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Saturday, January 12th, 2008 12:43 am
I was going to talk about this a few days ago but I forgot.

The other day I was gathering up the paper for recycling and I noticed a striking thing about the sports section. There were five stories on the front page of the section. Across the top, a story about surfing (regular surfing, not big-wave surfing). Down the side, a story about the baseball hall of fame induction and a story about collegiate men's volleyball (UCSC doesn't have any big-money sports, just things like volleyball, lacrosse, and so on. Slugs rock). In the middle, with a large color picture across the fold, a story about high school women's soccer. At the bottom of the page, something about professional football -- the Forty-niners, I think, maybe about the manager. I don't actually read the sports pages. But I was just struck by what that said about our town's priorities. The surfing story was not a huge one, but it was on top where everyone could see it. The baseball and volleyball ones were over to the side where they were moderately visible (I think the baseball hall of fame one was above the UCSC one, but I'm not sure about that, and if it was, I think the second headline was right below the fold). The high school girls were plastered all over the middle of the page, and not because they were looking cute, either: they were muddy and fierce in that photo. And, even though we're coming up to Superbowl (yes, I do live in the same universe as the rest of the US, I know what Superbowl is), the football story was tucked away on the bottom where only real sports fans would bother to look for it.

When the New York Times covers the upcoming Mavericks contest they stick it in to a weirdo category they call "other sports">.

Other sports. As if there are any other sports besides surfing, really.

I am beginning to form an opinion of big-wave surfing, by the way, and I don't think I approve, overall. It's not really such a great idea, I think, to haul surfers around in jet skis and helicopters. It's sort of antithetical to what surfers are traditionally about. I don't like the idea of all that fuel being burnt and spilled out there, and I don't like the idea of hundreds of people driving around on a narrow stretch of road and clomping around on friable cliffs, stomping on a fragile and endangered shore habitat, with all the garbage that implies. I guess that makes me a spoilsport -- but no, I can't spoilt the sport by my simple disapproval.

Meanwhile, remember that thing about how Huntington Beach got a law passed that says they're the true and only "surf city" and then went about suing small shops in Santa Cruz who sold "surf city" tshirts and hats and things?

You can now get tourist crap that proclaims that Santa Cruz is too the real surf city, lawsuit notwithstanding.
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Saturday, September 30th, 2006 08:34 pm
So, I know those of you who live in less clement climes are anxiously awaiting the year's first snowfall, and those of you who live on the other other side of the world are watching your days grow longer, but around here, it's the rain we're looking out for.

The weather report says maybe showers Tuesday, to which I reply "better fucking not," because I'm with Gloria all day Tuesday and if it rains before seven-thirty I've basically missed out on the First Flush event and that would be tragic.

What else did I learn at First Flush training today? Well, there's been new ocean disease research and the implications are interesting. Toxoplasmosis is endemic in birds and rodents -- it mostly doesn't make them sick even. Any animal that eats birds and rodents sheds toxoplasmosis in its feces. Any feces that are washed over by rainfall runoff releases toxoplasmosis into that water, and the water is carried in the storm drains to the ocean, where it lives and gets picked up by ocean animals. Otters get the disease and they have seizures and other brain disorders (makes me wonder about that bad-actor otter that was raping and killing baby seals a while back). Makes me wish I had a box cat instead of an outdoors cat.

Also, red tide organisms (there are multiples) like most kinds of nutrients in the water but what they really love is urea, which gets into the bay by way of lawn fertilizer runoff and, again, mammalian excretion. Fertilizer is a big one. Also feedlot runoff, in some areas. This was tested two ways -- in vitro, with colonies in different media, and with enhanced aerial photography, which showed the red tide oranisms really concentrating in the water around the outfalls.

Remember how I said that Huntington Beach and Santa Cruz had each claimed the right to be called "Surf City?" Huntington Beach won. In court. They started the beef, they took it to court, and now that they've won . . . they've issued "cease and desist" letters to little surf shops selling t-shirts with "Santa Cruz Surf City" logos on them. Yes, they have.

Which elevates the issue from a stupid little NorCal-SoCal rivalry to another of those "property rights trumps freedom of expression" events. It makes an insignificant little bit of community marketing into a minor, but significant, attack on the first ammendment.

But how can anybody fight it? This is the same week that Congress just suspended habeas corpus.