Thursday, November 26, 2009

The truth.




For years, American students have been taught that Thanksgiving is a tradition dating back to when the Native Americans and Pilgrims met in unity and friendship at Plymouth Rock to celebrate the harvest.
In reality, the history of the holiday is more complicated, with our modern celebration having its roots in the Civil War, according to Chris Lewis, an American Studies instructor at the University of Colorado.
The original feast in 1621 and subsequent celebrations through the American Revolution bore little resemblance to what we think of today as Thanksgiving, Lewis said. In fact, it was more similar to the German holiday Oktoberfest, taking place in late September or early October to celebrate the year's harvest.
Abraham Lincoln established Thanksgiving as a national holiday in 1863, during the Civil War, to celebrate the Union victories and honor the war dead, Lewis said. Officials sent a feast to troops in the field, featuring turkey, cranberries and other now-familiar staples.
The holiday grew in meaning and importance following the Great Depression and World War II, when it became a catalyst to unite the country and celebrate its values, Lewis said. Several presidents gave Thanksgiving addresses charging the country to come together through a common feast.
"It's mainly been about bringing the country together through the sharing of bounty and land," Lewis said. One way Thanksgiving has been used to celebrate American values and bring its people together is through the story of the Pilgrims and Native Americans, which Lewis says is more myth than truth.
"They tolerated more than liked each other," he said. "The story of different groups coming together and sharing the same land really isn't true. Thousands of Indians were put into slavery and others on reservations, and it was said that Indians and Anglos couldn't share the same society.
"The story we know is more cultural myth. It's an interesting story, it makes us feel good about ourselves. We're teaching our children the values we want to aspire to."
Lewis said the current holiday has elements of both myth and tradition.
"Our Thanksgiving holiday is a kind of cultural ritual that embodies both real people and real history but with cultural symbolism and mythology," he said.
He added that American society today more closely resembles the idealized values taught in the Thanksgiving story.
"Today, we are a multicultural people learning to live with each other," he said. "There is hope that in the 21st century the larger meaning of the holiday can be realized."

Monday, November 23, 2009

Lando (Calrissian?)



Meet my dog, Lando. He is a labrador and maybe a bit of retriever mixed in. I got him at the Humane Society today. It was a big first day, but we had a lot of fun and spent a lot of time outside.

Don't worry, I think that there will be a lot more pictures coming!

Sunday, November 22, 2009

Possibilities.

Well the car still isn't working, but we have bikes and Boulder's public transportation is fantastic. Maybe tomorrow it will be fixed. Our apartment is great and allows pets. I have been home a lot and thinking that I should get a dog. We went to the humane society... just to look. We looked and there was cute lab/retriever puppy that was on hold. The people never showed up that were supposed to take him today. So I put my name on the waiting list. I hope that I get a phone call tomorrow.

Maybe...
One of the ladies that lives down stairs (a little person) has two big dogs that are about as tall as she is. One chases a laser pointer and chews on trees. I thought it was funny and was asking her about her dogs. She quickly replied with "I like to take them to the dog park, but I got a DUI and can't drive anymore." I tried to keep the awkward silence to a minimum and luckily my neighbor came out to say hello. Maybe I should mention that my alcoholic neighbor likes to come over earlier Sunday mornings to explain that he has been drinking manmosas. That would be a mimosa with a shot of vodka in it. He works at a restaurant and is proud that he doesn't do drugs. So am I. Our neighbor cooks in a restaurant that we like and has promised to cook for us one night. As long as we bring some wine.

Driving is not the only option in Boulder.
So that is the most exciting news that I have. I am shredding tires on my trainer. We have a tv, but no stand to put it on. I will start working soon. I am excited for winter. And puppies!
Staying busy!

Monday, November 16, 2009

Car trouble.

Friday night we went crazy and met Ed for some movies at the Boulder Film Festival. We saw Gum for my Boat and Tibet: Murder in the Snow. I liked the first one more (which is why it gets the link) and made me realize how much I love traveling. On the way there the car died. I have been borrowing Mom's car until she can drive again or we get our own. That would require the Craigslist people to respond. So we got a jump and made it a bit further. It died again so we got another jump start. The third jump got us to a parking spot where we could leave it overnight. I had to move it before 9 Saturday morning so I wouldn't get ticketed or have to pay for parking. I called a friend of my moms to help me figure out what is wrong. I am not mechanically inclined. I would have AAA tow it to a mechanic. But that isn't how my mother works. Her friend showed up with a tow rope. Great. I make fun of people in a car that are being towed with another car using a rope. Now I was the guy in the second car. The rope seemed very short and I was scared of rear ending my tower. Or hitting something. Or the rope breaking. Or the rope coming off my car. Or anything else!

