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Great Lakes Restoration Initiative Feedback

Tuesday, August 31st, 2010

Here are my recommendations to the GLRI folks.  You can give them your ideas at http://greatlakesrestoration.us

  • Construct wetlands to filter run-off and address water quality issues from urban and agricultural areas.  Use remediated brownfield sites where possible.
  • Develop and implement a comprehensive restoration plan for coaster brook trout throughout their historical range (not just Lake Superior).
  • Thoroughly regulate the practice of Hydraulic Fracturing in minerals extraction to eliminate both water quality and withdraw quantity issues, and to protect the public’s health, safety and property.
  • Work to prohibit metallic sulfide mining near waters tributary to the great lakes.  The lakes have no buffering capabilities and leachate washing into the lakes will have devastating effects.
  • Develop ballast water discharge and invasive species regulations with real teeth. Develop comprehensive control and eradication plans for invasive alien species in the great lakes.  Yes this is a huge job and will cost well into the billions of dollars.  Shoulda regulated ballast water and planned for invasion through the Welland canal.  Too late to go back and do that, and we do not accept “Woops!”  as an acceptable response.  RESTORE the lakes.  Don’t just work on them, FIX THEM!

I don’t know if anybody is going to read these things, or if they are like the old cartoon of the office suggestion box with a pretty sign and mail-slot on one side of the wall and a paper shredder on the other.

It is such a joke that they are making all this hoopla about a couple hundred million dollars when the task will run into the hundreds of BILLIONS at the least.  (Too bad the Great Lakes aren’t as important as Iraq to the well being of our nation, eh?)

If the federal government were a dog owner and the Lakes their dog, it would be as if they refused to feed us or take us to the vet, let us suffer with poisonings and parasites of all kinds, kicked us whenever they felt like it, and let their friends treat us as poorly as they pleased.  Then they throw us a Milk Bone from time to time and expect us to be satisfied and the ASPCA to leave them alone.

What jerks.

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WTF?* Hydraulic Fracturing in Antrim Shale will impact water resources

Friday, March 19th, 2010

(*What the Frack?  Research indicates that you have to use some variant of this pun in any discussion of the topic.  Sorry.)

There has been a lot of interest lately in the implications of increased use of hydraulic fracturing technology in gas and oil bearing shales to enable extraction of stocks of gas or oil that are not recoverable by conventional means.  First, what is hydraulic fracturing?

A really good introduction (with some industry and scientific jargon) is a paper written by ALL Consulting of Tulsa, OK.  In part, they say that-

The process of hydraulic fracturing as typically used for shale gas development involves the pumping of tens of thousands of barrels of sand laden water into the target shale zone. Fluids pumped into the shale creates fractures or openings through which the sand flows, at the same time the sand acts to prop open the fractures that have been created. Once the pumping of fluids has stopped the sand remains in place allowing fluids (both gas and water) to flow back to the wellbore.

A quicker overview was made by an intern from Cornell University in this PowerPoint presentation on fracking for the Broome County, NY county health department.

While we need natural gas, we also need clean water, and must protect our surface and ground water from both pollution and depletion as oil and gas reserves are extracted.  This presents challenges everywhere you might drill a well, and there are some particular implications for drilling in the Antrim shales in northern Michigan.  These challenges are made all the more difficult because fracking fluids are specifically exempted from the Safe Drinking Water Act, at the urging of (wait for it!) VP Cheney!!  What a shock, huh?

In a February 18, 2010   memo to Energy & Environment sub-committee members of the House Committee on Energy and Commerce, Chairman Henry A. Waxman and Subcommittee Chairman Edward J. Markey point out some of their concerns with fracking, including the exemption from EPA oversight.

In 2005, Congress exempted hydraulic fracturing from regulation under the SDWA as part of the Energy Policy Act.18 Many dubbed this provision the “Halliburton loophole” because of Halliburton’s ties to then-Vice President Cheney and its role as one of the largest providers of hydraulic fracturing services. Specifically, Congress modified the definition of “underground injection” to exclude “the underground injection of fluids or propping agents (other than diesel fuels) pursuant to hydraulic fracturing operations related to oil, gas, or geothermal production activities.” As a result of this exemption, EPA cannot use the SDWA to regulate hydraulic fracturing unless it can show the use of diesel fuels.

