Friday, December 29, 2006

Announcing CORE GIS


So the reason the blog posts have diminished precipitously these past few months is because Amy and I started our own company. I left CommEn Space at the end of October and CORE GIS started up on November 1st. CORE GIS is actually an acronym for Community, Regional, and Environmental Geographic Information Systems. Amy is the president and I am (technically) the managing principal, although for now Amy does not really have any involvement with the day-to-day operations. The work I'm doing is largely similar to the work I did at CommEn Space, although I'm hoping to pick up a few private sector and government contracts to help subsidize the non-profit work that forms the core (heh) of the business. Unfortunately, CommEn Space is closing it's doors at the end of the year--there's more info here.

Several of my former CommEn Space colleagues have also started their own companies, and we are working together in a loose confederation to assist with workload balancing and business development. Josh's Umbrella Consulting site is here, Jessemine's Leesaa Consulting site is here, Karsten's Terra GIS site is here, and Tim's Geocartic site will soon be available here.

So far, it's been great working from home--I have a lot more time with the boys and amazing flexibility in meeting my project commitments. There are certainly challenges as well, but so far, nothing insurmountable. More updates over the coming months.

Saturday, December 16, 2006

A Truly Mighty Wind

On Thursday night we experienced the tail end of an extremely powerful low pressure system. The associated winds were incredibly strong, especially for Seattle, and there was a substantial amount of damage--big portions of the metro area are still without power. When I took Liam and our neighbor's boy Colin to preschool in the bike trailer yesterday, there were a couple of large-ish trees completely blocking the Burke-Gilman trail. At the preschool itself, half of their fence had been blown over! It's been quite an intense fall for weather.

Wednesday, December 06, 2006

SNOW at Snoqualmie Pass!








One of the benefits of the amazing amount of precipitation and record cold weather we experienced here in Western Washington is abundant amounts of cold, fluffy snow. Our friends and neighbors Chris, Becky, Colin and Darby invited us to join them for a day of sledding near Alpental. They are members of the Washington Alpine Club, so we had access to their lodge for getting warm and drinking hot cocoa. It was a blast! Next time, Amy and I might even try to get a few runs in on our snowboards.

Wednesday, November 29, 2006

Twins Separated by Three Years


Since Lochlan was born, Amy and I have been amazed by the resemblance (both physical and behavioral) between Liam and Lochlan. Now we have photographic evidence--one of these pictures was taken three years ago, one was taken three days ago. Guess which one is which.

Sunday, November 26, 2006

Halloween






Sorry for the extended absence from the blogosphere (more on that later). I'm going to try to catch up on recent major events in a whirlwind of posts this weekend. The first of which is:

Halloween! Liam was a T-Rex, and his buddy Liam was a dinosaur. Lochlan was a Barbaloot Bear (from the Dr. Seuss book The Lorax). My folks were in town and we met the Prestias at Woodland Park Zoo for the Pumpkin Prowl. It was awesome--lots of cool pumpkins, and Brothers From Different Mothers put on a really incredible juggling show.

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

First Day of Preschool





Liam started preschool at the Fremont Community School last week. It is a great school--their motto is "we let kids be kids" and they are set up to facilitate that. The school is actually an old craftsman house, with a huge backyard containing fruit trees, a chicken coop, a bunny hutch, a mud pit, and lots of dump trucks and excavators. The kids spend at least an hour outside every day, rain or shine, and the teachers really emphasize natural cycles and ecological awareness. Liam is attending two days a week to try it out, and so far he really seems to be enjoying it. Since he started up, a common refrain is "I learned it at school." They also celebrate a number of festivals, the first of which (Harvest Festival) is this Friday. Hopefully I'll be able to make it.

The woman giving Liam a squeeze is one of his teachers, Tara, and the photo of the kids and parents standing in a circle is Circle, which is how they start each day.

Iron Horse State Park



Last weekend we took a nice leisurely hike along the Iron Horse State Park rails-to-trails. It was a very pleasant day. Here is a shot of Liam holding a leaf from a very appropriately named Big Leaf Maple, and MicroMan completely zonked out on Mom.

Sunday, September 03, 2006

Lochlan Smiles


Sean captured this one!

The Slumbering Wee Lads


Ah, if only it were as easy as this photo makes it seem...

Franklin Falls






Last weekend we went for a delightful hike with our friends the Caughlans (Anne, Sean, Caitlin & Dillon) to Franklin Falls, near Snoqualmie Pass. The hike was only about a mile each way and was pretty easy for little kids. It is a very popular destination, and consequently there are some places where all the boots and sneakers have created some fairly severe erosion. However, in many places there are puncheons to deal with the erosion, and I get the impression that a lot of work is being done on the trail.

