Showing posts with label California. Show all posts
Showing posts with label California. Show all posts

Tuesday, 7 September 2010

The great kinetic sculpture race, Arcata to Ferndale

Formerly known as the Kinetic Sculpture Race, the Kinetic Grand Championship is a 3-day race in Humboldt County of northern California. The "sculptured" vehicles must be human-powered. Many fall apart during their traverse of city streets, ramps, saltwater bay, mud, sand, and hilly roads. Fun for all.

The race began in 1969, when Ferndale sculptor Hobart Brown challenged artist Jack Mays to a race down Mainstreet. Their kinetic vehicles started a 40-year tradition that has spread to Oregon, Washington, Arizona, Colorado, Baltimore, Maryland and Perth, Australia. Here are its basic principles:
  1. Develop and encourage artistic human-powered vehicle technology.
  2. Promote and encourage instruction in kinetic art and engineering for all age groups.
  3. Create public art, in all media, including but not limited to visual art, aural art, dance forms, creative dramatics, poetry, lyric arts and emerging media.
  4. Sponsor special events involving public performance of any or all of the above art forms from all parts of the community.
  5. Directly engage in and provide vehicles and facilities so that others may engage in the promotion of the arts.
  6. Demonstrate the benefits of artistic human-powered vehicle technology including: health and well being, reduction of non-renewable fuel sources, lowering greenhouse gas emissions, and encouraging critical thinking about global human impact.
  7. Directly promote interchange on artistic human-powered vehicle technology between the first and third worlds.
Prizes are given for
  • Best Speed
  • Best Engineering
  • Best Art
  • ACE -- for completing the race at a higher level of competition with stringent rules
  • Golden Dinosaur -- the sculpture with the most memorable (or first) breakdown
  • Worst Honorable Mention -- for the sculpture whose half-baked theoretical "engineering" did not deter its pilot from the challenge of the race
  • National Mediocre Champion -- the entry with a finishing time closest to the average, once all time penalties are taken into account.
  • Golden Flipper -- the most interesting water entry
  • Best Pit Crew
  • Best Costume(s)
  • Best Bribes
  • Pilots' Choice
  • People's Choice
  • Spirit of the Founder
See also Kinetic Universe, Kinetic Grand Championship (with photo galleries) and Wikipedia.

Sunday, 5 October 2008

Hawks are flying - Lineatus

Juvenile female Sharp-shinned Hawk (Accipiter striatus)

"Lineatus" lives in San Francisco. This is from her birdwatching blog:

Banding season is underway. This is the time of year I live for.  I like the migration, like getting the odd day to head to the coast or into the delta... got to spend a day at Pt. Reyes weekend before last and it was great.  But above all else, fall means one thing to me:  The hawks are flying, and I'm spending some quality time with them.  I am a lucky, lucky person.

One of the coolest things about working with these birds is locking gazes with them.  They are keen observers of the world, and looking into those eyes is a rare and remarkable experience.

Saturday, 28 June 2008

The “end of nature” seen in California wildfires

June 26 satellite data of fires in Big Sur, by US Forest Service, from a series in Xasuan Today. See also California Office of Emergency Services maps of 1000+ wildfires and smoke-plumes.

http://xasauantoday.files.wordpress.com/2008/06/overview6-28am.jpg

A digest of info in DailyKos 24 June and 26 June 2008:


A week ago 800 fires in the north, from the redwood country south to San Francisco, had already destroyed 44,000 acres of forest. Most are still out of control. In southern California the Big Sur/Ventana valleys are burning. Mendocino County residents were warned to stay indoors and avoid exercise, because of air pollution by wildfires -- the result of what the Los Angeles Times called an "unusual weather pattern" with more than 8,000 lightning strikes.

A East Bay blogger says: “All of us folks streaming along the Interstate in our gas-guzzlers, complicit in climate change, had the results thrust right in our faces. Traffic slowed down by 15 mph... in awe at the smoke drifting over from Napa.” Air pollution is double or triple the amount considered safe by federal standards.

Firefighter Blog reports:

The State of California is in the midst of the worst wildfire crisis in modern state history. More than 900 wildland fires are burning, many unstaffed. Incident commanders are making do with skeleton crews
DailyKos correspondents say there are 300 vacant positions and a shortage of fire engines at the U.S. Forest Service, just one of many environmental rollbacks by the Bush administration. “The lack of preparedness by the federal government and the loss of readiness in the National Guard is unforgiveable”.

Three weeks ago, Governor Schwartzenegger declared a statewide water emergency after two years of drought. “This March, April and May have been the driest ever in our recorded history... As a result, some local governments are rationing water, developments can't proceed and agricultural fields are sitting idle. We must recognize the severity of the crisis we face." The underlying cause: man-made climate change, despite official denials by the federal government.
From Circle's Diary: Last Friday the Feds were acting like they had the fire-response situation in California under control. They said they'd start hiring more personel this coming week, ahead of schedule. He quotes David Helgarv: “We had a million environmental refugees as a result of Katrina.”

"Why aren't we talking about the environmental refugees here in our own country?" Circle asks. "When are we going to acknowledge that natural disasters are as big a threat as terrorism, indeed, if frequency is the measure, a bigger threat? We're seeing the impact of oil wars, but what will it look like when the wars are over water? It's not that far in the future, you know. Part of the reason California is burning is because of the terrible drought here. And already there's a struggle going on over water, and who is going to get what little there is. It's part of the reason the salmon aren't spawning and there isn't a season this year."
Meanwhile, stock marketeers triumphantly crow that unprecedented profits can be made from the water emergency.

Further Reading: Jared Diamond, Collapse; Naomi Klein, Disaster Capitalism; Bill McKibben, The End of Nature.