16 April 2008

How does Portland top itself?

The city's next mayor needs to mobilize the city
Wednesday, April 16, 2008

The next mayor of Portland will ride into office on green coattails. Even if he knows nothing about climate change, he'll be regarded as something of a hotshot on the strength of the city's reputation alone -- plus its 15 years of work to reduce carbon emissions.

So here's a warning: Portland has the kind of head start that can vanish fast. The next mayor needs a very specific plan to capitalize on the city's global warming expertise, not coast on it.

Everyone everywhere is talking about creating "green-collar" jobs, including many candidates in the May primary. Portland has been talking for years about reaping the benefits of a greener economy. But unless the next mayor has specific plans to galvanize the community and create jobs, this could be yet another dream that passes Portland by. (Remember when biotech was going to be the next big thing?)

Meanwhile, the most difficult challenges in confronting global warming still lie ahead, including the need for green retrofitting of houses, businesses and buildings across the community. This is not nearly as sexy or exciting as building new and green, but it's essential, because buildings produce about 40 percent of carbon emissions.

Energy-efficient retrofitting can produce a quadruple win, reducing emissions, reducing energy consumption, reducing utility bills (with benefits for every size pocketbook) -- and creating jobs that can never be outsourced. Grasping the potential, many bright people are working on some facet of green retrofitting, but it will take mayoral leadership to ignite change on a communitywide scale.

The potential jobs bonanza (including some federal help in the offing) has mayors across the country scampering to launch green initiatives. Back in 1993, it seemed farfetched, even goofy, when Portland became the first city in the country to adopt a plan to counteract global warming. Not any more. As of Monday, 830 mayors had signed on to the U.S. Conference of Mayors' Climate Protection Agreement, pledging to reduce greenhouse gases.

When mayors gathered to talk about climate change last fall, they sounded almost giddy in ticking off the fringe benefits of making their cities greener, more walkable and livable. Portlanders, of course, had heard it all before.

By 2006, Portland had notched real progress in reducing greenhouse gas emissions on a per capita basis by 14 percent. That should have voters elbowing the city's mayoral candidates and asking: "OK, buddy, how will you top this?"

The mayoral candidates need to explain exactly how they'll build on what Portland has achieved -- instead of basking in the city's (fading) limelight while boasting rights and economic opportunities slip away to other communities.


11 April 2008

Cellphones & Poverty

NY Times magazine article

Cellphones & Poverty

NY Times magazine article

Bees v Basketball

Oregonian Letter: + Comments

Increments of Technology

USB Power at Oakland Airport

110V Plugs in one car on the Coast Starlight

10 April 2008

References

Jefferey Sachs

  • The End of Poverty
  • Common Wealth: Economics for a Crowded Planet

Paul Hawken

  • The Next Economy (1983)
  • Growing a Business (1987)
  • The Ecology of Commerce (1993)
  • Natural Capatalism: Creating the Next Industrial Revolution (1999)
  • Blessed Unrest: How th Largest Movement in the World Came into Being and Why No One Saw it Coming (2007)

Adam Werbach

Ted Nordhaus & Michael Shellenberger, American Environics & The Breakthrough Institute

Blue is the way to integrate green

Thursday, April 10, 2008 (SF Chronicle)
Open Forum: Blue is the way to integrate green ideals
Adam Werbach

