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#1
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![]() Things get done by people who: 1. Know what needs to be done. 2. Have an inclination/reason to get it done. 3. Can command the necessary resources (money/labor/space/materials/ etc.) to get it done. 4. Have the requisite experience/expertise/knowledge/tools to get it done. 5. Have the time to get it done. 6. Can stay focused long enough and/or often enough to get it done. 7. Have the requisite authority/permission to get it done.....or do it anyway. It has been my good fortune to know a good few such people off and on throughout my life. They have been a constant source of inspiration and admiration. I have also been fortunate in actually being such a person (admittedly by sheer happenstance and on a modest scale) on rare occasions. The latter, I think, gives one an even greater appreciation of those who do it regularly and with evident ease. In the last year and a half, it has been my great good fortune to meet a few folks who routinely get things done, and done well, with appallingly evident ease. And it happened again.....in spades.....these last three days. It started last weekend when Larry reminded me of the impending visit of three heavy hitters from a major university in Michigan who were scheduled to visit the tree farm. Larry graciously refrained from telling me that three bodies and three beds would preclude yet another invasion by the erstwhile tree farmer from Milwaukee. He said I could stay at the condo in La Crosse. I refrained from expressing my horror at the suggestion of sleeping in a condo in La Crosse. I said I would tent it at the tree farm. He was horrified at the thought of anyone sleeping out in the....the.....well.....under the....um.....stars and ****.....with all the animals and dew and bugs and.....etc. I suggested that, having survived similar experiences on numerous occasions in the past, the odds were even (or perhaps even better) that I could do so again. The proposition was never tested, the experiment was never conducted. The heavens opened up on Wednesday evening.....angel pee everywhere.....in short, it started raining early in the evening. I slept on the floor.....with the dog. Though small and of dubious aroma, she is warm and affectionate. But that is beside the point, I suppose. By then, the biologists had arrived, a late supper of steak and baked potatoes, with a side salad and lots of good beer (about as good as boy could come up with fast and easy at 9:00 p.m.), had been consumed, introductions and CV had been exchanged, something vaguely resembling a plan for the morning had been sketched, refined, and ratified, and much storytelling had transpired, replete with inside jokes from all and sundry which left the ins grinning or roaring with laughter and the outs nodding, smiling, and utterly bemused. Oh yeah, and a lot of biology and internal departmental politics and personalities flew in smoking hot streaks back and forth across the room. A boy is tempted to say that it was all he could do to keep up......but he didn't.....quite. Pretty close, though. Same tools (mostly), same techniques (pretty much), similar protocols (more or less), same reagents (here and there).....WAY different critters.....Dan (not his real name), a plant pathologist, tells the story of a friend who originally trained as a botanist and then moved to human physiology. You cannot imagine how EASY! human DNA is, the friend informs him. Larry and I busily knit our brows. The others (Tony and Justin.....not their real names.....from Michigan.....and Angela.....not her real name.....from the local university) smile broadly and nod wisely. Hm..... Larry leaves. Yeah, it's his place.....but there's only three beds. He's staying in the condo tonight. Dan looks at me and says (and I quote), "O.k., why are we here?" Uh oh. Ummmmm........................................ Ummmmm........................................ Angela comes to the rescue. She explains, in broad terms, the research project that her grad students Cassie and Astrid (not their real names) are engaged in, what they hope to do in the future, what Larry would like to see come of it, and what we all hope to gain from the current visitation. I (rather wisely, I think) nod vigorously, smile broadly, and strive manfully not to think of other places I'd rather be just at this moment. Discussion ensues. A provisional plan is agreed upon. We will have breakfast in the morning.....and then wait for Larry.....if he has not already arrived. I nod, slowly and deliberately, as though not entirely convinced but willing enough to abide by the apparent consensus in lieu of a better idea. In due course, morning arrives. Breakfast is designed, executed, and consumed by committee. It is surprisingly good. Larry, having not yet arrived, does not get a vote. However, arriving before the consummation is completed, he is allotted a full share and tucks in with gusto. Everybody is happy. Senta (her real name), has been visibly and unmistakably jubilant every waking moment since my arrival some 36 hours earlier. This would be an unequivocal annoyance in anyone other than a coal black schnauzer pup (the aforementioned small dog). Even so, it is starting to wear thin. Beth and Eric (their real names) arrive. Beth and Eric own a small forestry business. Not surprisingly, in the coulee country, their business sense is