with Lorelle and Brent VanFossen

Flower Power and Photography

Spring wildflowers in the high alpine meadows, Olympic National Park, photograph by Brent VanFossenWe believe very strongly in learning all you can about the subject you are photographing. Imagine our surprise to learn that many flowers have survived over time because of us! Us as in humans. This is according to research released recently and highlighted in this article called The Evolutionary Triumph Of Flower Power by ScienceDaily.

Flowers have flourished – their beauty evolving over time –
simply because we like them, says Terry McGuire,
associate professor of genetics at Rutgers and co-author
of a paper that examines for the first time the whys and
wherefores of flowering plants in an evolutionary context.

It seems that while flowers originally attracted potential pollinators like bugs and birds, it is “their appeal to humans that accounts for the incredible variety of shapes and colors we see in domesticated flowers today.” McGuire research suggests that the pretty flowers survived and thrived because people didn’t destroy them, but cultivated them as they cleared land and destroyed forests over the past 5,000 years.

It goes on to say that in spite of our influences, many domesticated flowers have been “so selected by humans that nature’s pollinators – the bugs and birds – no longer find them attractive. So the job of propagating the species depends mainly on us.”

“Our hypothesis is that flowers are exploiting an emotional niche. They make us happy,” McGuire says. “Because they are a source of pleasure – a positive emotion inducer – we take care of them. In that sense they’re like dogs. They are the pets of the plant world.”

This theory says that flowers survive because of their emotional influence on us and our response to them, and keeping them alive because of this influence. Amazing!

Gives us a whole new perspective on flower power.

Photographing Flowers

Understanding that flowers influence emotions, photographers can style their flower photography to enhance those emotions through composition, creative use of backgrounds and foregrounds, symbol and pattern recognition, and portraiture. Think of daisies in the hands of a child and a rose in the hands of an elderly person. Great symbolism.

We’ve done a variety of articles on photographing flowers and related subjects. Here are a few examples to help you capture the emotional response of flowers.

Attract Wild Birds – Bird Supplies, Identification and Success Tips

We love bringing you new sites and information on wildlife and birds, and we found another good site. Attract Wild Birds offers a wide range of wild bird identification information, articles on attracting and feeding wild birds, and all kinds of information for wild bird enthusiasts.

One of the greatest treasures on the site is the online version of Wild Bird Neighbors – An Introduction to 150 Birds Commonly Found in Nearby Gardens, Meadows, and Woods. Based on the 1922 edition by Neltje Blanchan, with an intro by John Burroughs, it was originally written in 1897. I would prefer keeping the original, but they are working hard to update the information into modern language and revitalize the book.

Editor’s Note: It is believed that this was one of the very first bird fielder’s guide to be printed. Many mentions are made of a larger Audubon book being used as a primary reference – which was too heavy to lug into the bush or to take on bird-watching hikes. This bird book was small and the verbiage was brief.

The birds identified in the book are native and migratory, covering the north-eastern region of the US and to eastern Canada. You can also read the original from the Guttenberg Project.

They also have a birding forum so you can discuss different birds, what you have found and see, how to attract them to your home and garden, and other information on birding and wild birds.

Good luck with the site and if you are a birder, this is worth checking out.

Improving Cell Phone Photography

In general, I’m all for new technology, especially in photography. I love the new popularity of photography on the Internet. Everyone wants to show off their pictures, good or bad, and photoblogs are gaining popularity. Sites like ours have a goal of helping people learn more about photography and improving their photography skills, but I like it that everyone can now own a camera and enjoy the fun of recording every moment of their lives with it.

The entry of cameras on cell phones is a novel method of capturing and sending pictures instantly to one another. It also puts two pieces of equipment into one small package. The use of camera cell phones isn’t about capturing images that will make the covers of some of the best magazines in the world, but it is about convenience and fun.

