texascavers Digest 20 Aug 2012 15:00:16 -0000 Issue 1611

2012-08-20 Thread texascavers-digest-help

texascavers Digest 20 Aug 2012 15:00:16 - Issue 1611

Topics (messages 20553 through 20561):

Re: off topic - retirement
20553 by: Bill Walden

Re: Oregon does too have significant cave life
20554 by: Louise Power

Calling Mike Bradley
20555 by: Heather Tucek

San Antonio bat question..
20556 by: Ted Samsel

that spider
20557 by: Sam Young

Kiwi Sink dig
20558 by: Ernest Garza

Looking for a new caving vehicle?
20559 by: Louise Power
20560 by: Ted Samsel
20561 by: Don Cooper

Administrivia:

To subscribe to the digest, e-mail:
texascavers-digest-subscr...@texascavers.com

To unsubscribe from the digest, e-mail:
texascavers-digest-unsubscr...@texascavers.com

To post to the list, e-mail:
texascavers@texascavers.com


--
---BeginMessage---

Logan,

Congratulations on your retirement!

I predict that within a year or perhaps two that you will be involved in 
volunteer work and projects to the extent that you will wonder how you 
ever found the time to have a real job!


Enjoy your retirement.

Bill Walden




On 08/17/2012 01:56 PM, Logan McNatt wrote:
I retired from Texas Parks and Wildlife Department on August 15th, 
after 18+ years of working there (1972-1976 part-time; 1996-2012).  If 
you have my TPWD work email address and phone #, please be sure to 
delete them from your address book/contacts. They don't work anymore 
(like me, for now).


I've sent evites to some of you for my retirement party, but know that 
I've missed a lot of you who will want to come. It will be a mix of 
cavers, archeologists, TPWD folks, and other friends.  So here's the info:


Saturday August 25th, 2012  5:30 to 11:30 p.m.
Zilker Clubhouse  west of Zilker Park and Loop 1/Mopac, off 
Rollingwood Drive 
http://www.mapquest.com/maps?address=200%20Zilker%20Clubhouse%20Rdcity=Austinstate=TXzipcode=78746

beer, music, fire-dancer, champion kite flyer provided
potluck

Here's how my new life of retirement is going so far.

_Day 1_: Calendar says SLEEP LATE, DO ABSOLUTELY NOTHING.
5:30 a.m.  woke up
6:00 a.m. to 12:00 midnight  on computer and phone answering messages 
most of day; wash dishes; feeble attempts to clean house;  put tarp on 
roof to last until roofers come on Aug 28th;


_Day 2_   Calendar says SLEEP LATE, DO ABSOLUTELY NOTHING
9:00 a.m.  woke up, making rapid progress in adjusting to new lifestyle

Onward Through the Fog,

LowGun
4419 Clawson Rd
Austin, TX  78745-1039
512-462-9581



---End Message---
---BeginMessage---

It was even on local TV last nite. Robin Snider, the wildlife biologist who 
permitted the study, is a friend of mine in our office. She's on my bat 
information list for things on my e-mail list and other sites that may be of 
interest to local BLM and FS wildlifers. I was happy to read that they're 
keeping the cave names and locations a secret.

Date: Sat, 18 Aug 2012 06:26:42 -0500
Subject: Re: [Texascavers] Oregon does too have significant cave life
From: t.b.sam...@gmail.com
To: power_lou...@hotmail.com
CC: texascavers@texascavers.com

I heard another bit about this on BBC last night on my way to the Home Brewers 
meeting..

Ted

On Fri, Aug 17, 2012 at 4:31 PM, Louise Power power_lou...@hotmail.com wrote:





Entirely new family of arachnids was discovered south of Grants Pass area

 



A new family of spiders, called Trogloraptor marchingtoni, has been discovered 
in caves south of Grants Pass. They are about the size of a 50-cent piece. 
Photo courtesy Joel Ledford, California Academy of the SciencesJoel Ledford, 
Calif Academy Of T

 
August 17, 2012 


By Paul Fattig

Mail Tribune
 
Arachnophobes beware: A new family of spiders has been discovered in two caves 
south of Grants Pass.

The new species of Josephine County cave-dwelling arachnid has been given the 
scientific moniker of Trogloraptor marchingtoni in honor of Neil Marchington, a 
self-taught biologist and spelunker who helped bring the caves and its 
eight-legged residents to the attention of the scientific community.

It's exciting to be part of a whole new discovery of spiders, said 
Marchington, 31, of Bend, the son of retired Medford teachers Scott 
Marchington, now of La Pine, and Sally Marchington of Medford.

It's remarkable, really amazing, to think you were in a group that discovered 
an undiscovered species in the Grants Pass area, added Neil Marchington, a 
deputy sheriff in Deschutes County when he isn't spelunking.

Marchington is a member of the Western Cave Conservancy who, along with 
graduate student Tracy Audisio of San Francisco State University and others, 
helped bring attention to the spider. Dead specimens were collected in 2010, 
followed by live samples last year.

