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The Elements of Typographic Style

Patagonia Synchilla Snap-T Pullover

Minding the Earth, Mending the Word: Zen and the Art of Planetary Crisis

North Face Base Camp Duffel (Medium)

 

 

 

Entries from January 1, 2013 - January 31, 2013

Thursday
Jan312013

Beijing Air (Again)

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency has an Air Quality Index (AQI) that tops out at 500. On January 12, 2013, an air quality reading of 755 was recorded in Beijing. The AQI in New York on this same date was 19. Go here for more information about this unprecedented level of air pollution. And here for an arresting series of photos of China's toxic sky [NOTE: You can toggle between "normal" and supersmog in some of the photos].  Air quality seems to have gotten much worse than what I experienced in previous trips to Beijing (see Beijing Air). The word "apocalyptic' comes to mind.

Wednesday
Jan302013

Daw Khin Tin

The woman on the left with the big smile and the wonderful hat is Daw Khin Tin, the owner of the Khin Soe Trading Company in Myitkyina and the major exporter of rattan from the Hukaung Valley. She is also a devout Buddhist (note mala dangling from her right hand) and feels that her current business success is a result of deeds in past lives. She recently donated two million kyat  to a local monastery so that they could rebuild their pagoda. In response, the monks let her use several acres of land around the monastery as a rattan storage and drying area.

in 2005 when this picture was taken, Daw Khin Tin was moving about 40,000 rattan canes/month out of Hukaung during the dry season. The material is carried (see Rattan Truck) back to Myitkyina where it is washed and treated with diesel and then trucked to China. We were camped right down the road from her rattan landing, and I had a wonderful chat with Daw Khin Tin one afternoon (thx, Saw Lwin). She told me all about the rattan trade in the Hukaung Valley, complained about the bridges (see Checking the Bridge), and gave me a pack of Chinese rice crispy treats. I gave her a "Hukaung Valley Rattan Survey 2005" t-shirt. There were lots of smiles all around. Image below shows Daw Khin Tin, U Tun Shuang (see Group Photo), me, Andrew (see A Palm, Two Botanist With Cameras) and the rice crispy treat (cradled in my right hand).

Tuesday
Jan292013

Myanmar TV 3

So here I am on January 15, 2005, standing out in a field next to a pagoda in Shimbweyeng, Myanmar (see Pressing Palms), holding a leaf of Calamus palustris and talking to a reporter from MRTV-3 about "the rattan situation" in Kachin State. While the cameras roll. You couldn't make this stuff up. The interviewer, whose name I forget, was the daughter of the Burmese diplomat to the U.S. and grew up in Washington. Her English was very good. As were her questions, e.g. "how many species of rattan are endemic to the Hukaung Valley"?

[NOTE: The camera crew was actually in Shimbweyeng to film the Naga festival (see Naga Festival), but apparently Andrew and I were just too quirky a story to pass up: Scientists from New York Study Spiny Palms in Hukaung Tiger Reserve].

Monday
Jan282013

Verification

Figure above shows size-specific growth rates for six rattan species from Laos and Cambodia. The data were collected over a four year period to provide a production baseline for defining a sustainable harvest of cane. In the absence of these data, the communities were operating under the assumption that 20% of the canes in the forest could be harvested each year on a sustainable basis. This assumption, which was provided as an interim indicator by the WWF rattan program, is valid if the commercial canes are growing at least 1.0 meter/year. i.e. it takes five years to produce a merchantable rattan cane such that 20% of the resource stock can be harvested each year.

The growth data shown above verify that a 20% harvest intensity is appropriate for all of the rattan species except Calamus tetradactylus. The merchantable canes (≥5.0 m long) of this species exhibit an average growth rate of 0.78 meter/year [NOTE: Average growth rates of merchantable canes are shown as a dotted horizontal line in each histogram] and annual harvest intensities, as a result, should be considerably less than 20%. Similarly, more than 20% of the merchantable canes could be harvested sustainably from other species, e.g. Myrialepis and Plectocomia, which are both growing well over 2.0 meters/year.

