júlí 30, 2006

Quick review

Hot damn, time can get away from me. It's like a never-ending carnival ride here. Well, not really, I just wanted to say that.

Having a bit of a nostalgia trip right now, working on cds for my sister because she's in in need of music that is 1) not Hawaiian and 2) not Lite Rock (ugh). This has prompted me to rip about 10 gigs of music that I rarely listen to anymore. Technotronic, Soft Cell, Psych Furs, Gene Loves Jezebel, Bangles, B-52s, Adam & the Ants, KLF, En Vogue, Ziggy Marley, Bob & Doug McKenzie, Meco. I even re-discovered that I had a Pseudo Echo cd for some ungodly reason. All in all, it's been fairly hilarious.

I can't bear to actually put together a coherent post yet I don't want to forget that these things happened in the last three or four months. This will make no sense to anyone but me, so you might want to move along now. These aren't the droids you're looking for.

1. New camera, Panasonic Lumix DMC_FX01, in pink. So cute, so friendly. Sudden glut of photos.
2. Awhile back, to my surprise, I won two Quango cds from properlychilled.com (a site I highly recommend). I had my choice of a few of their artists (not Kraak en Smaak, alas), so I chose Bitter Sweet and Bliss. I love Bitter Sweet. Bliss, eh, not so much. It's that kind of electronica that I think of as New Age electronica. Still, can't complain, I did get one cd I love. For free.
3. Wish list for Christmas: Nintendo Wii, Slim Devices
4. Geosense online geography game. Crude interface yet still addictive.
5. The Lost commercials. I even called one of the numbers. The call was at once hilarious and freaky.
6. Favorite commercials: GoPhone horror children, Dunkin Donuts Pleather (song by TMBG), Nextel.
7. Bazin's in Vienna, VA. Good fish dishes, desserts too sweet, way way way too loud.
8. I've become quite the bird (and squirrel) watcher lately.
9. Grizlar article, because I find bears fascinating, no matter what Stephen Colbert says.

Source: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060510.wgrizz0510/BNStory/Science/home

Grizlar a rare bear indeed

SARA MINOGUE

Canadian Press

Iqaluit, Nunavut ó Northern hunters, scientists and people with vivid imaginations have discussed the possibility for years.

But Roger Kuptana, an Inuvialuit guide from Sachs Harbour, NWT, was the first to suspect it had actually happened when he proposed that a strange-looking bear shot last month by an American sports hunter might be half polar bear, half grizzly.

Territorial officials seized the creature after noticing its white fur was scattered with brown patches and that it had the long claws and humped back of a grizzly. Now a DNA test has confirmed that it is indeed a hybrid--possibly the first documented in the wild.

"We've known it's possible, but actually most of us never thought it would happen," said Ian Stirling, a polar bear biologist with the Canadian Wildlife Service in Edmonton.

Polar bears and grizzlies have been successfully paired in zoos before--Mr. Stirling could not speculate why--and their offspring are fertile.

Breeding seasons for the two species overlap, though polar bear gets started slightly earlier.

Polar bear and grizzly territory also overlap in the Western Arctic around the Beaufort Sea, where the occasional grizzly is known to head onto the sea ice looking for food after emerging from hibernation.

Some grizzly bears make it over the ice all the way to Banks Island and Victoria Island, where they have been spotted and shot before. These bears will scavenge seals left over by polar bears.

"And some hunters have told me that they think sometimes the grizzly bears actually hunt seals, which I'm quite sure they could do," Mr. Stirling said.

That might explain how a grizzly got to the region, but few can explain how it managed to get along with a polar bear mate long enough to produce offspring.

Colin Adjun, a wildlife officer in Kugluktuk on the northern mainland in western Nunavut, said he's heard stories before about an oddly coloured bear cavorting with polar bears.

"It was a light chocolate colour along with a couple of polar bears," Mr. Adjun said.

And though people have talked about the possibility of a mix, "it hasn't happened in our area," he said.

Three years ago, a research team spotted a grizzly on Melville Island, an uninhabited island about 350 kilometres north of where Idaho sport hunter Jim Martell bagged his crossbreed.

While the latest find is a surprise, it is not necessarily another sign of climate change, said John England, a geologist who was with the team that spotted the earlier grizzly.

"If we want evidence for climate change, we don't have to go to an isolated occurrence of a grizzly bear somewhere," said Dr. England, who holds a northern research chair on environmental change in the Arctic.

"The satellite imagery showing sea ice reduction over the last 30 years is proof positive of very dramatic changes in the northern hemisphere."

The DNA results were good news for Mr. Martell, who had paid $50,000 for guides and a permit to hunt polar bear. Before the tests came back, the 65-year-old hunter was facing the possibility of a $1,000 fine and up to a year in jail for shooting a bear for which he had no permit ó as well as the disappointment of an expensive hunting trip with no trophy.

The NWT Environment and Natural Resources Department now plans to return the bear to the hunter.

( 07:52 EH | silly hooha. )