Environmental groups, public health officials, and communities across the country have raised other concerns about hydraulic fracturing, beyond potential impacts on drinking water. In Texas, state regulators are responding to tests showing high levels of benzene in the air near wells in the Barnett Shale gas fields. In Pennsylvania, state regulators are facing a new challenge of how to ensure proper disposal of the millions of gallons of wastewater generated from natural gas development in the Marcellus Shale. In New York, the state Department of Environmental Conservation analyzed wastewater extracted from wells and found levels of radium-226 as high as 267 times the limit safe for discharge into the environment and thousands of times the limit safe for people to drink. Others have raised concerns about water scarcity, since the drilling and hydraulic fracturing of a horizontal shale gas well may require 2 to 4 million gallons of water.

This is a big issue when it comes to water here in Michigan.  Most gas bearing shales don’t produce as much water as the Antrim “play” during extraction, in part because the Antrim formation is shallow, only 200 feet below the surface in some areas, and less than 2500 feet everywhere.  Most other gas bearing shale formations are thousands or tens of thousands of feet below the surface.  The Antrim is already naturally fractured to a good extent, yet still needs additional fracking.  And fracking isn’t a one and done procedure.  It will need to be re-fracked several times to keep production up, and with the water present in the formation it probably won’t hit peak production volumes for a year or more after fracking, while the fracking fluids and the natural water, bearing a variety of chemicals and NORMs (Naturally Occuring Radioactive Materials), are pumped out to allow the gas to flow.  All of this water has to be treated, which means hundreds or thousands of trips over the surrounding roads with big tank trucks, or pipelines.  Municipal water treatment plants aren’t set up to deal with this type of pollution (and in the case of fracking fluids, they won’t even know exactly what is there due to “trade secrets”) so often drillers seek to inject the polluted water deep underground and forget about it.  Doesn’t sound like a good idea to me.  Recycling and re-use sounds better, and would lessen the demands on local water supplies (aquifers, streams, lakes) as well.

And the demand on local water resources will be phenomenal.  Horizontal bore fracking uses lots of water, as was pointed out in the congressional memo above.  According to the Michigan Public Service Commission web site there were 9700 producing wells in the Antrim play in 2008.  If we add just a few thousand that aren’t producing, but will with fracking we can easily imagine 10,000 wells working at a time.  If they all are fracked every few years, to the tune of 4 million gallons of water each time, we are talking about a whole lot of water that won’t be available to drinking wells, irrigation wells, rivers, streams and lakes.

The area’s major river is the Jordan, Michigan’s first wild and scenic river.  According to the USGS, the 40 year average mean daily flow in East Jordan ranges from 218 cubic feet per second in April to 171 cfs during July and August.  My back-of-an-envelope math translates that into about 14.77 million cfs/day.  One cfs = 7.48 gallons per second.  That’s about 110.5 million gallons per day (if my math is good.  YMMV.)  So fracking 27 wells would use the equivalent of all the water that flows through the town of East Jordan in a day.  Fracking 10,000 wells would use more water than flows through the river in East Jordan in a year.

And that is each time they are fracked, and we know that they will need to be given repeated treatments to keep the gas flowing.

We need natural gas.  But in northern Michigan, we need abundant, clean, cold, water more.  Pollute that water, or seriously reduce the volume available, and our regional ecology, quality of life, and our number one industry, tourism suffer proportionally.

Until we have rock solid rules and procedures in place to safely monitor and regulate hydraulic fracturing, it isn’t a practice we should accept.  Until we have assurances that our water resources won’t suffer, either through pollution from extracted water and fracking fluids or excessive de-watering of our aquifers and surface waters, hydraulic fracturing is a gamble we can’t afford to take.

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Industrial Disease

Wednesday, January 20th, 2010

In  a piece titled, The attack of the killer everything, the BBC’s Richard Black makes a pretty good case for the world-wide decline in amphibians and bees being linked to the piling on of environmental stress including lack of habitat, food, and perhaps most interesting, diversity.

Bee & Butterfly

So its not just humans who are not eating properly, not using sunblock, exposed to toxic chemicals in our air and water, and living in environments that we were not adapted to emotionally and psychologically.