In an article about Improving cell phone photography with better chips, it seems that nearly half the cell phones sold in the United States come with a camera built-in. Unfortunately, these built-in cameras take lousy pictures. A start-up company called Cupertino says it will begin delivering new chips that will improve photographic results soon. Nethra Imaging is expected to announce today that it will begin selling the chips later this year.

Cell phone manufacturers are working overtime to get built-in flash, better optical lenses and improved chips for better resolutions and memory storage in their cameras. Most U.S. camera phones today have images with at most a 1 megapixel resolution, but usually it is much less.

Camera phones with resolutions of 3 megapixels and higher are selling well in South Korea and Japan but have not caught on in the United States because of their cost. U.S. residents expect free or low-price cell phones that are subsidized by wireless carriers in exchange for multi-year service agreements, Singh said.

It will be interesting to see where these “do all” camera phones end up, but for the traveler who wants to take their camera on the road, but is not interested in selling their photography, getting a good quality cell phone and camera combined lightens the load and adds convenience.

Computer Crash – Again – I know

Our laptop is now in the mail on its way to be repaired and so I wanted to warn everyone that I’m trying to set up our server so I can use it until I get my baby back.

Crap. This is the second hard drive in this laptop to crash and it has caused me no end of grief. I was really good and didn’t push the envelope with this computer, well, mainly because I was too busy over the past two years. So it’s being treated like a “normal” computer.

It looks like the motherboard went screwy, which could explain the rest of the problems, and so hopefully the main hard drive will be fine…I hope.

Anyway, responding to email and a few other activities will be delayed as I have to set all the software back up on this computer. Ugh. Luckily, I have a good backup of my documents from a month ago and a pretty good but not excellent backup from a couple days ago, so we’ll see. It’s just that the whole computer wasn’t backed up, which wouldn’t help me with this computer, and I have to install programs from scratch, since this is a storage device rather than a full functioning computer. It will be when I get done with it!

Back to the drawing board, again…as usual.

Lesson: BACKUP BACKUP BACKUP BACKUP

See Them All – 10,000 Birds

Did you know that there are almost 10,000 different bird species on this planet? This kind of fact amazes me. When it comes to humans, we have only a few colors, and the sizes come and go, but in reality, we’re all basically the same. A limited and unvaried species. If you are looking for true diversity, birds got it.

Birds come in every shape, size, color, and odd ball behavior. They can be found in almost every ecosystem and climate on this planet. Birds like penguins have adapted to the most extreme cold temperatures, places where most animals fear to tread. Some birds eat fish, some eat seeds, others eat each other. And then there are birds, like the vulture, which will eat just about anything that isn’t moving.

Birds provide no end of fascination with naturalists and nature lovers. A flash of color in a bush can send my husband into the bird dog position, standing absolutely still, eyes focused on the spot, examining every leaf and branch for the tell tale shape, then zooming in visually to inspect colors, feathers, beaks, and feet. What is it? “I must know!”

He will race home and pour over the many, many books we haul around with us in our travels to find out what it was, and then look up, the grin his mother would remember well from his days as a two year old having just figured out a puzzle or challenge, and announce that he’s seen a purple finch, roufus-sided toehee, or babbling-brook-whatcahmacall it. Yes, the last is my name for some of these things.

As we examine the many wonders of the natural world around us, I think about the task it would be to wake up one day and say “Hey, I want to see every bird species on the planet.” With a list of almost 10,000 bird species to check off, that’s an amazing amount of effort.

Well, a group has decided to do that. Called the 10,000 Birds, they have set for themselves to see every bird species on the planet. Their website is dedicated to chronicling their efforts to see “every one of them.”

We are new to birding and have a great deal to learn.
Join us on our (near) daily exploration of this fascinating activity.
We do our best to make the journey interesting for experts and novices alike!

They share their new fascination with birding with other birders from across the country and around the world, visiting them and in turn, inviting them to visit and go out bird watching. The site is filled with excellent resource information on various birds, birding, and bird facts.

We wish them well with their endeavors, and I’m thinking about investing in some of their “I Brake for Birds” bumperstickers. Too cute!

