Saturday, November 22, 2008

November 22

November 22 is a date that someone of my age will never forget. The question is Where were you when you heard the news? I was in my dorm at Texas Tech between classes talking on the phone with a girl I had been dating during the fall semester. I was an 18 year old freshman just finding my feet as a college student. From a small town and a small high school, many thought that I could not or would not succeed as a student. I had confidence, but I had to prove I could make it. That day, 45 years ago today, put a knot in our stomachs and a kink in our expectations. How could it be? Not him! We really did not know how to react. We were young and we had great expectations. They seemed to go away so quickly.

I suppose if we had been paying attention I would have seen some of the signs. But we really weren't very observant. Martin Luther King and the Civil Right movement had made what is now remember as a key step on August 28 of that year. We were college freshmen having a good time, enjoying a good football season, dating and learning how to study. The change from my pre-college life was, for me, so big that I don't remember much about King's most famous speech ... at the time it was given.

But then it was Friday, November 22, 1963. John F. Kennedy was dead. Everything changed.

Friday, November 21, 2008

Energy, Trees, Grass and Water


This week I had the opportunity to participate in discussions with federal agencies, academic interests and public representatives on issues of importance ... energy, trees, grass and water. The world is either excited about or ignoring the approaching limits of each and our use conservation and enhancement of each substantially impacts other current issues. Global climate change for example.

Energy: How can we help folks use it more efficiently? Increased oil prices and resulting increased gasoline prices, brought down driving miles. Now gasoline is 'relatively' cheap again. Will the driving public respond by increasing their gasoline use? Undoubtedly, yes! Do we forget about the limits and the need to more efficiently use energy? Hopefully, not.

Trees and grass: Forest and rangeland in the U.S. is not being well managed. Conflicting strategies of preservation and effective use are creating situations that support more fires. The West is burning again, but other issues are raising there heads . . invasive species, watershed deterioration, distorted wildlife conditions. Can we have 'working landscapes' that enhance in a natural way the ecosystems of our forests and grasslands? Much work needs to be done.

Water: Water is being discussed by many as the most critically limiting natural resource. Essential to life, water is limited in arid areas by definition, but it is also limited in other areas as drought is brought on by the changing climate. In other areas, water is abundant, but of poor quality. The issue in the U.S. is small compared to other parts of the world, especially Asia and Africa.

We need major efforts to make the public more aware and concerned about the issues of energy, forestry, grass and water ... natural resources. The green movement is popular at the moment, but do 'greenies' really recognize the limits of our resources or are the following a fad?

Where is the crisis?

Initial Purpose

This blog will, I hope, be my way to discuss - mostly with myself - my life adventures including work, travel, food, entertainment, reading, writing, recreation and other thoughts. The listing may be a bit disjointed, but so is life.