It was kinda like this.
Eventually we made is to another friend of my mother's house. We parked the car and hoped that it wouldn't start snowing yet. We took out (I watched) the battery and took it somewhere to get charged. Apparently, we couldn't find out the real problem until the battery worked. Maybe the battery was the problem. We dropped it off and they told us to come back in two hours. I went home and worked on team stuff. A couple of hours later we went back to the mechanics to pick up the battery. Apparently, they didn't do it correctly and it would be a couple more hours.
So I am still tagging along with my mom's friend. He took me to a radio station, KGNU, where we hung out. A couple hours later (after wandering in and out of studios) we returned and picked up the battery. Now it is 2 in the afternoon. This all started about 8 in the morning. The battery is charged. Now it has begun snowing. We take it to the car and the car starts. However, when we turn on the lights, the power gets low. The windshield wipers might kill it again. So we leave the car and go to buy a fusible link. Apparently, this car has had this problem in the past. We buy a couple fusible links and return to the car. Despite only being 4 in the afternoon it is dark, snowing, and feels to be about 20 degrees. We decide that it is not a good time to work on the car. (I didn't want to stand in the snow and watch.) It has been snowing all weekend. I have two new fusible links sitting here beside me. Maybe someone will put them in the car tomorrow. Then they can follow me to see if the car still dies when it is being driven.

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Is it "blog worthy"?

Being the first day that I have no job, I wasn't sure what to do. There is always time to help out Mom. And there is always lots of work to do for the team. Ben kicked ass this weekend in Mexico and it looked like a fun race. I went for my 2nd run of the week trying to keep up with my offseason training. I am supposed to ride my bike 4 times a week, but I am a wuss when it is cold out side. I hate being cold
especially out riding my bike and I am a couple hours from home. So the plan is o ride on trainers. But I don't have a trainer yet. Craig said that he would drop them off yesterday or today, but he hasn't. Now he has rescheduled for Friday. It looks like I will be riding outside tomorrow. I need to get out anyway because it is supposed to snow this weekend. Maybe that will actually force me to pay for a membership to the rec. center.

From right beside the library. Downtown Boulder.
The car search continues. The occasional fishing is always happening. I am starting to think that I should only write blogs when something exciting happens in my life. But I think that everything is exciting. I mean I love living in Boulder. It feels like cars come second to pedestrians and cyclists here. I can run for an hour and use the paths, tunnels, and trails only having to run across one road. The library is fantastic. And free. Despite the body odor smell from some of the homeless people that hang out in there, the place is amazing. There are great restaurants, coffee shops, climbing gyms, or anything else within bike riding or bus taking distance. I could be in school making Roomba PacMan with these guys:

Sunday, November 8, 2009

Update.

This blog is usually about all the cool things that I do. I am still not sure why I keep writing things here. Maybe it is for my own records in the future. Maybe it is so my friends far away know what I am going through. I like reading other people's blogs so that I don't have to call them to see what they are doing. It feels like Facebook for adults. The egocentric part of me checks my Google Analytics to see if people actually read this.
This week has been pretty crazy. A couple of days fishing Cheesman Canyon with Ed resulted in  two huge rainbows for me. (But only one picture.) I rode my bike a couple of days and realized that I like riding my bike more than I thought. My mother went into the hospital with severe cramps and ended up having a hysterectomy and colostomy. She was released yesterday and things seem to be going well for the recovery.
In two days I will be finished with my contract with Endurance Sports Marketing. Then I can go out and find another job. I am really looking forward to next year. Actually I am really looking forward to today. Moj will be studying so I will have a Sunday to mess around. That is not unlike every other day. Yesterday, we looked at a car in Denver that we found form Craigslist. Piece of crap. It was good to see it because it seemed too good to be true. That search will continue.
The off season training plan is to swim twice a week, run twice a week, and ride my bike four times a week. The bike is my weakest so I want to spend more time in the saddle. Hopefully I will have a couple of trainers for the snowy days. I also need to get a membership somewhere with a pool.
Until next time my friends, life is good.

Saturday, November 7, 2009

Mice in NZ.


