pg-kitchenstories.blogspot.com
My kitchen stories: I AM FISH...
http://pg-kitchenstories.blogspot.com/2009/12/i-am-fish.html
My experiments with cooking and baking! Wednesday, December 16, 2009. This is not about a recipe, but very much about food - the fish- whose home is the oceans. I get a newsletter from the David Suzuki Foundation called Marine Scene. This is what it asks/tells us in this Issue:. Did you know plankton helps produce more than half the world’s oxygen? Or that oceans provide 99 per cent of the planet’s living space? David Suzuki is also this years Swedish Right Livelyhood Award. Go here: I AM FISH. Equivalen...
pg-kitchenstories.blogspot.com
My kitchen stories: December 2009
http://pg-kitchenstories.blogspot.com/2009_12_01_archive.html
My experiments with cooking and baking! Wednesday, December 16, 2009. This is not about a recipe, but very much about food - the fish- whose home is the oceans. I get a newsletter from the David Suzuki Foundation called Marine Scene. This is what it asks/tells us in this Issue:. Did you know plankton helps produce more than half the world’s oxygen? Or that oceans provide 99 per cent of the planet’s living space? David Suzuki is also this years Swedish Right Livelyhood Award. Go here: I AM FISH. Handy kit...
coastalvoices.blogspot.com
Coastal Voices: July 2009
http://coastalvoices.blogspot.com/2009_07_01_archive.html
Thursday, July 30, 2009. Very Important Study to Be Published in Science Tomorrow. Photo: Boris Worm (Credit: Danny Abriel, Dalhousie University. Thu Jul 30 12:40:45 2009 Pacific Time. Scientists Document Prospects for Recovery of Fisheries, Call for More Global Action. To read the full article. Posted by Heather Aldersey. Finding Coral CBC News:The National. Check out this very well done piece on the Finding Coral Expedition, shown on CBC's The National this past Monday. Posted by Heather Aldersey.
coastalvoices.blogspot.com
Coastal Voices: Name This Spot!
http://coastalvoices.blogspot.com/2009/10/name-this-spot.html
Friday, October 30, 2009. Right on the heels of congratulating our most recent winner in my last post, I think we should have everyone try and figure out the location of this next image. This is a spot within the Pncima. Region and any mariners with local knowledge. Of the Inside Passage would know this spot. If you would like to try your best guess, you can email me at:. Or leave a comment in the comments section. Winners will be announced on the next Name This Spot! Posted by Vern Sampson.
coastalvoices.blogspot.com
Coastal Voices: Living the Ocean - An interview with Jennifer Lash
http://coastalvoices.blogspot.com/2009/11/living-ocean-interview-with-jennifer.html
Tuesday, November 3, 2009. Living the Ocean - An interview with Jennifer Lash. Ava, from The Reef Tank. Is our guest blogger this week. She interviewed Jennifer at the beginning of October and her post is reproduced with permission here. The Reef Tank is one of the largest online communities of saltwater aquarists. Did you know it was an Australian water landmark that inspired Jennifer Lash to create Living Oceans Society. The single largest marine conservation organization in Canada? I established Livin...
coastalvoices.blogspot.com
Coastal Voices: October 2009
http://coastalvoices.blogspot.com/2009_10_01_archive.html
Friday, October 30, 2009. Right on the heels of congratulating our most recent winner in my last post, I think we should have everyone try and figure out the location of this next image. This is a spot within the Pncima. Region and any mariners with local knowledge. Of the Inside Passage would know this spot. If you would like to try your best guess, you can email me at:. Or leave a comment in the comments section. Winners will be announced on the next Name This Spot! Posted by Vern Sampson. Carbon dioxi...
coastalvoices.blogspot.com
Coastal Voices: November 2009
http://coastalvoices.blogspot.com/2009_11_01_archive.html
Monday, November 9, 2009. A Short History of Progress by Ronald Wright. I was going to post some thoughts about a book I've been reading recently, entitled, The Last Great Sea by Terry Glavin, a voyage through the human and natural history of the North Pacific Ocean, and I will, but a slim volume by another Canadian writer interrupted that process. In A Short History of Progress. Where are we going? It is Gauguin's third question - Where are we going? That Wright tries to address in this book. This so ca...
coastalvoices.blogspot.com
Coastal Voices: March 2009
http://coastalvoices.blogspot.com/2009_03_01_archive.html
Tuesday, March 31, 2009. Carbon Dating of Deep-Sea Corals. New research from Lawrence Livermore, Stanford University, and the University of California at Santa Cruz has determined that deep-sea corals off the coast of Hawaii are much older than previously assumed. In fact, this new research shows that deep-sea corals might be the oldest living marine organism in the world. Gerardia (gold) coral (Photo: NOAA Hawaiian Undersea Research Lab). Most significantly, the researchers found samples of Leiopathes.