tempered by a rather bewildering amalgam of New Age, Hippie, Astrological, Biodynamic, Holistic, Nativist, Herbal, Pragmatic sensibilities. Beth and Eric are also old friends and sometime part time employees of Larry's. They have at least as large a stake in the current proceedings as anyone. They also have more experience on the ground in this locale than anyone but Larry himself. Beth, as Larry often proclaims, does the work of two men. Eric has bigass digger machines and a portable bandsaw mill (well, a borrowed mill, but it cuts just the same). We have, not just a quorum......we got the whole shebang! Dan says....."So?" Beth (or Angela.....I forget) says, let's go for a walk up to the orchard (the orchard comprises the newest plantings, from two to four or five years ago, and contains the trees of greatest interest to the visiting dignitaries.....for reasons that space does not permit me to go into here.) I say why don't we just all pile into the Gators and ride up? I see several nodding heads. And then I see Beth and Angela looking at me in a manner that is indescribable but with which every man who has ever known woman knows and dreads. We have the women outnumbered 3:1 (well, actually, 6:2......but, close enough). We all agree that it is a very nice day for a walk. For the next four hours we wander, in ever changing aggregates of humans and one small dog, over the eastern half of Larry's 80 acres, peering, kneeling, squatting, discussing, peeling, paring, poking, prying, questioning, answering, pondering, debating, lying prone on bellies and backs, rubbing, smelling, photographing, remembering, philosophizing, planning, collecting, discarding, theorizing, suggesting, digging, and wondering. By the time we head back downhill, everybody, including (MAINLY including) Larry, knows what we all knew before any of us arrived and the adventure began. The chestnuts are doomed.....period. Well.....ALMOST period. There's hypovirulence. Hypovirulence. There is a virus.....well, actually a tribe of viruses.....that ingest and otherwise thrive on the Cryphonectria fungus, the villain in the American chestnut drama. There are many strains of Cryphonectria, so it is a good thing that there are also many strains of the virus that attacks and weakens them. But it DOES make life complicated. As luck would have it, Larry's setup, diverse plantings, loving attention to the trees, and record keeping make his holding a textbook example of the perfect laboratory for the proposed experiment. Angela, Cassie and Astrid get the ready made lab to do with as they will. Beth, Eric, Larry, Becky and I are relieved of the responsibility of caring for the chestnuts (in fact, the policy will be strictly hands off for us.....except for clearing out the unmistakably dead). We have that much more time to devote to the butternuts (also doomed.....but that a whole nother long story.....for another time), walnuts, hazels and sundry other minor characters. Justin gets much needed samples and data for his PhD. dissertation on the evolution of Cryphonectria, Tony, ditto for his statistical analyses. Dan? Well, what Dan gets out of the deal is a bit more complicated.....and subtle. Dan is on the Castanea A-list. Dan is pretty much at the top of the Castanea A-list. There really isn't much more for Dan to get out of any of this. Dan just gets to make it happen. And it happens like this...... When we get back to the house there is much discussion about how to get the project rolling, who is going to fund it, how the funding will be managed, who will do the management, and a very LONG list of other considerations. The bottom line is that this isn't something that a bunch of people can make happen just by agreeing that it needs to happen. Fortunately, similar situations have been coming up for a long long time, and there are well developed institutions and procedures in place for dealing with them. Universities have organizational and administrative tools at their disposal for just such situations. So does the federal government. While we discuss details, ask questions, raise objections, and generally chew on a host of considerations, Larry quietly dials a phone number. A moment later the house falls quiet when Larry says hello Max (not his real name) who has worked for the Forest Service (USDA) for 35 or a hundred fifty or something years, do you know Dan? Yeah, says Max. Larry explains that a foundation is to be set up to conduct a years long intensive Cryphonectria management experiment on his property and that some startup funds will be required. He hands the phone to Dan, who reminds Max of a few long ago shared adventures of one sort or another. They laugh. Then they get down to business. It takes all of four minutes. Dan hangs up the phone. Approval must await the next application and funding cycle.....a matter of a few months. This means exactly nothing. The deal is done. The funding will appear. The work will go forward. The world has turned. So much for academic detachment from real world phenomena. So much for governmental bureaucratic inertia. That's how **** gets done. Kind of amazing. Kind of scary. g. who suspects he will somehow get no less busy. |
#2
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On Sep 12, 12:07*pm, Giles wrote:
Things get done by people who: 1. * * *Know what needs to be done. 2. * * *Have an inclination/reason to get it done. 3. * * *Can command the necessary resources (money/labor/space/materials/ etc.) to get it done. 4. * * *Have the requisite experience/expertise/knowledge/tools to get it done. 5. * * *Have the time to get it done. 6. * * *Can stay focused long enough and/or often enough to get it done. 7. * * *Have the requisite authority/permission to get it done.....or do it anyway. It has been my good fortune to know a good few such people off and on throughout my life. *They have been a constant source of inspiration and admiration. *I have also been fortunate in actually being such a person (admittedly by sheer happenstance and on a modest scale) on rare occasions. *The latter, I think, gives one an even greater appreciation of those who do it regularly and with evident ease. In the last year and a half, it has been my great good fortune to meet a few folks who routinely get things done, and done well, with appallingly evident ease. And it happened again.....in spades.....these last three days. It started last weekend when Larry reminded me of the impending visit of three heavy hitters from a major university in Michigan who were scheduled to visit the tree farm. *Larry graciously refrained from telling me that three bodies and three beds would preclude yet another invasion by the erstwhile tree farmer from Milwaukee. *He said I could stay at the condo in La Crosse. *I refrained from expressing my horror at the suggestion of sleeping in a condo in La Crosse. *I said I would tent it at the tree farm. *He was horrified at the thought of anyone sleeping out in the....the.....well.....under the....um.....stars and ****.....with all the animals and dew and bugs and.....etc. *I suggested that, having survived similar experiences on numerous occasions in the past, the odds were even (or perhaps even better) that I could do so again. The proposition was never tested, the experiment was never conducted. The heavens opened up on Wednesday evening.....angel pee everywhere.....in short, it started raining early in the evening. *I slept on the floor.....with the dog. *Though small and of dubious aroma, she is warm and affectionate. *But that is beside the point, I suppose. By then, the biologists had arrived, a late supper of steak and baked potatoes, with a side salad and lots of good beer (about as good as boy could come up with fast and easy at 9:00 p.m.), had been consumed, introductions and CV had been exchanged, *something vaguely resembling a plan for the morning had been sketched, refined, and ratified, and much storytelling had transpired, replete with inside jokes from all and sundry which left the ins grinning or roaring with laughter and the outs nodding, smiling, and utterly bemused. *Oh yeah, and a lot of biology and internal departmental politics and personalities flew in smoking hot streaks back and forth across the room. *A boy is tempted to say that it was all he could do to keep up......but he didn't.....quite. *Pretty close, though. *Same tools (mostly), same techniques (pretty much), similar protocols (more or less), same reagents (here and there).....WAY different critters.....Dan (not his real name), a plant pathologist, tells the story of a friend who originally trained as a botanist and then moved to human physiology. You cannot imagine how EASY! human DNA is, the friend informs him. Larry and I busily knit our brows. *The others (Tony and Justin.....not their real names.....from Michigan.....and Angela.....not her real name.....from the local university) smile broadly and nod wisely. Hm..... Larry leaves. *Yeah, it's his place.....but there's only three beds. He's staying in the condo tonight. Dan looks at me and says (and I quote), "O.k., why are we here?" Uh oh. Ummmmm........................................ Ummmmm........................................ Angela comes to the rescue. *She explains, in broad terms, the research project that her grad students Cassie and Astrid (not their real names) are engaged in, what they hope to do in the future, what Larry would like to see come of it, and what we all hope to gain from the current visitation. *I (rather wisely, I think) nod vigorously, smile broadly, and strive manfully not to think of other places I'd rather be just at this moment. *Discussion ensues. *A provisional plan is agreed upon. *We will have breakfast in the morning.....and then wait for Larry.....if he has not already arrived. *I nod, slowly and deliberately, as though not entirely convinced but willing enough to abide by the apparent consensus in lieu of a better idea. In due course, morning arrives. *Breakfast is designed, executed, and consumed by committee. *It is surprisingly good. *Larry, having not yet arrived, does not get a vote. *However, arriving before the consummation is completed, he is allotted a full share and tucks in with gusto. *Everybody is happy. *Senta (her real name), has been visibly and unmistakably jubilant every waking moment since my arrival some 36 hours earlier. *This would be an unequivocal annoyance in anyone other than a coal black schnauzer pup (the aforementioned small dog). *Even so, it is starting to wear thin. Beth and Eric (their real names) arrive. *Beth and Eric own a small forestry business. *Not surprisingly, in the coulee country, their business sense is tempered by a rather bewildering amalgam of New Age, Hippie, Astrological, Biodynamic, Holistic, Nativist, Herbal, Pragmatic sensibilities. *Beth and Eric are also old friends and sometime part time employees