When you know the actual yield characteristics of the resource you are exploiting, you can be very precise in defining a sustainable offtake. [NOTE: These data are currently being written up in an article, so please do not copy, distribute, or cite. Thx].

Friday
Jan252013

Wellness

Wellness altar in the dokusan room (see Dokusan Bell) at the Empty Hand Zen Center. Photo shows Susan Jion Postal and Dennis Shofu Myozan Keegan (see Myozan). Last year was a tough one health-wise for both of these dear teachers, and the altar provides an opportunity to offer a bow and some petal incense to their continued health and well-being. And it seems to be working. Both are doing much better and it's great to have our teachers back in the zendo again. [NOTE: The large statue next to the photo is a Medicine Buddha, the little white statue to the right is Avalokiteshvara (see Avalokiteshvara and Quan Âm), and the petal incense in the offering and receiving bowls is made from dried rose petals. Petal incense is offered because a few sangha members are allergic to incense smoke]. 

Thursday
Jan242013

Hypotheses

This from Phaedrus:

"The number of rational hypotheses that can explain any given phenomenon is infinite (p. 139, ZAMM)".

Pirsig next tells us that "it pleased him (Phaedrus) never to run out of hypotheses". Am currently re-reading ZAMM, largely in response to the deep impression that Shop Class as Soulcraft had on me (see Nice Job). I must say, I agree with Phaedrus about hypotheses. Facile explanations of biological phenomena should always be viewed with caution. [NOTE: Photo shows Robert Pirsig and son, Chris, at a rest stop in North Dakota during the motorcyle trip on which Zen and the Art of Motocycle Maintenance is based]. 

Wednesday
Jan232013

Dominoes

Morning game of dominoes in the Central Market of Tanai in northern Myanmar (see Shopping For Supplies and Shopping for Rope in Tanai). So much that I like in this photo. The player's concentration and the way they hold the tiles (or "bones"). The spectators all clustered around the table (crate) watching the action - and opining on things, I'm sure. I mean, look at the expression on the gentlemen in the beige jacket. And then there's the fellow, back left, in the blue jacket that seems more interested in the new guy taking all of the pictures. [NOTE: Love the longyi, wool cap, winter coat, and sandal look].

Tuesday
Jan222013

Tool User

Tools on a bench in the village of Shinlonga (see Shinlonga) in the Hukaung Valley Wildlife Reserve (see Hukaung Vista). Thirty meter fiberglass tape with slope correction table taped on the back, Spiegel relaskop for measuring slopes and heights, orange Forestry Suppliers fieldbook (big fan of these), Pilot G-2 retractable gel ink pen (extra fine point, 0.5 mm), and a lovely NYBG baseball cap. Simple tools are an important part of what I do, and I see that I have posted a lot about this (see Tools of the Trade, Shopping For Supplies, Field Equipment, Transect Ropes Redux, More Red Lines, and Tool Repair). Suffice it to say that I have gotten pretty good with a compass.

"The disappearance of tools from our common education is the first step toward a wider ignorance of the world of artifacts we inhabit".

-Matthew B. Crawford
 Shop Class As Soulcraft: An Inquiry Into the Value of Work (2010) 

[NOTE: I lost the baseball cap; left it in a restaurant in Central Vietnam].

Monday
Jan212013

Kids On A Bridge

Let's see. I know I took this picture in Uganda in late 2001 (says so on the slide). And I think we were on our way back to Kampala after giving a workshop at the Bwindi Impenentrable Forest Reserve (see Bwindi Impenetrable Forest). This is probably the entrance to a restaurant that we stopped at along the road to have lunch. As frequently happens, all of the local kids came out to greet us. Especially like the little guy in the center making the face. [NOTE: Looks like we have some erosion issues judging from the root ball of the tree in front of the bridge].  

Friday
Jan182013

More from Luang Prabang

Another member of the painting crew at Wat Xieng Thong (see Painting). Although this monk is precariously seated on single plank supported by bamboo scaffolding, the one immediately above him (feet and robe visible) seems to have a chair. Precariously balanced on two planks. Image below shows a beautifully rendered, gilded carving of the Buddha on one of the doors at the temple. [NOTE: I am certainly ready to go back to this enchanting place].