This unhealthy environment is cause for concern, and one reaction to it has been the rise of the “Smart Growth” movement.  Over at the Huffington Post, Seth Bauer interviewed one of the deans of Smart Growth, Architect Andres Duany, who has written a new book titled, appropriately enough, The Smart Growth Manual. From the article:

Duany began by identifying three concurrent crises that he traced directly to the American lifestyle: Peak oil (the likelihood that we’ve already consumed more than half the planet’s petroleum in barely 100 years), the housing bubble, and global climate change. “It’s where we live, the size of our houses, the distances we drive for work, commerce, play–everything.”

And there’s a brutal irony to our long record of poor choices, Duany says: Other countries are emulating it. As they become wealthier per capita, it’s the American lifestyle that they aspire to, the one that has undermined our health, our social engagement, and our environment. He laughs. “In some ways, it’s our only chance,” he says, of staying on top. “We can ruin China by making extremely unpleasant places for them.” What justifies density is urbanism, he says. “You give up your back yard for street life. But they’re getting neither. They’re getting Tyson’s Corner.”

The solution for all of us is to make choices for land use based on good science, not what is expedient or produces the highest short-term gain.  So,  “The solutions to this oversized, expensive, and planet-killing misery, Duany says, are simple, obvious, and nearly impossible to implement.”

I know how tiring it can get to keep hearing this, and it does seem that we’ve been saying it for years, but the need for more environmental education among all peoples is critical to initiating any needed changes.  There is probably a majority of people who don’t see a problem if we lose amphibians and bees all together.  They don’t know what they are “good for.”  We are at Earth Day +40 years, and though we have made gains, we still have far to go, and it’s getting late.

By allowing biological diversity to continue to diminish we are rushing toward a day when our planet won’t be able to support us.  But relying on enlightened self interest fails to take into account the “what good is it?” argument.  We must reach that point where frogs, bees, bluebells and brown trout have standing and are seen as legitimate stakeholders.  Because right now we are treating the planet like almost all empires have treated indigenous peoples.  They aren’t like me, they don’t vote, they have something I want, they have to go.  But we do this at our peril.

A great illustration of this is the new movie “Avatar.”  If you haven’t seen it yet, go!  Or rent the disc when it comes out and watch it with an awareness that it is a warning against our specie’s ignorance and avarice that rings true.

We need to start a foundation and a telethon to find a cure for Industrial Disease before it’s too late.

JP

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MDNR to accept angler input on “Gear Restrictions” for trout streams

Monday, January 18th, 2010

If you have ever complained about the DNR’s management of cold water fisheries here is your chance to tell them what you would like them to do in the way of changing fishing regulations for your favorite stream.

Fly Fisherman

From the DNR’s website here’s the introduction.  The whole document can be read as a .pdf by clicking the link at the top.  (Joe Heywood’s blog has a much longer document from the DNR, with more detail and history.  It isn’t available on the DNR website any longer, or they changed the url but not the links.)

FO – 213.04
CRITERIA FOR SELECTION OF TROUT STREAMS
WITH GEAR RESTRICTION REGULATIONS
Under the authority of Section 48701(m), as amended, being Sections 324.48701(m) of the Michigan Compiled Laws, the Director of the Department of Natural Resources on November 7, 2003, ordered that this criteria be adopted and used in the selection of gear restricted trout streams.
Introduction
Michigan can boast of 36,000 miles of rivers, streams and creeks, of which over 12,000 miles harbor
significant populations of trout. In the early 1950’s, Dr. Albert Hazzard, well-known fisheries researcher and then head of Michigan’s Institute for Fisheries Research, inventoried these trout streams and identified those that were “the best” and suitable for “flies only” regulations. To qualify, the streams needed to have strong, self-sustaining trout populations, have good insect hatches, and be wadeable and wide enough to permit flycasting.  Hazzard found approximately 1,200 miles that met these criteria.
Prior to 2002, fisheries managers were restricted to 100 miles of trout streams on which gear restrictions could be applied. The restriction, contained in PA 451 of 1994, had been in place for many years, dating back to the early 1970s. This changed in 2002 when PA 434 went into effect. Among other provisions, PA 434 increased the number of available miles from 100 to 212 and mandated that the Department prepare a set of criteria to evaluate potential streams for application of gear restriction regulations. This document fulfills that obligation and provides a process and a set of criteria that will be used to 1) evaluate existing waters in stream Types 5, 6, and 7 and 2) evaluate potential streams for inclusion in one of the three available gear-restricted categories.
The information presented here was developed as a tool for fisheries managers to use in the evaluation of trout streams, and to help decide whether gear restriction regulations may be appropriate on those streams.
By design, biological and physical conditions of the streams form the basis of the criteria. However, it is
clearly recognized that other aspects such as social, geographical and even political issues must be
considered prior to making a final decision on a particular waterway. Those involved with the development of the criteria understood that it was important to set up strict enough guidelines to narrow the scope of potential/satisfactory streams, while still allowing managers some flexibility in their decision making.

