Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Kamchatka Project T-Shirts Are Here!


We are pleased to announce the release of the official Kamchatka Project T-shirts. The shirts were designed by team member Ethan Smith and printed by Jay Gifford and Andy Round. In keeping with our values, the shirts are made from 100% Organic Cotton and no pesticides were used in producing these shirts. As you have all contributed to the success of our project we wanted to extend a t-shirt to each of you to show our gratitude for supporting the Kamchatka Project. We hope that you will wear these shirts proudly and help us spread the word about our project.

Donors who contribute $35 or more may opt to receive an Official Organic Cotton Kamchatka Project T-Shirt. Please let us know your size, color preference and shipping address and we will put a shirt in the mail for you. Due to size availability, some shirts may have a 2-3 week delay on shipping.

You can contact us at: explore@kamchatkaproject.org


Thank you for your continued support,

The Kamchatka Project



Kamchatka Project from Jay Gifford on Vimeo.

Saturday, January 24, 2009

Win a pair of Rudy Project Optics!




In the Siberian city of Tomsk, children play a game called telephone, whispering a sentence around a circle until someone fails to repeat the original wording accurately. The penalty for getting the sentence wrong, is "you must go live in Kamchatka."

If you were that child, along with your Rudy Project sunglasses, what is the one item that you would bring with you to Kamchatka?

To some, Kamchatka is remote and dangerous and to others it is a place that is wild, beautiful, and worth exploring. Either way, you ONLY get to bring one item with you. What's it gonna be?.

Contest rules:

-1. Go to Rudy Project and pick out the sunglasses that you want to win!

-2. Check out our Facebook page and leave a message on our wall telling us the sunglasses you want to win and your answer to this week's question, "What is the one item that you would bring with you to Kamchatka?" by 9 pm PST on Sunday (1.25.09).

-3. Monday morning we will randomly draw three winners from the submissions! Grand Prize: Your choice of Rudy Project optics. 2nd & 3rd Prize: Rudy Project pro-forms and Kamchatka Project t-shirts. Winners will be announced on Monday the 26th by 9 am PST.

Sunday, January 18, 2009

100% Organic Cotton T-Shirts




We are excited to announce the release of the official Kamchatka Project T-shirts. There will be two color options which are yellow haze and river blue with a black logo on the front and back.

We would like to thank everyone who has contributed to the creation of these shirts, specifically Ethan Smith for the shirt design and Cassandra and Drew for their timely printing.







Wednesday, January 14, 2009

National Geographic examines Kamchatka



By David Quammen
Photograph by Michael Melford

Some places on this planet are so wondrous, and so frangible, that maybe we just shouldn't go there.

Maybe we should leave them alone and appreciate them from afar. Send a delegated observer who will absorb much, walk lightly, and report back as Neil Armstrong did from the moon—and let the rest of us stay home. That paradox applies to Kronotsky Zapovednik, a remote nature reserve on the east side of Russia's Kamchatka Peninsula, along the Pacific coast a thousand miles north of Japan. It's a splendorous landscape, dynamic and rich, tumultuous and delicate, encompassing 2.8 million acres of volcanic mountains and forest and tundra and river bottoms as well as more than 700 brown bears, thickets of Siberian dwarf pine (with edible nuts for the bears) and relict "graceful" fir (Abies sacha­linensis) left in the wake of Pleistocene glaciers, a major rookery of Steller sea lions on the coast, a population of kokanee salmon in Kronotskoye Lake, along with sea-run salmon and steelhead in the rivers, eagles and gyrfalcons and wolverines and many other species—terrain altogether too good to be a mere destination. With so much to offer, so much at stake, so much that can be quickly damaged but (because of the high latitudes, the slow growth of plants, the intri­cacies of its geothermal underpinnings, the specialness of its ecosystems, the delicacy of its topographic repose) not quickly repaired, does Kronotsky need people, even as visitors? I raise this question, acutely aware that it may sound hypocritical, or anyway inconsistent, given that I've recently left my own boot prints in Kronotsky's yielding crust.

To learn more go to: National Geographic

Friday, November 7, 2008

Kamchatka Project on Facebook


You can now become a fan of the Kamchatka Project on Facebook

If you have a Facebook account please join us here. This is an exponential way to stay in contact and we look forward to keeping everyone up to speed as the Kamchatka Project continues to develop. Facebook is an excellent way to connect , and share our expedition. If you know someone who would be interested in the Kamchatka Project, please invite them to join us at the Kamchatka Project fan page

Thanks for all of your support!

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Russian Stand

Hours after Obama won the presidency last night, President Dmitry Medvedev promised to install missile launchers capable of hitting American soil if the US doesn't back out of Bush's missile-defense program. Those missile launchers would most likely be installed on -- you guessed it -- Kamchatka Peninsula. I have a feeling Obama knows better than to get entrenched in Cold War part deux.

On the bright side, Medvedev granted Obama a 'fresh-start' with Moscow. Let's hope this guy is as smart as we all think he is, and takes on this diplomatic challenge with ease.

Read the NY Times article here:

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/11/06/world/europe/06russia.html?partner=permalink&exprod=permalink

Fundraising Launch

In order to make the Kamchatka Project possible, we are relying on small donors to fund our project. We chose this method over pursuing 1 big sponsor or grant because they goal of the project is to educated as many people as possible about Kamchatka. At midnight on Nov. 4th we sent out over 3,000 emails to friends and family asking for their support. The response so far has been astounding. People from all over the country have been donating money and asking for other ways to get involved in the expedition. Stay tuned to this blog for more information on how to contribute to The Kamchatka Project.

Don't forget to sign up for our blog at:
http://kamchatkaproject.blogspot.com/

Thank you so much for all of your support,
Rob