Fish & Wildlife Department has initiated a study of species particularly vulnerable to global warming. In conjunction with the US Geological Survey, the Department will also be measuring climate change at eight new stations. According to a US FWD spokesperson, from this, it is expected that a preservation blueprint will be evolved, one benefiting both the land and the species who live on it. Nice going, folks. This is a good example of how I like my tax dollars working.

In their never-ending war to discover how other creatures can serve us, wasps are now being trained to sniff out explosives and toxic chemicals. They’re also being trained to hunt down criminals and ward off intruders. Preliminary trials have proven them just as effective as the dogs that do the brunt of this work. And, of course, they’re a lot cheaper to feed. I imagine the media will eventually leap on this and that within five years or so, we’ll have a television series about Walter, a mild, unassuming, modest yellow jacket who answered the call of his country and became a national hero. Go Walt.

Recommended Related Links:
Go Northwest: Northwest Wildlife Websites
BBC’s wildlife finder
National Geographic Daily News - Animals
Retrieverman’s Weblog: Engaging articles on domestic & wildlife in the American South

YOU GUYS THINK I MAKE THIS STUFF UP

I have a t-shirt which has survived the second beaching of the Ark and which proudly declares “Real Men Do So Wear Pink”. My passion for the color is local legend so I was a little nonplussed when one of you in the United Kingdom send me this story about an English lady who died her cat’s fur pink. The feline turned up missing for awhile and when discovered ignited the furor of animal lovers throughout the Isles. This is one of those “All Creatures Great & Small” stories so yep, for more, go here.
Well, that’s it for this week. If you’re in a shopping mood and into some interesting choices? We’ve got a “reader stocked” General Store that you might want to check out. We’ve stocked a bit of everything from camping gear and cookware, specialty food items, books, music, films and fun/interesting/weird things that just somehow found their way onto the shelves at night when we were asleep.
The Northstar Journal is funded by contributions from readers like yourself. If you enjoyed this edition and would like to contribute to the next, please click the donate button below.

Rusty

Monday, September 20, 2010

Computer magnate joins Disney and Armstrong in prestigious Boy Scout Award


Hi again from the Bastion on the Puget Sound. Well, I’m real pleased to report that one of our neighbors has been honored by the Boy Scouts of America in a way that puts him right up there with Walt Disney and Neil Armstrong.

I also love the name of the award this Puget Sounder received. Silver Buffalo so resonates the west. It’s in recognition of his leadership and his philanthropy and it probably also helped that before he became a trans-millennium mover, he was also a Life Time Boy Scout.

I, for one, think he totally deserves this award, the controversies in which he’s also been involved notwithstanding. Despite being one of the richest people in the world, he really hasn’t changed much since the days when his ability to so totally focus that he zoned anything else out earned him a largely unjustified reputation for being arrogantly antisocial and more than a bit the martinet.

It’s been suggested that getting married mellowed him out some but that’s really to not understand his wife Melinda, the concept of soul mates, or the notion that sometimes two very exceptional people who love one another can work as a team and from that union and partnership, create something neither of them alone could have.

So here’s a tip of the working man’s cap to Bill Gates. Nice going, sire, and congratulations, mate.




IN OTHER NEWS

Well, apparently British billionaire and adventurer Sir Richard Branson’s vision of space tourism is catching on. America’s Boeing Aircraft announced last Wednesday that it plans to start its own flights as early as 2015. To see how this is coming together and for an incredible artist’s conception of what the craft involved looks like, yep, go here.

In what could well be the most significant contribution to clean energy since Ben Franklin flew a kite and a key in the rain,
researchers at Western Washington University have made a breakthrough in solar energy technology which could cut the cost of that power source to one-tenth its present rate. Nice going, folks. Yep, for more, go here.

This will probably not come as totally good news to global warming denialists of the male gender
and may even backfire by pointing to this study and asserting that melting polar ice, etc. is only one of those “female things,” and like “that time of the month,” not to be taken real seriously. I’ll take my chances. The story is headlined Why American women accept climate change science more than men.”

