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This profile was automatically generated using 22 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 22 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
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1. www.postindependent.com
www.postindependent.com/articl - [Cached]Published on: 12/28/2007 Last Visited: 1/11/2008
Venture just a little off the beaten path north of Main Street on Second Street in Carbondale to take a trip around the world in the exotic 2nd Street Shop, where owners Ingrid and John Seidel have collections of ethnic handicrafts, shawls, jewelry, carvings and more for sale from their globe-trotting adventures.
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The shop also features John Seidel's photographic works and the fine art of other Colorado artists, not to mention an original Bev Doolittle painting.
Whether he's in his own backyard or overseas in a Third World country, John Seidel always has been an adventurer, curious to see what's around the bend or on the other side of a "cardboard" ceiling in an old miner's shack where he found a rare Coca-Cola print that lists for $1,000 on ebay.
"I've been knockin' around in the woods for a long time," he said.
His parents had lived in Iran for a number of years, which influenced his interest as a globe-trotter, but his traveling blood began to flow fast the year his mother drove the kids to the national parks. "I remember I just really enjoyed it," he recalled, describing his view from the back seat. When he was in high school, he took a trip to British Columbia.
He met Ingrid in the early 1970s, and they continued traveling, even taking up scuba diving prior to a trip to the land Down Under. "I said, ‘I'm not going to go all the way to Australia and New Zealand without looking at the Great Barrier Reef,'" he said.
She was a Valley View Hospital nurse and would get six weeks off at a time. As a longtime biologist for the Colorado Division of Wildlife, he would save up his vacations around her time off so they could journey to another part of the world - Indonesia, Micronesia, Guam, Tanzania, Ecuador, Borneo, Fiji, Tonga, Nepal, Turkey - focusing on Third World and developing nations.
"We never really stayed in hotels. We'd walk off the plane and through customs and the taxi driver was our new best friend. We'd say ‘Let's go meet our new best friend,'" said John Seidel, who also integrated some trips with wildlife work.
He has conducted studies for the king in Nepal and spent 10 days straight on the ice in Manitoba studying polar bears. The frigid location is the first in Hudson Bay to freeze and the last to thaw so the bears have been able to thrive there. The study is particularly poignant to Seidel now because he knows the population will be lost to global warming, he said, "so, it sticks out in my mind."
They've thought about what their other favorite trips and places have been but have a tough time narrowing it down, although Thailand, with what they described as the friendliest people, is currently at the top of the list. Other contenders are Costa Rica, Dominica and Turkey, and Kenya and Tanzania were memorable for John because of the wildlife.
Mostly, they just love meeting other people and learning about other cultures. Having studied Spanish at Colorado Mountain College throughout the years, the two are pretty much fluent. They frequent Mexico, visiting a true hideaway in the Yucatan where they are the only "gringos," but, Seidel added, "I'm not going to tell you where it is. … I'm the only guy who walks there on the beach." -
2. Alliance for America :: View topic - CO: Forest Svc Wrong to Abandon Elk Herd
www.allianceforamerica.org/bb/ - [Cached]Published on: 5/13/2005 Last Visited: 3/5/2006
By John Seidel
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John Seidel is a retired supervisor for the Colorado Division of Wildlife. He currently operates an environmental consulting firm, Environmental Perspectives, in Carbondale. -
3. Colorado lynx program gets everybody's attention
previous.cmc.org/cmc/conserve/ - [Cached]Published on: 5/16/2006 Last Visited: 12/6/2007
At that point, "We wanted to quit looking and do something about restoration," says John Seidel, predatory mammals biologist at CDOW and a strong advocate of lynx augmentation.

