Wyatt Hoopers 2011

Q/1 Fastest Time in Class. Dummerston, VT August 13, 2011

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Agility Results

We had a good day. Only went 2 for 6 for qualifying but we had a good day. I took Wyatt back for contacts in Regular 2 and Touch and Go to make sure he was doing what he was supposed to do. He had one of his classic dogwalk jump offs on the second obstacle of the day, which I have seen before. I think he is pretty pumped up the first run. We qualified in Regular 1 and had a very nice Hoopers run, getting first and the fastest time in Elite, all heights. We did not get Chances. I felt good about the run but I was not smooth enough and he stopped on a pinwheel jump go out. I must have pulled back or stopped on him. I ran Jumpers but he was running around jumps so I think it was too much for the end of the day. Jumpers is first tommorrow before Chances so I am trying to decide whether to scratch and have him primed for Chances or to run Jumpers and take the edge off. I am thinking I will run Jumpers but exit the course if he appears to be sore.

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What Makes A Great Agility Run?

I have been noticing that when you are in the midst of a great agility run, the biggest difference is that there is more time and space. What I mean by that is that you don’t feel overly rushed and your sense of space is large, you don’t feel cramped and you can see both the individual obstacles and the whole course. On the hand, when things go wrong, you feel rushed for time, you feel that you can’t attend to everything (dog, you, course, your plan) all at once, and you feel cramped for space. I really don’t know why this is. Part of it seems to be chance but there does seem to be a relaxation factor.

What do you think?

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Letter to Conway Conservation Commision

7/30/2011

Dear Conservation Commission Member,

I recently went for a bushwhack hike in Conway. I started in the Town Forest hardwood section, which was selectively cut recently. This was after spending about an hour cleaning up the landing area, which was become a popular spot for teenage parties and subsequent littering. As I walked through the Town Forest, right near the Conway State Forest line, I was struck by the difference in the 2 areas. The CSF was clear of underbrush, slash (1), with stumps from previous logging deteriorating and little hemlock saplings growing up on them.

The Town Forest, on the other hand, was very difficult to walk through due to masses of brambles and slash everywhere. Fresh stumps littered the landscape. I eventually went into the CSF because of the tough goings and better look and feel of the CSF. I recalled times where I bushwhacked through old growth section of forest in Savoy. Even more than the CSF, the forest is very open with huge, majestic trees dominating the landscape. Soon the CSF could look like the Town Forest if the DCR designation is not changed. They say the forest recovers but it only recovers to be logged again. Ceasing logging operations will allow us to see an forest only managed by nature and not man.

It became very clear to me that we have the opportunity right now to create old growth forest in Conway for the people of Conway and our visitors. We have a huge and wonderful forest in our back yard. Much of it is open to logging. But we have the chance to create a small part of it (1700 acres of some 13000 acres) as a very special forest.

The DCR’s computer models take into account the proximity to non-Conway sawmills, easy access for logging trucks on scenic Cricket Hill Road, potential benefits to the Northampton water supply (though creating reserves also helps watershed protection according the DCR document but not the computer models.) But their models, while acknowledging the ecological importance of the CSF, do not take into account the whole forest and surrounding wetlands and the continued impact of logging on Cricket Hill Road and Conway residents.

I hope you will join me in creating a very special forest in Conway and permanently protecting a small piece of this forest forever regardless of political winds, changing forestry personnel, and fluctuating demand for forest products.

Sincerely,

John Heffernan

(1) I realize that if you do logging, there are ecological benefits to leaving slash piles. Also, you do see some mountain laurel patches in the CSF.

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Help Protect the Conway State Forest

Please write to the address below with your own letter of use this as a sample. The deadline is August 26, 2011.

John Heffernan
99 North Hill Drive
Conway, MA 01341

7/27/2011

DCR Designation Comments
designation.comments@state.ma.us
Department of Conservation and Recreation
251 Causeway Street, Suite 900
Boston, MA 02114-2104

Dear Sir or Madam:

I urge the DCR to change the designation of the Conway State Forest (CSF) from Woodland to Reserve for the following reasons. Mr. William Hill and Mr. Paul Lyons, of the DCR, were kind enough to recently attend a Conway Conservation Committee and share the GIS map developed for the CSF. I believe the Designation Process to be a significant and positive step forward for the DCR. However, this new information caused me to write a second letter concerning the CSF specifically since it was not available at the time of my first letter.