And for those without that particular hang-up, it must still come as a stretch to read about tornados
in New York City. With all you folks have been through back there and especially with the recent commemoration of the worst disaster in your history, I’m amazed at how well you’re taking this. But then you’re the same town that gave us the Statue of Liberty, the Yankees, the Mets and the Jets, right? You’re nothing if not tough then, eh? I’ve got very distant cousins in Flatbush with whom I talk on the phone occasionally. They speak so fast I need to record it and then play it back at half speed. Understandably, they have a problem on their end and that’s not retiring before I, a Pacific Northwesterner, finish a sentence. Across the seven flags which fly above this masthead, then, our hearts and our prayers abide. Yep, for more on why we feel this way, go here.

We’ve been following for several years now the progress that the Canadian province of British Columbia is making in electric transportation, both private and public.
According to The Pembia Institute, by 2030, a third of the vehicles on the roads there will be so powered. To see how a million or so of these will be zipping over 365,946 square miles/947,800 square kilometers, yep, go here.



SURVIVING HARD TIMES

With one in seven Americans now living in poverty, and jobs ~ good, bad or indifferent still hard for an estimated 45-million ~ tougher to find than they have been in my life time, these three success tips on how to land one during hard times is certainly well worth the read.

With a promised economy recovery simply not happening and the dramatic climate changes bringing unprecedented weather challenges, it hasn’t been a particularly fun time to be a human being. However, as Darwin contended, survival belongs to the adaptable.
To see how some of your species mates are making these hard times work for them, please go here.

As we’ve discussed in this column before, one of the ways of surviving hard times is to lower the cost of living and that’s given birth to what some are now calling the “locavore movement,” vis a vis home and community gardens. This idea, however, did not originate with this Recession. Back in the “olden days,” they were called Victory Gardens.
To read more about them, yep, go here.

ON THE CANCER FRONT

Prostate cancer is the second most fatal form of this disease in men. There are approximately 200,000 new cases a year, some 32,000 of which (16%) will prove fatal. This strain of it feeds on testosterone and there’s a drug in clinical trials now which denies it what it needs and literally starves it to death. Yep, for more on this one, please go here.

Researchers at the British Cancer Institute may have discovered a successful treatment for one of the most aggressive breast cancers, “triple negative.” Some 9,000 women in that country of 51-million, are diagnosed each year. Yep, for more on this one, please go here.


HEALTH NEWS

Despite our devotion to them, we never really believed that eating pizza was healthy.
But apparently with the right toppings, it can actually be really good for you. Think mushrooms now, folks, and for more, yep, go here.

According to a position paper recently released by the American Dietetic Association, how long one lives may also be a matter of the right genes. Researchers, however, are quick to point out that the personal lifestyle choices an individual makes can have a major impact on longevity, as well. I thoroughly enjoyed this one so yep, for more, go here.

SEATTLE SCENES
I thought for a minute or two that this cloud was about ready to snack on this building. Stranger things have happened on the shores of the Salish Sea.
Photo by Merritt Scott (Rusty) Miller

How in the world a 1500 lb/680 kg camel came to be in Oregon in the first place was a bit of a stretch for me, even though I lived among those rather interesting folk for over a decade. That the dromedary somehow got itself stuck in a deep sinkhole full of wet clay was easy to imagine. I mean, let’s face it. Mud is not something your average camel probably knows a whole lot about, right? It also does not surprise me that it was successfully rescued. Oregonians may make some weird friends but they are also notorious for taking care of their own. Yep, I loved this one, so please go here.

Biologists in remote Pend Oreille County, Washington ~ situated in the northeast corner west of Idaho and south of British Columbia ~ may be the home of the state’s third breeding wolf pack.
Officials trapped and radio tagged a large male gray wolf and now they’re trying to determine if his den is in Canada/British Columbia or America/Washington. Right now, he’s apparently considered a canine without a country. Yep, for more, go here.


