Wednesday, October 10, 2012

NOAA satellites - helping save lives for 30 years

First sea rescue via SARSAT/COSPAS.NOAA satellites - helping save lives for 30 years: "Thirty years ago, about 300 miles off the coast of New England, a barrage of towering, 25-foot waves battered a catamaran sailboat, causing it to begin sinking. A satellite, orbiting in space, detected the signal from an emergency beacon onboard the boat. A short while later, a U.S. Coast Guard cutter pulled the three passengers to safety.
 
The Search and Rescue Satellite-Aided Tracking system, or Cospas-SARSAT, is celebrating the 30th anniversary of this first life-saving rescue in the United States, which occurred October 10, 1982. NOAA operates several satellites and the U.S. Mission Control Center as part of the international program that has been responsible for the rescue of more than 30,000 people worldwide and nearly 7,000 in the United States since its inception in 1982."



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Tuesday, October 9, 2012

Skydiver Delays 23-Mile Free Fall - NYTimes.com

Probably a good idea. - gwc

Skydiver Delays 23-Mile Free Fall - NYTimes.com: "ROSWELL, N.M. (AP) — Extreme athlete Felix Baumgartner canceled his planned death-defying 23-mile free fall Tuesday because of high winds, the second time this week he was forced to postpone his quest to become the world's first supersonic skydiver"



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Monday, October 1, 2012

Port Clyde Fresh Catch - NY Times

Justin Libby - Port Clyde, Maine
Port Cyde Fishermen's Memorial
Port Clyde Fresh Catch is the community fishery marketing effort of the ground fishing fleet at Port Cyde, entrance to the Penobscot Bay and point of departure for Monhegan Island, Maine.  The Times celebrates their model today.  Port Clyde's landmark is the Marshall Point Light at which Forrest Gump turned around when he ran coast to coast to coast.  You can see the light and the rest of the fleet HERE

Saving a Fishery - New York Times - by Patricia Leigh Brown

"HEADING toward his fifth hour of filleting, his thick rubber boots squeaking on the wet concrete floor, Glen Libby, a fisherman by trade, looks more like a beleaguered line cook than the hero of a seafood revolution.
Five years ago this month in this unspoiled fishing port immortalized by three generations of Wyeths, Mr. Libby and a half-dozen cohorts banded together to try to rescue their depleted fish stock and their profession.
The result (“after trial and error with a lot of error” in Mr. Libby’s words) was Port Clyde Fresh Catch, the country’s first community-supported fishery, now part of a burgeoning movement that tries to do for small-scale local fishermen what community-supported agriculture has done for farmers...."

Sunday, September 30, 2012

NRDC scientist heads out to survey canyons southeast of Georges Bank


DSC00006.JPGBrad Sewell of Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) is heading out to explore underwater life in the canyons southeast of the Georges Bank.  - GWC


I’m about to set out on the 125-foot Scarlett Isabella (above) with team of scientists and engineers from the Waitt Institute, the University of Connecticut, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution (WHOI) to undertake the first ecological investigation of two Atlantic seamounts, two of just four seamounts in U.S. Atlantic waters. We will then explore several nearby “submarine” canyons that cut into the southern flank of Georges Bank southeast of Cape Cod, again cataloging for the first time the life at the bottom of these ocean features. 
Seamounts and submarine canyons typically teem with all types of marine life – from vast schools of squid and mackerel to whales, tunas, and sharks – because of strong localized currents and upwellings that bring in and trap food (and sweep away wastes). The rocky walls and crevices of seamounts and canyons are frequently home to rare deep sea corals, some of which have been growing for hundreds, even thousands of years, in depths from several hundred to several thousand feet, splashes of color beyond sunlight’s reach.   

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Tipping point? Arctic Sea Ice Lower than Ever

A new video produced by independent videographer Peter Sinclair for The Yale Forum on Climate Change & The Media explains what expert scientists now find to be the lowest extent of Arctic sea ice in recorded history.

Monday, September 24, 2012

Fear of flying: The Twilight Zone

Oregon Gov. Kitzhaber: Act now to save salmon and energy | OregonLive.com

We can end the Columbia basin salmon wars now by balancing energy, conservation | OregonLive.com:
By John Kitzhaber

If you look only at the courtroom record, environmentalists are winning the war to save salmon in the Northwest. A year ago, U.S. District Judge James Redden sent the federal plan for managing the Columbia hydro system back to the drawing board -- marking the fourth time in the past 20 years that federal agencies have failed to present a defensible program for saving salmon. 

TSUNAMI_DEBRIS_OREGON_20213447.JPGView full sizeGov. John Kitzhaber
But wins in court don't keep our salmon and steelhead from going extinct. At almost the same time as Judge Redden's decision, the federal government released its most recent review of wild salmon in the Northwest. That review found that many runs remain at high risk of extinction and that the level of risk is not changing for most species. Federal agencies, including the Bonneville Power Administration, are spending hundreds of millions of dollars to stem the decline, but they are losing in court and they are losing in our rivers and streams. ....
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Sunday, September 23, 2012

Valiam - Linda and Bill Anderson circle globe in homemade plywood sloop

Linda and Bill Anderson have covered a lot of territory - and water - in the past three years.  Thirty countries and thirty three thousand miles.  Aussies from the Suncoast, Queensland, they gave up the W word and  headed off in Valiam, their plywood, homemade sloop.  I met them in New York where they did a slideshow and talk at Le Cheile, our local Irish pub.  They're headed home (by plane.  Next will be the Med and northern Europe.  And some day these warm weather sailors are going to try Patagonia - the Magellan Strait and Cape Horn.  Follow their journeys HEREout of the shed - Peachester

Thursday, September 20, 2012

Dismasted

After the storm
The storm of September 18 - gusting to 48 kts from the south according to the Execution Rocks buoy - sent a bunch of boats adrift at City Island.  One of them snagged the forestay of my North River 2, taking her mast down. (click pix to enlarge and for slideshow)

Eastchester Bay - wind gusting to 48 kts at Execution Rocks

No. 4 nun salvaged by CIYC launch

Under tow by salvager

Restless - no one aboard