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Thursday, August 26, 2010

Awareness Number Four

Awareness Number Four [Reasons Why Not To Mow The Yard]



By: Daniel Lee Edstrom


hayfever.png


1. Mowing grass causes air-born toxic emissions. Anytime a plant is eaten or cut down, it goes into a self-preservation mode.


a. The damaged plant sends electrical impulses to it's root system telling it to produce a toxic enzyme for the purpose of warding off further destruction.


b. The damaged plant also sends a genesis signal to the roots that will cause the growth of the plant to switch into high gear. The plant then grows at an abnormal speed in a state of toxicity until it's threat of extinction is no longer. This promotes a local air atmosphere of toxicity that lingers in hopes of warding off further destruction from air-breathing creatures. Some of the side effects for humans may include; hay fever, labored breathing, coughing, sneezing, runny nose, acute asthma,and nausea.





2 .Mowing increases the pesky bug population.


a.The miraculous eco-system that you have just cut down, has driven away an arsenal of would-be predators of gnats, flies, and mosquitoes.The pesky bugs can now fly around with less fear of being consumed. They are also filled with the toxins from the air-born aftermath, thus, birds and other would-be flying predators will stay away from them until the conditions return to normal.





3. Labor and equipment cost.


a. First you have the initial cost of the lawnmower,


b. Second you have the perpetual cost of fuel and oil.


c. Third you have the cost of maintaining and fixing your lawnmower [unless you are one of those people who are fortunate enough to have a mechanic in the family, but even then, you must rely upon their charity every time you have a mechanical need.]


d. Fourth, your time is money if not for the fact that you could be spending more time on better endeavors that may be important to you.





4. Noise Pollution


a. For a considerable portion of your day, the lawn mower engine noise will strip the peace and solitude as well as drown out and drive away many beautiful song birds [that also eat pesky bugs I might add.] that were also once thriving around your yard space.





So why don't we save ourself a lot of time and money, sprinkle some wildflower seeds around and maybe cut just enough for a little winding walkway, and enjoy our yard's little eco-system?We will all breathe alot easier especially when we realize all the time, energy, and money that we are saving!


About the Author



It's not about me.

(ArticlesBase SC #3130169)


Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/ - Awareness Number Four [Reasons Why Not To Mow The Yard]


Monday, August 23, 2010

God loves us all!