Recommended Related Links:
Go Northwest: Northwest Wildlife Websites
BBC’s wildlife finder
National Geographic Daily News - Animals
Retrieverman’s Weblog: Engaging articles on domestic & wildlife in the American South

YOU GUYS THINK I MAKE THIS STUFF UP

If I wasn’t as much in love with orcas as everyone else on the shores of the Salish Sea, I would think it very weird that a University of Washington research team has come up with a way to photograph these benevolent (if you’re not on their menu) behemoths at night. At first glance, that might seem like an invasion of privacy but the project which produced the technology was initiated at the behest of a local utility district planning a tidal energy project and wanting to make sure the turbines were turned off when our two local orca pods were in the area. This is so totally us. Yep, for the story behind the story, go here.

Well, that’s it for now. Thanks for the ear. Before you leave, if you’re in a shopping mood and into some interesting choices? We’ve got a “reader stocked” General Store that you might want to check out. If you’d like to sell something with us or know someone who does, email us at minstrel312@aol.com and we’ll see what we can do.

The Northstar Journal is funded by contributions from readers like yourself. If you enjoyed this edition and would like to contribute to the next, please click the donate button below.

Rusty

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

And a tentative peace prevailed


Hi again from the Bastion on the Puget Sound. Hi again from the Bastion on the Puget Sound. Well, we’re glad to see that the ninth anniversary of 9/11 passed with relatively no violence. That Florida evangelist minister decided not to hold a rally and burn the Muslim equivalent of the Bible and there were no calls from the Muslim world for a jihad or holy war.

On America’s news and commentary television program
Face the Nation the morning after, host Bob Schieffer, in remembering 9/11, remarked about how not only New York City, but the entire nation pulled together, including the American Muslim community. He observed that in the nine years since, we seem to have lost that ability to focus, to unite behind the same threat to the American Way of Life the destruction on September 11, 2001 represented.

He was referring to the Recession, among other things. Mr. Schieffer is not just one of America’s most astute and unbiased political reporters, he is also a student of history. He knows that there are two ways the mightiest of nations can die. They can be conquered from without or they can decay and collapse from within.

If we ~ as Americans ~ cannot put aside those “differences” we think divide us and pull together to end this Recession, provide adequate health care for our population and make peace with our neighbors so that our sons and daughters will not die ~ or in some cases, survive ~ in such far flung and distant lands as Afghanistan and Iraq, all our enemies can pretty much take a holiday.

We will have done to ourselves something in their wildest dreams they could not have done to us. And we will have no one but ourselves to blame for the demise of potentially the greatest democratic republic in the history of humankind and nations.

IN OTHER NEWS

BP has apparently decided that the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico was the result of a chain of mistakes by all of those involved. Skeptics are calling their 103-page report detailing specifics a blueprint of how the industry giant intends to defend itself in future criminal and civil litigation. A source with whom I spoke under condition of anonymity feels that while it may indeed be that, it is also a good look at how this particular fossil fuel gets from gusher to gas tank, as it were. He contends that as such, it might also provide the basis for regulatory review and remedial action, as well. For more and for the report itself, go here.

A tip of the tam as it were to California governor Arnold Schwarzenegger on his announcement of a new website devoted to green jobs. Called Clean Energy Jobs, it lists 48 programs which provide training for jobs in the recycling, clean transportation and renewable energy jobs and one of its stronger points is that it represents a cooperative and comprehensive effort among community colleges, local workforce investment boards and private industries to meet a growing demand for these positions as California continues to lead the nation in the evolution of an environmentally safe and stable state economy. For more, go here.

If Washington State ever decides to take the face of its American namesake founding father off its flag, there’s a good chance it will be replaced by a salmon.
Which salmon ~ chinook, king, sockeye, et all ~ will likely be a matter of some debate. It is to us what beef cattle are to other parts of the country, except that these fish were here long before we arrived. Under these seven flags, everyone has a “salmon.” To see what we’re doing to preserve and perpetuate ours, yep, go here.