After spending most of my life as a full-time environmentalist, I declaredin 2004 that environmentalism was dead, unable to effectively work at thescale of the problems we faced. Since that time, I've been on a journeyacross the planet to find the next stage of ideas that can help catalyze anew movement to build the world we want. As I've traveled, my field ofvision has expanded. I've come to see that you can eat locally, co-op grown, organic heirloomtomatoes and still be a bad person. Eating those tomatoes is only onesmall way to take care of yourself, your community and the planet. Thosetomatoes are an entrance point, not an end. While I'll always be someonewith green ideals, it's clear that we need a new mass movement - not justfor professionals or experts or people who can explain photosynthesis andlifecycle analysis. We need a movement for people who care about spendingmore quality time with their family and also about climate change, forpeople who want to lose a little weight as well as bike to work, and forpeople who really need to save some money. When you travel to countries that have been green for decades, such asSwitzerland, there's already a color for this movement - it's blue. Ipropose that we begin to adopt this blue movement here. Don't worry, youcan still be green, but blue is a way to integrate your green ideals intoyour broader ideals. We still can't get where we need to go withoutpolitical change, but it's time to get serious about bringing our idealsto the way we live and the way we shop. Consider this: For the first time in human history there are twice as manypeople who are overweight than are hungry on the planet. The way we live,and the way we shop, are killing us. The average American woman spends an hour a day shopping. She is an expertat finding the right value for herself and her family, and increasinglyshe's looking to make a difference when she does. To date, the only socialchange movement that speaks to her says one thing: Stop. Stop shopping,start making your own household chemicals, rendering fat into soap, andhanging your clothes out on a laundry line. While these are noble ends,everything that we've learned about behavior change is that it happenssmall step by small step, so it's unlikely that a mom will switch fromCheez Whiz to tofu. Our battle is not between the organic carrot and theregular carrot, the battle is between the carrot and the Twinkie. There's a sense of green fatigue infecting many people, largely becauseit's being promoted as a panacea in ways that it doesn't deliver. "OrganicAmerican Spirit Cigarettes" still cause lung cancer and low-birth-weightbabies. Those cigarettes may be better for the "environment," but thissort of FOCUS obfuscates the fact that smoking kills a lot more peoplethan pesticides, and that we need to care about both the smoker and thefarmer. Organic is simply one step toward being blue even though it's thegold-standard for being green. While this movement will have many faces, it will use a platform that is adaily practice for most of us - shopping. While political activism is atbest a biannual pursuit, shopping is a regular activity for most people onthe planet, and if trends continue, for virtually everyone. Now before youattack me for sounding like President Bush who seemed to say after 9/11,"We can shop our way out of it," let me be clear. I'm not calling for youto get off the farm and into the mall. Engaging people as consumers, aspeople who shop, allows us the possibility of building a billion-personmovement. People don't need to join a listserv or pay a membership fee tojoin. They won't get a newsletter or a membership card that they need tostuff into their wallet. And no wall calendars. But how do we bring ouraspirations for the world into what we buy? This is the billion-personquestion. Every product you buy should be a gateway to a personal sustainabilitypractice. The first step is developing your own personal practices. Thesecond step is asking the stores where you shop to start carrying productsthat support your practice. And the third step is sharing your practicewith you friends. It all starts with you. 21st century award INFORUM's award is given to visionaries who are shaping the future. Recentrecipients include YouTube founders Chad Hurley and Steve Chen, KingAbdullah II of Jordan, Microsoft executive Paul Rutter, and tonight, AdamWerbach. INFORUM is a division of the Commonwealth Club. For text of Werbach's speech, go to www. saatchis.com/birthofblue For more information, go to http://www.commonwealthclub.org/ orgrist.org/birthofblue
Adam Werbach is the global CEO of Saatchi & Saatchi S and formerly servedas the national president of the Sierra Club. ----------------------------------------------------------------------Copyright 2008 SF Chronicle

20 September 2007


This is what you shall do: Love the earth an the sun and the animals, desipise riches, give alms to every one that asks, stand up for the stupid and crazy , devote your income and labor to others, hate tyrants, argue not concerning God, have patience and indulgence toward the people, take off your hat to nothing known or unknown or to any man or number of men, go freely with powerful uneneducated persons and with the young and with the mothers of families, read these leaves in the open air of every season of every year of your life, re-examine all you been told at schooll or chrurch or in any book, dismiss whatever insults your own soul, and your very flesh shall be a great poem and have the richest fluency not only in the silent lines of its and face and between the lashes of your eyes and in every motion and joint of your body ... Walt Whitman

11 August 2007

A poem from a long time ago

The dawn glistens in spirals of lights
starting the day anew
The morning dew, mirroring a kaleidoscope of colors
awaiting the sun’s rays for unity once again
With the heavens
Birds singing songs unknown,
Plants whispering truths untold as the earth
Opens up to creation

And then there is you

…..

Peeking through the branches as if aspy
of the many wonders within
The sun catches nature’s children at play
Above in the trees hide the hidden
Nest of nature’s magical forces
Locked indefinitely in their biological realms
Below on the ground amidst entangled webs on light
Flutter a rainbow of thoughts

All a part of you

…..

The night is upon us and the heavens
unveil a field of blooming white lights.
Across the universe two special stars sparkle
and fall into the horizon
The moon smiles at the happening
And as nature ebbs its way into my life

So as well do you

…..

13 July 2007

Michael Gellerman
18972 NW Northshore Ct
Portland, OR 97229 USA
Tel: +1 503 929 6555
msgellerman@gmail.com


Experience

Raccoon Dog Associates
- Principal/Consultant
- Contracted Management
Portland, Oregon
Tokyo, Japan
Namibia/South Africa
Berkeley, California
1999 - present
1993 -1997

I have used this company name for a number of consulting and contracted management projects over the years. I have worked on a number of different projects in Japan, Southern Africa and North America including:
  • designed a new database and user interface for subscription and customer relations management using Open Source resources for the scientific journal Nature (Japan)
  • acting Director of Technology for Justsystem, Inc. - the US subsidiary of Justsystem Corp. I designed and managed the support systems, network and telecommunications. I additionally conducted detailed technical reviews of new technology for their venture capital investment subsidiary. Additional responsibilities included managing customer service and support for this Japanese company for two years while they tried to expand to the US market and invest in new technology projects.
  • acting Director of Operations/IT for Calyx & Corolla, a direct to consumer flower company. I reworked their systems with FedEx and communications with direct-ship vendors, installed new inventory systems and managed day to day IT operations during their transition when purchased by Capitol Cities/ABC.
  • acting Director of Operations for IBE, Inc. and COO. A direct marketing firm representing the Heriot-Watt University (Edinburgh Business School) Distance Learning MBA for North America during the transition to absorbing the program into the University's international marketing program
  • partner in developing the environmentally-conscious consumer store Marina Green in San Francisco. We opened two stores that were successful and sold them to a competitor EarthSake
  • consulting biologist on endangered island bird species for the Ministry of Environment and Tourism (Japan)
  • consulting biologist for the Namibia Breeding Bird Survey and National Biodiversity Project
  • private consultant and natural history trip organizer/naturalist for clients in Australia, Africa, North America, Asia, South and Central America and the sub-Antarctic Islands.

