April 26 – weekend in the Marble Mountain Wilderness. Salmon River. 29 types of pines, firs, spruces, junipers, cedars. Dozens of birds, dutifully recorded by fellow Batesie Brandon Breen. Bacon duly cooked. Quietness you only get after following a winding river deeper into the forest for three hours. Hiking for 7 hours and only getting one inch into the wilderness (on a map, at least). Tiny towns on the river forgotten by time, since they were built in a boom time that lasted barely 50 years, over 150 years ago. The timber, gold and fish are either long gone or well protected. Hot pine tar heating up on a 97 degree, completely dry day. Emerald streams 50 degree water splashing on smooth rocks. I heard there are salmon hiding in there somewhere. Lots of snow left. Slippery, hard, granular, melting spring snow. Its hard to hike on. The trail signs are mossy, weathered by tough winds and hard snows. Not maintained. This whole area seems like humans already came and went. 

Read more about the on-site “mobile workshops” of sustainability-in-action projects in Hong Kong. This is from last week’s Pacific Cities Sustainability Initiative Forum, a project I manage at the Asia Society of Northern California. Follow this link to read more about a tour of public space revitalization in Wanchai, a new high rise LEED Building (Hysan Place- pictured above), and how the Asia Society’s Hong Kong Center integrated old military infrastructure into a modern, cantilevered new building. 

Hong Kong February 2013 – First Day; wandering around town. Fresh fish (and razor clams in rubber bands!; stray cats, high rises; and more. Wan Chai, Western, Causeway Bay.