of Larry's. *They have at least as large a stake in the current proceedings as anyone. *They also have more experience on the ground in this locale than anyone but Larry himself. *Beth, as Larry often proclaims, does the work of two men. Eric has bigass digger machines and a portable bandsaw mill (well, a borrowed mill, but it cuts just the same). We have, not just a quorum......we got the whole shebang! Dan says....."So?" Beth (or Angela.....I forget) says, let's go for a walk up to the orchard (the orchard comprises *the newest plantings, from two to four or five years ago, and contains the trees of greatest interest to the visiting dignitaries.....for reasons that space does not permit me to go into here.) *I say why don't we just all pile into the Gators and ride up? *I see several nodding heads. *And then I see Beth and Angela looking at me in a manner that is indescribable but with which every man who has ever known woman knows and dreads. *We have the women outnumbered 3:1 (well, actually, 6:2......but, close enough). *We all agree that it is a very nice day for a walk. For the next four hours we wander, in ever changing aggregates of humans and one small dog, over the eastern half of Larry's 80 acres, peering, kneeling, squatting, discussing, peeling, paring, poking, prying, questioning, answering, pondering, debating, lying prone on bellies and backs, rubbing, smelling, photographing, remembering, philosophizing, planning, collecting, discarding, *theorizing, suggesting, digging, and wondering. By the time we head back downhill, everybody, including (MAINLY including) Larry, knows what we all knew before any of us arrived and the adventure began. *The chestnuts are doomed.....period. Well.....ALMOST period. *There's hypovirulence. Hypovirulence. *There is a virus.....well, actually a tribe of viruses.....that ingest and otherwise thrive on the Cryphonectria fungus, the villain in the American chestnut drama. *There are many strains of Cryphonectria, so it is a good thing that there are also many strains of the virus that attacks and weakens them. *But it DOES make life complicated. *As luck would have it, Larry's setup, *diverse plantings, loving attention to the trees, and record keeping make his holding a textbook example of the perfect laboratory for the proposed experiment. Angela, Cassie and Astrid get the ready made lab to do with as they will. *Beth, Eric, Larry, Becky and I are relieved of the responsibility of caring for the chestnuts (in fact, the policy will be strictly hands off for us.....except for clearing out the unmistakably dead). *We have that much more time to devote to the butternuts (also doomed.....but that a whole nother long story.....for another time), walnuts, hazels and sundry other minor characters. Justin gets much needed samples and data for his PhD. dissertation on the evolution of Cryphonectria, Tony, ditto for his statistical analyses. *Dan? *Well, what Dan gets out of the deal is a bit more complicated.....and subtle. *Dan is on the Castanea A-list. *Dan is pretty much at the top of the Castanea A-list. *There really isn't much more for Dan to get out of any of this. *Dan just gets to make it happen. And it happens like this...... When we get back to the house there is much discussion about how to get the project rolling, who is going to fund it, how the funding will be managed, who will do the management, and a very LONG list of other considerations. *The bottom line is that this isn't something that a bunch of people can make happen just by agreeing that it needs to happen. *Fortunately, similar situations have been coming up for a long long time, and there are well developed institutions and procedures in place for dealing with them. *Universities have organizational and administrative tools at their disposal for just such situations. *So does the federal government. *While we discuss details, ask questions, raise objections, and generally chew on a host of considerations, Larry quietly dials a phone number. A moment later the house falls quiet when Larry says hello Max (not his real name) who has worked for the Forest Service (USDA) for 35 or a hundred fifty or something years, do you know Dan? *Yeah, says Max. Larry explains that a foundation is to be set up to conduct a years long intensive Cryphonectria management experiment on his property and that some startup funds will be required. *He hands the phone to Dan, who reminds Max of a few long ago shared adventures of one sort or another. *They laugh. *Then they get down to business. *It takes all of four minutes. *Dan hangs up the phone. Approval must await the next application and funding cycle.....a matter of a few months. *This means exactly nothing. *The deal is done. *The funding will appear. *The work will go forward. *The world has turned. So much for academic detachment from real world phenomena. *So much for governmental bureaucratic inertia. That's how **** gets done. Kind of amazing. Kind of scary. g. who suspects he will somehow get no less busy. Having worked in academia doing research, I totally appreciate your story and the beauty of knowing People who Get Things Done. Nicely unfolded. Good luck with the project. --riverman |
#3