Pinnacle Rock Associates
Partner
Berkeley, California
1997 - 1999

Along with two colleagues, all of us former CIOs or Vice Presidents of IT, we formed this consulting group that continues to be successful. We saw a need for specialized information systems and management consulting for small to medium sized speciality retailers that were growing rapidly and had difficulty keeping pace with technology but were not quite large enough or capital-rich enough for traditional solutions. We specialized in systems integration, customization, and conversions for a number of prominent clients. We also did a number of legacy "Y2K" conversions to updated systems. I specialized in database design, user interface design, data conversion, training and management reporting development. Most of the work we did was on the IBM AS/400 or Windows NT Server, but we had plenty of experience with PICK, COBOL, S/38, UNIX operating systems, and most databases (open source and commercial) in common use. Example list of clients:
  • The Nature Company
  • The North Face
  • Smith & Hawken
  • Backroads (Travel)
  • Mountain Hardware
  • Discovery Channel Stores

Real Goods Trading
Director of Operations/COO
Ukiah, California
1990 - 1993

Primarily a catalog company of alternative energy (wind/solar/hydro) solutions for independent living and environmentally conscious consumer products - I was recruited to manage the operations, upgrade their systems, and provide experienced management in anticipation of rapid growth. The company expanded dramatically and successfully during my term in senior management and was eventually purchased by Gaiam, a holding company for a number of "lifestyle companies". My responsibilities and projects included:
  • managing Customer Service, Distribution, Information Systems, Technical Support and Purchasing
  • executive management of the company along with the Chief Financial Officer and President
  • helping raise private and customer capital through two over-subscribed public offerings
  • installation, conversion and training of a new comprehensive inventory, sales and marketing system (hardware and software)
  • installation and training of a new call center system
  • design and development of management reporting for productivity, sales, financials, and marketing
  • design, development and logistics for opening retail locations
  • human resources management including worker's compensation, unemployment, hiring/firing decisions and benefits management

The Nature Company
Progressively Responsible Positions
Berkeley, California
1985 -1990

An innovative and pioneering retailer of products dedicated to enhancing the appreciation and enjoyment of the natural world. Products included books, optics, framed and poster art, sculpture, minerals and fossils, educational toys, and nature inspired gifts and tools for the naturalist. I started with the company when it had 3 stores in the Bay Area and served in progressively responsible positions. It eventually grew to 165 stores in five countries before being purchased by The Discovery Channel.
  • Operations Manager. Responsible for:
    • receiving product from vendors and distribution to all retail stores
    • delivering and setting up new store opening inventory, fixtures and logistics during a rapid growth period
    • general logistics for a rapidly growing company
  • Director, Inventory Control. Responsible for:
    • physical inventory control, security and electronic inventory accuracy for retail and catalog operations with large warehouses and national retail operations.
    • daily sales audit for all transactions in retail and catalog divisions
    • organizing and executing physical inventories bi-annually and reporting financial results
    • design and development of new point-of-sale devices, integration and training for new merchandising and financial systems
  • Director/Vice President, Operations. Responsible for:
    • budgeting and results for multiple departments
    • membership on the executive committee for general company goals, budgets, policy and strategy
    • direct management of Information Systems, Catalog and Retail Distribution, Inventory Control, Systems Development and Training (over 20 direct reporting employees, over 500 employees at peak in all departments)
    • projects; including relocating distribution facilities and operations from California to Kentucky, international expansion of systems and logistics, development of customized executive reporting and detailed merchandise performance reporting outside of vendor supported systems
    • systems development and training at all levels, developed a training department and curriculum for retail and corporate users
    • complex human resources issues including union/management negotiations, hiring/firing, benefits and transition or relocation packages
  • Vice President, System Development. Responsible for:
    • multiple complex hardware/software upgrades with no interruption of business
    • integration of subsidiary companies into the merchandising/inventory/distribution systems (Smith & Hawken, Hear Music, international Nature Company partners)
    • training, design customized reporting and systems for partners, ongoing management of the development team for point-of-sale , inventory and merchandising applications.
  • Consultant, International Business. Responsible for:
    • opening and integrating stores in Japan, UK, Australia and Canada
    • integrating harmonized code logic into export documents and providing partner specific reporting
    • integrating sales and inventory data from overseas vendors into replenishment algorithms that match transit times and export issues. Working with customs agents for integration of import/export issues.

