Random thoughts

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Don't think too hard about how to cook that turkey....

Happy Thanksgiving!



cool Todd
i will have the Turkey/prefer a chook tbh
AND the jock
and you can befriend the chick
ps
i wont tell your missus
pps
turkey seems to be too fleshy dryish,like salmon/trout to me
an oddity texture

Don't think too hard about how to cook that turkey....
 
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jock Todd,sorry mate
you made me do it ha

rare

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you bloody Aussies bitch and moan about CHINA nut quick as a flash sell off everyting uou can for the crap dollar huh
as bad as NZ

we have done the exact same thing

MAD/BAD rent/lease you idiot govts
except the Chinese dont believe in that stuff

Chinese company to take over Dairy Farmers and Aussie dairy icons for $600m
The Chinese company, which recently took over Bellamy's, wants to pay $600 million to Japanese beverage giant Kirin for Dairy Farmers, Masters and Pura and other dairy icons.





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Chinese company to take over Dairy Farmers and Aussie dairy icons for $600m
 
LOVE Au RURAL
glad the fires appear to have died down a little
drought still prevalent, bumer

ATO launches appeal over backpacker tax ruling
The ATO appeals against a federal court ruling that Australia's backpacker tax is discriminatory.



'It's like a war zone': Farmers respond to governments' bushfire recovery package
Farmers say a joint NSW and Federal government bushfire recovery package is a fraction of what will be needed to recover.



Up to 400 jobs lost in East Pilbara copper mine closure
290 internal jobs and 110 contractor positions are set to be lost, as Metals X Limited mothballs Nifty Copper operations.



Miner killed working underground in central Queensland
The overnight death at the Carborough Downs Mine is the seventh death in the state's resources industry in about 18 months.



Chinese company to buy Dairy Farmers and other dairy icons for $600 million
The Chinese company which recently took over Bellamy's wants to buy Dairy Farmers, Masters and Pura and other dairy icons for $600 million.



More planes and firefighters not the answer to bushfire woes, former RFS chief says
Large fuel loads and climate change are to blame for the unprecedented fire season in NSW, according to the state's first Rural Fire Service chief.



Queensland dairy farmers are on their knees: Susan McDonald
Farmers tour Parliament House to raise concerns about their future as the Government digests feedback on its draft dairy industry code of conduct.



Water pipeline from Wivenhoe Dam to Warwick subject to $1m feasibility study
Queensland's Premier announces a feasibility study into piping water into the Southern Downs from Wivenhoe Dam.

 
How Turkey Got Its Name
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This week, many American families will gather around the lunch or (and?) dinner table, feasting on a Thanksgiving meal centered on turkey. It’s a celebration of many things, but historically, stems back to 1621, when European settlers (“Pilgrims,” as any American elementary school children will surely tell you) marked the harvest by having a similar meal.

Turkeys are indigenous to the United States and Mexico; in fact, Europeans only first came into contact with turkeys roughly 500 years ago, upon discovery of the New World. So how did turkeys (the bird) end up being named so similarly to Turkey (the country)? Let’s follow that bird’s history from the New World to the Old.

As far as we can tell, the first European explorers to discover (and eat) turkey were those in Hernan Cortez’s expedition in Mexico in 1519. This new delicacy was brought back to Europe by Spanish Conquistadors and by 1524, had reached England. The bird was domesticated in England within a decade, and by the turn of the century, it’s name — “turkey” — had entered the English language. Case in point: William Shakespeare used the term in Twelfth Night, believed to be written in 1601 or 1602. The lack of context around his usage suggests that the term had widespread reach.

But the birds did not come directly from the New World to England; rather, they came via merchant ships from the eastern Mediterranean Sea. Those merchants were called “Turkey merchant” as much the area was part of the Turkish Empire at the time. Purchasers of the birds back home in England thought the fowl came from the area, hence the name “Turkey birds” or, soon thereafter, “turkeys.”

Not all languages follow this misconception. Others, such as Hebrew get the origin just as wrong, but in the other direction. The Hebrew term for turkey, transliterated as tarnagol hodu, literally translates to “chicken of India,” furthering the Elizabethan-era myth that New World explorers had found a route to the Orient. This nomenclature for the bird is so wide-spread that it self-defeats the historical basis for the term “turkey” in English, as the Turkish word for turkey is “hindi.”
 
good luck Cali folk,as much as our Aussie mates
itsa cruel cruel world, even without these manmade wars

People Are Literally Driving Through Flames to Escape This California Wildfire
2,400 homes near Santa Barbara have been evacuated.

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By Alex Lubben
Nov 27 2019, 6:51am
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Firefighters were desperately battling fast-moving wildfires burning through the hills just outside Santa Barbara Tuesday morning, attempting to keep the fire outside of city limits as residents evacuated along highways surrounded by flames.

The Cave Fire, a blaze at least 3,100 acres large and 0% contained, is burning dangerously close to homes in Santa Barbara, prompting mandatory evacuations of 2,400 homes and cutting power to residents in the southern part of Santa Barbara County. The fire sparked around 4 p.m. on Monday in the Santa Ynez Mountains in an area that hasn’t burned since 1990..