We think this is a pretty historic moment in arachnology, said entomologist 
Charles Griswold, 61, an internationally known spider expert at the California 
Academy

texascavers Digest 20 Aug 2012 15:00:16 -0000 Issue 1611

2012-08-20 Thread texascavers-digest-help

texascavers Digest 20 Aug 2012 15:00:16 - Issue 1611

Topics (messages 20553 through 20561):

Re: off topic - retirement
20553 by: Bill Walden

Re: Oregon does too have significant cave life
20554 by: Louise Power

Calling Mike Bradley
20555 by: Heather Tucek

San Antonio bat question..
20556 by: Ted Samsel

that spider
20557 by: Sam Young

Kiwi Sink dig
20558 by: Ernest Garza

Looking for a new caving vehicle?
20559 by: Louise Power
20560 by: Ted Samsel
20561 by: Don Cooper

Administrivia:

To subscribe to the digest, e-mail:
texascavers-digest-subscr...@texascavers.com

To unsubscribe from the digest, e-mail:
texascavers-digest-unsubscr...@texascavers.com

To post to the list, e-mail:
texascavers@texascavers.com


--
---BeginMessage---

Logan,

Congratulations on your retirement!

I predict that within a year or perhaps two that you will be involved in 
volunteer work and projects to the extent that you will wonder how you 
ever found the time to have a real job!


Enjoy your retirement.

Bill Walden




On 08/17/2012 01:56 PM, Logan McNatt wrote:
I retired from Texas Parks and Wildlife Department on August 15th, 
after 18+ years of working there (1972-1976 part-time; 1996-2012).  If 
you have my TPWD work email address and phone #, please be sure to 
delete them from your address book/contacts. They don't work anymore 
(like me, for now).


I've sent evites to some of you for my retirement party, but know that 
I've missed a lot of you who will want to come. It will be a mix of 
cavers, archeologists, TPWD folks, and other friends.  So here's the info:


Saturday August 25th, 2012  5:30 to 11:30 p.m.
Zilker Clubhouse  west of Zilker Park and Loop 1/Mopac, off 
Rollingwood Drive 
http://www.mapquest.com/maps?address=200%20Zilker%20Clubhouse%20Rdcity=Austinstate=TXzipcode=78746

beer, music, fire-dancer, champion kite flyer provided
potluck

Here's how my new life of retirement is going so far.

_Day 1_: Calendar says SLEEP LATE, DO ABSOLUTELY NOTHING.
5:30 a.m.  woke up
6:00 a.m. to 12:00 midnight  on computer and phone answering messages 
most of day; wash dishes; feeble attempts to clean house;  put tarp on 
roof to last until roofers come on Aug 28th;


_Day 2_   Calendar says SLEEP LATE, DO ABSOLUTELY NOTHING
9:00 a.m.  woke up, making rapid progress in adjusting to new lifestyle

Onward Through the Fog,

LowGun
4419 Clawson Rd
Austin, TX  78745-1039
512-462-9581



---End Message---
---BeginMessage---

It was even on local TV last nite. Robin Snider, the wildlife biologist who 
permitted the study, is a friend of mine in our office. She's on my bat 
information list for things on my e-mail list and other sites that may be of 
interest to local BLM and FS wildlifers. I was happy to read that they're 
keeping the cave names and locations a secret.

List-Post: texascavers@texascavers.com
Date: Sat, 18 Aug 2012 06:26:42 -0500
Subject: Re: [Texascavers] Oregon does too have significant cave life
From: t.b.sam...@gmail.com
To: power_lou...@hotmail.com
CC: texascavers@texascavers.com

I heard another bit about this on BBC last night on my way to the Home Brewers 
meeting..

Ted

On Fri, Aug 17, 2012 at 4:31 PM, Louise Power power_lou...@hotmail.com wrote:





Entirely new family of arachnids was discovered south of Grants Pass area

 



A new family of spiders, called Trogloraptor marchingtoni, has been discovered 
in caves south of Grants Pass. They are about the size of a 50-cent piece. 
Photo courtesy Joel Ledford, California Academy of the SciencesJoel Ledford, 
Calif Academy Of T

 
August 17, 2012 


By Paul Fattig

Mail Tribune
 
Arachnophobes beware: A new family of spiders has been discovered in two caves 
south of Grants Pass.

The new species of Josephine County cave-dwelling arachnid has been given the 
scientific moniker of Trogloraptor marchingtoni in honor of Neil Marchington, a 
self-taught biologist and spelunker who helped bring the caves and its 
eight-legged residents to the attention of the scientific community.

It's exciting to be part of a whole new discovery of spiders, said 
Marchington, 31, of Bend, the son of retired Medford teachers Scott 
Marchington, now of La Pine, and Sally Marchington of Medford.

It's remarkable, really amazing, to think you were in a group that discovered 
an undiscovered species in the Grants Pass area, added Neil Marchington, a 
deputy sheriff in Deschutes County when he isn't spelunking.

Marchington is a member of the Western Cave Conservancy who, along with 
graduate student Tracy Audisio of San Francisco State University and others, 
helped bring attention to the spider. Dead specimens were collected in 2010, 
followed by live samples last year.