The arbitrary number of 212 river miles was set, so I’ve been told, because a state legislator got all pissy about not being able to let his kids dunk worms in flies only water.  Another reason to get the legislature out of setting fish and game rules, including license fees, IMO.  Gear restrictions should be implemented where they make the most sense,  along 2 miles or 2000 miles of river.

Me, I like my rivers managed for natural reproduction of whatever lives there best.  Water too warm for trout?  Grow smallies.  Don’t throw good money after bad by stocking fish we know are gonna die in August.  Sheesh!  Who’s stupid idea was that?

I also want them managed for BIG fish, and lots of them.  Based on science, of course.  But all things being equal, BIG, wild, fish.  Native is better, but I’m afraid that ship sailed years ago.  We should get serious about coaster brookie restortion (in fact, watch here for a series of pieces on Coasters in the near future.) in any stream where they’ll grow.  I can hear certain fisheries managers whining that coasters didn’t live in all of the streams tributary to the Great Lakes where they can grow today.  Tough.  Browns, rainbows and salmon didn’t live in any of them until we stocked them.  Get over it.

To make your comments to the DNR, e-mail them at     dnr-gearrestricted@michigan.govbefore February 5, 2010.

According to MITU the DNR would like you to be as specific as possible in stating the stretch of river you are proposing by using landmarks, GPS coordinates, etc.

As always, I’d love to hear your thoughts on this.

Tight Lines!

JP

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Aliens are living among us!!

Saturday, December 12th, 2009

The following is a letter I received in response to a letter I sent to Senator Carl Levin (D – MI) some time back.  In fact, I wrote before eDNA evidence from the Asian carp was found above the electric barrier.

Thank you for contacting me regarding the electric dispersal barriers in the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal. I appreciate hearing your thoughts on this matter.


The Great Lakes are one of our nation’s greatest natural resources. Ensuring the protection and clean-up of this treasure and Michigan’s others waterways has long been one of my top priorities. As co-chair of the Senate Great Lakes Task Force, I have worked with other senators and representatives from the region to promote legislation and policies that protect the Great Lakes from various threats.


I have long been concerned about the threat posed to the Great Lakes by invasive species, such as Asian carp. These species are introduced from other ecosystems and often encounter few, if any, natural enemies in their new environments and wreak havoc on native species.


In an effort to address this issue, I cosponsored the National Invasive Species Act of 1996 (P.L. 104-332). This law authorized the Army Corps of Engineers to build a temporary dispersal barrier (Barrier I) in the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal to stop invasive species from entering Lake Michigan. Along with the other members of the Great Lakes Task Force, I have made repeated efforts to fund and to authorize the Army Corps to complete and enhance the dispersal barriers in the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal.


Asian carp have been found in the Des Plaines River, which runs extremely close to the Chicago Sanitary and Ship Canal (CSSC), north of the dispersal barriers. When flooding occurs, Asian carp could be carried over by floodwaters into the CSSC. The Army Corps of Engineers has identified six areas where flooding from the Des Plaines River is most likely to flow into the CSSC, which would allow the carp to bypass the barrier. Additionally, the Illinois and Michigan Canal (IMC) can provide a bypass for the Asian carp. The Army Corps of Engineers speculates that they can fill the IMC with dirt to mitigate this bypass of the dispersal barrier.


