I was attacked by one or more mosquitoes last night.
In January, in the Netherlands.
I am not a happy person.
It's January, for heaven's sake!!!!!!
Give me some rest from the bastards in winter.
I'm already planning a short visit to Greece in summer, to buy half a ton of those blue pads that you put in the wall heating unit. It's the only thing I've ever found that works against mosquitoes. I have a feeling, 2008 will be an itchy year...
Thursday, January 24, 2008
Sunday, January 20, 2008
Sunday walk with Kelly
Since the tumour in her nose has become infected and it started bleeding so profusely, it feels like every time we go for a walk it might be our last.
She's as fit as a fiddle when you see her.
Full of piss & vinegar and fun and hunting instinct.
Fifteen years old, Cushings, cancer and she keeps on going without a hiccup.
This tumour in her nose is going to be the end of her, and probably soon.
She's as fit as a fiddle when you see her.
Full of piss & vinegar and fun and hunting instinct.
Fifteen years old, Cushings, cancer and she keeps on going without a hiccup.
This tumour in her nose is going to be the end of her, and probably soon.
Monday, January 14, 2008
Legale en illegale DVD's
Iedere keer als ik een gehuurde DVD in mijn machine stop moet ik gedwongen eerst eindeloos durende, zeer belerende filmpjes kijken over dat thuiskopiëren illegaal is, dat downloaden diefstal is, enz. Geen enkele manier om te fast-forwarden hier doorheen. Je moet wel blijven kijken, of ff een bakkie koffie gaan maken.
Potverdorie! Zouden ze dit nu niet kunnen verwijderen van de legale films, of je de mogelijkheid geven om door te forwarden naar de menu? Dat dwingerige karakter, daar word ik nu helemaal sacherijnig van. De afgelopen tijd betrap ik mijzelf dat ik loop te schelden naar de scherm van "zeur niet, deze IS legaal!!!!".
Ik voel me gewoon gestraft, omdat ik een legale kopie zit te kijken.
Hmmm... zouden de illegale kopieën ook deze waarschuwing hebben, of heeft men het eruit gehaald....
Potverdorie! Zouden ze dit nu niet kunnen verwijderen van de legale films, of je de mogelijkheid geven om door te forwarden naar de menu? Dat dwingerige karakter, daar word ik nu helemaal sacherijnig van. De afgelopen tijd betrap ik mijzelf dat ik loop te schelden naar de scherm van "zeur niet, deze IS legaal!!!!".
Ik voel me gewoon gestraft, omdat ik een legale kopie zit te kijken.
Hmmm... zouden de illegale kopieën ook deze waarschuwing hebben, of heeft men het eruit gehaald....
Friday, January 11, 2008
Sir Edmund Hillary, RIP
The first (Western) climber who reached the top of Mount Everest together with his Sherpa mountaineer Tenzing Norgay, died at age 88.
One of the great old-fashioned adventurers is no more.
RIP.
One of the great old-fashioned adventurers is no more.
RIP.
Thursday, January 10, 2008
Current playlist
Dark days. Slow and sometimes sad music.
It's good, it's that time of year.
It's good, it's that time of year.
Brian Eno - An Ending(Ascent) - 28 Days Later Soundtrack
Urban Creep - Tripping On Moonshine
Teddy Thompson - Shine so bright
Urban Creep - Noah (live)
The Cure - Plainsong
Blof & Counting Crows - Holiday in Spain
Jackson Browne & Jann Arden - Unloved
Brian Eno - Deep blue day
Counting Crows - Colorblind
Cowboy Junkies - Powderfinger
Matthew Ryan - Chrome
Sarah Harmer - Uniform Grey
Damian Rice - Cannonball
Donna the Buffalo - Your Way Home
Dougie Maclean - Caledonia
Ben Harper - Beloved one
Teddy Thompson - Everybody Move It
John Cale - Andalucia
John Mayer - The Heart Of Life
John Rutter - Requiem - I. Requiem Aeternam
kd lang - Hallelujah
Liesbeth List - Pastorale (Duet Met Ramses Shaffy)
Lisa Loeb, Brian Eno - Ambient #5 (Insomniac Trance)
Dar Williams - Guinevere (with Lucy Kaplansky)
Ben Harper - Please Please Me Like You Want To
Dave Mathews & Emmylou Harris - Gulf Coast Highway
A Girl Called Eddy - Golden
Dave Matthews - The Space Between
Martha Wainwright - The Car Song
Counting Crows - Going Back to Georgia (With Nancy Griffith)
Martha Wainwright - The Sex Song
Matthew Ryan - Beautiful Fool
Neil Young - Powderfinger
Nevada - California - 2M Sessies
Paul Kelly And the Messengers - South of Germany
Richard Shindell - Are you happy now
Warren Zevon & Jackson Browne - Hasten Down the Wind
Rickie Lee Jones - Low Spark Of High Heeled Boys
Sufjan Stevens - Casimir Pulaski Day
The Corrs - Song for Ireland (Celtic Myst)
The Corrs (with Bono) - When The Stars Go Blue
Trisha Yearwood & Don Henley - Walkaway Joe
U2 - Dreaming With Tears In My Eyes
Urban Creep - Sigh
Erik Satie - 1 Gymnopedie no.1
Whispering Woods - Walk Softly
Damien Rice feat. Lisa Hannigan - 9 crimes
Friday, January 04, 2008
Saving the Baltic?