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![]() "Giles" wrote in message ... Things get done by people who: 1. Know what needs to be done. 2. Have an inclination/reason to get it done. 3. Can command the necessary resources (money/labor/space/materials/ etc.) to get it done. 4. Have the requisite experience/expertise/knowledge/tools to get it done. 5. Have the time to get it done. 6. Can stay focused long enough and/or often enough to get it done. 7. Have the requisite authority/permission to get it done.....or do it anyway. It has been my good fortune to know a good few such people off and on throughout my life. They have been a constant source of inspiration and admiration. I have also been fortunate in actually being such a person (admittedly by sheer happenstance and on a modest scale) on rare occasions. The latter, I think, gives one an even greater appreciation of those who do it regularly and with evident ease. In the last year and a half, it has been my great good fortune to meet a few folks who routinely get things done, and done well, with appallingly evident ease. And it happened again.....in spades.....these last three days. It started last weekend when Larry reminded me of the impending visit of three heavy hitters from a major university in Michigan who were scheduled to visit the tree farm. Larry graciously refrained from telling me that three bodies and three beds would preclude yet another invasion by the erstwhile tree farmer from Milwaukee. He said I could stay at the condo in La Crosse. I refrained from expressing my horror at the suggestion of sleeping in a condo in La Crosse. I said I would tent it at the tree farm. He was horrified at the thought of anyone sleeping out in the....the.....well.....under the....um.....stars and ****.....with all the animals and dew and bugs and.....etc. I suggested that, having survived similar experiences on numerous occasions in the past, the odds were even (or perhaps even better) that I could do so again. The proposition was never tested, the experiment was never conducted. The heavens opened up on Wednesday evening.....angel pee everywhere.....in short, it started raining early in the evening. I slept on the floor.....with the dog. Though small and of dubious aroma, she is warm and affectionate. But that is beside the point, I suppose. By then, the biologists had arrived, a late supper of steak and baked potatoes, with a side salad and lots of good beer (about as good as boy could come up with fast and easy at 9:00 p.m.), had been consumed, introductions and CV had been exchanged, something vaguely resembling a plan for the morning had been sketched, refined, and ratified, and much storytelling had transpired, replete with inside jokes from all and sundry which left the ins grinning or roaring with laughter and the outs nodding, smiling, and utterly bemused. Oh yeah, and a lot of biology and internal departmental politics and personalities flew in smoking hot streaks back and forth across the room. A boy is tempted to say that it was all he could do to keep up......but he didn't.....quite. Pretty close, though. Same tools (mostly), same techniques (pretty much), similar protocols (more or less), same reagents (here and there).....WAY different critters.....Dan (not his real name), a plant pathologist, tells the story of a friend who originally trained as a botanist and then moved to human physiology. You cannot imagine how EASY! human DNA is, the friend informs him. Larry and I busily knit our brows. The others (Tony and Justin.....not their real names.....from Michigan.....and Angela.....not her real name.....from the local university) smile broadly and nod wisely. Hm..... Larry leaves. Yeah, it's his place.....but there's only three beds. He's staying in the condo tonight. Dan looks at me and says (and I quote), "O.k., why are we here?" Uh oh. Ummmmm........................................ Ummmmm........................................ Angela comes to the rescue. She explains, in broad terms, the research project that her grad students Cassie and Astrid (not their real names) are engaged in, what they hope to do in the future, what Larry would like to see come of it, and what we all hope to gain from the current visitation. I (rather wisely, I think) nod vigorously, smile broadly, and strive manfully not to think of other places I'd rather be just at this moment. Discussion ensues. A provisional plan is agreed upon. We will have breakfast in the morning.....and then wait for Larry.....if he has not already arrived. I nod, slowly and deliberately, as though not entirely convinced but willing enough to abide by the apparent consensus in lieu of a better idea. In due course, morning arrives. Breakfast is designed, executed, and consumed by committee. It is surprisingly good. Larry, having not yet arrived, does not get a vote. However, arriving before the consummation is completed, he is allotted a full share and tucks in with gusto. Everybody is happy. Senta (her real name), has been visibly and unmistakably jubilant every waking moment since my arrival some 36 hours earlier. This would be an unequivocal annoyance in anyone other than a coal black schnauzer pup (the aforementioned small dog). Even so, it is starting to wear thin. Beth and Eric (their real names) arrive. Beth and Eric own a small forestry business. Not surprisingly, in the coulee country, their business sense is tempered by a rather bewildering amalgam of New Age, Hippie, Astrological, Biodynamic, Holistic, Nativist, Herbal, Pragmatic sensibilities. Beth and Eric are also old friends and sometime part time employees of Larry's. They have at least as large a stake in the