Spinach economy losing $1 million per day. A microcosm of global concern overreaction and stupidity.


Who’d have thunk that spinach was a pretty big biz. This article suggests that the spinach scare is losing a million per day for California farmers, some of whom are plowing it all under and laying off workers.

Of course if people are spending this million on *other* healthful veggies than the positive affects may wash out the negative, but it seems more likely they are buying something less healthful. If true the scare may have a (small) but net negative affect on health.

I think the overreaction to such small things offers great insight into how defectively we process the big stuff like global health and welfare, and lesser but still significant things like automobile and gun dangers and heart risks. Part of this is simple mental accessibility – “news” outlets report things that people can latch on to easily and we like “easy to digest” news sound bytes. But that’s no excuse. The news attention deficit syndrome is a perilous approach in these troubled times.

As with the ridiculous overreaction to Mad Cow non-disease, the spinach “cure” – basically nobody eating spinach for weeks or even months – combined with economic problems from the loss of milions of pounds of the crop, layoffs, and hardships in the agriculture sector, is likely going to have a more negative health impact than the problem itself.

When you expand this defective type of analysis to the overreaction to Global Warming and the underreaction to AIDs, Malaria, and Rotaviral diseases in underdeveloped world that kill millions per year the future looks … ummm….. green and leafy?

Top Ten Fall Destinations?


TripAdvisor’s top ten fall destinations are:

1.Munich, Germany
2.
Napa Valley, Calif.
3.
Montreal, Quebec
4.
Asheville, N.C.
5. Woodstock, Vt.
6.
Vancouver, Canada
7. Lake Placid, N.Y.
8.
Camden, Maine
9.
Mystic, Conn.
10.
Aberdeen, Scotland

It seems like a funny list to me.   The Fall color of USA is well represented at Woodstock, Lake Placid, and Camden and a trip to the Northeast USA in fall is impossible to beat for spectacular foliage IF your timing is lucky.   Mystic and Napa are charming and Montreal and Vancouver are very cool places.   Haven’t been to Asheville but I’m sure it’s nice.    Munich an obvious choice for Octoberfest.  Not sure about Aberdeen.

But as long as they’ve decided to include the entire world it seems like a reasonable person is going to pick London, Paris, Rome, Prague, a city in China or Japan, etc, etc over, say Asheville or Mystic or Lake Placid.

I think these silly lists tell you more about the person composing them than travel.

Global Warming Guilt


Fresh from a great trip in the California Wilderness I feel guilty as usual for challenging Global Warming alarmism from folks I respect and admire and who seem to spend a lot more time than I do on this topic, such as Al Gore and a lot of respected scientists participating in the IPCC.

However it’s really hard for me to view the catastrophe claims without feeling that 1) the major concerns don’t come from the science, rather from emotion and narrow focus and 2) clearly poverty, hunger, and disease are far more pressing human concerns – all being present catastrophic human conditions, solvable with simple technologies and at relatively low cost.

Of course humans are not the only thing to worry about when you’re looking at problems on our earth. However the case for expensive Global Warming “remedies” vs other methods of protecting the environment seems to get much weaker the farther you go from the human consequences. For example Kilauea in Hawaii could care less about GW. In fact Volcanos spew considerable CO2 into the atmosphere naturally (though not as much as humans, contrary to some GW denier claims).

SO…. maybe the best way to figure this out is to take a little more time to carefully examine the main catastrophe claims and compare them to what the actual research suggests. Luckily, the Climate Crisis website, a companion to the film “An Inconvenient Truth” gives us a clear starting point in our quest with these catastrophes they clearly feel are 1) a big deal and 2) looming on the near horizon:
If the warming continues, we can expect catastrophic consequences.

Deaths from global warming will double in just 25 years — to 300,000 people a year.
Global sea levels could rise by more than 20 feet with the loss of shelf ice in Greenland and Antarctica, devastating coastal areas worldwide.
Heat waves will be more frequent and more intense.
Droughts and wildfires will occur more often.
The Arctic Ocean could be ice free in summer by 2050.
More than a million species worldwide could be driven to extinction by 2050.

…. TO BE CONTINUED ….

Trinity Alps Wilderness, California


What a fine time in the Trinity Alps with our great friends Linda and John from the Bay Area.  The kids handled the 4 miles in no problem and we got our *favorite* spot just down from the lower waterfalls that plunge into a cool-green deep pool surrounded by trees with a huge peak rising upstream in the background.   Even my two Yellow Jacket stings didn’t dampen my enthusiasm.  The next day another 4 miles up to the Canyon Creek Lakes and playing around the upper waterfall.

John took a LOT of pix and I’ll post or link some soon.

Trinity Alps here we come


Tomorrow we’ll head down to the Trinity Alps in Northern California for a 2 night backpack. I really love this wilderness area, which is spectacular, sublime, and always uncrowded. This will be our third trip to the Canyon Creek Lakes part of the Trinity Alps and we’ll camp about 4 miles in, hopefully at the spot above the little waterfall.

Another 4 miles in the next day without heavy packs will take us up into the heart of the region, three lakes in a valley surrounded by granite peaks of up to 9000 feet. The last trip here was 3 years ago and we’d just spent a week in Yosemite but I kept thinking how great the Trinities are as a place to really immerse yourself in the splendor of California mountains and woods.

Although the Trinity Alps are not as spectacular as Yosemite (I’m not sure any place on earth can compete with the many unique vistas in Yosemite Valley), they offer a lot more solitude, similar beautiful scenery, and the kind of insight into the workings of the world you just can’t get unless you surround yourself in a cathedral of granite, mountains, and forest that has remained largely unchanged for thousands and thousands of years.

Speed Geeking Session


Here at Mashup Camp part of the open conference concept is the upcoming “speed geeking” session which will showcase about 23+ mashups that are competing here for the “best mashup” award – a niagra server from Sun, delivered by…. the president of Sun.

If you want NEWS and VIEWS about this event I’m not a good source – go to the project Wiki which is HERE and Programmable Web, John Musser’s superb site about Web 2.0 and such things. John is here and very dedicated to providing a great 2.0 resource, though I think he’s got a tiger by the tail and may need to choose between that and his day job (consulting) soon.

SpeedGeeks / Mashup Contest entries:
#1 Dave – StrikeIron.com
Dave Brooks – Bungee Labs
Robert – FlySpy – Airfare Search
Yogi Benjamin – GoodStorm.com.
? Mobido.com – mobile phone communities
Taylor – popbop.org – mp3 podcasts, concert info.
Edgeio.com
David – Rrove – social bookmarking with locations. Google maps.
Masterbeta ?
Mapbuilder.net – Google maps.
Universal submit – events data mashup with competitors to add events to eventful and OTHER sites….
Itunes + Ical Calendar – where and when for performers.
Bart and Frank – TrainCheck.com – Mobile phone application sends train times by phone. DC and SF.
CommerceNet Labs – MIFFY micro formats editor. Suckup vs Mashup.
Computer disposal mapping mashup.
#16 Brian – Online Training blogs? for runners, weight training, etc. Mashing with map/topography.
#17 Adrian – http://www.chicagocrime.org Created BEFORE the Google API. This guy is *good*.
Mosez – mobile ap for ?
Weatherbonk and Skibonk. Weather and maps and satellite stuff.
?
Jeff Marshall, FrozenBear Attendr for MashupCamp. Social interaction at gatherings.
Yoz? NING.com – fast social networking mashup maker
Yoz – UK Govt Data Mashups.
DudeWheresMyUsedCar.com – ebay and maps