Summer has flown by. Enjoyed 2 groups of guests and our trip to Mali, and now it’s already late August.

Went to Homer a few days ago and bought a boat previously owned by famed Alaska outdoor writer Jim Reardon. Hope to get back into commercial trolling, albeit on a smaller scale, as well as an overnight boat I can take my nieces/nephews out and about, as well as for deer hunting. Boat will come across the gulf by ferry, and I’m already having buyers remorse but it’s a solid fiberglass Roberts hull and 453 Detroit Diesel. Beautiful weather in Homer, and the town is a lot larger than I remember.

We bought the boat from Ollie Morris, who was born in Barrow. His dad was a fur trader up there, and I was intrigued by all his stories. He and his wife and a friend came down for the sale. They all graduated with the legislator I used to work with in 1957 in Fairbanks, and her husband. The friend happened to be the mother-in-law of a UAF friend still in Fairbanks. Ollie and his wife Pat raised their kids near where my wife grew up. Sara was on the swim team with one son, and graduated with another. Pat was her Girl Scout leader. Alaska is such a small state. I bought the boat as much because of these relationships as what I planned to use it for.

A former boss who taught me how to fish now has highly acclaimed fish (from processors) after putting to work what I taught him – even though at the time he fought me almost all the way. I was able to get some of his fish for my customers who’ve been waiting since June for king salmon, and am sure they’ll all be happy.

Coho fishing has been decent. Ron and I caught 3 yesterday, and boy was it great for dinner last night.

Mark Stopha
Alaska Wild Salmon Company
4455 N. Douglas Hwy
Juneau, AK 99801
www.GoodSalmon.com

Summer in Mali

What a trip this has been to Mali. I brought my wife Sara and niece Aimee with my on this assignment with Winrock. Aimee has been a great traveler, never complaining about anything except the heat, which we’ve all had our fill of.

We are here at the end of the dry season, so everything is parched and most days were over a hundred degrees F. Only near the end of our trip did we get daily rains, which cools things off considerably.

We got to go to Dogon country, where people have been living along an escarpment (basically a long, steep cliff) and farming the valley below for over a thousand years, I think. Farming is somewhat advanced here. Although still done by hand, the Dogon farm the same land year after year, and everywhere we saw piles of composted organic matter in the fields, ready to be turned into the soil before planting. The Dogon also have standing relationships with the Fulani nomadic herders to bring their livestock into their fields after harvest. The cattle eat the stubble, etc. left and in the process, fertilize the fields with their manure. According to our host, the some Dogon and herder families have relationships going back generations, with the Dogon providing millet rations to the herder family when they are there in return for their cattle (cattle, goats, sheep, and donkeys) fertilizing their land. The people here can feed, clothe and house themselves
with what they have on hand, if necessary. They’ll be the last one standing, I think, if there’s some world catastrophe.

My host Bara’s home village is Borko, and we visited there first. His village is famous for the sacred crocodiles that live in a small water way there. It appears these crocs are reminants of another time, when this tiny swamp must have been connected to a larger water system during less arid times. The crocs will come up out of the small plant choked swamp to eat meat scraps from a “caller”, and right up to your feet if you have the nerve. The crocs obviously must live on something, but no one really knew what – the meat scraps are not their sole source of food. We saw 4 crocs that came right up to the footpath road in town, the largest being about 8 feet long and maybe 400 lbs. The story goes the original person who founded the town was led there by an alligator, and so the town has protected and lived with these crocs for generations. According to Bara, the crocs are not eaten, not to be mistreated, and are even buried when they die.

We then went to Sanga(h), which is an area of several villages on the edge of the cliffs described earlier. I should also mention here the hand laid coblestone roads that go in to these villages. We saw men making a road on the way in. Two rows of rock or curbed cement walls about 6 inches high line either side of a road about a car to a car and half width wide. Rock is brought into the middle, then broken up with sledge hammers. Cement is then poured over the broken rock to make a very useable, durable rural road. For being so far off the main roads, the roadway in was surprisingly good.

In Sanga, we got a guide for the day who took us by foot and with our vehicle up into the cliffs to see some of the villages. We stayed at the Guida (?) hotel in Sanga, which was very nice, with good food and even a bar. Jacques Shirac once visited Sanga, and photos commemorating the visit are in the hotel. I think the hotel cost about 60 dollars US for the three of us in one room with 3 beds with AC.