The destination is pretty spectacular--a 70 foot waterfall that empties into a beautiful little pool. This was a perfect hike for a hot summer day!

Friday, September 01, 2006

ESRI International User Conference









As I mentioned in an earlier post, the primary motivation for our trip to San Dieigo was the ESRI International Use Conference, which is put on annually by the maker of the most commonly used commercial GIS software, ArcGIS. I use ArcGIS almost every day at CommEn Space and have been using ESRI products in some form or another for 10 years. The conference was great fun. I always learn new things and gain great inspiration from the Map Gallery. This year was no exception. There were several outstanding sessions, which I describe in some detail below for any readers who happen to be similarly interested in spatial data and analyttical methods, and I'm also including some digital pics of a few of the maps I found particularly intriguing.

Here's a brief rundown on the sessions I attended. Please pardon the rough nature of the notes, most of them were hammered out on my laptop in real time.

Status of NLCD

NLCD has two other products in addition to the landcover--percent impervious and percent tree canopy. The USGS has been using See5 for the classifcation tree; it is highly automated and will enable easily automated updates of national land cover. The canopy cover data set is complete for lower 48; moving on to AK next . Imperviousness is also done for most of the US

For landcover, by end of 2006 most of the lower 48 will be done

Download data here:

gisdata.usgs.net/website/MRLC

www.mrlc.gov

Spatial techniques for Marine Reserve selection
Brian Fulfrost

Ailinginae island--several uninhabited coral attols

Rapid ecological assessment --30 field sites; terestrial bird surveys

Remote sensing on benthic habitat, bathymetry, and vegetatoin changes using quickbird imagery

35 dive sites; somewhat biased locations due to remoteness

Question is how to protect attols biodiversity

Coral
Fish
Birds
Rare species
Range extensions

Derived bathymetry from Quickbird (Daria Siciliano) and also derived benthic classifiation--apparently many papers written on her methods (speaker

NDVI vegetation change analysis

Methods used are: Kriging, regressions, MARXAN (simulated annealing algorithm)

Kiriging: interpolate species richness from sampled points; interpolation from the points, so the surfaces were not very useful because of low N; doesn't look into currents, suitable substrate for larval settlement, etc, also doesn't incorporate ecological barriers (but Constantine @ ESRI has worked out some ways around that)

Regressions: N is too small, so regression has no significance

MARXAN: combines field data w/remote sensing.
1. Planning units
2. Conservation targets
3. Boundary length modifier (looks at adjacency issues)
Used hexagons across the islands
Targets:
Looked at sum irreplaceability--any poly chosen more than 50% of the time represent irreplaceable areas

Best fit model gives you the best output to meet your conservation targets.

MARXAN is not an "ecologically intelligent" tool, it's a decision making tool.

Combine techniques to get the best fit

The influence of Topography on Habitat Area Estimates
Duane J. Haselfeld

PSOMAS--consulting firm in CA

Basic idea here is there is, in some instatnces, a huge discrepancy between plannimetric area and topographic area

The relative increase in the topographic area is directly proportional to the slope--the steeper a place is, the less accurate area measurements will be

At 60 degrees, the error is approx 100%; the error is very low where slope is low, but it increases rapidly--

0-25 degrees, 10% error
25-40 degrees, 30% error
40-60 degrees, 100% error

Emphasizes that elevation is not a surrogate for slope.

Pretty interesting; bottom line is that when area calculations are important, use the topographic area and not the planimetric area


New Landcover Data for the State of Maine
Sanborn office in San Diego

Andrew Lewis worked on the landcover map of Maine

Mike Smith from State of Maine
Mike Palmer from Sanborn in the Ann Arbor office

Project is moving form a 30m to a 5m data layer

Collaborative effort with Maine

Integrated with Federal NLCD/CCAP 2001 projects

Modeling wildlife habitat
Water quality
Imperviousness
Broad level planning initiative

Lots of partners on the project--Federal, state agencies, some non-profit? (Woodlot Alternatives was employed as the field data gathering arm)


Deliverables: 5-meter landcover, based on the NLCD 2001 landcover data classes

5-meter imerviousness data for about 25% of Maine

Recylced a lot of work from the NLCD work


Used SPOT panchromatic; semi-automated approach to binary impervious

Resulting products are CCAP, 5m polygon based map (not as interdigitated landcover classes)

Ran image segmentation on SPOT 5 to get the landcover classes

USed E-cognition for segmentation

Used training data based on the change classes (I think on some field work too)

RFeferred to as a "low cost" option--but how much did it cost?
He mentioned that they're doing some stuff with 1m resolution data

$125k for the SPOT imagery
$100k for the analytical work

Pan sharpening was done in ERDAS Imagine

Energy Mapping in Austria

Because of direct o indirect solar production, increasingly huge land areas are necessary for energy production. Energy will soon be readically impacting zoning throughout the developed world.