SURVIVING HARD TIMES

Sometimes the most devastating way to NOT survive hard times is to be under informed and to keep trying things that don’t work or looking for jobs that simply are no longer there. Bad news is hard to take on the sunniest of days and there’s an understandable reluctance to look at such things as economic forecasts, job reports and other vital information simply because they’re often depressing. That certainly fits this Associated Press story headlined “Future jobs: More skills or less pay”. I read it, though, and I’m glad I did.

Does having less to spend really need to be a cause for depression, anxiety or loss of self-esteem? Apparently not, according to economics blogger Trent Hamm. His The Simple Dollar column talks about 48 things frugality has taught him. It’s a romp to read and the kind of good-natured approach which could restore thrift to its rightful place as a virtue to be emulated. Yep, go here.

ON THE CANCER FRONT

A much abused and therefore much maligned drug popular during the Sixties is regaining respectability among oncologists. In a small but significant study recently released by a UCLA research team, the psychedelic drug psilocybin, the active ingredient in "magic mushrooms," can improve mood and reduce anxiety and depression in terminal cancer patients. Yep, for more on this one.

This has got to come as good news to breast cancer patients. Malignant cells treated with peach extract or plum extract died but the healthy cells around them did not. This is a dramatic departure from traditional chemotherapy, which eradicates both and in so doing, reduces the body’s ability to fight off other infection. This new treatment also doesn’t involve the level of pain either. Yep, for more on this one.

RESOURCES AND RELATED LINKS:
Cancer Research Journal
National Cancer Institute (American)
Fighting Breast Cancer: Breast Cancer Survivor Stories
Science Daily: Health & Medicine News
American Cancer Statistics 2009
Canadian Cancer Statistics 2009

HEALTH NEWS

I’m not sure whether this is good news or bad news. Maybe you can help me decide. According to a report released by the US Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), after some 40 years of continual declines, smoking rates among Americans have finally stabilized. What I found both interesting and alarming about this is who still smokes and who’s had the sense to quit. I’m in the process of moving from one to the other so this was particularly interesting to me. Yep, go here.

Okay, this one hit me as weird but then again, it does sometimes pay to keep an open mind, as dangerous as that can also be in this house.
Apparently, gin-soaked raisins are effective in easing the pain of arthritis. I’m saying nothing more about this one because this story does it far better than I ever could. Yep, go here.

SEATTLE SCENES

University District Sunset Sky
Photo by Merritt Scott (Rusty) Miller

SEATTLE FACTS AND FIGURES
Seattle Rainfall in Comparison To Other US Cities
Seattle Geography & Climate
For more information about Seattle
For live cameras on Seattle, the Puget Sound and Washington State

CRITTER STUFF

We’ve had several requests now for information on creating critter-friendly gardens and mini-wildlife refuges. Depending on where one lives and the extent to which concrete and steel have taken over, it can be as simple as letting the grass grow or as complex as a good family project involving restoring the chosen site to its pre-Industrial Revolution condition. National Wildlife magazine has an outstanding website which seems to cover it all. Yep, go here.

Well, those skeptics of global warming might want to talk to the tens of thousands of walruses which have come ashore in northwest Alaska because the ice they normally hang out on has melted. It’s quite a visual, trust me. For the whole story, yep, go here.

Recommended Related Links:
Go Northwest: Northwest Wildlife Websites
BBC’s wildlife finder
National Geographic Daily News - Animals
Retrieverman’s Weblog: Engaging articles on domestic & wildlife in the American South

YOU GUYS THINK I MAKE THIS STUFF UP

One of the reasons I enjoy living in Seattle as much as I do is that there is a quiet resonance which, at a time when the world seems so ready to kill for historical precedents, seeks to set things right in that regard, as it were. This story involves a long overdue apology and a wall of remembrance. It’s our way of saying we never want to make this mistake again. It may, as well, explain why we’re not going to be stampeded into bigotry in the name of homeland security.
If you’re still curious, yep, go here.

Well, that’s it for this week. Our sincerest thanks to the Albert Coyne Foundation for their generous donation to this week’s Northstar Journal.

