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C.W. Nicol
For C.W. Nicol's latest contributions to The Japan Times, see below:
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / OLD NIC'S NOTEBOOK
Dec 2, 2004
Apres le deluge
As I write this it is 4 in the afternoon of a mid-November day, a fine, clear, crisp day, with the sun now gone down behind Iizuna mountain to leave the massive bulk of Kurohime looming black against a sky of blazing silver, its peak lightly brushed by misty cloud.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / OLD NIC'S NOTEBOOK
Nov 4, 2004
Captivity conundrum over spared bear
In August 1985, I was in Tokyo awaiting the birth of my youngest daughter. One evening, I got a telephone call from Yoshio Kazama, my friend and next-door neighbor in Kurohime -- the beautiful corner of Nagano Prefecture where I live.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / OLD NIC'S NOTEBOOK
Oct 7, 2004
A 'theme park' that's an eco-friendly dream
I recentl went down to Nagasaki Prefecture to spend time with a dear old friend, Takekuni Ikeda, who lives on a little wooded peninsula jutting into Omura Bay. He's an incredible man.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / OLD NIC'S NOTEBOOK
Sep 2, 2004
Ravens, shamans and 'shrooms
In 1988 I made a documentary with the Hokkaido Broadcasting Co. We filmed on the Kamchatka Peninsula in northeast Siberia, in Alaska and in Japan. Our main theme was the raven and the many raven legends that link the peoples of the Pacific Rim.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / OLD NIC'S NOTEBOOK
Aug 5, 2004
Woodland beauty there for all to sense
Just about the time when the wild wood irises burst into glorious purple around early July up here in Nagano Prefecture, high in the treetops there is a dancing, fluttering ballet of countless white-winged creatures.
ENVIRONMENT / OLD NIC'S NOTEBOOK
Jul 1, 2004
Tucking in to alien outcasts
IN MAY, I was invited to Vancouver to give a keynote speech at the Fourth World Congress of Fisheries. The congress in that beautiful city in southwest British Columbia was attended by about 1,500 delegates from 80 countries. Its theme was: "Reconciling Fishing with Conservation."
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / OLD NIC'S NOTEBOOK
Jun 3, 2004
Our woodland's magic is a joy to behold
A very kind Japanese man who has served for more than 30 years in children's homes told me recently that 70 percent of the youngsters in his care nowadays have been abused or seriously neglected by their parents. Early in his career, he said, such abuse was very rare indeed. And, he assured me sadly, though we see media reports of horrible things done to children, those are just the tip of the iceberg.
ENVIRONMENT / OLD NIC'S NOTEBOOK
Apr 29, 2004
'Little blighters' that drive me barking mad
Two years ago, we transplanted 20 cherry saplings cloned from an ancient and historical tree (see Old Nic's Notebook; May, 1, 2003) here where I live in Kurohime, Nagano Prefecture. We then raised the saplings with loving care in our own little nursery for six years, before replanting them at the entranceway to our Afan Woodland Trust.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / OLD NIC'S NOTEBOOK
Apr 1, 2004
Ways of weathering winter
I had to attend a college graduation ceremony and an Environment Ministry meeting in Tokyo; otherwise I could easily have made it in a day from Okinawa to northern Nagano Prefecture where I live. As it was, the trip from that balmy Pacific isle to my home amid the snows of Kurohime took me until nearly 8 at night the next day.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / OLD NIC'S NOTEBOOK
Mar 4, 2004
Pottering in a paradise too easily lost
Whenever I get the chance I like to spend time in Okinawa, which is where I am writing this. As I said to my long-suffering editor, who is getting this article in longhand, I am here to work on the first draft of a novel in Japanese, so I sit at a table loaded with books and dictionaries, a big window in front of me overlooking a sea of various hues of blue. I'll be here for about a month, working on the book, going to a dojo to practice stick-fighting, swimming, kayaking, swilling Orion beer and awamori, and generally pottering about.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / OLD NIC'S NOTEBOOK
Feb 5, 2004
Deer's tasty demise helps them, too
The first time I saw a Japanese sika (deer, Cervus Nippon) was on tiny Lundy Island, which lies in the Bristol Channel between South Wales and the north coast of the beautiful English county of Devon. I was going on for 20, and had gone to the island to assist the warden.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / OLD NIC'S NOTEBOOK
