Month: July 2021

The Wilding of Ruburbia

By Dr. Robert Thorson Meat-eating wild dogs prowl the peripheries of our lives. Known as coyotes (Canis latrans), these carnivores have gradually been moving eastward during the last century. This is wonderful news to me, even though it may cost my neighbors a few of their cats and my daughter a few of her bunny […]

Danger in Dams – Aging & Otherwise

By Dr. Robert Thorson One of President Donald Trump’s primary initiatives is to put workers back to work on public infrastructure. Though transportation is usually the highest priority, I suggest we pay more attention to the tens of thousands of aging dams spread across the country. As I write, the communities below California’s Oroville Dam […]

Two Predators Engaged in Timeless Ritual

By Dr. Robert Thorson Cry me a river. That’s what I say to the animal rights activists protesting blood on the snow in northwestern New Jersey, where nearly 300 black bears were killed during a six-day season ending last weekend. A shot of adrenaline. That’s what I say to the 7 percent of the 4,400 […]

What Are Penguins Doing Here?

By Dr. Robert Thorson ‘Twas the day after Christmas, When all through the house The muse of this columnist Was as dead as a trapped mouse. The stockings were hung by the chimney with care, The polar bear, tin soldier and bear … Wait a minute! What in winter wonderland is a penguin doing there […]

Failing U.S. Concrete May Cost Trillions

By Dr. Robert Thorson One trillion dollars. That’s what President Donald Trump proposes for rebuilding our nation’s crumbling infrastructure, much of it concrete. The American Society of Civil Engineers suggests $4.6 trillion is a better number, based on its benchmark report from last week. That profession has spent more time studying concrete than any other. […]

Harvest the Galapagos For Sneakers?

By Dr. Robert Thorson The Galapagos Islands off the west coast of Ecuador are a very special place. Yet some of that specialness is allegedly being chopped down and shipped around the world, in the name of athleticshoe marketing at shopping malls. This is worse than sad. It’s a profanity. It’s an obscenity when a […]

Sense of Place (Four Essays)

SENSE OF PLACE: PART 1: MAKING CONNECTICUT The Primal State of Architecture Hartford Courant, Sunday June 8, 2003, page. C4. Architecture hasn’t changed that much. The Roman architect Vitruvius defined this most complex of disciplines as the union of “firmness, commodity and delight.” Using more familiar language, architecture strives to produce buildings and spaces that […]