Well, that’s it for now. Thanks for the ear. Before you leave, if you’re in a shopping mood and into some interesting choices? We’ve got a “reader stocked” General Store that you might want to check out. If you’d like to sell something with us or know someone who does, email us at minstrel312@aol.com and we’ll see what we can do.

The Northstar Journal is funded by contributions from readers like yourself. If you enjoyed this edition and would like to contribute to the next, please click the donate button below.

Rusty

Monday, September 6, 2010

BLOOD, OIL, GAS & COAL



Hi again from the Bastion on the Puget Sound. Well, American Gulfporters got yet another heart-stopper this past week. The bad news is a second oil platform exploded. The good news is that there was no loss of life and since it wasn’t pumping anything, no oil or natural gas leaks.

Is it just me or is that still not very reassuring? How safe are the rest of those rigs out there? I’d love to see the actuals on a few of them. I’d also like to know what the industry considers an acceptable risk when they keep men, machinery and materiel on the job for too long.

I have a feeling I’d hear what I’ve heard before, off the record. The demand for the product determines the risk factor. And who determines the demand? We do. For as long as we’ve been using fossil fuels, miners and wildcatters have been dying hard and in inordinate numbers. That doesn’t seem to have mattered very much to us.

If that is, in fact, true ~ particularly in light of the dramatic evolution of renewable options ~ I’m wondering whether the responsibility for dead miners and wildcatters rests with those directly involved or whether it is ours.

Seems to me there’s some blood mixed in with that coal, that oil and that gas. And more than a gallon or so of widow’s tears.

IN OTHER NEWS

Last week, we reported on a rural Washington State school teacher who somehow managed to keep his job after being twice arrested for inappropriately touching his female students. State school superintendent Randy Dorn suspended the teaching license of Michael Moulton, thus ending what victims say is a thirteen-year history of victimizing the most vulnerable. We consider this a totally appropriate intervention by state government and we are actually prouder of that than we are ashamed that in our home state, that this extremely questionable excuse for a decent human being lasted as long as he did in public education. Yep, for more.

This will come as good news to those of us who love organic gardening and consuming the harvest of same.
A study recently released by Washington State University (Go Cougars!) confirms that in the case of strawberries, the fruit in “Fruit and Soil Quality of Organic and Conventional Strawberry Agroecosystems, organics are better for both the consumer and the soil in which they are grown. For more on this one.

If you love a good fight for a worthy cause,
there’s one shaping up in the interior of Canada’s western province, British Columbia. There’s a proposal to open a new copper mine and the First Nations are opposing it fiercely. To see what North America’s original environmentalists are doing to make a stand, please go here.

SURVIVING HARD TIMES

We’ve spent a lot of time ~ and based on your emails, appropriately so ~ on the more hands-on, non-cyber aspects of surviving hard times. But I got to thinking that those of us who have access to the Net also have ways to generate an income. In my house, it’s another sugar can. I have a potential client now who produces fine walking sticks, flutes and stone sculptures. He’s also soon going to be teaching a course in the last one. The first photo below is the stone he found. The second is what it told him it wanted to be.

He’s also a performing musician who loves demonstrating the instruments he makes. I started out in life in the same art and trust me, he’s good. He’s not interested in being famous but he wouldn’t mind some land on this side of the mountains, his own place, replete with a studio where he and his protoges can create good music. He also wants a workshop for his walking sticks and stone sculptures.

Most of all, he wants an all-weather place of his own to market what he produces. That’s “real time” we’re talking about here. He’s fully aware that yard sales, flea markets, etc. are not going to help much in those regards.

By his own admission, he is totally Internet challenged. He does, however, recognise the value of online marketing. He’s got the stuff and all he really needs is to be promoted honestly and appropriately out there in Cyber Land. That’s what I’m doing and it’s worth 20% commission to him.

We’re talking website creation and networking. And yep, I’m also teaching him how to do it. Nobody lives forever and he’s perfectly capable of doing the whole nine yards himself. It’s just part of the learning curve.

