I grew cherry tomatoes and three large tomato varieties, okra (grew like a weed), tomatillos (pests set in, I won't try these next year), banana peppers, zucchini (I'll plant more next year but be choosier about the variety), green beans (attack of the Mexican bean beetle), parsley, basil. My blackberries were in the their first year of growth so they did not produce berries. My garden is hemmed in by mint, various Aster species, and some ornamental flowering plants planted by someone who lived in the house before me.
Monday, December 18, 2017
Thursday, November 2, 2017
Data structure and resilience properties
In my 2017 article in Geomorphology,
I describe more of the theoretical basis for linking the multivariate data structure of state space to its resilience properties. It could be
considered a followup to my 2005 paper in Geomorphology. I wasn't in a
rush, but back then the availability of lidar data and the
software tools to manipulate these data weren't quite as on hand as they are
today. I had thought about making topographic state space back in
2005, and added a preliminary figure in my Ecological Complexity paper.
Sunday, August 6, 2017
Monday, January 30, 2017
Albert Borgmann, Holding on to Reality
Back in the early 2000's I had an interest in the digital representations of animals online, and how animals cams create an imaginary biogeography. I read this 1999 book below, "Holding On To Reality" by Albert Borgmann. It has a lot to say then about the importance of the context of information, and how the internet separates us from that context and creates a slippery slope of ambiguity. I am struck now by its prescience and how it anticipated the rise of fake news and alternate facts.
Sunday, January 15, 2017
Taoist Tai Chi Society
These are photos from a Taoist Tai Chi intensive we had in Lexington last year. We now have classes at a couple of locations in town three days a week.

Monday, January 2, 2017
BioScience
In this BioScience
article, we describe barrier island dune topographic state space.
Presently, my PhD student Li-Chih Hsu and I are characterizing dune
topographies along barrier islands in Virginia and Maryland. We want to
examine where these islands will plot in the larger state space outlined
in this BioScience article, as originally developed in Monge and
Stallins (2016) in Physical Geography.
Space and place are the new DNA
Genomics, postgenomics? Omes, omics, proteome, transcriptome, exposome? Here is a primer on some of these biological concepts. In our recent article in GeoJournal, we describe how this new biology relates to geographical concepts about the productivity of space, spatial fixes, and the fallacies of spatial inference.
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