Lesson 6 – Rest Strokes and Scales

Rest Strokes

We began the lesson when I demonstrated my week’s work on the rest stroke. I played Carulli’s Allegro from Shearer “Classic Guitar Technique”, Volume 1, p 56. The piece is a series of three note arpeggios. Owen asked me to treat it as an exercise, and to play the middle note, the high note, using the rest stroke. This is a new stroke for me, and it wasn’t until the night before my lesson that I felt like I had it under control. Though it still needs some work, I can now control the quality and volume of this stroke.

We moved on to the other rest stroke piece I had been working on, Carulli’s Waltz on p 66. This piece is a series of six-note arpeggios, and the third and fifth notes were to be played rest stroke. This piece is more complex because the rest strokes come on the first, second, or third string, and in varying orders. The chords are also more interesting. I played fine, but I have occasional trouble with the resting portion of the stroke not coming to a complete stop against the lower string, and this causes some ringing of unwanted strings.

Carulli's WaltzIn measure 26, the left hand fingering as marked requires a difficult stretch. I had substituted a partial bar to simplify this, and he caught me immediately. He asked me to finger it as written, and to release the pinky from the D on the second string in order to then play the F on the first string a few notes later. “It’s not necessary,” he told me, “to hold that note all the way through.” When I asked why he preferred that I not use the barre there, he explained that most players at the level of this book are not accustomed to playing barre chords, although they’re easy for me. While this answer doesn’t satisfy me, I can imagine that I have something to learn from practicing the stretch required to play this measure cleanly without the barre.

I’m to play these two pieces every day and polish them until I can do them with ease. These are my rest stroke practice pieces. I need to continue watching my hand to make sure that it’s moving properly and without wasted motion. And I’m to play them at an unhurried pace so I can pay attention to the details.

Scales

Owen asked about my scales, and I showed him the A Major scale at the fifth fret of the sixth string using i-m, m-i, and i-a right hand patterns.

He then showed me the C Major scale that begins in second position on the fifth string at the third fret. This scale requires a position shift when ascending on the second string after the E at the second string fifth fret. This allows the last five notes after the shift to be played on the second and first strings, and extends the scale to a full two octaves for a finish at the first string eighth fret.

When coming down the C Major scale, the pattern is different. It stays in fifth position for an entire octave. After the C on the third string fifth fret, it shifts to second position and continues down to the low C.

When you make a shift, you don’t want to drag the finger along the string, because this friction can slow you down, and especially on the lower strings, it causes unnecessary string noise. You should release the string and hop to the next note. The best way to do this is to take a little pause at the time of the shift and make sure you completely release the pressure. Then, as you perfect the move, the pause gets smaller and smaller until it is gone and the shift is seamless. A small squeak of the string when shifting is an indication that there is left hand tension that is carrying over from one note to the next.

We talked about the change that came about in the 70’s and 80’s where the younger players began to play without the squeaks and noises long associated with the guitar. Now, squeaking strings are rarely heard. I think this is a natural growth of the instrument.

I’m working out of a booklet called Why Scales that Owen Middleton published in 1994. It’s only eight pages long, and contains scales similar to the famous Segovia Scales, but the fingerings are different. It also has some discussion about why and how to use scales, and about playing without dysfunctional tension. It’s available for $3.95 from http://www.andysmusiconline.com . Andy’s is the Mobile, Al, music store where Owen conducts his private lessons.

The B Melodic Minor scale is good for teaching proper shifting, as it has so many. It begins in II (second) position at the second fret of the fifth string and continues to F# on the fourth string fourth fret. Then, it shifts to VI position for five more notes, then finishes in IX position. It descends in VII position for five notes, then IV position for four notes, then the last five notes are in II position again. The descending scale is just the Aeolian mode, the natural minor scale. Ascending, the 6th and 7th tones are sharped. He emphasized again to make a small pause at each shift until I have learned the scale and perfected the no-tension shift. This scale will take some work for me as I’m not used to hearing the melodic minor scale.

