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New running shoes

Hoka One One Stinson Lite After looking at my sad, crushed awesome pink running shoes and realizing that i can’t remember when i got them (and too lazy to look up my FB feed to find out) I came to the conclusion it’s probably time for some new running shoes.  Summer is coming to a close (I am not very motivated… Read more →

Working backwards

The summer has been a bit of a chaos in stasis.   Working on filming projects both my own and others.   Giving presentations, shooting, completing a class, applying for grants, managing grants, finishing grant work, driving all over the state…  The list seems to go on and on.   It has been a bit of head down, barreling forward… Read more →

Ice Bucket Challenge, Puget Sound Style

Oooohh… I have an idea… Puget Sound is sick, and our pollution is what is making it sicker. If you’ve been watching any of my latest videos you can get a feel for what kind of sea monsters lurk in even ONE DROP! So here is the Puget Sound version of the ice bucket challenge… Donate $100 (or what you… Read more →

iPhone Microscope

I’ve always been fascinated by plankton, but a good video microscope has been out of my reach (mostly because i spend all my disposable $$ on camera crap) When I saw this (how to make a microscope with cheap laser pointer lens and iPhone)   i immediately went out and bought the parts and thanks to my friend Neal Chism and… Read more →

Things people don’t tell you about spending 10 hrs on scuba in a pool

This past weekend I got to do something “new” to me.  That isn’t unheard of, as there are many things I have not yet had a chance to partake in, but the list gets much shorter when it has to do with diving. I got a chance to work as an UW grip (and ‘behind the scenes’ camera) for the… Read more →

Star Blight – Seattle Magazine Article

Stories about the Sea Star wasting disease just keep coming… Much like the disease itself. The waters are warming up along with the weather and the scientists I’ve been talking to are concerned that we will see an uptick in the sea star deaths again.   They are now seeing it in the San Juans, an area that was spared… Read more →

Climate change and Puget Sound, it’s what you CAN’T see…

Literally… The signs are there, the plankton cycle is messed up, there is more algae and less diatoms (the diatoms are the good guys who die and feed the bottom, the algae dies and causes eutrophication) It’s been several years since we saw the epic late summer vis, and even the dead of winter when we normally see our best… Read more →