We think this is a pretty historic moment in arachnology, said entomologist 
Charles Griswold, 61, an internationally known spider

texascavers Digest 20 Aug 2012 15:00:16 -0000 Issue 1611

2012-08-20 Thread texascavers-digest-help

texascavers Digest 20 Aug 2012 15:00:16 - Issue 1611

Topics (messages 20553 through 20561):

Re: off topic - retirement
20553 by: Bill Walden

Re: Oregon does too have significant cave life
20554 by: Louise Power

Calling Mike Bradley
20555 by: Heather Tucek

San Antonio bat question..
20556 by: Ted Samsel

that spider
20557 by: Sam Young

Kiwi Sink dig
20558 by: Ernest Garza

Looking for a new caving vehicle?
20559 by: Louise Power
20560 by: Ted Samsel
20561 by: Don Cooper

Administrivia:

To subscribe to the digest, e-mail:
texascavers-digest-subscr...@texascavers.com

To unsubscribe from the digest, e-mail:
texascavers-digest-unsubscr...@texascavers.com

To post to the list, e-mail:
texascavers@texascavers.com


--
---BeginMessage---

Logan,

Congratulations on your retirement!

I predict that within a year or perhaps two that you will be involved in 
volunteer work and projects to the extent that you will wonder how you 
ever found the time to have a real job!


Enjoy your retirement.

Bill Walden




On 08/17/2012 01:56 PM, Logan McNatt wrote:
I retired from Texas Parks and Wildlife Department on August 15th, 
after 18+ years of working there (1972-1976 part-time; 1996-2012).  If 
you have my TPWD work email address and phone #, please be sure to 
delete them from your address book/contacts. They don't work anymore 
(like me, for now).


I've sent evites to some of you for my retirement party, but know that 
I've missed a lot of you who will want to come. It will be a mix of 
cavers, archeologists, TPWD folks, and other friends.  So here's the info:


Saturday August 25th, 2012  5:30 to 11:30 p.m.
Zilker Clubhouse  west of Zilker Park and Loop 1/Mopac, off 
Rollingwood Drive 
http://www.mapquest.com/maps?address=200%20Zilker%20Clubhouse%20Rdcity=Austinstate=TXzipcode=78746

beer, music, fire-dancer, champion kite flyer provided
potluck

Here's how my new life of retirement is going so far.

_Day 1_: Calendar says SLEEP LATE, DO ABSOLUTELY NOTHING.
5:30 a.m.  woke up
6:00 a.m. to 12:00 midnight  on computer and phone answering messages 
most of day; wash dishes; feeble attempts to clean house;  put tarp on 
roof to last until roofers come on Aug 28th;


_Day 2_   Calendar says SLEEP LATE, DO ABSOLUTELY NOTHING
9:00 a.m.  woke up, making rapid progress in adjusting to new lifestyle

Onward Through the Fog,

LowGun
4419 Clawson Rd
Austin, TX  78745-1039
512-462-9581



---End Message---
---BeginMessage---

It was even on local TV last nite. Robin Snider, the wildlife biologist who 
permitted the study, is a friend of mine in our office. She's on my bat 
information list for things on my e-mail list and other sites that may be of 
interest to local BLM and FS wildlifers. I was happy to read that they're 
keeping the cave names and locations a secret.

List-Post: texascavers@texascavers.com
Date: Sat, 18 Aug 2012 06:26:42 -0500
Subject: Re: [Texascavers] Oregon does too have significant cave life
From: t.b.sam...@gmail.com
To: power_lou...@hotmail.com
CC: texascavers@texascavers.com

I heard another bit about this on BBC last night on my way to the Home Brewers 
meeting..

Ted

On Fri, Aug 17, 2012 at 4:31 PM, Louise Power power_lou...@hotmail.com wrote:





Entirely new family of arachnids was discovered south of Grants Pass area

 



A new family of spiders, called Trogloraptor marchingtoni, has been discovered 
in caves south of Grants Pass. They are about the size of a 50-cent piece. 
Photo courtesy Joel Ledford, California Academy of the SciencesJoel Ledford, 
Calif Academy Of T

 
August 17, 2012 


By Paul Fattig

Mail Tribune
 
Arachnophobes beware: A new family of spiders has been discovered in two caves 
south of Grants Pass.

The new species of Josephine County cave-dwelling arachnid has been given the 
scientific moniker of Trogloraptor marchingtoni in honor of Neil Marchington, a 
self-taught biologist and spelunker who helped bring the caves and its 
eight-legged residents to the attention of the scientific community.

It's exciting to be part of a whole new discovery of spiders, said 
Marchington, 31, of Bend, the son of retired Medford teachers Scott 
Marchington, now of La Pine, and Sally Marchington of Medford.

It's remarkable, really amazing, to think you were in a group that discovered 
an undiscovered species in the Grants Pass area, added Neil Marchington, a 
deputy sheriff in Deschutes County when he isn't spelunking.

Marchington is a member of the Western Cave Conservancy who, along with 
graduate student Tracy Audisio of San Francisco State University and others, 
helped bring attention to the spider. Dead specimens were collected in 2010, 
followed by live samples last year.

We think this is a pretty historic moment in arachnology, said entomologist 
Charles Griswold, 61, an internationally known spider