I took this from Fly Fish Alberta. Sounds like a good reason to return!
By Gavin James and Steve Fox
Provided courtesy of Fish & Game New Zealand magazine


New Zealand has an international reputation for having a pristine backcountry trout fishery where anglers have the opportunity to catch large, wild trout. Yet as anglers who fish backcountry rivers know, these fish, while sometimes large, are normally long rather than well conditioned. Every few years, however, this pattern seems to change with some unusually high conditioned fish being caught. During the last two summers this has been particularly evident with numerous reports of record size trout being caught throughout the country. As a consequence, there has been much talk in angling clubs and reports in the popular press about the size of some of the fish caught and the apparent importance of mice as food for trout.
A Large FishOur recent capture of a large brown trout containing mice stimulated our scientific curiosity and prompted an investigation into what is actually known of the relationship between mice and trout. We have attempted to provide some answers here to the more commonly asked questions that perplex anglers. What causes good beech tree seeding years, or "masting" years in botanical terms, and can they be predicted? What is the link between beech seeding and "mice plagues" and for that matter why do mice apparently enter the water so readily and end up becoming food for trout? Why do only some trout seem to catch on to this new food source and does this phenomenon only happen in New Zealand?
Beech tree seeding has been the subject of scientific interest since the late 1950s, when it was first hypothesized that the sporadic seeding of beech trees leads to a cascading increase in the number of rodents, then stoats, and subsequent predation on native birds. Such a scenario is of concern to conservationists, as beech trees (Notholagus spp.) either dominate or are present in approximately 70% of New Zealand's native forests. While there has been no research on the link between beech seeding and trout growth, recent studies on food webs within beech forests are beginning to shed some light on the relationship.
On average, beech trees in New Zealand produce seeds in large quantities every three to five years. However, the last two years have been unusual in that seeding has occurred in consecutive years. Some forest communities have been studied for as long as 35 years and there is general consensus that temperature has a large role to play in triggering beech seeding. Hot conditions in summer stimulate flower bud formation, but it is actually the following summer before the beech trees produce flowers and several months after that (Febuary to May) before the seeds are shed. Thus there is a lag over a year between the warm temperatures and the production of beech seeds. The seeds then lie on the ground all winter and germinate in spring. Within a single year the intensity of seeding often varies between different locations and beech species, although overall there is significant synchrony among all the beech species over at least the entire South Island and lower North Island. Some seeds are produced in most years, but the amount varies extremely widely, from only one to five seeds per m2 in the lowest years to more than 12,000 per m2 in the highest.
In spite of temperature being a major factor in triggering beech seed production, there are different explanations for the mechanisms involved. One view is that the warmer temperatures result in increased photosynthesis and therefore greater production of flower buds. Another view is that temperature is merely a cue for flower production. It has recently been shown that beech gains a major pollination benefit from flowering synchronously at intervals, giving support to the second (cueing) theory.
Different beech tree species apparently do seed simultaneously across various regions of the country, suggesting that there are large-scale climatic factors involved, notably El Nino and La Nina. However, it is also true that local factors, such as aspect and elevation, can modify the timing and intensity of masting on a local basis.
Fish ContentsWith global warming and the positive relationship between temperature and beech tree masting, it seems likely that beech tree seeding years may become more frequent in the future, with positive benefits for trout, but negative ones for our native birdlife. However if beech seeds more often, there won't be the chance for really big years to build up, so seed supply is likely to be more regular without the huge occasional surpluses now seen.
Mice are opportunistic feeders and are quick to exploit any increases in the abundance of seeds. Not surprisingly, analyses of mice stomach contents reveal that the huge numbers of beech seeds that can fall on to the forest floor (in extreme cases up to 10,000 per m2), form an important source of food during seed years. However, recent research on food webs within beech forests indicates other food items, especially insects, may also be important. Prior to seeding, beech trees shed surprising quantities of flowers and leaves. The resulting increase in the volume and quality of leaf litter triggers a population boom of insects, particularly caterpillars that live on the forest floor. As a consequence, during seed years mice benefit from a bountiful supply of food.
Mice, of course, have been introduced into New Zealand, along with the rats, stoats, and trout that now form parts of this beech forest food web. When well fed, mice are prolific breeders and can mature as young as two months of age, with litters being produced as frequently as ever), 20 to 30 days. In non-seed years, breeding lasts from spring through to late autumn, although this changes drastically during seed years when breeding extends through winter. Under these ideal conditions population densities continue to rise and generally peak in summer. However, it seems mice numbers started to decline in late February. We suspect this because one very experienced angler, who fishes South Island high country rivers extensively, noticed a marked decline in the condition of large mice-feeding fish in January and early February.