Research Biologist
Various Locations
1982 - present

I have always taken some time out from other jobs and projects to be a biologist. That is my first love and while I am accomplished in the systems and operations area, it has been complimentary to pursuing a greater understanding of ecology and natural history. This is a sampling my work over the years, sometimes with holidays, sometimes between jobs and moves and occasionally with a leave of absence with an employer or client who understands that this work gives me insight into how the world works:

  • Reproductive Ecology of Microtus californicus and related rodents in California
  • San Clemente Island Loggerhead Shrike Conservation and Restoration Project
  • Distribution and Breeding Ecology of Eastern Sierra Migratory Mule Deer
  • Evolutionary Ecology of Pyrenestes ostrinus (Cameroon, Gabon, CAR)
  • Distribution of Neotropical Migrants in Baja California, Costa Rica, El Salvador and Honduras
  • Seed Distribution of Hornbills in Equatorial Indonesia
  • Predation on Ground Nesting Birds in Okinawa and Proximate Islands
  • Limited Distribution of Endemic Birds in the Ryukyu Islands
  • Distribution of Endemic Birds in Ancient Landscapes of Southern Africa
  • MAPS project at San Francisco State University, Sierra Nevada Field Campus (Neotropical Migrant bird banding and analysis)



Education

University of California, Berkeley

  • B.S., Ecology and Evolutionary Biology
  • Graduate Studies, Population Ecology
1980 - 1985


Activities

  • Active member of Portland Audubon Society
  • Past President, Secretary, Vice President of the International Adventure Club (Tokyo)
  • Birding Guide for Oxalis Adventures (London - trips to Japan and Armenia)
  • Private trekking and birding guide for Japan, Australia, Southern and Central Africa


Skills

  • proficient in all standard PC office applications
  • database design, interface development, data manipulation (SQL Server, MySQL, Oracle, Sybase)
  • integration of financial systems (A/P, A/R, G/L) with inventory and merchandising systems
  • experienced systems analyst (Visual Basic, RPG, SQL, Cobol, C++)
  • experienced at data migration and conversion
  • data analysis, statistical analysis, data mining
  • point-of-sale design, integration, and implementation
  • sales audit, inventory control, merchandise performance analysis
  • proficient with multiple operating systems (Windows, Unix/Linux, OS/400)


References

Available on Request

17 April 2007

Mark Shields for President?

February 14, 1993 - before the invasion/occupation

I think the president can go to war. I think that the question, Margaret, is what becomes success politically as well as militarily. I don't think anybody doubts that the United States could vanquish the depleted armies of Saddam Hussein. But the reality is, Margaret, here we are 58 years after World War II. The United States still has troops in Japan and Germany. Fifty years after the end of Korea, the United States still has troops there.

Mark ShieldsAnybody who thinks this is a year or two years, to build the kind of Iraq that is envisioned, that is, a democratic Iraq, multi-representational government with secure borders, having disavowed any use of weapons of mass destruction, living in harmony and some peace and prosperity, if it took 50 years in Germany and Japan, with homogenous populations with traditions it's an investment that the president has not prepared this country to make. It's just really... it's an enormous, enormous task. And I think given the American people's attention span on this war, they'd root and we'd win and that would be it. I'm telling you, I could see it turning to absolute ashes and dust before us.

... the President of the United States since Sept. 11 has never asked young Americans to join the military -- One -- never once. He has never said this is going to be long, it's going to be bloody, it's going to be painful, it's going to be costly. We're going to go to have forgo some pleasures, some privileges and some luxury, never. So as a consequence, American people are totally unprepared for any kind of admission as noble but as risky and difficult as building a multi-party multi-religious democracy in a land that is a construct, an artifact of a political drawing and not a natural place.

... I don't think there's any preparation. Margaret, just take Afghanistan. The last time we were involved in Afghanistan was when the Soviets were there. Ok, the Soviets leave, we leave. What happens? The Taliban. Now we're in Afghanistan. Girls can go to school with boys. Isn't that terrific? Karzai -- one of the great leaders of probably the area in the region is now the mayor of Kabul effectively because that land is essentially... we have lost interest in it. Do you hear Americans talking about the mission we have in Afghanistan?

... [Democratic Party] leaders, plural; basically what they've done is they've taken a position, the ones in Congress, supporting the president on this. The party itself is against war -- strenuously against war. And probably if we go in and the troubles do develop as are predicted and the long painful peace follows and difficult peace, then there they'll be even more against it. So you have the followership party of the party going in one direction and the leadership going in the other. The leadership is absolutely in my judgment paralyzed with what to do.

And then on another topic on the same program (pre Hurricane Katrina) -

... if we find out that emergency workers in the next crisis, in the next attack are deprived of the tools, the federal government is supposed to provide for them because instead we're diverting those funds to cut whatever tax it was that was burdening Bill Gates that day, then I think that there will be an erosion of the president's leadership qualities and a sense of his judgment in that way.

Once again February 14, 2003 and he got it all completely right!

Mark Shields for President!

06 February 2007

Pine Siskins, counting, Turkey Vultures and other thoughts ...

