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Letters: January-March 2005

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From our readers

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California Agriculture 59(1):4-4.

Published January 01, 2005

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“Crabbing” about Cal Ag cover

The October-December 2004 issue of California Agriculture is, as usual, very interesting and informative, particularly the Dungeness crab articles.

Your cover picture, however, does not depict Dungeness crab fishing. More likely the photo is of a snow crab boat — in Alaska or maybe even the Bering Sea! Nevertheless, it is a beautiful, dramatic photo. Just looking at it gives me a bit of motion sickness.

The scene is familiar to me. I did my Ph.D. research at the College of Fisheries and the Institute for Food Science at the University of Washington in Seattle. To carry out the study I spent many weeks at sea going from Puget Sound as far as the Gulf of Alaska. Most of my time was spent aboard a small research vessel converted from a trawler. (I almost had my legs cut off by a snapped winch cable that whipped across the deck.)

I have enjoyed reading California Agriculture over the years. The topics covered are broad and the articles are consistently well written and informative. Your publication is particularly important to me since I have retired and have become a fruit grower — still learning, growing great fruits, trying to make a buck or two and having a lot of fun.

John G. Chan

Hilo, Hawaii

WHAT DO YOU THINK?

The editorial staff of California Agriculture welcomes your letters, comments and suggestions. Please write to us at calag@ucop.edu or 1111 Franklin St., 6th fl., Oakland, CA 94607. Include your full name and address. Letters may be edited for space and clarity.

Editor's response: Thank you for your interest in California Agriculture — and for your correct observation regarding the October-December 2004 cover.

We located this stock photo after searching for an illustration depicting the dangerous conditions at sea when the race for crab begins. However, the agency providing this photo had not documented the identity of the crab. We established its identity as snow crab and immediately corrected the omission on our Web site.

Donation to Amazon research institute

You will be pleased to learn that a shipment of 50 years of California Agriculture magazines (from 1954 to present) has been received by the Institute Nacional de Pesquisas de Amazonia (INPA) in Manaus, Brazil. Several years ago, I met Dr. Rosalee Coelho Netto at a conference and decided to donate my personal library of phytopathology resources to the institute, which had very little reference literature in its library. I arranged to ship the California Agriculture magazines, as well as several decades of Plant Disease, Phytopathology and a small library of agricultural manuals. The crate arrived in good order at the Manaus port in April, but was held up at the docks by a worker strike until August. Finally, all matters were worked out and the shipment is now in the hands of the receiver library.

Franklin Laemmlen, with his shipment of 5 decades of California Agriculture magazines and other research materials; Rosalee Coelho Netto receiving the shipment for the Institute Nacional de Pesquisas de Amazonia in Manaus, Brazil.

Franklin Laemmlen, with his shipment of 5 decades of California Agriculture magazines and other research materials; Rosalee Coelho Netto receiving the shipment for the Institute Nacional de Pesquisas de Amazonia in Manaus, Brazil.

In a letter, Dr. Netto of INPA wrote: “The books and journals will be a wonderful and important resource for INPA students and researchers.” The acting director of INPA, Edinaldo Nelson dos Santos Silva, added, “Your act enriched our library and will help to enlarge the knowledge of our students, professors, researchers and scholars of the Amazonia region.”

Franklin Laemmlen

County Director & Farm Advisor Santa Barbara County

Editor's response: We are gratified to learn of your donation, and impressed that your perseverance paid off. Because your collection ended in 2004, California Agriculture has provided a free subscription to the institute's library (international subscribers normally pay $24 annually to defray postage and handling costs).

Editor's note

We gratefully acknowledge the efforts of those who contributed to the publication of this special issue on alternatives to organophosphate insecticides: Robert A. Van Steenwyk, Cooperative Extension Entomologist at UC Berkeley, and Frank G. Zalom, Cooperative Extension Entomologist at UC Davis, who served as co-chairs; California Agriculture associate editor Timothy D. Paine, Professor and Entomologist at UC Riverside, who oversaw the peer review of manuscripts; and the California Department of Food and Agriculture, which partially funded this issue of the magazine.

New look for nameplate

With this issue, the California Agriculture name-plate on the front cover takes on a new look. While using the same typeface, we have slightly enlarged the print and placed it on one line, without italics. We believe this makes it visually stronger and clearer, while increasing flexibility in cover design.