And yep, since I’m also a novelist with a book for sale, I’m hoping for an ‘agent’ with as much enthusiasm for that one admittedly modest attempt at literature of mine as I have a profound appreciation of his art.

This link I found talks about a lot more ways to use the Net to make money. So yep, for this one, go here.

ON THE CANCER FRONT

This has got to be good news not only for those suffering from an admittedly rare form of cancer (tracheal) but, by implication, for all transplant patients. In this specific case, it’s essentially a donated windpipe using the patient’s implanted healthy stem cells to generate tissue which more closely resembles what it is replacing. Yep, we’re talking about dramatically reducing the risk of transplant rejection of other organs, as well. For more on this one, please go here.

RESOURCES AND RELATED LINKS:
Cancer Research Journal
National Cancer Institute (American)
Fighting Breast Cancer: Breast Cancer Survivor Stories
Science Daily: Health & Medicine News
American Cancer Statistics 2009
Canadian Cancer Statistics 2009

HEALTH NEWS

Good health really can be fun, as I learned once again at this website entitled
Froot Facts. Did you know, for instance, that whenever you munch down on a stalk of celery, you’re eating what the ancient Greeks awarded the winners of sporting events? This is another great reference, as well, for parents to motivate their kids to eat what’s good for them. Yep, for this one, please go here.

Eating healthy foods can also be budget enhancing and according to a recent Public Health Nutrition study, one dish is as cheap as fifteen cents American. Without realizing it, we’ve been eating like this for years and our doctor, who has two kids still in college, hates us. We are contributing nothing to their education expenses. The folks at the Farmer’s Market and the PCC Co-Op, however, love us to death. Yep, for more on this one, please go here.

SEATTLE SCENES


The University District Farmers Market, Seattle, Washington



Ralph


Sasha

I’ve mentioned before that Northstar’s household is critter friendly and I’ve regaled you folks with stories and video of the bears, cougars, bobcats, and bald eagles “taking back the ‘hood’” as it were out here. I almost had myself convinced it was a “Northwest thing,” so I’m delighted to report that there’s a borough in New York City undergoing an ‘invasion’ of raccoons. Yep, check it out here. (And Ralph says hello.) If it’s happening anywhere else under these seven flags, we’d love to hear about it, with a link and permission to share. Email us here then.



Well, given what we’ve reported about dolphins and sea lions being trained to protect the American portion of the Salish Sea (Greater Puget Sound), it comes as good news of sorts to learn that the American government is tightening up regulations around what is appropriate killer whale watching. Us being who we are, however, we’ll go along with it until the first time there’s a military incident in these waters. Then, you will not be able to keep us off of them. This is our home and theirs as well, so if you want to engage in this stupidity, take it outside. You’ve got the whole Pacific Ocean for this. We really don’t need this in our backyard.

Recommended Related Links:
Go Northwest: Northwest Wildlife Websites
BBC’s wildlife finder
National Geographic Daily News - Animals
Retrieverman’s Weblog: Engaging articles on domestic & wildlife in the American South

YOU GUYS THINK I MAKE THIS STUFF UP

For as much as we call for an accounting of human weirdness in this column, we are nonetheless constantly on the lookout for those individuals and behaviours which ennoble the species and address the compassion, the charity, the strength of character and the integrity which is also part of the gene pool of our species. This story comes from “east of the mountains,” as we refer to that part of our state which lies on that side of the Cascades. It is headlined “German woman gets to thank Portland woman in person for post-WWII CARE packages”. Seattle Times reporter Erik Lacitis is one of the finest chroniclers of life here on the shores of the Salish Sea and he’s crafted a powerful, moving and penultimately inspiring story of friendship and love. Yep, go here.

Well, that’s it for now. Thanks for the ear. Before you leave, if you’re in a shopping mood and into some interesting choices? We’ve got a “reader stocked” General Store that you might want to check out. If you’d like to sell something with us or know someone who does, email us at minstrel312@aol.com and we’ll see what we can do.

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Rusty
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Rusty