While driving back from the last village on the tour, we experienced a flash flood down pour, and even had to stop for awhile. As one of the first rains of the year, water was cascading everywhere among the rocks on the hillside we were driving down from, faster than the hard ground could absorb it. There were instant waterfalls everywhere, and you could almost see the land sigh in relief to some cool, wet rain.

Sanga has a longer history of formal tourism, and the consummate beggar boys asking for pens and candy and water bottles followed us everywhere. In Borko, with our home-town guide, we were simply greeted and allowed to watch the towns people come to and from the market day there in peace, and that in and of itself was a great day which Aimee said was one of her best days in Mali.

Sara and Aimee flew up to Tombouctou, as this had been a premier place they wanted to see for it’s history and to ride camels in the desert. Tombouctou has had numerousl warnings of kidnapping and car jacking from the state department, so we thought this trip was out. However, we met missionaries in Sevare who said it was only the drive there that was dangerous, and that the town itself was very safe and if they flew they’d have nothing to worry about. So, they went up there and then flew back to Bamako while Bara and I returned to Bamako by vehicle.

The girls found themselves as two of only 4 tourists in town when they arrived. It reached 120 degrees while they were there, and was likely higher but that’s as high as their thermometer reached. It was definitely the “off season”. They were badgered endlessly by hawkers selling overpriced jewelry and tee shirts, etc., and everything from bottled water to their guide were much higher than elsewhere in the country. Aimee also said the place didn’t “feel” safe. They did get their camel ride and see the town, but Tombouctou is not a place they’d visit again, and not a place I have a hankering to go as a destination. I may end up there on a fish assignment, and that would be fine.

My fisheries workshops this time focused on fisheries management and stock assessment – both which are lacking here and elsewhere in Africa. Most of the emphasis in governmental organizations is how to get fishermen better gear to catch more fish, but little is known about the status of the stocks they are harvesting, nor is there, in Mali at least, much in the way of enforcement of regulations banning gears such as the “catch all”, which appears to be a type of trawl with a very fine meshed cod end, such that fishermen are now going after the smallest of fish. Reports are that fish are getting smaller and smaller and catches are declining, but little in the way of reliable data exists. I’ve found in the fisheries scientific literature of methods such as measuring the flood plain area or using and edphic index measuring primary productivity, to get first order estimates of yield. However, little exists in the way of accurate harvest estimates to
assess these estimators.

I went over Alaska’s history of overfishing, limited entry to fishing, and recovery of our fish stocks, along with current management practices of gear, time, and are restrictions, and our scientific sampling programs. Like my talks on fish handling and quality control, the methods are so simple I think some in the room find it almost hard to believe we don’t have some advanced methodogical approach or other silver bullet to fisheries management. It ain’t hard, but the simple data collection like a fish ticket system to accurately measure catch, and taking length data to assess year classes and size at maturity must occur or it’s all speculation.

So, we’ll see if they can get their focused turned to fisheries management and enforcement now. It will be a steep climb.

I also found out an group called “Aquafish” is operating in Mali, and constructed a hatchery near Selingue, where we went to a national farmer field day and got to see the head of state, President Toure. We stood in the open in the sun for a couple of hours waiting for the president’s arrival, and then ended up leaving early when we saw the program would go well past expected. We didn’t get to see the hatchery as the road was closed because the president was going there after the ceremony. Still, it was a great day to see Mali dancers and singers celebrating the day, and all the children excited to see their president. Security was surprisingly light, and to me a good sign of political stability in Mali.

We again stayed with John McKinney at Macs Refuge in Sevare. He’s a great host and I could spend hours and hours listening to his stories of growing up in Mali. He was raised in Sanga, the village mentioned above, and they knew him well when we mentioned his name there. He was extremely cordial to Sara and Aimee and he made their stay there memorable. We brought over some books for reading to him, and he was very appreciative. He also allows Peace Corps volunteers to stay at his place under a voucher system, and we paid for volunteers to eat breakfast when we were there. His breakfasts of pancakes, french toast, fresh fruit, and home made jams and syrups are legendary, but on stipends of less than 10 dollars a day, even the 3 dollar or so price for breakfast is out of some of their budgets. We will look into sending over a fund to cover this small luxury to the young adults still doing it as I did 25 years ago and why I’m back over here today.