Demand indicators:
• Demographics
• Business data
• Using standardized load curves from utilities

1. Demand forecast
2. Potential Generation forecast: concept is a “virtual powerplant” of different types of renewables; transmission doesn’t’ send energy over long distance,s mostly provides stability to the entire network
3. Looking for a locally adapted mix of appropriate renewable energy sources

Look at segmentation for defining homogeneous regions froma grid—looks a bit like thiessen polys; “autoarkic regions”

Equitable Fee Collection Using Enhanced Impervious Surface Data
Lauri Sohl, City of Sioux Falls

All properties in SD are charged a storm drainage fee based upon impervious cover per parcel. Impervious surface includes roads, parking lots, etc

Parcel area X runoff WT factor X unit financial charge

Runoff factor is determined by land use, based on intensity of use

METHODS:

Orthophoto 6” resolution
Infrared IKONOS 4m

Resolution merge using Leica Geosystems Image Analysis Extension; used Borvey transformation, nearest neighbor resample

Feature Extraction by Visual Learning Systems (an extension)—VLS Feature Analyst

Create “learning” feature class.

Conservation Plan for Southeast Pennsylvania
Clare Billet, Smart Conservation, smartconservation.org

***VERY INTERESTING presentation. Looked at terrestrial vertebrates, grid-based from GAP. For aquatic resources, used the watershed. For Terrestrial resources, used GAP and heritage for Rarity (how did they solve the absence of absence problem?)

Focused on top 20% as nodes

Used roads, railways, streams, waterbodies, as barriers for the network analysis

Web-site supports on-line digitizing, analyzes how important that site is, online—pretty amazing

Identifying, Defining, & Mapping Natural Infrastructure in SW Pennsylvania
Andrew Schwartz, Environmental Planning & Design, LLC

Landscape Characterization & Evaluation of Alachua County FL
Partnered with the Information Center for the Environment (ICE) @ UC Davis

Tuesday, August 29, 2006

San Diego









Earlier this month we went to San Diego. I was attending (and presenting at) the ESRI International User's Conference, so Amy and the kids flew down too and we rented a condo in Encinitas, a few blocks away from Moonlight Beach. Encinitas is an awesome beach town, very walkable with lots of restaurants and best of all the Coaster stops right in the middle of town, which is how I got to the conference each day. (I did manage to fit in some beach days and a trip to Legoland with the fam).

My brother drove over from Flagstaff mid-week to hang out with the kids, and he came to the conference with me on Thursday to watch me present, visit the map gallery, and check out some other sessions. The presentation went pretty well--it was about a conservation plan I've been working on for the Columbia Land Trust.

The second weekend of our stay was also Liam's 3rd Birthday, so both sets of grandparents came over from Phoenix, along with Amy's sister Julie and her daughter Madison. It was a great birthday party for Mr. Little Guy and we were elated that he was able to celebrate with so many of his relatives--actually, just about all of his relatives!

Back from the Summer

Well that was a nice month and a half off from blogging. Where the heck was I, you might ask? Well:

a) We went to San Diego for 10 days (more on that soon)
b) I've been working on the side for The Watershed Company
c) CommEn Space is losing another staff member

More on b) and c) sometime soon too.

Oh yeah, and raising two kids is REALLY TIME CONSUMING. But also really fun too.

Tuesday, July 18, 2006

Pacific Crest Trail





We finally made it out for a hike in the Cascades. We walked along the Pacific Crest Trail for a couple of miles with the ostensible destination of Commonwealth Basin, but everyone got tired before we made it so we turned back. It was a wonderful day in the forest.

2 Months Old



Lochlan is two months old today!

Kentucky









Yes, we went to Kentucky for the 4th of July. Why? Amy's mother's family is from Louisville, and the Faust's were having a reunion. Linda really wanted her whole family to be there, so she and Dan generously offered to fly everyone out for the big event.

Kentucky in July is pretty hot (94 degrees) and pretty humid (85-100% humidity most days). However, we did not let that stop us from having barefoot races in Carol & Bill's enormous backyard! Their house was built on part of what used to be the hay meadow of a big farm. The kids loved the rural feel of the area, with the ponds, fields, tractors, and (my personal favorite) fire flies, Pyractomena sp.

In addition to the family reunion, we also visited a farm in Indiana and went to the Six Flags in Louisville. We definitely had some fun moments, and I know Liam had a blast playing with his cousins, but it was pretty bracing for us to be in Kentucky--Amy and I felt like fish out of water most of the time. (I'm speaking here of Kentucky generally, not how we felt around Amy's relatives, who are all lovely people).

In any event, I'm glad we went, but it sure felt good to come home.