Jan 4, 2004
It's time to stop looting Japan's tree treasures
A couple of decades ago, I had a very public confrontation with the government's Forestry Agency. It was about the cutting of old-growth deciduous forest around where I live in Kurohime, Nagano Prefecture -- trees that were hundreds of years old.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / OLD NIC'S NOTEBOOK
Dec 4, 2003
Alarm mars a runaway success story for salmon
In October, I spent some time in Vancouver. I have grown-up children there, as well as grandchildren and a lot of old friends, most of whom I met while working for the Environmental Protection Service. Even though I left Canada in 1978 to come to Japan and pursue the often dubious course of a writer, I have always kept my Canadian ties, and have especially followed the river-enhancement programs there that are aimed at improving the habitat for salmon.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / OLD NIC'S NOTEBOOK
Nov 6, 2003
Where there's muck -- there's crystals of money
I just got back from Vancouver, Canada, where I was staying with my dear old friend Fred Koch and his wife Akiko. I first met Fred back in the early 1970s when I worked for the Environmental Protection Service in Canada, and when Fred, then a keen young engineer, was hired by EPS to do some contract work. In 1983 Fred began doing research on the biological treatment of sewage, at a pilot plant set up in trailers right next to the woods in the grounds of the University of British Columbia. Fred himself always called his place of work "The Poo Plant."
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / OLD NIC'S NOTEBOOK
Oct 2, 2003
Blowing up the merits of charcoal
When I was 12, chemistry didn't interest me much until I found a battered old book in the school library that gave detailed instructions on the making of gunpowder. I still remember the recipe, which includes 75 percent potassium nitrate, otherwise known as saltpeter, and 10 percent charcoal.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / OLD NIC'S NOTEBOOK
Sep 4, 2003
About the bears and the bees
This story is really about honey, a spoonful of which I have in my morning tea. Without it the day just doesn't seem to go right. Together with my old friend Mr. Shimada, I've been producing the finest honey for the last 20-odd years. However, first I have to tell you about my lovely "false acacia" trees. (What a horrible name; I'll just call them "acacia" for the rest of the story.)
ENVIRONMENT / OLD NIC'S NOTEBOOK
Aug 7, 2003
A tale of two Afans reborn
Two thousand years ago, my native Wales had 98 percent forest cover. By 1950, when I was a little lad, woodland in Wales was down to 5 percent. I was born in Neath, where coal-mining wasn't particularly heavy, and where there were still wooded parks and groves of wild trees so I didn't really feel the loss as a child. However, we did not have to go far into the valleys to see the devastation caused by industry and mining.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / OLD NIC'S NOTEBOOK
Jul 3, 2003
Who says all factories have to be eyesores?
Earl in 1995, a friend of mine, a journalist I first met back in the 1970s, asked me to have dinner and drinks with him in a cozy, noisy izakaya in Shinjuku. There, he introduced me to a very friendly, well-traveled man called Masayoshi Ushikubo, the executive manager of a company that made electrical equipment, including air conditioners. My friend had already told me Ushikubo wanted me to look at some land.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / OLD NIC'S NOTEBOOK
Jun 5, 2003
A few tasty tales I squirreled away
There was a very brilliant but rather eccentric biologist in Montreal who was convinced -- or perhaps he just convinced us that he was convinced -- that the squirrels were not only watching him, but were stealing his secrets.
Japan Times
ENVIRONMENT / OLD NIC'S NOTEBOOK
May 1, 2003
Hanami with a shot of history
Vancouver, Canada, is a beautiful city. Not only for the magnificent mountains, for salmon spawning rivers, and a largely natural coast, but for the city's many trees. I am told that Vancouver has 124,000 street trees, 30,000 of which flower. The cherry trees especially are glorious.

Longform

When trying to trace your lineage in Japan, the "koseki" is the most important form of document you'll encounter.
Climbing the branches of a Japanese family tree