1. The DCR should preserve the heart (1758 acres) of this very large forested area. It is part of a 9000 acres forest if you define it as being bounded by paved roads. That figure could be increased by 50% (13500 acres) if you consider the border as state highways and other major roads. Mass DEP, using the Massachusetts Conservation Assessment and Prioritization System (CAPS) as a tool to trigger detailed review under the Wetland Protection Act, has designated the CSF as a “Habitat of Potential Regional or Statewide Importance” [http://www.umass.edu/landeco/research/caps/data/dep/dep.html#maps]. The CAPS system itself designates much of the CSF at its highest level of ecological integrity [http://www.umass.edu/landeco/research/caps/data/iei/iei.html#Maps].
2. This land can be used to recreate old growth; logging is still allowed all around the CSF. We should provide a balance in this large forest of managed and unmanaged areas. Those of us that have been in old growth forest, for example, in the Savoy area or in the Western states, know firsthand the special spiritual, ecological, and aesthetic value of such lands.

3. We are hopeful that the DCR will be improving its management practices as shown in the Water and Soil Resource Guidelines section of the document. However, we favor permanent protection of this area since changes in DCR personnel, states politics, and DCR funding can change over time. I am concerned that the DCR state forester responsible for the area is still in place. He refused to move a problem plagued (with petrochemical spills) landing in a recent Conway Town Farm logging project and referred the spills as “so-called oil spills” despite the lab report , numerous photographs, and acknowledgment of the town’s forester of the issues. The improved guidelines are also just that and do not appear to regulations at this time. Also, there is no apparent restriction on placing landings close to wetland systems and no requirement that spills less than 10 gallons be remediated. Though DCR claims logging is good for water supplies, logging operations have posed a risk to Deerfield, Conway, and Northampton water supplies in the past with numerous petrochemical spills within 50 feet and uphill from a wetland system that is part of the Town of Deerfield watershed. The DCR itself, states that [reserves have ] “the dominant ecosystem service objectives are biodiversity maintenance and the underlying supporting services of nutrient cycling and soil formation, watershed protection [my emphasis], and long-term carbon sequestration; important secondary services include provision of wilderness/spiritual values and recreation.” At this time, we have no guarantee that the same landing will not be reused with the oil spills coming to the surface again, as occurred during the subsequent ice storm salvage operation at the Conway Town Farm.

4. Designation results in less land available for forestry. This may produce additional pressure to heavily log the CSF with a change in administration, economic need, or renewed biomass activity. It will alter the landscape for years to come and cause noise, traffic, and pollution and it loses money for the taxpayer, according the MA Forest Watch. Though local wood production is an admirable goal, much of our local logged wood goes to Quebec.

5. It appears that the high Woodlands rating for CSF is due to proximity to sawmills, access to roads, and proximity to Northampton and Deerfield water supply lands. Besides the fact that DCR itself lists Reserves as having a high value for watershed protection (was this not reflected in the computer models?), I feel that ecological needs are more important in this case for this special area. The CSF rated very high for biodiversity and plants and animals. It rated low for wetlands in the Reserve model. However, it is readily apparent from walking the area or looking at a topographical map, that there are huge wetland systems adjacent to the CSF, most notably on the Cowls Lumber property. The rating as medium for contiguous forest block must not have taken into account all the adjacent forest and private and protected land. DCR models should have taken into account adjacent areas.

6. Cricket Hill residents have experienced many logging operations during the last 10 years (Deane Lee – 2, Joanie Schwartz – 2, Town Farm-2). We all need wood but haven’t Cricket Hill and Conway residents done their part? No one at the DCR looks at the big picture of the combined logging operations and their impact on a particular area such as Cricket Hill Road, a historic and special area, that has been highlighted as such, with the DCR Deane Lee Trust Conservation Restriction.

7. It appears that a Reserve designation will not change traditional recreation uses and the maintenance of existing trails. We support traditional uses of the CSF, including dirt bikes and ATVs, of which the latter may be looked at the future by the DCR.

Sincerely,

John S Heffernan

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Distance Discrimination Challenges

I only have an A Frame in the yard and use it for distance discrimination as part of a larger course all the time. Wyatt and I have gotten good when the tunnel is on the outside of the A-Frame. I can cue him to the outer tunnel by cueing early and often. I can also cue him to the inner A Frame by using an RFP from a distance and again cueing early. When the tunnel is on the inside, it is much harder to get the outside A-Frame from any kind of distance. Kind of a puzzle to me as to why this is so much harder.