I had two Pine Siskins on the thistle feeder here at Bethany Lake in Washington Co., which may seem like old news to those who see hordes of them but they have been absent here for years according my girl Leslie. She has lived here for 13 years and they were once the most common of the thistle eating birds, but she took down the feeders when she found dead birds during the the Salmonellosis die-off in the NW a few years ago. I have had them up for 2 winters now and these are the first siskins to show up. American and Lesser Goldfinch come in waves, interestingly alternating days the past week or so

I also think the whole concept of counting birds belies why birds are interesting. I suppose I am not a very good birder by many standards as I am not an expert on the finest points of identification of the rarest birds and I often misidentify birds by continent as my "expertise" if you will, is more with birds of Southern Africa and East Asia than the Pacific NW so I might think Goldcrest for Golden-crowned Kinglet until I have my bearings right, but I am good at Osprey and Northern Goshawks and Golden Eagles and Sanderlings and Common Terns, etc. for the very reason that they occur about everywhere. There are "pied" and "black" Oystercatchers on almost every continent although we give them specific status. I suppose I might count every species (I don't really count), but isn't that an interesting question? As you might guess I am an ecologist so what makes birds interesting to me is there relative rarity or abundance and the fluctuations in their populations. As an ecologist I tend to think why a bird is or isn't there in number and breeding or using habitat for migration rather than how a unique individual arrived. I doubt anyone thinks that Falcated Ducks will overrun the Willamette Valley, but Eurasian Collared Doves, or Wrentits, or Anna's Hummingbirds? Those are interesting questions.

I have also worked quite a bit on what makes bird rare. Rare in their apparently most desired habitat. I can tell you that if you are on a tour of southern Africa along the roads, you would tell me that the Pale Chanting Goshawk is the most common raptor in the world. Why? They love to hunt from telephone poles and Sociable Weavers love to build nests on telephone poles. Ok, let's take a walk in the bush and you will rarely find the goshawk because the prey nests are widely distributed in rare trees and hunting perches are scarce. You will find Lanner Falcons, Red-footed Falcons, and a handful of Kestrel species though. Why are American Kestrels common and Loggerhead/Northern Shrikes relatively rare? Their diet overlaps substantially, it can be almost identical in some areas. (here I speak from great experience). The difference is not climate or food or habitat per se, but nest locations. Kestrels nest in inaccessible scrapes on cliffs or manmade structures like most falcons, Shrikes nest in trees and most of the trees have been cut down for agriculture and the few that are left are subject to cats, rats, ravens, crows, etc. When the converstation turns to blackberries, I roll my eyes a bit because food and cover is not the whole equation. I doubt Wrentits would expand their range for blackberries - there is plenty of cover - but why are there Black Phoebes on Sauvie Island in the middle of winter, or Townsend's Warblers? Food and only food. All of them eat bugs or modify their behavior to stay where they are. Why are there more bugs in winter? That is a whole different discussion for the political forum.

I will recount one story about Turkey Vultures and behavior modification that goes to my point about not oversimplifying. As a young biologist nearly 30 years ago now, I worked down in the Falkland Islands. I grew up in the SF Bay Area, went to school in Berkeley so I knew Turkey Vultures. I knew they soared on thermals on golden summer days, ate dead cows and road kill and roosted communally in oak trees in relatively remote locations. I knew they were resident, I couldn't imagine them migrating (there is always road kill and dead cows), I never gave much thought to them otherwise. And then I was in Patagonia and the Falklands (Las Malvinas for the politically correct). After tagging penguins, banding shorebirds and jaegers, petrels, and terns and handfull of cool endemic passerines I looked around at the vultures. There were Black Vultures in abundance, I'd seen Andean Condors, but that bigger and greyer vulture than the Black Vulture? Turkey Vulture. Walking on the beach, eating dead fish and penguins and anything else. You could not pay them to fly, it was too cold and no land to create thermals and no predators so why invest when all you could possibly want was right here and concentrated on this bit of shingle?

And now I live in Oregon, two winters now and people are amazed at Turkey Vultures in February. Me too now, but it makes me wonder why the common is rare and a non-migratory bird soaring over the savannah where I am from or walking on the beach 10,000km away where I worked creates a stir in my home town now and I will spend my time thinking about that rather than whether the left or right toe of Falcated Duck is clipped.


My best,

Mike Gellerman
Bethany Lake, Portland

31 January 2007

A Weekend Around Portland


What a nice weekend. It was unusually beautiful weather here in Portland, still very cold but stunningly clear. Les and I went on Saturday morning to the Sellwood/Reed College area of Portland. We found what seems like a new restaurant in an old location - it is called Lili's and it was excellent. The service was fractured, but I think they are all brand new and it was not crowded so the locals haven't quite discovered it, but it was a fine place to be on Saturday morning. We took a walk through the Rhododendron Gardens at Crystal Springs afterwards and had a great time. Lots of winter ducks and other birds there including:

American Wigeon
Eurasian Wigeon
American x Eurasian Wigeon
Ring-necked Duck
Wood Duck
Ruddy Duck
Mallard
Lesser Scaup
Gadwall
Bufflehead
American Coot
Pied-billed Grebe
Double-crested Cormorant
Canada Goose
Cackling Goose
Varied Thrush
Golden-crowned Kinglet
Ruby-crowned Kinglet
Brown Creeper
American Robin
American Crow
Northern Flicker
Song Sparrow
Winter Wren
Marsh Wren
Great Blue Heron