English Dance

I played the English Dance again for him, and this time, I played all the way through with no errors. It was musical and at the right tempo, and when I finished he just laughed and told me I should be proud of my playing.

Chromatic Scales

I showed him the chromatic exercise I had been playing, the 1324 pattern from Lesson 4. He reminded me that I need to transfer left hand pressure from note to note and only play with minimum pressure. He showed me the 1342 pattern, where you play the 1, then add 2 and 3 together to play 3, then add 4 and play 4 (all four fingers are now on the fingerboard). Then, release 3 and 4 together and play 2. This should be played on all strings across the fingerboard. When working on left hand fingerings, play simple patterns, like i-m, with the right hand. He suggested that I stick to one or two patterns and learn them well, while playing different right hand patterns. Coordination between the hands is important.

He reminded me to play very softly in order to help reduce tensions in both hands. If your hand gets tired or tight while playing, you know you’re too tense and need to do two things: slow down, and practice playing more softly.

New Pieces

We looked at Fernando Sor’s Andante I on page 72. This is a deceptively simple piece. It’s short with not a lot of notes, but there’s much detail in the right hand fingering. The pattern isn’t repetitive like it has been with the previous pieces we’ve worked on. I had a lot of trouble on my first play through (and later after I got home) playing the right hand part. This will require focus and work, and I’m not sure yet of the logic of the fingerings.

We looked at Sor’s Allegretto I on page 74. This piece is interesting because it requires attention to the voicing of the different parts. The bass line must be emphasized. The end of the first line emphasizes the treble part. The second line begins by emphasizing the bass line again, and the ending is another treble part. The middle voice must be kept soft throughout so as not to conflict with the other parts. The last two pairs of notes should both be played i-a i-a, instead of the i-a p-m that’s marked in the book. The ending of each of the two parts should slow for a slight retard.

We also looked at Mauro Giuliani’s Allegro on page 76. This is an arpeggio piece that’s a good exercise. There are many places throughout that require a special fingering. Otherwise, one finger will be stuck in a place that’s hard to make the next note. It’s important to pay attention to the marked fingerings for maximum ease and best flow.

Adelita

He asked to hear me play Adelita. As I began, he reminded me to prepare the first two notes by placing them together so that the backup for the first pull-off was ready ahead of time. He also noted that I should hold the two-note pair, the octave B’s on the 6th and 4th strings in measure 15, just a little longer before playing the next notes. This measure should not be hurried. He gave me another tip: The two-note chords at the end of the first, second, and third measures, and throughout the piece, should be played softly relative to the single notes. Otherwise the chords will drown out the melody. The fourth measure should be played full and strong.

AncientFaces.com: VanFossen Family Sources

Whether you spell it Van Fossen, VanFossen, van Fossen or Vanfossen, these are all part of my husband’s family name spellings. We recently discovered a site called “Ancient Faces” and they host an area with Van Fossen Family History: Photos, Forum, Stories, and Recipes. They also have many other surnames with information and resources on family history.

If you’re tracking the VanFossen, Van Fossen, van Fossen, or Vanfossen family tree, this might help you.

I was recently introduced as Lorelle VanFoozen, but that’s not one of the correct spellings, though it might be. ;-)

Geneaology Gen File Viewer

Years ago, I ran into my first GEDCOM or GEN file, also known as a genealogy data file. Without the proper software, these files were a challenge to pour through, trying to find some shred of information about my family history and genealogy. With the growing use of open source software, we all benefit and the ability to read GEN files is now simple and easy and free.

GenJ is a viewer and editor for genealogic data written in Java. Free and open source code, it allows you to view genealogy data files or GEN files easily.

Like many open source projects, they are requesting help with the code and development, so if you have the skill and interest, you might consider donating your time and energy to benefit all of us researching our family tree.

And if you really like it, I’m sure they would appreciate a donation to keep the work going.

What is GEDCOM?