On October 21, 2009, the Fiscal Year 2010 Senate Energy and Water Appropriations Act was signed into law. This law includes language, which I supported, to authorize the Army Corps of Engineers to draft an Interim Report and to implement its findings on how to address this bypass threat. The Interim Report is part of a broader Efficacy Study that will examine larger, longer term improvements to the barrier project. The final Efficacy Study will include recommendations for optimal operations of the dispersal barriers and permanent efforts to prevent the passage of such invasive species through the CSSC.


Invasive species in the Great Lakes are an ecological, economical and health threat. I will continue to work to ensure that the threat of invasive species is reduced. Thank you again for writing.


Sincerely,
Carl Levin


Last week a group of wildlife management agencies forming the Asian Carp Rapid Response Workgroup ( No, really!  That’s what they are called!) poured rotenone into the CSSC while the electric barrier was down for maintenance and killed a bunch of fish, but only one Asian carp, a Bighead.  For more background on the official efforts to control Asian Carp go to asiancarp.org .

According to The Great Lakes Commission, “Since the 1800s, more than 160 nonindigenous aquatic nuisance species (ANS) have invaded the ecosystem from around the world, causing severe economic and ecological impacts.”

This doesn’t include species that are alien but aren’t considered by most authorities to be invasive nuisances, like brown and rainbow trout, or Pacific and Atlantic salmon.  (We should really ask the whitefish, Menomonee, Coaster Brook Trout, and Lake Trout about that one.  I mean, biomass is biomass, right?  And while we’re on this topic I will throw in the obligatory mea culpa reference to Europeans being the worst alien invasive species ever to hit the American continents.  We displaced the native populations of humans and brought all manner of plants, animals and diseases with us from the old country to displace the Native American flora and fauna.  We’re territorial, filthy, aggressive, arrogant, and breed like bunnies.  And as if that wasn’t bad enough, we drug Africans and Asians over to help us screw things up faster than we could by working alone. We make rotten neighbors, by all accounts.)

I was a child during the 1960s not a “child of the ‘60s,” but I remember the energy of the decade and the belief that it was not only possible to change the world, but inevitable.  Like Billy Joel said,

We didn’t start the fire
It was always burning
Since the world’s been turning
We didn’t start the fire
No we didn’t light it
But we tried to fight it.

Have we stopped even trying to fight this problem?  When did we become so complacent, and why?  Senator Levin points out what he has tried to do and what he has accomplished.  As much as I appreciate the Senator’s hard work, it seems to me to be too little and too late.  The Army Corp is going to prepare a study, when an ecological nuke is hundreds of yards from Lake Michigan?  Seems to me it’s time to get righteously indignant, draw a line in the sand and shout, “ENOUGH!”

Apparently we don’t learn too good here in the heartland.  The Asian carp, sea lamprey, zebra mussels, Viral Hemorrhagic Septicemia, the spiny water flea, Purple loosestrife and the other 150-some plagues to our Great Lakes were mostly preventable.  They weren’t prevented because short-term financial gain trumps long-term ecological health.  And it is going to continue to trump the health of our local, regional and global environment until we find a way to change the game by getting a vast majority of people to get really pissed and demand change from our elected officials and to refuse to take “no” or “later” for an answer.  Until we are able to make the corporations and individuals responsible for these ecological catastrophes liable for their crimes and cause them to fear financial ruin and prison.  Today not only is there no down-side to this biological pollution, it’s accepted as the price of progress in many circles.  While there are some laws on the books enforcement is problematic at best, and the penalties are woefully inadequate.

This must change, and soon.  History shows us that there will always be another Asian carp or Emerald Ash Borer.  We are spending billions of dollars fighting preventable problems instead of on restoring our Great Lakes.  I have to believe that if we piled all the financial gain of a few companies and individuals on one side and all of the costs of fighting this scourge on the other the costs to the many would dwarf the gain of the few.

Putting out a fire is never easy.  It is even harder when new hot spots keep popping up all around you.  But that doesn’t mean you quit trying.

Like my friend the Lorax said,

“Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot, nothing is going to get better.  It’s not.”