We’re on our last day now, and La La, Winrock’s accountant, is taking the girls out to see Bamako sights while Bara and I wrap up reporting. We had a good rain last night so it should be not so hot for their excursion, and a fun one with La La.

First Rain. Double the price.

06152010

Sitting on a roof enjoying the early morning breeze. It’s 80 now at 530 am, on it’s way to 100+. A boy kicks a soccer ball down the red laterite road. Herders pass through with their cattle, on their way to some scattered scrub awaiti g the first rai ns of the year. Geckos flit about and the camp dog patrols the roof wall. Very nice dog. Didn’t kn ow he could bark till this mor ing when a dog trotted byon the street below.

Mali is n the firm grip of World Cup, and I must say it is contagious. I chided my host of Cameroon’s loss to Japan. I didn’t even know Japan played soccer. He blames it on poor coaching on African teams.

Listening to the short wave like old days in the Peace |Corps. Wonder how long shortwav will last with internet now invading Africa.

Unfortunately, my wife and niece will not see Timboktu this trip. All Malians we have asked said it is not safe to go there, as bandits are kidnapping and car jacking regularly. The area is apparently becoming a no-mans land and perhaps the Malian people are somewhat stymied as to what to do. It is the edge of the Sahara, and a place few know like the bandits working there.

06162010
Work delayed again, as a Fisheries Ministry offiicial was injured in a car accident from the funeral the earlier day. The wife of the official was sent by ministry vehicle to Djenne to see her husband, and we were invited to accompany her. Djenne is located on an island between 2 rivers, and is an ancient trading center dating to B.C. times. Mud and kind-of adobe type construction with narrow walls and open waste water canals in some streets. These smelled pretty ripe in the 100+ degree heat.

Our guide took as past the famous mosque there, and told of Djenne’s origins, architecture, and down through the ages. Made me realize what a young culture the US is. The searing heat and badgering of a market lady trying to sell us jewelry over the entire tour were the only detraction, but to be expected. The heat really take s is out of you, and it the reason Sevare is alive into the early morning hours with young people socializing during the coolest part of the day.

Tiecouromanguel@gmail.com. Uncle of Amadou, our guide. Amadou’s Phone 753 323 55. Send uncle photos.

06172010
Very good day yesterday. Met with several Pedapeche officials who understand that catch reported is more than actual catch and that updated estimates are needed. When we get the workshop on, hopefully we will get somewhere. Also met the major fish buyer in Mopti who may have a gold mine of data: catch per fisherrman per landing by species. If these are daily landings, then we have a catch rate and it will be a matter of estimating effort to get to a total catch est imate. If only a catch rate, then at least an idex of abundance. I wonder how many months or years of records he may have.

While Bara bargained for gara lapas for Aimee, I bought a notebook and some soft drinks for his home to replenish what he’s been serving us. Sara and Aimee picked up the Africa clothes I ordered and managed to pay only double the quoted price in my absence. If I was still in the Peace Corps, I’d go fight for justice, but as I’m just a visitor, it’s my contribution to the local economy

Finally, the first rain of our Sevare stay. This morning it is very tolerably cool and some moisture in the air. The thermometer showed 95 as the rain began, and this morning it might even be below 80 degrees.

A Frenchman who has lived in Burkina Faso for 20 years and is a restaurant/bar owner, Jilles, is also staying at Macs Refuge. He’s here on holiday with his son, niece and nephew. We had a nice conversation last night over the last of his Iriish Whisky on world politics and his experieces living in Ouagadougo over the last 2 decades, first coming to Africa as an adventure crossing the Sahara by vehicle, and eventually marrying and settling in Burkina Faso.

Mali : Mopti day 1

Back in Mali. End of dry season and all is hot. Stayed in same hotel with a/c that didn’t work well. Stayed in Bamako 2 nights, then up country for an all day drive after which our butts were very relieved to be over. Country looks more like desert with this being dry season end.

Mangoes are in season, and hard to stop eating them. Ripe right off the tree.