On Sunday we drove over to the coast. We went to Canon Beach via Tillamook Bay to see what was happening there. We stopped at the Tillamook State Forest Interpretative Center for a short walk. On the return hike I saw my first ever NORTHERN GOSHAWK in Oregon putting on a rather fantastic aerial display. Not much actually at Tillamook Bay, the tide was very low and we did not see a single wader but it was still a very fine day. Not a complete list, but things that impressed me:

Yellow-rumped Warbler (loads of them)
Townsend's Warbler
Varied Thrush (loads of them)
American Robin (fewer than Varied Thrush in the forest)
Bald Eagle (a very immature bird, still sort working out the flying business)
Great Egret (at least 10)
Brandt's Cormorant
Western Grebe (1)
Eared Grebe (2)
Herring Gull
Western Gull
Glaucous-winged Gull
Ring-billed Gull (just one, I thought it was unusual)

We also paused along the highway at several points just to admire the day and I looked around for any pelagic birds and did not see a single one.

I promised Leslie a milkshake at Tillamook Cheese Factory but there was a 45 minute wait for ice cream at 2pm so we passed. I would never think of stopping there in summer but, January?! Wow.

Mike Gellerman
North Portland



30 January 2007


Great Blue Heron on a frozen pond


Cooper's Hawk on a frozen pond


Wood Duck pair in a tree, Crystal Springs Lake, Portland


Male Wood Duck


Gadwalls staying dry


Male Bufflehead in just the right light


26 January 2007

Making Dry Salami

The first salami I made I did not know any better, I just guessed and made it and it was good. Well, it was rustic and smoky and pretty good, but no one died eating it and it encouraged me to think about doing a better job. This is a case of too much knowledge though, I have every book ever published on smoking and curing meat now. The first time around I cured pork in a brine made from "pink salt", ground it all up with some good Italian seasoning, cold smoked it for a few hours and hung it to cure. I was a bit more sophisticated on subsequent efforts, but still just experimenting. This last batch though, should be the test if it is actually better to be smarter than just going with your instincts. Now I am using Bactoferm and DS-2 curing salts and experimenting with cold smoking vs just ageing, but it is all good fun. We are going to build a "curing box" this weekend out of western cedar to keep these babies warm and properly humidified. I am also in the process of the 5 week process to make some
braceola - Les calls it $35/lb beef jerky, but I like it and nearly 50 million Italians can't be all that wrong.

Some pictures:



Stuffing the Salami - a little bit of art to this



The result - 2kg of pork becomes salami



Our garage, soon to be replaced with a "curing box"




25 January 2007



So it has been winter and Leslie took these pictures while I was away. The pond was frozen and the birds seem frozen in time.


We had a flock of Common Mergansers back again this week. And, an anomaly, 3 swans on the pond. One was collared but I did not get a chance to ID it properly. By most evidence they were Tundra Swans collared in Alaska last summer. Two of the birds were juveniles and the adult was collared.


18 January 2007


Kleptoparasitism

A long time ago, well 30 years ago does seem like a long time,
when I was a
small mammal ecologist studying cryptic, nocturnal
rodents I built four 1/2
acre enclosures with dug-in flashing and
fences to study the interactions and
breeding ecology in
Microtus californicus, Reithrodontomys megalotis, and

Peromyscus maniculatus. After a month of long, cold nights
trapping and marking
and mapping the animals I was ready for
breeding season in early spring. A pair
of Great-blue Herons
discovered my enclosures and within a couple of days it
was
their favorite hang out. Then a pair of Red-tailed Hawks arrived
to nest in
some eucalyptus trees bordering "my" field and
complete carnage ensued. When
the Red-tails weren't stealing
mice from the Great-blues they were using my fence to
perch
on and just knocking the furry little guys off themselves. A pair
of
Loggerhead Shrikes arrived at the same time and found
that Reithrodontomys were
a perfect sized meal. Within two
weeks, trap success had dropped 90%. With the
abundance
of food the Herons barely noticed the Hawks, they just
jumped and
dropped what they had and caught another one.
Fairly soon thereafter I dropped my interest in small mammals
and changed my
dissertation to population and evolutionary
ecology of Central African birds -
they are diurnal and colorful
and it was a warm place to work. And save the
occasional
owl or falcon in my nets, there was little carnage to behold.


Mike Gellerman
Chicken, Black Bean, Rice and Pumpkin Enchiladas

This not a recipe for a quick meal, well it is quick if you have your black beans and enchilada sauce in the freezer. I make a big batch of black beans every couple of months and a big batch of enchilada sauce in the late summer and freeze it all in portions for two. This makes a big batch of enchiladas, but they freeze well in small portions for lunch, or alternatively wrap the same filling in flour tortillas and freeze 12 burritos for lunches.