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Letters: January-March 2005

Webmaster Email: sjosterman@ucanr.edu

Letters: January-March 2005

Share using any of the popular social networks Share by sending an email Print article
Share using any of the popular social networks Share by sending an email Print article

Authors

From our readers

Publication Information

California Agriculture 59(1):4-4.

Published January 01, 2005

PDF  |  Citation  |  Permissions

Full text

“Crabbing” about Cal Ag cover

The October-December 2004 issue of California Agriculture is, as usual, very interesting and informative, particularly the Dungeness crab articles.

Your cover picture, however, does not depict Dungeness crab fishing. More likely the photo is of a snow crab boat — in Alaska or maybe even the Bering Sea! Nevertheless, it is a beautiful, dramatic photo. Just looking at it gives me a bit of motion sickness.

The scene is familiar to me. I did my Ph.D. research at the College of Fisheries and the Institute for Food Science at the University of Washington in Seattle. To carry out the study I spent many weeks at sea going from Puget Sound as far as the Gulf of Alaska. Most of my time was spent aboard a small research vessel converted from a trawler. (I almost had my legs cut off by a snapped winch cable that whipped across the deck.)

I have enjoyed reading California Agriculture over the years. The topics covered are broad and the articles are consistently well written and informative. Your publication is particularly important to me since I have retired and have become a fruit grower — still learning, growing great fruits, trying to make a buck or two and having a lot of fun.

John G. Chan

Hilo, Hawaii

WHAT DO YOU THINK?

The editorial staff of California Agriculture welcomes your letters, comments and suggestions. Please write to us at calag@ucop.edu or 1111 Franklin St., 6th fl., Oakland, CA 94607. Include your full name and address. Letters may be edited for space and clarity.

Editor's response: Thank you for your interest in California Agriculture — and for your correct observation regarding the October-December 2004 cover.

We located this stock photo after searching for an illustration depicting the dangerous conditions at sea when the race for crab begins. However, the agency providing this photo had not documented the identity of the crab. We established its identity as snow crab and immediately corrected the omission on our Web site.

Donation to Amazon research institute

You will be pleased to learn that a shipment of 50 years of California Agriculture magazines (from 1954 to present) has been received by the Institute Nacional de Pesquisas de Amazonia (INPA) in Manaus, Brazil. Several years ago, I met Dr. Rosalee Coelho Netto at a conference and decided to donate my personal library of phytopathology resources to the institute, which had very little reference literature in its library. I arranged to ship the California Agriculture magazines, as well as several decades of Plant Disease, Phytopathology and a small library of agricultural manuals. The crate arrived in good order at the Manaus port in April, but was held up at the docks by a worker strike until August. Finally, all matters were worked out and the shipment is now in the hands of the receiver library.

Franklin Laemmlen, with his shipment of 5 decades of California Agriculture magazines and other research materials; Rosalee Coelho Netto receiving the shipment for the Institute Nacional de Pesquisas de Amazonia in Manaus, Brazil.

Franklin Laemmlen, with his shipment of 5 decades of California Agriculture magazines and other research materials; Rosalee Coelho Netto receiving the shipment for the Institute Nacional de Pesquisas de Amazonia in Manaus, Brazil.

In a letter, Dr. Netto of INPA wrote: “The books and journals will be a wonderful and important resource for INPA students and researchers.” The acting director of INPA, Edinaldo Nelson dos Santos Silva, added, “Your act enriched our library and will help to enlarge the knowledge of our students, professors, researchers and scholars of the Amazonia region.”

Franklin Laemmlen

County Director & Farm Advisor Santa Barbara County

Editor's response: We are gratified to learn of your donation, and impressed that your perseverance paid off. Because your collection ended in 2004, California Agriculture has provided a free subscription to the institute's library (international subscribers normally pay $24 annually to defray postage and handling costs).

Editor's note

We gratefully acknowledge the efforts of those who contributed to the publication of this special issue on alternatives to organophosphate insecticides: Robert A. Van Steenwyk, Cooperative Extension Entomologist at UC Berkeley, and Frank G. Zalom, Cooperative Extension Entomologist at UC Davis, who served as co-chairs; California Agriculture associate editor Timothy D. Paine, Professor and Entomologist at UC Riverside, who oversaw the peer review of manuscripts; and the California Department of Food and Agriculture, which partially funded this issue of the magazine.

New look for nameplate

With this issue, the California Agriculture name-plate on the front cover takes on a new look. While using the same typeface, we have slightly enlarged the print and placed it on one line, without italics. We believe this makes it visually stronger and clearer, while increasing flexibility in cover design.

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