current proceedings as anyone. They also have more experience on the ground in this locale than anyone but Larry himself. Beth, as Larry often proclaims, does the work of two men. Eric has bigass digger machines and a portable bandsaw mill (well, a borrowed mill, but it cuts just the same). We have, not just a quorum......we got the whole shebang! Dan says....."So?" Beth (or Angela.....I forget) says, let's go for a walk up to the orchard (the orchard comprises the newest plantings, from two to four or five years ago, and contains the trees of greatest interest to the visiting dignitaries.....for reasons that space does not permit me to go into here.) I say why don't we just all pile into the Gators and ride up? I see several nodding heads. And then I see Beth and Angela looking at me in a manner that is indescribable but with which every man who has ever known woman knows and dreads. We have the women outnumbered 3:1 (well, actually, 6:2......but, close enough). We all agree that it is a very nice day for a walk. For the next four hours we wander, in ever changing aggregates of humans and one small dog, over the eastern half of Larry's 80 acres, peering, kneeling, squatting, discussing, peeling, paring, poking, prying, questioning, answering, pondering, debating, lying prone on bellies and backs, rubbing, smelling, photographing, remembering, philosophizing, planning, collecting, discarding, theorizing, suggesting, digging, and wondering. By the time we head back downhill, everybody, including (MAINLY including) Larry, knows what we all knew before any of us arrived and the adventure began. The chestnuts are doomed.....period. Well.....ALMOST period. There's hypovirulence. Hypovirulence. There is a virus.....well, actually a tribe of viruses.....that ingest and otherwise thrive on the Cryphonectria fungus, the villain in the American chestnut drama. There are many strains of Cryphonectria, so it is a good thing that there are also many strains of the virus that attacks and weakens them. But it DOES make life complicated. As luck would have it, Larry's setup, diverse plantings, loving attention to the trees, and record keeping make his holding a textbook example of the perfect laboratory for the proposed experiment. Angela, Cassie and Astrid get the ready made lab to do with as they will. Beth, Eric, Larry, Becky and I are relieved of the responsibility of caring for the chestnuts (in fact, the policy will be strictly hands off for us.....except for clearing out the unmistakably dead). We have that much more time to devote to the butternuts (also doomed.....but that a whole nother long story.....for another time), walnuts, hazels and sundry other minor characters. Justin gets much needed samples and data for his PhD. dissertation on the evolution of Cryphonectria, Tony, ditto for his statistical analyses. Dan? Well, what Dan gets out of the deal is a bit more complicated.....and subtle. Dan is on the Castanea A-list. Dan is pretty much at the top of the Castanea A-list. There really isn't much more for Dan to get out of any of this. Dan just gets to make it happen. And it happens like this...... When we get back to the house there is much discussion about how to get the project rolling, who is going to fund it, how the funding will be managed, who will do the management, and a very LONG list of other considerations. The bottom line is that this isn't something that a bunch of people can make happen just by agreeing that it needs to happen. Fortunately, similar situations have been coming up for a long long time, and there are well developed institutions and procedures in place for dealing with them. Universities have organizational and administrative tools at their disposal for just such situations. So does the federal government. While we discuss details, ask questions, raise objections, and generally chew on a host of considerations, Larry quietly dials a phone number. A moment later the house falls quiet when Larry says hello Max (not his real name) who has worked for the Forest Service (USDA) for 35 or a hundred fifty or something years, do you know Dan? Yeah, says Max. Larry explains that a foundation is to be set up to conduct a years long intensive Cryphonectria management experiment on his property and that some startup funds will be required. He hands the phone to Dan, who reminds Max of a few long ago shared adventures of one sort or another. They laugh. Then they get down to business. It takes all of four minutes. Dan hangs up the phone. Approval must await the next application and funding cycle.....a matter of a few months. This means exactly nothing. The deal is done. The funding will appear. The work will go forward. The world has turned. So much for academic detachment from real world phenomena. So much for governmental bureaucratic inertia. That's how **** gets done. Kind of amazing. Kind of scary. g. who suspects he will somehow get no less busy. Interesting and well written narrative. I'm glad I got to the end before you ran out of fictitious names. When are you going to write about when Freda and Mark went fly-fishing :-) Bill |
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Been there, done that. Worked to get something going for two years