3 cups Basic Black Beans
3 cups diced, cooked Pumpkin or other orange/yellow winter squash (acorn, Delicata, etc)
2 cups Seasoned Rice
2 boneless, skinless Chicken Breast, roasted, coarsely chopped or
2 cups of cooked coarsely chopped other meat (optional)
1+ cup shredded Cheese (i.e. Monterey Jack, Cheddar, Queso Fresco)
1/2 cup Cilantro, coarsely chopped
3 cups Enchilada Sauce
Olive Oil
Salt & Pepper
24 large size Corn Tortillas

  1. If you choose to add some chicken to your enchiladas (I think it enhances these tremendously) then take 2 boneless, skinless chicken breasts (actually, 1 breast split). Coat lightly with olive oil, some salt and pepper on each side. In a baking dish put them in the oven at 375º until the internal temperature is about 150º, slightly undercooked (170º is considered cooked). Allow to cool and coarsely chop.
  2. Clean a small pumpkin or winter squash, peel and chop enough for about 3 cups of 1/4 to 1/2" pieces. Simmer in salted water until cooked (fork tender, but not falling apart). Drain and cool.
  3. Combine the room temperature beans, pumpkin, rice, chicken, most of the cheese, cilantro and about 1/2 cup of Enchilada Sauce in a large bowl. Mix until just combined. Don't mash it too hard, you want some texture in the enchiladas.
  4. Heat the remaining Enchilada Sauce to a simmer, transfer to a flat container larger than your tortillas. Heat the tortillas one at a time in a dry skillet or griddle to make them flexible. Quickly dip them on both sides in the warm enchilada sauce. Add about 1/2 cup of the filling and roll them into an enchilada. Place seam side down in a baking dish. Continue until you run out of filling. Drizzle the enchilada dipping sauce over the top of the enchiladas. Don't drown them in sauce, just a nice topping. Sprinkle some of the reserved cheese over the top.
  5. Bake at 350º for about 20 minutes. The topping cheese should be melted, the sauce bubbly and the enchiladas heated through.
  6. Serve hot with a nice fresh salad. Extras are easily frozen in individual portions for lunches or late dinners. No need for a big plate of rice and beans slathered in more cheese with these, keep it simple.
Basic Black Beans

I make this pot every couple of months and freeze the results in the 3 cup "disposable" plastic containers. This recipe yields roughly 18-20 cups of cooked beans. All the ingredients are approximate, adjust to your personal taste. It is not a good idea to add other larger chunks of vegetables. These are clearly not vegetarian, but they are creamy, savory beans that are a great compliment to any meal.

2 lbs dried Black Beans
2-3 large Yellow Onions, chopped
10-15 cloves of Garlic, chopped
1-4 Jalapeno Peppers, seeded and chopped
8 oz Salt Pork or 1 Ham Hock
6+ cups Chicken Stock
Salt

  1. Pick through the beans for rocks or other foreign material, in a large pot cover with at least twice the volume of water, cover and soak overnight. (Refrigerate if it is hot outside or if there is chance you will be delayed cooking the beans or you might have black bean beer).
  2. Drain the beans and rinse. Cover the beans with plus an inch or so more with fresh water, add the salt pork or ham hock and bring to a rolling boil. Reduce heat to barely simmering. Skim any scum and froth.
  3. Add onions, peppers (to taste, start with some and add more during cooking), garlic
  4. Continue to simmer, uncovered and monitor now and then adding chicken stock to keep the beans covered with liquid as they expand volume. Stir occasionally, adjust salt and Jalapeno peppers as the beans become tender. Cook (2-3 hours) until some of the beans are falling apart and the pot is a mix of sauce and whole beans. Remove the salt pork or ham hock.
  5. Enjoy a bowl, allow the rest to cool and then freeze in portions you will use for a meal. Make a new pot when you use the last container in the freezer.

Enchilada Sauce

Made at the end of summer, most everything comes from the garden. Everything is approximate, just taste as it all cooks together and adjust the heat and seasoning to your taste. I usually freeze the sauce in 1 or 2 cup "disposable" plastic containers to last as long as long as the supplies last. I make this sauce hot because it is always mixed with something else, but adjust the spice to your taste.

15-20 cups coarsely chopped fresh Tomatoes
3-4 coarsely chopped Yellow Onions
15-20 coarsely chopped cloves of Garlic
8-12 husked and coarsely chopped tomatillos
4+ fresh Jalapeno Peppers
8+ cups Chicken Stock
1/4 to 1/2 cup Chili Powder
2-4 dried whole Ancho Chilies
Salt

  1. Add all the ingredients except chicken stock, chili powder and salt to a large pot. Just cover with water and begin cooking over medium heat uncovered.
  2. As the mixture begins to cook down slowly add chicken stock and stir each time to keep the vegetables just covered and simmering. When everything is near a sauce, add chili powder a bit at time to taste. It takes time to incorporate so continue to taste and adjust salt and chili powder. Add chicken stock as required to maintain a constant consistency.
  3. When the desired consistency and flavor (probably several hours), remove the dried chili pods. Process the sauce through a food mill or gently through a blender. The sauce should be smooth and thick but with a bit of texture.
  4. Cool and freeze in 1-2 cup portions.

Seasoned Rice

A quick and savory rice for any meal. This recipe will yield about 2 cups of cooked rice. The recipe scales easily and this recipe freezes well. A little cumin, turmeric, oregano in any combination (maybe 1 tsp in total) is a nice addition depending on your taste.