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Whippet Annual Ad 2010

Wyatt and Patriot - Still Going Strong

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Social Media and Blogging

It’s getting complicated!  Now that I am using Twitter, Google+, and FaceBook and have work and home identities, I want to be able to automatically share new blog entries (I have work and home blogs too) without duplicating too much.  I set up my WordPress blogs with a little widget that has TW, G+, and FB buttons.  The TW and FB ones work great but don’t go to work and home identities.  The G+ one does not seem to work.  I use Networking Blogs on FaceBook too but that now is creating duplicates so I need to take that out I guess.  Anyone have a nice clean solution?

 

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2 Chances in One Weekend!

I was very pleased that Wyatt and I earned 2 NADAC Chances qualifying legs (Qs) this weekend!  We went 0 to 5 this year so far but had many near Qs.   I was getting discouraged that we could ever earned a NADAC championship (NATCH) since we needed 8 more and were getting so few.  We passed the half way mark and now need 6 more.  What seemed to be working was me both keeping the next thing in mind as well as the present position while maintaining contact and communication with Wyatt.  Saturday was a traditional looking course with a send out to tunnel/dogwalk discrimination (tunnel was the course) a turn around/switch send back out to the dogwalk with a hoop after the dogwalk and then turning back to me and the line.  No problems with that course.  Sometimes we have trouble getting down to the bottom of the dogwalk at a distance and/or getting the next jump/hoop after that since he stops on the contact.

Sunday was unusual with a send out to a bunch of jumps with a tempting off course tunnel straight ahead with the course turning back over the line.  Then you had to send the dog back across the line and to a little 1/2 pinwheel (again with the other end of the tunnel very tempting) and out at a distance back to some weaves and the final hoop.  Again, I seemed to do all the right things until the send back over the line when I said “tunnel” when I meant jump.  Luckily, he stopped in confusion and I was able to send him to the correct tunnel from standstill.

Very happy!  There is hope!

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Help Protect the Conway State Forest

The Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation has proposed the designation of the Conway State Forest as Woodland.  Woodlands will be managed for lumber extraction.  Parklands will be managed primarily for recreation.  Reserves will be unmanaged by people.  We are interested in upgrading the designation of the Conway State Forest to preserve this important and sensitive resource.  No designation will change the existing recreation use of the land, according to the DCR, with the exception that the use of off road vehicles (not snowmobiles) may be examined in the future.  Note that the Conway Conservation is currently examining this issue.

If you agree, there is a template letter (below), which you can modify and/or sign and send to:

Designation.comments@state.ma.us (DCR)

Stephen.Kulik@mahouse.gov (Representative Stephen Kulik)

Benjamin.Downing@masenate.gov (Senator Benjamin Downing)

jeswald@verizon.net (Peter Jeswald, Chair of Conway Conservation Commission)

28 June 2011

 

Department of Conservation and Recreation
251 Causeway Street, Suite 900
Boston, MA 02114-2104

 

Dear Sirs/Madams,

I am writing with comments on the landscape designation process with regard to the designation of the Conway State Forest (CSF) as a Woodland.  I feel that the Conway State Forest should be changed to a Reserve or Parkland designation for the following reasons.

The Conway State Forest is a rich, diverse bio-system.  The DCR recognized this in granting a Conservation Restriction to the adjacent Deane Lee Trust, saying that the land is “an excellent wildlife habitat, […] wet meadows, and upland forest.”  Also, the CSF is part of a very large protected area consisting of the CSF, Cowls Lumber land, Town of Conway land, Northampton Water Authority Land, and State Wildlife Management land.  It makes sense to protect the heart of the large area as much as possible and manage it for biodiversity and not for economic lumber extraction reasons.  The CSF (36 /100 km2) is an important bear habitat, with even greater density than the Savoy Hawley/Mohawk Trail State Forest (29/100 km 2), parts of which have received Reserve/Parkland status. [Fuller 1993 Thesis, University of Massachusetts].

Mass DEP, using the Massachusetts Conservation Assessment and Prioritization System (CAPS) as a tool to trigger detailed review under the Wetland Protection Act, has designated the CSF as a “Habitat of Potential Regional or Statewide Importance” [http://www.umass.edu/landeco/research/caps/data/dep/dep.html#maps].  The CAPS system itself designates much of the CSF at its highest level of ecological integrity [http://www.umass.edu/landeco/research/caps/data/iei/iei.html#Maps].

Designating this area for woodland management, as opposed to habitat and water supply protection, will undermine the value of this important and unusual resource.  It makes sense to protect the heart of this large forest area as a reserve to create old growth forest.  Because of its interconnection with many other sensitive areas, including watershed protection lands for three municipalities, it is inappropriate for the woodland designation.

Sincerely,

 

[Insert your name and address here]

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