So how do mice find their way into rivers and the stomachs of trout? It is often thought that high population densities force mice to search for new areas, much as its overseas relative - the lemming - has often been portrayed as doing. Contrary to popular opinion, however, it is now known that lemmings do not commit suicide by jumping off cliffs into the sea. Back to the mice. It is now known that mice do not appear to defend territories when living at high densities in beech forests. In spite of this, it is still possible that their drive to find a new area is so strong that when they encounter a river or lake they make a brave, but often ill-fated, attempt to swim across. An alternative and simpler explanation is that as mice numbers build up, there are simply more mice around to fall into waterways and many mice that finish up in rivers may do so inadvertently. In the latter stages of a mouse plague, they are also likely to be very hungry and to search more widely for food.
FliesLaboratory studies have shown mice have little fear of entering the water and are surprisingly good swimmers. Observations in New Zealand agree with this and there are even reports of mice being found up to 2km offshore and still actively swimming. On one occasion, one of us interested in the ability of mice to swim decided to see what mice did at night along a lakeshore in southern New Zealand. While standing on a beach, several mice ran down the beach quite close by, plunged straight into the water, and began swimming. There was no sign that they were being chased, so this seemed to be a voluntary action. But why would a mouse enter a lake with the apparently impossible task of crossing it? Perhaps from mouse-eye height it isn't possible to tell that a lake is not a river. Mice are primarily nocturnal creatures and no doubt darkness would add an extra degree of difficulty to judging the width of a waterway. So our guess is that such attempts are just examples of bad judgement by the mouse.
A related question is whether trout take mice that are actively swimming, or drowned individuals as well? As already mentioned, juice are primarily nocturnal and this coincides with the preferred feeding time of many large trout. Many anglers would appreciate that movement is a powerful cue that can stimulate uncooperative trout to take a fly or lure. A swimming mouse would probably be easier to locate at night and be more likely to stimulate a predatory response. Indeed, there are a number of anecdotal reports from both New Zealand and North America of trout taking swimming mice. This, of course, doesn't exclude the possibility that dead mice are also consumed. The large fish we caught was captured in the eye of a pool, above which there was several kilometres of rapids. In that position it is hard to imagine many mice successfully navigating the rapids and making it to the trout alive. This brings us to the question of trout selectivity. Why do some fish apparently relish mice, while others do not? On a recent trip into the headwaters of a large West Coast river, we landed 11 trout over two days, but judging from their condition only one of these had been feeding on mice. Several other fish landed were large enough to have been able to feed on mice, but their very average condition suggested they had not been doing so.
It seems that for larger trout, feeding on mice is a learned ability.
Indeed, the propensity for some individuals to specialise on one type of prey, while others in the same population don't, is a well known phenomenon among fish biologists and observant anglers alike. This specialisation occurs because fish are remarkably good at conducting "cost-benefit" analyses as they feed. As new prey types become available and more abundant in a lake or river, fish are at first reluctant to switch to that new prey type, even if at that point in time it is the more energetically-profitable prey (anglers who have encountered very selective trout would have witnessed this behaviour).
Such fish are reluctant to switch because they have become efficient at finding, identifying, and catching a particular type of prey. Switching to a new type of prey is probably viewed by the fish as an energetically "risky" operation, as they will have to change their behaviour so as to efficiently capture a new food item. Eventually though, as that new prey becomes more abundant, some individuals in the populations realise that they have been missing out on a lot of food and switch, and, in turn, become skilled at dealing with the new type of prey.
If the new prey type is extremely abundant, the whole fish population will eventually make the switch to that prey type. However, if there is not enough of the new prey to go around, you will often find a "divergent" feeding strategy, with some fish feeding on the new prey type and others sticking with the old, "tried and tested" food types. Again, anglers should be familiar with this behaviour. We are sure many readers would have contemplated alcoholism after throwing everything in the box at a pompous willow grub feeder, only to persevere, and hook a trout two pools upstream on the first cast with a big, ugly Hare and Copper!
With respect to trout and mice, those trout that make the switch to mouse feeding first may be monopolising the resource to the extent that other individuals never get to encounter mice frequently enough to make the switch also. We have some scientific evidence for this divergent mouse feeding strategy from a recent study by one of us (Rick Stoffels) on brown trout feeding habits in Lakes Manapouri and Te Anau. Here the length/weight relationship contained two quite different groups of fish those that had learned to feed on mice (and were much better conditioned), and those that had not. Also, using a chemical analysis technique that enables us to determine which prey types are contributing to the growth and production of the trout population, we are finding that some large trout may indeed be ultimately obtaining a significant amount of energy for long-term growth and reproduction from the beech forest, possibly through the mice. Further research being conducted over the next two years will shed lig on the importance of mice to the trout populations of Fiordland lakes.
