onsdag 22. januar 2014

”Isbrekkenitt – et sjeldent mineral”






Isbrekkenitt ble funnet av Kjell Arve Isbrekken høsten 1991. Steinene du ser på bildene er deler av tre blokker som ble funnet på Gråurdfjeller sør for  Åmotsdalen ikke så langt fra Snøhetta på Dovre. Den største blokken var på 50-60 kilo. Alle blokkene hadde skarpe kanter og kan derfor neppe være transportert langt fra opprinnelsesstedet under siste istid. Steinblokkene inneholdt gull (200 gram per tonn, men også sølv, kopperkis og svovelkis).

Området hvor blokkene ble funnet, er nå naturreservat. Det innebærer at leting etter mulig gullførende bergart er stoppet.

lørdag 18. januar 2014

”Fast Food Not the Major Cause of Rising Childhood Obesity Rates, Study Finds”



 

”The study's researchers found that children's consumption of fast food is only a small part of a much more pervasive dietary pattern that is fostered at an early age by children's parents and caregivers. The pattern includes few fruits and vegetables, relying instead on high amounts of processed food and sugar-sweetened beverages. These food choices also are reinforced in the meals students are offered at school.

"This is really what is driving children's obesity," said Barry Popkin, PhD, W.R. Kenan Jr. Distinguished Professor of nutrition at UNC's Gillings School of Global Public Health, whose team led the study.” http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/01/140115132750.htm

”Turbulent ground handling today!



The wind picked up around 11.30. Time for paraglider exercise. Even if there was no sun the wind was changing very much – nil wind to eight meters a second. No wind where I was standing and strong wind thirty meters away resulting in lots of frontals. In the end it was almost impossible to pack my glider; I should have brought a sack and packed the glider later…

torsdag 16. januar 2014

”Cherry tomatoes – lucky seed”





This cherry tomato plant must have had a piece of good luck; I have never seen a plant growing like this one. Did the seed have special qualities? Still there are only a few ripe tomatoes but lots of green ones.

lørdag 11. januar 2014

”Cutting grass on Khao Sadao – no flying”





We stayed in tent on takeoff for two nights. Now the grass is cut everwhere. It is the dry season now so I hope no cutting is needed for seveeral months now. The wind did not cooperate so there was no flying.

An owl made a try in nighttime; we found it entangled in the grass in the morning (photo).

søndag 5. januar 2014

"Special Report: A nation at the crossroads - Phuket Gazette"

"Special Report

As Thailand begins a new year, the country finds itself at a crossroads. What seems to be at stake is not only the future shape of democracy in this country, but whether it will even remain a democracy at all. This should worry all those who care about the future of Thailand and its people.

The People’s Democratic Reform Committee (PDRC) is determined to bring down Yingluck Shinawatra’s government. They want to uproot the Thaksin regime and replace it with a “People’s Government”. They want a People’s Assembly to serve as the legislative branch of this brave new administration, and to draft legislation that would reform Thailand’s political system.

They insist that they are not anti-democracy, but support a cleaner democracy – one not corrupted by capital.

The group, led by former deputy PM Suthep Thaugsuban and several old faces from the People’s Alliance for Democracy, claim the Constitution allows them to do this. Article 3 of the charter says sovereignty of the country “belongs to the people”.

The government, they add, has violated Article 68 of the Constitution, which says that no one should try to overthrow the system of constitutional democracy with HM The King as head of state. Because the current government says it will not heed the judgment of the Constitutional Court, which struck down its recent Senate amendment, the administration is no longer respecting the Constitution, and has thus lost legitimacy, the PRDC claims.

Once Ms Yingluck has resigned, an eventuality the PDRC is plainly aiming to achieve, there will be a power vacuum. The PDRC then wants to invoke Article 7 of the charter, which says that when no part of the document seems to apply to the situation, the country should follow conventional democratic practice.

Since the country has been ruled by appointed prime ministers before, this would allow the head of the Senate to appoint a new premier, who would in turn bring in a new government of technocrats – “good people”, using the protesters’ term of choice.

A new People’s Assembly would then replace the Parliament. Its 400-strong membership would comprise 300 representatives from professional organizations, and 100 appointed by the PDRC. This assembly would then set about "reforming” Thailand’s corrupted political system.

The PDRC is right to say the system is in need of reform. Politics remains deeply corrupt. Vote buying, as the protesters claim, is indeed rife. But to claim that Pheu Thai buys elections entirely through the purchasing of votes, as the PDRC has claimed, is to grossly oversimplify the situation. The reality is that – for all his serious flaws – Thaksin Shinawatra and his proxies are the party of choice for millions of Thais.

A further oversimplification is in suggesting that only one party engages in vote buying. All the parties play the votes for notes game. Studies have shown that some voters take money only from the party they intend to support, while others take money from every party then vote for their preferred candidate anyway. Paying for votes is the price you pay to play the game, as academics Chris Baker and Pasuk Phongphaichit have argued. It does not guarantee victory.

One further cause for caution is the leader of the protests himself. Those who have lived in Phuket long enough may remember a little of Suthep Thaugsuban’s questionable record. In 1995, as Agriculture Minister, he was responsible for the SorPorKor 4-01 land reform scheme, in which the deeds to plots of empty land were supposed to be distributed to poor farmers around the country.

In Phuket, an investigation revealed that 11 of the island’s richest families were among the recipients of this property. The accusations had enough credibility – and seriousness – to bring down Chuan Leekpai’s Democrat government. This fact should serve as a strong signal that this conflict is driven by a lot more than just revulsion to corruption.

To lose faith in democracy at this point in Thailand’s development would be a mistake. The system is highly flawed. But one has to wonder what kind of reforms the PDRC might carry out that could somehow ensure that when democracy is restored – within about 18 months – it is suddenly, miraculously clean.

The PDRC claims to be a peaceful movement, and so far the protests have been relatively free from violence. But those observers who support the principles of human rights and free speech have good cause to wonder what kind of reforms Mr Suthep and his fellow leaders have in mind – reforms that we are led to believe will succeed in cleaning up Thai politics where others have failed.

A nation does not make a better democracy by abandoning democracy."

http://www.thaivisa.com/forum/topic/694260-special-report-a-nation-at-the-crossroads/?utm_source=newsletter-20140105-1346&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=news 

torsdag 2. januar 2014

”Good advice for everything 5 eller alt du trenger å vite om fyllesyke”




Atle kvapp aldri så lite da han tok en titt på NRK sine nettsider rett over nyttår og fant dette førsteoppslaget: http://www.nrk.no/livsstil/alt-du-trenger-a-vite-om-fyllesyke-1.11439311

Riktignok vet han at 1. nyttårsdag ikke er noen god dag for den delen av Norge som bruker den foregående dagen og natta til å gå på fylla.

Siden Vinmonopolet er drevet av Helse- og omsorgsdepartementer (av alle departementer?), er det vel ikke mer enn rett og rimelig at statskanalen NRK viser omsorg og hjelper fyllesyke nordmenn med råd om hvordan de skal rette på plagene dagen derpå.