leps-list not dead, but sleeping
Michael Gochfeld
gochfeld at eohsi.rutgers.edu
Wed Jul 9 09:47:40 EDT 2003
It has always been "global climate change", warming is just one part of
it. The maps that have been published for years emphasize that some
extreme drought in some areas, extreme rainfall in others, will be the
major changes. The media (at least in a coastal state like ours),
jumped on "warming" and "sea level rise" for their interest. But I bet
in the mid-west, they are more interested in the fact that hundred year
floods are occurring with increasing frequency.
BUT always good to stir things up. That's what humans are good at.
MIKE GOCHFELD
Mike Soukup wrote:
> Anyone notice how, since we have now had some of the coolest, wettest
> weather in history (at least on the east coast of the USA) we are no
> longer experiencing "global warming" - but are now, instead,
> experiencing "global climate change".....
>
> hmm....seems mighty suspicious to me......
>
> Just thought I'd stir things up a bit........it HAS been slow....
>
> Michael Gochfeld wrote:
>
>> Hi Anne, good luck with the nettles.
>> Butterflies in New Jersey are beginning to bounce back after record
>> cold in
>> April-June and the rainiest June on record.
>> Lots of lush foliage, but the flowering was delayed approximately
>> two weeks.
>>
>> Global Climate Change is supposed to give us extreme oscillations in
>>
>> weather, and seems to be doing just that.
>>
>> After getting burned a few times because people received the same
>> message
>> from both lists, I gradually withdrew.
>> Too bad, because the two lists are not congruent.
>>
>> Mike Gochfeld
>>
>> Anne Kilmer wrote:
>>
>> > I received four answers to my query, and none posted to the list.
>> Seems
>> > to me that, if we want this list to survive, we need to use it
>> more.
>> > Ron's TILS list is fine, and I'm a regular there, but some of you
>> do not
>> > post to both lists.
>> >
>> > At the time that UK-Leps split off, I feared that it would greatly
>>
>> > reduce our activity, and indeed it did. That's a very lively list,
>> with
>> > much local interest.
>> > I like the internationality of Leps list.
>> >
>> > Once TILS started their list, with a freedom to bicker, talk about
>> God,
>> > and pursue minutiae of taxons beyond the sub-species ... it drew
>> off
>> > considerable of our heat and fire. What, after all, does leps list
>> offer
>> > that TILS Leps-Talk does not also provide?
>> >
>> > Brightness falls from the air, Queens have died young and fair,
>> dust
>> > hath closed Helen's eye ...
>> >
>> > The people who responded to my query are all subscribed to TILS as
>> well.
>> > I have a sentimental fondness for the leps list, but see no reason
>> to
>> > keep it on life support if it's no longer needed.
>> >
>> > I throw this thought out in hopes that all of you will leap to its
>>
>> > defence. On list, not in private.
>> >
>> > Today I will put on plate armor and go chop nettles, in hopes that
>> my
>> > arthritis will let up a bit. Nobody has been eating them, and new,
>> fresh
>> > nettles must be provided for the second brood.
>> > Ow.
>> >
>> > Anne Kilmer
>> > Mayo, Ireland
>> >
>> >
>> > ------------------------------------------------------------
>> >
>> > For subscription and related information about LEPS-L visit:
>> >
>> > http://www.peabody.yale.edu/other/lepsl
>> >
>>
>>
>> ------------------------------------------------------------
>>
>> For subscription and related information about LEPS-L visit:
>>
>> http://www.peabody.yale.edu/other/lepsl
>>
>
> --
> Mike Soukup
> http://www.thenaturedepot.com
>
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