If you are doing any family history or genealogy research, you will run across the term GEDCOM. I finally found a good explanation on the term and history at Eastman’s Online Genealogy Newsletter: GEDCOM Explained. This is how he explains it:

Basically, GEDCOM is an abbreviation that stands for GEnealogy Data COMmunications. In short, GEDCOM is the language by which different genealogy software programs talk to one another. The purpose is to exchange data between dissimilar programs without having to manually re-enter all the data on a keyboard.

Now, GEDCOM is not a program but a “standard”. This means that data in one genealogy program can be transfered from one GEDCOM compatible program to another. If you are trying out different genealogy software programs, make sure you get one that supports this GEDCOM standard. It’s fairly universal now, but double check to make sure.

This GEDCOM standard applies to websites that allow you to import information into their databases, too.

Understanding the term GEDCOM helps every genealogy researcher. It helped me, that’s for sure.

Microsoft to Make It Easier to View and Edit Digital Images

With the new “Longhorn” version of Windows operating system coming out soon, Microsoft has just announced that they are trying to rally support for improving the viewing and editing of digital camera images. Microsoft says it is “working closely with a number of digital imaging companies, including Adobe Systems Inc., Canon Inc., Fuji Photo Film Co. Ltd. and Nikon Corp.”

Basically, Microsoft wants to have a viewer in the new version of Windows XP/Longhorn to allow the user to view the “raw” images, which are in the proprietary formats used in digital cameras before the picture is converted to a standard JPEG file. Raw files contain the actual data captured by the photo sensors in a camera.

In traditional photography, a raw image would be equivalent to a photonegative. Camera buffs and professionals prefer to view and edit the raw image because it has more detail and accurate color than a converted file. High-end cameras, called digital SLR cameras, make raw images available to users, while lower-end cameras for consumers usually convert the pictures to JPEGs and only make that format available.

Microsoft is developing a “Windows certification program” for raw image codecs, the technology used to encode and decode an image during the storing to editing process.

If Microsoft can pull this off, photographers will now have an easier time to access the raw data directly from the digital camera media rather than relying upon so many different manufacturer’s software packages, a different one for every type of camera.

Could be good, if not just interesting news for photographers.

Tropical Storm Arlene Brings Water So Far

Map of the path of tropical storm arlene and a star for where we areWe’ve been watching the weather maps and occassionally turning on the television’s Weather Channel, eyeing the path of Arlene. It picked up speed yesterday and looked like it might start to form some consistency, but has now weakened and difused. It still has brought a ton of water with it.

Original predictions were from 6 to 18 inches of water in the various places along the Gulf Coast and Florida. It started raining about four this morning, but so far, it’s just rain, not gallons or buckets. Still, this area is so waterlogged, the smallest accumulation can equal massive run off and flooding. The flash flood warnings are still in effect.

We were awakened early this morning with the weather radio announcing that a tornado watch was in effect until 4PM this afternoon. So I expect the winds will pick up.

For the past four years, when we’d see a map on the news it was telling us where the most recent bomb was destroying lives in Israel. We’d look at the maps on the television to try to determine where we were in relationship to the attack, and if friends were nearby.

Now we look at different maps with the same intent. How far away is the natural disaster from us, and how close is it to friends. But we have a new perspective and question to ask. Are we in it’s way? (more…)

Published: Instantly Improve Your Photography Article in the Community of PhenomenalWomen.com

Wow, it’s a day of recognition. An article submitted per request almost two years ago has just been released to the public on Phenomenal Women’s article resources. The article, Instantly Improve Your Photography – Overcoming Bull’s Eye Syndrome, is from our basic photography series and discusses how to avoid one of the most common mistakes people make when creating photographs.

For those who don’t know, we write articles for a wide variety of magazines, e-zines, websites, and newletters all over the world. We also sell our nature photography images.

Changing the WordPress Quicktag Buttons

I bravely entered the WordPress core programming again and made a few customization changes – nay – improvements. These are for me, but you might learn something from the process of changing your WordPress quicktags javascript file yourself.