Joy and fear: miners found alive stuck for months

Sebastian Pinera, Lourence GolbourneAP – Chile's President Sebastian third from left, accompanied by miners' relatives and Chile's Mining Minister …
COPIAPO, Chile – For 33 men found alive after 17 days trapped deep in a copper and gold mine, the toughest challenge now may be preserving their sanity during the months it may take to carve a tunnel big enough for them to get out.
For their families above ground on Monday, euphoria and and more anxiety meant for a sleepless night at the realization that the miners may be stuck until Christmas.
"We didn't sleep. We stayed up all night long hoping for more news. They said that new images would appear, so we were up hoping to see them," said one, Carolina Godoy.
Dawn broke behind a cold fog on the surface of the gold and copper mine in Chile's Atacama desert, where an intense rescue effort finally reached the miners on Sunday after weeks of missteps, new cave-ins and other false starts.
Now the plan is to carve a wider tunnel, just big enough for the men to be pulled out one by one. That equipment works much more slowly than the bore that drilled the 15-centimeter-wide shaft used to make first contact.
That narrower drill broke through 2,257 feet (688 meters) of solid rock to reach the emergency refuge where the miners have gathered. The trapped men quickly tied two notes to the end of a probe that rescuers pulled to the surface, announcing in big red letters: "All 33 of us are fine in the shelter."
"Today all of Chile is crying with excitement and joy," President Sebastian Pinera said at the mine.
And where many were beginning to give up hope, the scene above ground became a celebration Sunday night, with a barbecue for theminers' families, roving musicians, lit candles and Chilean flags making the barren landscape seem festive.
The men already have been trapped underground longer than all but a few miners rescued in recent history. Last year, three miners survived 25 days trapped in a flooded mine in southern China, and two miners in northeastern China were rescued after 23 days in 1983. Few other rescues have taken more than two weeks.
The miners' survival after 17 days is very unusual, but since they've made it this far, they should emerge physically fine, said Davitt McAteer, who was assistant secretary for mine safety and health at the U.S. Labor Department under President Bill Clinton.
"The health risks in a copper and gold mine are pretty small if you have air, food and water," McAteer said.
Still, he said the stress of being trapped underground for a long period of time can be significant.
"There is a psychological pattern there that we've looked at," McAteer said. But "they've established communication with the guys; there are people who can talk them through that."
The hole already drilled will be used to send down small capsules containing food, water and oxygen if necessary, and sound and video equipment so the miners can better communicate with loved ones and rescuers. That two-way communication may be key to keeping them thinking positive.
A video camera lowered down the probe shaft Sunday showed some of the miners, stripped to the waist in the underground heat, waving happily. But they weren't able to establish audio contact, Pinera said.
"I saw eight or nine of them. They were waving their hands. They got close to the camera and we could see their eyes, their joy," the president said.
The miners seemed to be aware that their rescue may take a long time, according to one of them, Mario Gomez, perhaps the eldest of the trapped men at 63, who wrote a note to his wife.
"Even if we have to wait months to communicate. ... I want to tell everyone that I'm good and we'll surely come out OK," Gomez wrote, scrawling the words on a sheet of notebook paper the miners tied to the probe. "Patience and faith. God is great and the help of my God is going to make it possible to leave this mine alive."
Mine officials and relatives of the workers had hoped the men reached a shelter below where the tunnel collapsed Aug. 5 at the San Jose gold and copper mine about 530 miles (850 kilometers) north of the capital, Santiago. But they had said the shelter's emergency air and food supplies would last only 48 hours.
Gomez wrote that the miners used vehicles for light and a backhoe to dig a channel to retrieve underground water.
It was unclear whether their air supply was in danger of running out.
Rescuers had drilled repeatedly in an effort to reach the shelter, but failed seven times. They blamed the errors on the mining company's maps. According to Gomez's note, at least some of those earlier probes were close enough that the trapped miners heard them. The eighth attempt finally worked.
Gomez's note, which the president read aloud on live television, focused on expressions of faith and love for his family. But frustration also showed through in one line, where he declared that "this company has got to modernize."
Chile is the world's top copper producer and a leading gold producer, and has some of the world's most advanced mining operations. But both the company that owns the mine, San Esteban, and the National Mining and Geology Service have been criticized for allegedly failing to comply with regulations. In 2007, an explosion at the San Jose mine killed three workers.
Liliana Ramirez couldn't believe it when Chile's mining minister said her husband had sent a note to his "Dearest Lila."
"I know my husband is strong, and at 63, is the most experienced miner who could lead his co-workers," she said, but she vowed to keep him above ground once he's rescued.
Authorities and relatives of the miners hugged, climbed a nearby hill, planted 33 flags and sang Chile's national anthem after discovering the miners had survived.
Along the length of Chile, horns honked, flags waved and people watched the drama unfold live on television and computer screens. It was a rush of good news in a country still rebuilding from a magnitude-8.8 earthquake Feb. 27 and its resulting tsunami, which together killed at least 521 people and left 200,000 homeless.
___
Associated Press writers Federico Quilodran in Santiago, Chile, Peter Orsi in Mexico City and Michael Warren in Buenos Aires contributed to this report.
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Thursday, August 12, 2010

New Zealand Retail Sales for June 2010


[22:55 NZ ECON:  Retail Trade Surprises Sharply To Upside In June, Q2] SYDNEY, Aug 13 (IFR) - Retail trade in New Zealand has been barely rising for months, and markets and IFR and looked for more of the same in June, but instead growth soared over both the month and the quarter.  Overall retail trade leaped 0.9% in June, the strongest rise since last August, against market expectations of a 0.4% rise.  Ex-car sales bounced a hefty 1.5%, their best result since last May and also more than double the 0.6% expectation.  Helped by this bounce in June, retail trade volume rose 1.3% over the June, handily beating expectations of a second straight quarterly gain of just 0.2%.  With nominal retail trade rising a mere 0.5%, the rise in volumes reflects heavy discounting by retailers, suggesting that underlying demand remains relatively weak.  While IFR had been thinking that weak retail data combined with the greater uncertainty in major economies would argue against another rate hike in September, the relatively hawkish central bank is likely to take this as a sign that domestic conditions are improving and make the market expectation for another 25bp more likely.  Further details and table on .  George.Worthington@thomsonreuters.com

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Australia Trade Balance Goods






Aussie Trade Balance and Q2 House Prices

Written August 3, 2010 at 9:45 PM EST by Alex Chernomordin 
A much better than expected Trade Balance out of Australia for the second straight month has moved the AUD/USD pair off session lows and revitalized the bid on risk after another round of poor readings out of the US earlier. The House Price Index also improved on the quarter.
  • Trade Balance - Survey:1800M   Actual:3539M   Prior:1645M
  • House Prices (QoQ) - Survey:2.0%   Actual:3.1%   Prior:4.8%
  • House Prices (YoY) - Survey:17.2%   Actual:18.4%   Prior:20.0%
On the 5-min AUD chart today we see the pair found support at the 61.8% from the move in the NY morning but has only found its way back to levels from earlier in the Asian morning.
audusd1


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