till I sat down and chatted between a couple of meetings with a two- star. He reached over a confernce room table, grabbed the phone, made a call, in the middle he asked me how much staff I would need, rank and job types. Told him four folks besides me and their skill sets. He grunted, chatted on the phone a few more minutes (as everyone held off starting the meeting), hung up, leaned back to me, said "its done." First body showed up by the end of the week. We worked for 6 months then disbanded. We saved the US taxpayer 17 million dollars the first year with that program. Just gotta get to the right folks. Very cool. You going to help with the program? Frank Reid |
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![]() "Giles" wrote in message ... Things get done by people who: 1. Know what needs to be done. 2. Have an inclination/reason to get it done. 3. Can command the necessary resources (money/labor/space/materials/ etc.) to get it done. 4. Have the requisite experience/expertise/knowledge/tools to get it done. 5. Have the time to get it done. 6. Can stay focused long enough and/or often enough to get it done. 7. Have the requisite authority/permission to get it done.....or do it anyway. It has been my good fortune to know a good few such people off and on throughout my life. They have been a constant source of inspiration and admiration. I have also been fortunate in actually being such a person (admittedly by sheer happenstance and on a modest scale) on rare occasions. thanks for sharing your self-congratulation, once again. As one person, or more, is fond of saying, YMMV. introductions and CV had been exchanged hoo, boy. That should have been good. Dan looks at me and says (and I quote), "O.k., why are we here?" the same thought occurred to this reader, at least. Hypovirulence. There is a virus.....well, actually a tribe of viruses.....that ingest and otherwise thrive on the Cryphonectria fungus, the villain in the American chestnut drama. There are many strains of Cryphonectria, so it is a good thing that there are also many strains of the virus that attacks and weakens them. But it DOES make life complicated. a discussion of Cryphonectria, and why it has become the villain would have been informative.....you might have chosen to enlighten us with that, as opposed to a description of consuming breakfast, but I suppose, that's my scientific training getting the best of me...... And it happens like this...... ok, I've slogged this far, we'll get to the point now, I figure.... Then they get down to business. It takes all of four minutes. Dan hangs up the phone. Approval must await the next application and funding cycle.....a matter of a few months. This means exactly nothing. The deal is done. The funding will appear. The work will go forward. The world has turned. so, that was it? They got a grant project approved(at least on a verbal basis)? Do you have any idea how often this happens, every day, in every field of science? Further, can you comprehend how such verbal agreements often de-materialize into bureaucratic backlogs? I hope for the best, and all, for this project(hell, I am alarmed as the next guy over the fate of American Chestnuts, as well as the fate of much native flora and fauna), but to tell the truth, nothing is really 'gotten done' until the project generates data, and points the clear path toward progress addressing the problem. As you are no doubt well aware, this can happen through both positive or negative findings, but simply glad handing after an initial planning session doesn't speak, in any way, to accomplishment. Frank Reid provided a salient example of accomplishment, as illustrated by the final results. g. who suspects he will somehow get no less busy. doing what, is always the part that's unclear, but it's good to know we can count on a long-winded essay describing your pivitol role in modern biological advances. Now, was there any discussion of WHY the virus class in question is not already present, given the presence of a preferred media of reproduction? If so, I didn't read it in your piece. And if not, was there any discussion as to potential deliterious effects of introducing same to the ecosystem involved? Hell, Wolfgang, it seems like a potentially interesting and beneficial program of study about to be embarked upon......I just wonder what makes it in any way different from the numerous examples of well-intended tinkering with nature that has had provable detrimental effects for our environment. I also wonder why you choose to not name the research principals. Is this supposed to be top-secret? It would seem like something unnecessary, and, at the same time sort of puzzling.......Come on, lad, you can do better. A little less about the importance of Wolfgang, and a bit more about the actual issue at hand might have been nice. Tom |
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On Sep 12, 10:54*am, "Tom Littleton" wrote:
"Giles" wrote in message ... always -at least most of the time ---enjoy reading your { Wolfgangs stuff } but got a little confused by this one did you have coffee with your breakfast---did you catch any fish ? how fast do you type ? Joe the Elder |
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On Sep 12, 7:54*am, "Tom Littleton" wrote:
"Giles" wrote in message ... Things get done by people who: 1. Know what needs to be done. 2. Have an inclination/reason to get it done. 3. Can command the necessary resources (money/labor/space/materials/ etc.) to get it done. 4. Have the requisite experience/expertise/knowledge/tools to get it done. 5. Have the time to get it done. 6. Can stay focused long enough and/or often enough to get it done. 7. Have the requisite authority/permission to get it done.....or do it anyway. It has been my good fortune to know a good few such people off and on throughout my life. *They have been a constant source of inspiration and admiration. *I have also been fortunate in actually being such a person (admittedly by sheer happenstance and on a modest scale) on rare occasions. thanks for sharing your self-congratulation, once again. As one person, or more, is fond of saying, YMMV. introductions and CV had been exchanged hoo, boy. That should have been good. Dan looks at me and says (and I quote), "O.k., why are we here?" the same thought occurred to this reader, at least. Hypovirulence. *There is a virus.....well, actually a tribe of viruses.....that ingest and otherwise thrive on the Cryphonectria fungus, the villain in the American chestnut drama. *There are many strains of Cryphonectria, so it is a good thing that there are also many strains of the virus that attacks and weakens them. *But it DOES make life complicated. a discussion of Cryphonectria, and why it has become the villain would have been informative.....you might have chosen to enlighten us with that, as opposed to a description of consuming breakfast, but I suppose, that's my scientific training getting the best of me...... And it happens like this...... ok, I've slogged this far, we'll get to the point now, I figure.... *Then they get down to business. *It takes all of four minutes. *Dan hangs up the phone. Approval must await the next application and funding cycle.....a matter of a few months. *This means exactly nothing. *The deal is done. *The funding will appear. *The work will go forward. *The world has turned. so, that was it? They got a grant project approved(at least on a verbal basis)? Do you have any idea how often this happens, every day, in every field of science? Further, can you comprehend how such verbal agreements often de-materialize into bureaucratic backlogs? I hope for the best, and all, for this project(hell, I am alarmed as the next guy over the fate of American Chestnuts, as well as the fate of much native flora and fauna), but to tell the truth, nothing is really 'gotten done' until the project generates data, and points the clear path toward progress addressing the problem. As you are no doubt well aware, this can happen through both positive or negative findings, but simply glad handing after an initial planning session doesn't speak, in any way, to accomplishment. Frank Reid provided a salient example of accomplishment, as illustrated by the final results. g. who suspects he will somehow get no less busy. doing what, is always the part that's unclear, but it's good to know we can count on a long-winded essay describing your pivitol role in modern biological advances. Now, was there any discussion of WHY the virus class in question is not already present, given the presence of a preferred media of reproduction? If so, I didn't read it in your piece. And if not, was there any discussion as to potential deliterious effects of introducing same to the ecosystem involved? Hell, Wolfgang, it seems like a potentially interesting and beneficial program of study about to be embarked upon.......I just wonder what makes it in any way different from the numerous examples of well-intended tinkering with nature that has had provable detrimental effects for our environment. I also wonder why you choose to not name the research principals. Is this supposed to be top-secret? It would seem like something unnecessary, and, at the same time sort of puzzling.......Come on, lad, you can do better. A little less about the importance of Wolfgang, and a bit more about the actual issue at hand might have been nice. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Tom- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Garlic and Goat cheese pizza just befiore bedtime is bound to make the middle aged stomach a major contributor to CRANKY. Maalox or just a large bucket of water in which to place one's head can sometimes curtail CRANKy. P;+)) Dave He wasn't defending a thesis Tom. Just describing what HE experienced. As to what science is or is not, well that's for another day, as is experimental design standards in the bio medical world. |
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On Sep 12, 2:31*pm, Injun Joe wrote:
On Sep 12, 10:54*am, "Tom Littleton" wrote: "Giles" wrote in message ... always -at least most of the time ---enjoy reading your { Wolfgangs stuff } *but got a little confused by this one did you have coffee with your breakfast---did you catch any fish ? how fast do you type ? Joe the Elder - Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Good point. Breakfest without coffee is like . . . the anti-breakfest. Dave |
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On Sep 13, 6:06*am, DaveS wrote:
Good point. Breakfest without coffee is like . . . the anti-breakfest. Dave For me, breakfast without coffee is no breakfast at all. Nada, zilch, nothing. --riverman (coffee for breakfast, in case you missed that) |
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On Sep 12, 7:21*am, --riverman wrote:
Having worked in academia doing research, I totally appreciate your story and the beauty of knowing People who Get Things Done. Nicely unfolded. Good luck with the project. --riverman Thanks, Myron. giles |
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