Quicktags in WordPress are buttons that sit above your editing box in the Write Post panel of the Administration. They allow you to quickly add bold and italics, links, images, blockquotes, the “more” and “nextpage” tags, and other things. There are even plugins you can use to add more buttons to your quicktags buttons, but I wanted to get into it and fix what was already there.

BEFORE DOING THIS, either get out pen and paper or create a text file called “quicktagchanges.txt” and save it to your wp-admin folder next to your quicktags.js file with the following notes on what you are or have done to this file. This will remind you of the changes and if this file is overwritten in future upgrades, you will have your notes to remind you of how to re-fix things. You have been warned.

As you may have noticed, we have a fairly unique looking blockquote, used for highlighting quotes and blocks of comments or important points that need to be made. It requires some special CSS handling to generate the look of the two hands framing the quote.

In WordPress 1.5x, the quicktags.js is found in the /wp-admin directory. In WordPress 2.x, the file you need to edit is still called quicktags.js but it is found in the /wp-includes/js/ directory. Open the quicktags.js javascript in a text editor and search for blockquote. It should look like this:

edButtons[edButtons.length] = 
new edButton('ed_block'
,'b-quote'
,'\n\n<blockquote>'
,'</blockquote>\n\n'
,'q'
);

I added the CSS to style my blockquote look:

edButtons[edButtons.length] = 
new edButton('ed_block'
,'b-quote'
,'\n\n<div class="nickwrapper"><blockquote class="nick"><div>'
,'</div></blockquote></div>\n\n'
,'q'
);
Now, when I use my blockquote design,
I can just click a button and the whole thing
will be generated on the page.
I can either highlight the text I want to become
a blockquote, or click the blockquote button,
type the text, and then click the “close blockquote” button again.

I needed to do the same with my links. I use a lot of external links on my site and they have a special class to make the funky little arrow to indicate that by clicking this link, you will be leaving our site. I also am very clear about making our site be as accessible as possible, so all my links should have a title element to help screen reader programs.

I found the default code in the quicktag.js by searching for href, but then I found two listings. A careful check found that the one I need to change looks like this by default:

function edInsertLink(myField, i, defaultValue) {
	if (!defaultValue) {
defaultValue = 'http://';
	}
	if (!edCheckOpenTags(i)) {
var URL = prompt('Enter the URL' ,defaultValue);
if (URL) {
	edButtons[i].tagStart = '<a href="' + URL + '">';
	edInsertTag(myField, i);
}
	}
	else {
edInsertTag(myField, i);
	}
}

I did some research and found that I needed to completely replace this entire section to this:

function edInsertLink(myField, i, defaultValue) {
    if (!defaultValue) {
        defaultValue = 'http://';
    }
    if (!edCheckOpenTags(i)) {
        var URL = prompt('Enter the URL' ,defaultValue);
        if (URL) {
            edButtons[i].tagStart = '<a href="'
            + URL
            + '" title="' + prompt('Enter a title for the link', '')
            + '" class="external">';
            edInsertTag(myField, i);
        }
    }
    else {
        edInsertTag(myField, i);
    }
 }

Thanks to Carthik at Wordlog for the help.

Now, the last little change I made was to the “bold” and the “italic” tags. I have my bold and italics styled in my CSS style sheet, so I want to use them and not the WordPress default tags of <strong> and <em>. I want the good old <b> and <i> tags. So I changed them. This is how I changed the bold reference. You can figure out the italic one, which is just below this:

edButtons[edButtons.length] = 
new edButton('ed_strong'
,'b'
,'<strong>'
,'</strong>'
,'b'
);

Easily became:

edButtons[edButtons.length] = 
new edButton('ed_strong'
,'b'
,'<b>'
,'</b>'
,'b'
);

Quicktag Plugins and Resources

For more information on changing your own WordPress Quicktags or adding more:

Tropical Storm Arlene Flood

The weather radio has been going off a lot for the past two days, and it will be ringing its bells even more over the next two days as Tropical Storm Arlene approaches the Gulf Coast of the United States.