Due to funeral, we just greeted de la peche people. Director Konteh won the language battle with his 2 sentence winner “How are you. I am fine. Bara and I put rods together and practiced casting in the Niger. Very low water and lots of trash and feces along river bank. Sara and Aimee went to Bara’s home for a cooking lesson with his wife and daughters. Went to Peace Corps Babas in afternoon and ordered two suits. Long nap in afternoon. 100 degrees and even with a/c still sweating in bed.

First of the season

Hooter hunting ends tomorrow, and king salmon are just starting to show up. I caught one with Kurt last night near the road-side rocks that people fish from last evening. We were off the rocks a ways in the boat. The king hit hard, and then jumped 10 times or so – cartwheeling 3 feet in the air. The fishermen on the rocks sighed “ooohh” everytime the fish jumped. And we thought he’d throw the hook with every jump. We finally got him to the boat and there’s no feeling like that first king of the year. I told Kurt I always feel like it’s the last one I’ll get on and maybe never get another one. Most years I catch just a few sport fishing.

This morning I arrived a couple hours before low tide, and Jeff and Kurt (in their boat) were just netting their first king of the year. I put my two lines out. One deep with an 8 oz sinker and one near the surface with a 3 oz. I’ve been using whole herring on a trolling hook with bead chain, and getting a nice troll roll. As I was checking the deep line, the shallow line took off, and I couldn’t believe I had another one on. This one didn’t take near the time the one did last evening, and was bigger. As I told Kurt, I think I take more care getting the fish tired before I try netting it when I’m alone than I do when I have a person on the net. I got this one in the net the first try. I called my coach from Bolivar, who left a few days ago, and said he’ll have to come for 2 weeks next year.

Tonight we’ve invited half the town, it seems, over for a salmon cookout. It’s in the high 50’s, and we’ll be happy if the rain holds off as forecast till late tonight so we can use the deck I built last year.

Mark Stopha
Alaska Wild Salmon Company
4455 N. Douglas Hwy
Juneau, AK 99801
www.GoodSalmon.com

Last Great Hate

The don’t ask, don’t tell in the military has reared its ugly head again. I call this the last great hate. Used to be whites hated minorities because they looked/talked/ate/acted different from them. Then, guys like Michael Jordan, Willie Stargell, Richard Pryor, Tiger Woods, all the great Latino baseball players, etc. came along. 24 hour television also brought the races and cultures closer together, and so even though there still seems to be a strong undercurrent of racism seen in the venom spewed at President O’bama, all races seem to be able to unite under the last great hate: homosexuality. Right wing, independent, and religious zealtots who want the government out of their lives, do want the government in their bedrooms. Or at least their neighbor’s bedroom. They’ve decided we can agree we can join hands with other races and cultures and unite to hate gay people whereever they may be. I might beat my kids and evade taxes and cheat on my
wife, but at least I’m not gay.

Gotta Stop Health Care
So I looked at what was passed for the health care bill, and scratch my head at all the venom and hate directed towards it, the Democrats and the President. “Government forcing me to buy a policy?” Where’s all the uproar for repeal of government laws requiring auto insurance if you drive? Never hear a peep about that. What about government required FDIC insurance for bank accounts? Or government required unemployment insurance premiums?

Why would people who are insured NOT want everyone to be insured? Do they think we aren’t already paying for those who are not insured? Of course we are. Hospitals aren’t going to turn away someone for lack of means to pay. They make up for it by charging more to us who can. I’ve seen nowhere that premiums for most of the uninsured will be free – only that they may be subsidized. These folks will not be getting free health care LIKE THEY ARE NOW!! However, I do believe it remains to be seen if the system will work from the get go. I understand that premiums will be based on age, so those much older may have much higher premiums, and I’ll wait to see if that part works out or has to be changed. I also have to see if I’m missing other things. What I hear from our Republicans is the bill is “too expensive” or “too much government interference” – one of which, at least, also voted for the Patriot Act when he wasn’t lobbying for new roads in
Florida. Our Democratic Senator only said the bill is needed to address the health care issues. Neither side gives much detail for or against the bill, just broad maxims.

I don’t ever remember this kind of venom from the right during the Clinton years, and think it has more to do with having a young, black president than it does with policy issues. Sarah Palin’s rise to popularity through name calling, with little in the way of specifics of contention in the bills, seems to exemplify the intellect of her followers. And the Texas politician who yelled “baby killer” in Congress, yet was a big backer of the war in Iraq and didn’t have a problem killing tens of thousands of innocent babies and women and children in carpet bombing in Iraq.

