May
22
2008
With the Memorial Day weekend fast approaching, plenty of folks will spend it fishing. The art of angling is the art of deception, and monofilament is a valued ally. It’s strong, elastic, and almost invisible. It breaks the connection between lure and angler, tricking gullible fish into believing that they’ve found a free lunch.
It’s all too easy to snag a hook and snap a line. Retrieval isn’t as easy, and we’re often tempted to leave the hook and line behind. But when we leave monofilament behind us — whether it’s in the water or in the trees, and whether it’s ours or some other angler’s — we weave a tangled web indeed. The likely result? Disability and death, as arbitrary as it is unnecessary. Ask any experienced wildlife rehabber who’s had to cut it off a duck’s gangrenous leg, a goose’s swollen neck, or a muskrat’s bulging abdomen. And monofilament is forever, or near enough — unless we take the time to remove its lethal web wherever and whenever we find it. That’s worth a little effort, isn’t it? I sure think so. Read more…
Tags: birds, fishing, geology, hazards, It's Only Natural! Birds, wildlife, Wildlife & More
May
20
2008

Many paddlers, bike tourists, and hikers seem to hanker after a simpler life, and our yearning for simplicity encompasses meal-making, too. Some folks even give up cooking altogether. That’s a little too close to roughing it for most of us, though. Then again, maybe we don’t have to choose between these two extremes. There IS a middle way. Read “Minimalist Cooking” to find out more. That’s alimentary, right?
Tags: Alimentary, cooking, Let's Eat!, minimalist, ramen
May
19
2008
If you’ve never gone to the birds in a boat or on your bike, you owe it to yourself to give it a try. Better yet, haul your boat with your bike and call it “amphibious paddling.” I’ve been exploring the no-octane synergy between boats and bikes for a long while now. Add birds to the mix and you’re really on to something. The amphibious paddler becomes an amphibious birder. It’s only natural. Birds flock to (and around) water, and any canoe or kayak can become a mobile observatory, a passport to an ever-changing world of beauty, grace, and song. If these things matter to you, and I’ll bet that they do, it’s a world you’ll want to visit often. It’s all part of being a Water-Born Naturalist.
Tags: amphibious biking, birds, birdwatching, natural history