Do you even need to ask where we are in regards to the path of the storm? No, I didn’t think so. If you know us, you already know that we are smack in the middle of the predicted path. Where else would we be?

As of right now, Friday at noon, the storm is still estimated to be a tropical storm and not a hurricane. It has picked up speed, moving from 8 mph to about 40 mph, but it hasn’t formed a good “center”, which is needed to really get this thing moving and doing damage. It is estimated to hit the Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida Gulf Coast tomorrow, and bring with it LOTS of water.

Weather forecasters are predicting 3 to 10 inches of water, with the highest concentrations in Florida, which doesn’t need any more rain. So flood alerts are out everywhere.

Shady Acres Campground, here in Mobile, Alabama, is on the Dog River, but according to the owner, who grew up here with his great grandfather, grandfather, and parents, the water has never even come up high enough to reach the campground area, though it has come close to their house with is waterfront property. The sewer and run off for the torrential rains I’ve experienced here so far seem to do okay, and what water remains isn’t enough to cause a problem. The ground we are standing on is like a sieve. A giant collander and the water doesn’t stay for long before the ground absorbs it, coming back to bite us with humity later.

I spent the morning hours sweating like a leaky faucet outside, cleaning up and putting things away, with the intend to evacuate if we have to, but mostly to keep things from flying around in the wind gusts. All the boxes of tools and odds and ends parts and pieces we have stored under the front of the trailer from our recent and on-going trailer repairs have all been put away inside the storage compartments of the trailer or in the back of the truck. I’ve put our bicycles under the fifth wheel overhang, better protected from the wind and rain.

The bird feeders are still out for now, but I’ve got plastic crates ready to toss them in when the winds start coming. Everything else is fairly protected, secured, and tied down. I hope.

So far, they are predicting winds of 30 mph with gusts up to 40, so I’m not very worried…much. We’ve been through worse. We’re just not going to go through worser.

This is good preparation for the hurricane season. I’m really clear that the moment a hurricane is spotted coming this way, we are out of here. Brent has said that he will stay behind and keep working, staying with friends, unless it is a bad one, and then we are both out of here. But I’m moving the trailer out of the path.

People keep asking me if I have a destination in mind if we have to evacuate. “Where will you go?”

I have a destination, and a preference. Alaska is my preference. “Away” is my destination. Out of the path. Out of the way. Away. As far away as I can get, as fast as our old truck will pull this trailer.

When I have gotten to “away”, I will then look for “far enough”. “Far enough” is located “away” from high winds, tornados, and rock size hail. “Far enough” is when I’m sure the weather is “over there” and I’m tired of driving, and there is a big enough space to camp out until the storm passes and the traffic dies down.

Just thought you should know.

Genealogy: How Many Crossed The Land Bridge?

In researching our family history and genealogy, this thought never occurred to me. How many members of my family tree may have crossed the land bridge?

I know that sounds like a strange question, but think about it. My family history research tracks my family back through several generations in Washington State, then back to Michigan, Wisconsin, up into Canada, to New York, and then to England and Europe.

I haven’t gone back much further yet, but there is talk of American Indian in our family tree, I just can’t seem to find who or where that rumor came from. If so, then there is a possibly that some branch in my family might have been one of the ancient natives who traveled across the land bridge between what is now Russia and Alaska, to come to North America.

If so, then researching my family history takes on a new light and articles like this, Founding Fathers and Mothers: How Many Crossed The Land Bridge? from ScienceDaily, has a new impact on my research.

According to the article, researchers now have a realistic “estimate of how many ancients made that ice age trek across the long-lost land bridge from Asia to become the first Native Americans.” Wow.

Tracking research that is beyond my total comprehension, Jody Hey, a professor of genetics at Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, figured out how to track population divergence, where a group split off from its ancestral population, using DNA and computer modeling. The research is fascinating and gives us a whole new insight into what it means to track our family history.