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What Climate Change May Mean for the Great Lakes

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

Sean Hannity notwithstanding, we have a real problem coming down the pike if we don’t get a handle on CO2 emissions.  I won’t even pretend to legitimize the climate change deniers by arguing about this.  The vast majority of the scientific community agrees on this, you can read to your heart’s content at the International Panel for Climate Change web site.

(I think these deniers are the same poor bastards who maintain that smoking cigarettes isn’t bad for their health, and even if it is they are going to continue to smoke just ’cause the government tells them they shouldn’t.  That’s showing those evil govenment health advocates!!)

I was just reading on Crain’s Chicago Business that Chicago and the surrounding region are going to be suffering a serious water shortage in a couple years as their population increases, and they are already pulling 85% of the water from Lake Michigan that they are allowed by a 1967 Supreme Court decree.  Somehow I don’t see Chicago (or anyone else who has squandered their own water, including the desert southwest) not trying to figure out how to get more water from the Lakes.  So I decided to do some research into how climate change is projected to impact the Great Lakes.  Since there may be more designs on our water, I was interested to see how much water and of what quality we may be fighting over.

As it happens, the EPA has already been doing some modeling and has several pages of content on their web site.  Here is a sample:

Possible Water Resource Impacts in North America

In general, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC, 2007) concludes that climate change will strain many of North America’s water resources, increasing the competition for water. A warmer climate will affect the seasonable availability of water by increasing evaporation and reducing snowpacks. The Columbia River and other heavily used water systems of western North America are expected to be particularly vulnerable. Groundwater-based systems in the Southwest are also likely to be stressed by climate change. Heavier precipitation will very likely increase waterborne diseases and affect water quality, and higher variability of precipitation will make water management more difficult.

Great Lakes

The states surrounding the Great Lakes are heavily populated. Variations in lake levels and flows would affect hydropower, shipping, tourism and recreation, municipalities, shoreline structures, and human health.

  • Possible lake-level declines
  • Reduced hydropower production; reduced channel depths for shipping
  • Decreases in lake ice extent – some years without ice cover
  • Changes in phytoplankton/zooplankton biomass, northward migration of fish species, possible loss of coldwater species in certain areas
  • Declines in water quality

They go on to say on another page devoted to U.S. Regions that while they are still in the process of studying this, they have some  “illustrative examples of some of the higher likelihood effects of climate change in different parts of the United States (IPCC, 2007):. . . .”

The part that relates to the Great Lakes is not without some up-side if you are growing grain, but water to irrigate may be a problem.

In the Midwest and Great Lakes:

  • Lowered lake and river levels, resulting from warmer temperatures and increased evaporation, impact recreation and shipping
  • Warming lake and river temperatures leading to reductions in many fish stocks
  • Decrease in water quality leading to habitat loss and eutrophication
  • Increased agricultural productivity in many regions resulting from increased carbon dioxide and warmer temperatures

Well that doesn’t sound good, does it?  Particularly the parts about hotter summers, warmer winters,  lower lake levels, habitat loss, reduction of cold water fish stocks, and the decline of water quality.  That pretty much destroys all the reasons that I like to live up here!

Well, the good news is that this hasn’t happened, YET.  If we get off of our collective duffs and can get our hired help in Washington to get off of their collective duffs we can change how much CO2 we are dumping into the athmosphere as a society, and of course we can all reduce our carbon footprint on a local level with some thought and changes in our habits.  We need tougher air quality standards,  tough climate change legislation and we need to get on-board with the rest of the world at the Climate summit in Copenhagen this December.  If we fail to act now we are screwed, plain and simple.  We have seen this bearing down on us for a long time (sorta like the end of cheap oil) and have ignored it or just paid it lip service.  The time has come for action or we may have to add trout fishing to pheasant hunting as something we remember fondly  but won’t see again in our lifetimes.  I can’t accept that, and you shouldn’t either!

October 24th is the International Day of Climate Action, visit the web site of  350.org, the folks who are promoting it.

This is too important to trust that “somebody” is taking care of it.  Talk about what we stand to lose with your elected officials, your family, hell, anybody who you can corner for 3 minutes.

Mark Twain wrote, “Twenty years from now, you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn’t do than by the ones you did do.”

Don’t let this be one of those disappointments.  It’s not a story you want to have to tell your grandchildren.

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