In my opinion, it cannot be done.
There is less flushing of the Baltic every year and that's geological in causation. During the last ice age, a huge weight of ice pressed down that entire area and the ground is still slowly moving back upwards. So, the entry at Denmark has become shallower all along and will keep on doing so. The flushing of the Baltic will become less and less. Considering the astounding amount of crap tossed into that body of water over the years, as well as the agricultural nutrient runoff, it's highly doubtful it will ever recover. Nope, I think the Baltic will die completely, except for plagues of algae and jellyfish and all kinds of emergency populator species.
I think we should write this one off. It's past saving. It's almost ecologically dead anyhow. People and industry should not dump in it any more, it's terrible for the health of the communities who live on the shores. But, don't try to make it a viable ecosystem again. Not only do we have human nature against it, we have geology working against it too.
The European Commission is contributing 9 million euro to the 27 million euro project Bonus+ to try and fix the Baltic. I say, that money could be better spent elsewhere on marine areas in Europe that need protection or that have a better chance of recovery. This is simply throwing good money after bad.
There is less flushing of the Baltic every year and that's geological in causation. During the last ice age, a huge weight of ice pressed down that entire area and the ground is still slowly moving back upwards. So, the entry at Denmark has become shallower all along and will keep on doing so. The flushing of the Baltic will become less and less. Considering the astounding amount of crap tossed into that body of water over the years, as well as the agricultural nutrient runoff, it's highly doubtful it will ever recover. Nope, I think the Baltic will die completely, except for plagues of algae and jellyfish and all kinds of emergency populator species.
I think we should write this one off. It's past saving. It's almost ecologically dead anyhow. People and industry should not dump in it any more, it's terrible for the health of the communities who live on the shores. But, don't try to make it a viable ecosystem again. Not only do we have human nature against it, we have geology working against it too.
The European Commission is contributing 9 million euro to the 27 million euro project Bonus+ to try and fix the Baltic. I say, that money could be better spent elsewhere on marine areas in Europe that need protection or that have a better chance of recovery. This is simply throwing good money after bad.
The news brought back to port by the Aranda was not good. First, the 59-meter (194-foot) research vessel happened across an invasive species of jellyfish in the eastern Gulf of Finland -- the same creature already responsible for decimating fisheries in the Black Sea and Caspian Sea.
Second -- and more concerning -- the Helsinki-based ship found rising levels of phosphorous in the waters off Poland and Russia. Phosphorous is a by-product of agricultural runoff and human waste -- and it's a warning that massive, deadly algae blooms could be on the horizon.
The ship cruises the Baltic Sea on behalf of the Finnish Institute of Marine Research, monitoring the sea's vital signs. For years they have not been good, with fisheries suffering, pollution rampant and algae at times spreading out of control. Last month, though, the countries on the shores of the northern European sea got together to sign a treaty to do something about it. Called the Baltic Sea Action Plan, the accord follows years of efforts at bringing Baltic Sea pollution under control -- including a similar effort launched in Russia to curtail untreated wastewater reaching the sea from the densely populated region around St. Petersburg.
The Aranda, though, has found that phosphorous levels have continued to go up. "It is very important to monitor if these efforts have had any effect," Dr. Markku Viitasalo, a leading scientist at the Finnish Institute of Marine Research, told SPIEGEL ONLINE. "And the answer is, not yet."
According to recent statistics gathered by the Helsinki Commission (Helcom), a 10-member organization that has been seeking to improve the Baltic Sea's health since 1974, some 730,000 tons of nitrogen and 36,300 tons of phosphorous make their way into the sea each year through a combination of human sewage, agricultural and industrial runoff, and airborne pollution. It's enough to trigger blue-green algae blooms massive enough to choke out the oxygen that sustains marine life.
Not only that, but there is a vast quantity of industrial waste strewn about on the floor of the Baltic Sea. Thousands of tons of chemical weapons were dumped into the sea following World War II, and waste from heavy industry was poured into the water as well. In August 2006, some 23,000 barrels of mercury were found on the sea floor off the coast of Sweden. There are also fears that the construction of a planned natural gas pipeline from Russia to Germany may stir up some of the heavily toxic waste resting on the sea floor.
"The Baltic Sea is one of the most polluted seas in the world," Juhu-Markku Leppänen, a Baltic Sea habitat expert with Helcom, told SPIEGEL ONLINE last year. Fifty years ago, he says, dumping industrial waste into the sea "was really considered at the time to be good environmental practice."
Now, though, the race is on to help the sea recover before the Baltic dies completely.
source
Tuesday, January 01, 2008
Happy 2008!
I have a feeling, it will be a good year. A happy one, hopefully.
Possibly, even a momentous one.
Possibly, even a momentous one.
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