So how many mice can a trout eat? Since more than 90% of all trout caught in South Island backcountry rivers are released, most anglers never examine the stomach contents of large trout that have been feeding on mice. The brown that first triggered our interest was only kept because it was bleeding heavily from the gills and had a limited chance of survival This 3.4kg (7.51b) turned out to have 13 mice in its stomach. Of these, eight were intact and fresh and had probably been consumed during the previous night. The other five were partially digested, suggesting they had had been consumed two nights earlier. The total weight of mice in the stomach was estimated at about 0.25kg (0.51b) and raises the question as to why the fish thought it had to eat a size 10 nymph as well. Perhaps just to keep itself familiar with other food for when the mice supply ceased?
Although we were impressed with the appetite of our fish, the unofficial record may go to a Nelson Lakes trout that we were reputably told had eaten 23 mice. Anglers undoubtedly have other experiences of mice-eating trout.
And does eating mice make the flesh pale or give it an unpleasant taste? Well, our sample size of one suggests not, as it was a pleasant light orange colour and the taste attracted only compliments front the group of friends who enjoyed eating it with us, although they were not informed of its history!
It seems intuitive that feeding on large organisms like mice and fish must be considerably more efficient than feeding on smaller prey, such as aquatic or terrestrial insects. This was confirmed by a recent British study that compared growth rates of two groups of brown trout - one fed on fish and the other on insects. On a diet of fish, trout grew approximately three times faster than when fed on insects. The increased growth rate was influenced by two main factors. Firstly, gram for gram, fish were energetically richer and more easily digested than insects, and secondly, trout could pack a greater volume of the larger items into their stomachs. It seems likely that this also applies to trout feeding on mice and the accompanying photograph of the distended stomach of the fish we caught graphically illustrates this. It is also probable that feeding on a small number of large food items would reduce foraging times and the energy expended in acquiring food. Resources could then be directed towards rest and digestion. Such a theory fits in with dive observations in Lake Manapouri and Te Anau of very large rather obese-looking brown trout resting tinder logs during the day, presumably digesting the mice meal from the night before.
Rodent-eating trout are not unique to New Zealand and have been widely reported in the popular literature for a wide range of salmonids including rainbow, take, bull, and brook trout in North America. Indeed, on the Alagnak River in Alaska, large rainbow trout are targeted using vote (a tundra mouse) patterns. There is also evidence that rodent population cycles in North America are linked to fluctuations in the abundance of tree seeds, at least in eastern United States where abundant crops of acorns have been linked to increases in white-footed mice, as well as chipimunks, deer, and lyme disease!
Recent research has confirmed that most of the brown trout found in headwater rivers are actually males. This is apparently because most females, which require more food than males to recover their energy resources after spawning, move downstream following spawning to the lower reaches where forage fish are more plentiful. Perhaps it is because many of these males are already long for their weight that they have the capability of putting on condition relatively quickly when a new food source appears.
It seems there is still much to learn about the importance of mice as food for trout and we would welcome any information that might add to our understanding of this phenomenon.
Contact the authors: Gavin James (g.james@niwa.cri.nz) and Steve Fox (s.fox@niwa.cri.nz) or NIWA, Box 8602, Christchurch; or Rick Stoffels (stori563@student.otago.ac.nz) or Zoology Dept., Box 56, Dunedin. And who knows, if the greenhouse effect does result in the increased temperatures that are being predicted, we may see more big mice-fed trout in our beech forest headwater rivers.

Monday, November 2, 2009

Getting Chees'd.

I woke up early this morning very excited. My friend Ed was taking me fly fishing. We were headed to Cheesman Canyon. I love fishing new spots and especially places with the potential for big fish. Certain areas are designated as "gold medal" waters. This means that the water quality is high and the size of the fish is generally large! We fished my first "gold medal" water today. It was a couple of hours of driving from Boulder, but well worth it. There were lots of fish. they were eating. They just weren't eating what we put in front of them. It could be frustrating at times. It was fun to see so many big fish. They were spooked easily which made the fishing tough. I got lucky with one.

My fish o' the day.
I am not sure how big it is, but it rivals some of my New Zealand Trout. Is it a Brown or a Rainbow? I couldn't quite tell. Does it hit the elusive 20" mark? I am not sure. I didn't take a picture of it in my net that could have told me how big it is. I was very happy to land it. It took a lot of patience. I didn't try any of my own flies because the fishing was hard enough with flies that I thought would work.

Ed in the Narrows with Zipper looking on.
After the awesome day of fishing, I headed home and got some interesting news. I apparently am finished with my last job. I won't be going to Las Vegas to work and race SilverMan this week. Tomorrow will be the beginning of the rest of my life!