And how many people against health care have a clue about how much we’ve spent on the Iraq and Afghanistan war. Isn’t this, according to them, for our national security so there is no price too high to pay? To me, this amounts to “National Health Care”, since I assume they equate security with not being killed ourselves.

Student Aid
It never fails to amaze me how politicians can screw things up. In such a landmark bill like the health care bill, why would the Democrats put in a rider? Now this part of the bill is providing more political hay because it’s causing the corrective bill to have to go back to the House with changes, all because there’s a problem with the student aid rider. This rider practice is always screamed about by both sides but always used by both sides, as money always talks louder than words.

Clinton sorry again.
I rarely hear Dems say much bad about Clinton, but here he is again apologizing for something that clearly was a mistake at the time. I read in the paper today he said his policy of dropping tariffs to countries like Haiti so his Arkansas farmer’s rice could go there more cheaply was a mistake. Seems Haitian farmers quit growing rice, and now the country can’t come close to feeding itself. This has been America’s broken policy not just in Haiti, but places like Sierra Leone, too – begun long before Clinton, and known long before Clinton to be detrimental to developing country food independence and local farmer well-being. Bring in US imports of cheaper rice – many times right at the same time the local rice is coming to harvest – and drive down the price of rice so the farmers are discouraged from growing more for sale. In Salone, they could turn to other cash crops like coffee and cocoa, which aren’t going to do much for them nutritionally.
Clinton has also apologized for not doing anything in the massacre in Burundi in Africa – even after all intelligence told he and Madaline Albright that the shit was about to hit the fan. Tens of thousands died by machete, and all they could do was go back decades later, lay a wreath, and say “whoopsi!”. I’m still reaching for what he or his wife did do well, or why I would trust him now in Haiti. It’s not unlike Al Gore, who was all against signing on to the Geneva Summit on reducing carbon emissions when he was vice president, yet after he was done suddenly finds God in global warming.

ANWR and Caribou

A friend asked the other day about oil development in ANWR. I told him my opinions on both sides of the issue, including how the Porcupine Herd is different than the smaller herds that occupy Prudhoe Bay and western Alaska. Unlike these increasing herds, the Porcupine herd is much larger – over 100,000 animals – and has been declining for unknown reasons in recent years. I’ve not checked recent numbers, so perhaps the population has stabilized. I do remember it had dropped from 150,000 to 125,000 or less animals. This herd uses eastern Alaska and Western Canada for it’s range. The part it uses in Alaska in ANWR is a place where the mountains bow northward, on a plain about 50 miles from the ocean to the mountains. I realized yesterday as I was on my rounds that what I was looking at WAS that bow. I’d always thought the mountains looked closer here than in Prudhoe Bay, and realized I was located right on the western boundary of ANWR, and so was
looking at the very topography I had only looked at on topographic maps before. From where I sat in my truck to the base of the mountains seemed even closer when I thought about a herd of 100,000 or more animals using that plain to calve. It certainly would be a sight, perhaps not unlike the buffalo in the west before they were killed off. Anyway, it gave me pause for thought as to what, if any, impact oil development might have there – maybe a pipeline from a drilling pad and nothing else might not bother the herd, or would it? It surely seems that directional drilling, where the actual drilling and oil extraction would be done outside the refuge with a pipe drilled down, and then sideways under the refuge, would be much less of an impact, yet defenders of the refuge were staunchly against this, too, last time I heard.

It’s March 26 today, with blowing snow and a temperature slightly below zero – it was -7 when we checked at 515 am this morning. Visibility is down to being measured in yards, so no travel is allowed unless you’re part of a 2 or more vehicle convoy, and I’m sitting tight in my truck in the camp parking lot and monitoring my radio in case anyone needs me. Seems like winter is hanging on longer than I’d guess it would, as the temperature has only been above zero once, I think, over the past 12 days I’ve been here. But many days have been sun and more sun and just beautiful weather looking out over the coastal plain to the Brooks Range. I’ve seen an arctic fox and a few ravens this hitch, but that’s it for animal sightings.

Mark Stopha
Alaska Wild Salmon Company
4455 N. Douglas Hwy
Juneau, AK 99801
www.GoodSalmon.com