1 cup long grain Rice
1 1/2 cups Chicken Stock
1/2 Yellow Onion, chopped
1-2 tbs Garlic, finely chopped
1 small Jalapeno, seeded and finely chopped or
small can of diced green chilies or
1/4 cup chopped bell pepper
1/2 cup diced canned diced tomatoes with juice
Salt
Vegetable or Olive Oil

  1. In a heavy medium non-stick saucepan, add 1 tablespoon oil. Heat until almost smoking. Add onions and cook until just browning, add garlic, peppers and rice and cook for another 2-3 minutes stirring continuously. Add tomatoes, and continue cooking and stirring until almost all of the liquid is gone.
  2. Add chicken stock. Bring to a boil and then reduce heat to low. Cover and simmer until all the liquid is absorbed (about 20 minutes).
  3. Fluff with a fork, adjust salt if necessary, the flavor should be savory and bright. A little browned crust is a delicacy, but don't burn it.

02 January 2007

New Year's Weekend - Sisters, Santiam Pass Christmas Bird Count

We left home on the 31st at 11am and drove to Sisters via Mt Hood/Madras and Redmond. On the way we stopped a few places to sightsee on this beautiful day. Near Deschutes Crossing we pulled off to the Recapture Resevoir and we were treated to the view of a pair of adult BALD EAGLES flying by west to east and a pair of GREAT BLUE HERONS flying west to east. 100's of MALLARDS and BUFFLEHEADS along with a smattering of RING-NECKED DUCKS.

On the way to Madras we saw several RED-TAILED HAWKS, a single ROUGH-LEGGED HAWK, and at least 25 AMERICAN KESTRELS.

It was bitterly cold in Sisters but we stayed at the Sisters' Inn and RV Park, remarkably comfortable room with king-sized bed, breakfast and quiet for just $75. As it was New Year's Eve and the dining fare in Sisters is limited we drove to the Tumalo Feed Company outside of Bend for dinner. It was a lot of fun, but pretty disgusting. The first course is an enormous basket of onion rings with salsa that Les and I managed to eat about 20% of. Then enormous steaks, fried potatoes, beans, garlic bread - I think we finished about 1/3 if that portion and finally ice cream. Whoa! The restaurant was packed with loads of overweight families and children, everyone seemed to have a clean plate. What a cultural experience.

We met at Santiam Pass snow park at 8:30 to receive our Christmas Bird Count assignment. We were paired with a nice couple from Bend (Brian and Antonia) and had a good day. The snow was old and crusted so we never needed snowshoes, but we ended up walking six or seven miles for a limited number of birds but a good day.

Gray Jay (parking lot)
Stellers Jay
Red-breasted Nuthatch
Pied-billed Grebe
Common Merganser
Brown Creeper
Winter Wren
Common Raven
Dark-eyed Junco
American Dipper* (2)
Ring-necked Duck
Golden-crowned Kinglet
Bufflehead
Common Goldeneye
Trumpeter Swan
Chestnut-backed Chickadee

*American Dippers - there were two near the resort at Clearlake. They were in the lake one just 40 feet from us and the other across the cove. Both were actively diving and calling with a remarkable active series mimic calls along with the standard dipper repetoire. We kept looking for grosbeaks, cell phones, and other unknown whistles and trills and these two little guys were, on close observation, responsible for all the noise.

Les and I drove back to Portland at the end of the count, a little tired after eight hours of walking in snow and a 4 hour drive, but happy we made time for the event.

Other highlights: the firm snow was great for tracks. We saw lots of rabbit tracks with different gaits and speeds, river otter, squirrel, raccon, river otter, and mink or some other mustelid of similar size.

27 December 2006

If Only the Nightmare was Over

So former President Ford passed away yesterday. By all accounts a decent man of a generation that believed in public service and an "American Dream" that was inclusive. He most famously said upon Nixon's departure from office in disgrace that "our long national nightmare is over". It took a few decades for those nightmares to fade: the abuse of power, the quagmire of un-winnable war, the lies and deceit by those elected to serve, warrant-less domestic spying, the smearing of political opponents as unpatriotic, adventurous foreign policy without objectives, secrecy - it all seemed like a distant by vaguely uncomfortable memory by middle of the 90's. The Cold War was over, no clear competitors or threats on the horizon, optimism and at least some sense that a rising tide in fact might raise all boats. But alas, like a bad case of post-traumatic stress the "axis of deceit" and their appointed minions come to power looking for a bogey-man to grasp and hold power for power sake, ensure that their wealthy power-base of fundamentalist thinkers (whether fundamentalist in religion, political philosophy, anointed wealth and power) became more powerful and the rest were left to stock the shelves at Wal-Mart, fight and die and be maimed in wars of opportunity, or be blamed for lack of competitiveness, education, vision or just being plain lazy. So will the next president of the United States be so gracious as to pardon Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld and company for their crimes? Ford lost the election because he pardoned Nixon, but he will always be remembered for that simple act that began a national self-analysis of who we had become and how we might change. These clowns in office now have ignored the lessons of history in virtually every policy decision that have made, let us hope for better and hope this period is a flashback that we will awake from in a vigorous exercise of democracy.

Mike Gellerman