People Are Literally Driving Through Flames to Escape This California Wildfire
 

Attachments

For Some Urban Areas, Warming
Climate is Only Half the Threat

A new F&ES study projects that urban expansion will cause the average summer temperature in these areas to increase about 0.5 to 0.6 degrees C by midcentury — but up to 3 degrees C in some locations.
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Shutterstock
Climate researchers predict that global temperatures will increase by as much as 2 degrees C by 2050 due to growing concentrations of greenhouse gas emissions in the planet’s atmosphere.

For Some Urban Areas, Warming Climate is Only Half the Threat
 
am always saddened for my rural Australia
take care brothers ye



Federal Govt accuses one state of holding up key Murray-Darling Basin role
One state, unnamed by the Federal Water Minister, is holding up plans to formally establish an integrity office to oversee the Murray-Darling Basin, according to the Federal Government.



No water, no work: 100 more jobs to go at SunRice
More jobs are being slashed at SunRice as high water prices turn growers off grains.



Hobart could face water restrictions as city's demand spikes, irrigators asked to slash usage
Farmers are being asked to slash their irrigation usage as supply in the state's south buckles under demand.



What happens when we run out of water?
Taps are running dry in towns over central NSW, but the region's dams have gone from overflowing to almost empty in just three years.



'Historic' bull semen goes under the hammer to support charities
Nearly 5,000 'straws' of bull semen no longer needed for research by CSIRO are going under the hammer for charity.

 
LOVE BEES
leave them alone humans


Wild bees are recycling plastic, study finds
Several bee species have begun using plastic waste to build their nests, hinting at the extent of

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An alfalfa leafcutter bee on an alfalfa flower. (Photo: Peggy Greb/USDA Agricultural Research Service)

Plastic is piling up in ecosystems all over the world, not just oceans and lakes. Its harmful effects on wildlife have been widely documented, but a few animals — like bowerbirds and hermit crabs — are doing what they can to recycle it. And according to a 2014 study, wild bees in Canada have joined the effort, using bits of plastic waste to build their nests.

These tiny insects can't recycle nearly enough plastic to put a significant dent in the problem. Still, their resourceful use of polyurethane and polyethylene illustrates how widespread plastic pollution has become, and how some wildlife is adapting to it.


"Plastic waste pervades the global landscape," the study's authors write in the journal Ecosphere. "Although adverse impacts on both species and ecosystems have been documented, there are few observations of behavioral flexibility and adaptation in species, especially insects, to increasingly plastic-rich environments."

The researchers found two species of leafcutter bees incorporating plastic into their nests, each bringing home varieties that mimic the natural materials they traditionally use. Leafcutter bees don't build big colonies or store honey like honeybees, opting instead for small nests in underground holes, tree cavities or crevices in buildings.

One of the bees they studied, the alfalfa leafcutter, normally bites off pieces of leaves and flowers to make its nests. But the researchers found that three of eight brood cells contained fragments of polyethylene plastic bags, replacing 23 percent of the cut leaves in each cell on average. "All pieces were of the same white glossy color and 'plastic bag' consistency," the researchers report, "and thus presumably from the same source."

While they don't make honey, alfalfa leafcutter bees still make money for U.S. and Canadian farmers by pollinating crops including alfalfa, carrots, canola and melons. The Eurasian insects were introduced to North America in the 1930s for that purpose, and they've since become feral, joining the continent's many native species of leafcutter bees.

Bees use plastic in Argentina, too
An alfalfa leafcutter bee in western New York. (Photo: Pollinator/Wikimedia Commons)

In a separate study conducted in Argentina between 2017 and 2018, researchers studying chicory pollinators found a nest made entirely of plastic. It's the first known example of such construction worldwide. They believe the bees that made the nests are alfafa leaf-cutting bees as in the example above.

Unfortunately, the nest was not healthy. New Scientist describes it:

The plastic included thin, blue strips the consistency of disposable shopping bags, and white pieces that were a bit thicker. In this nest, one brood cell had dead larva in it, one was empty and may have contained an unidentified adult that emerged, and one cell was unfinished.
The study was conducted by Mariana Allasino of the National Agricultural Technology Institute in Argentina and a team of researchers, and published in the journal Apidologie.

Bees using sealants
The Canadian researchers also examined a second bee, the native American Megachile campanulae, which normally gathers resins and saps from trees to build its nests. Along with those natural nest materials, the species was found using polyurethane sealants in two of seven brood cells. These sealants are common on exteriors of buildings, but since they were surrounded by natural resins in M. campanulae nests, the researchers say bees may be using them incidentally and not due to a lack of natural resin options.

"It is interesting to note that in both bee species, the type of plastic used structurally reflects the native nesting material," the researchers added, "suggesting that nesting material structure is more important than chemical or other innate traits of the material."

Plastic can have both advantages and disadvantages in bees' nests, the study suggests. The bees that used bits of plastic bags didn't suffer any parasite outbreaks, for example, echoing a 1970 study of alfalfa leafcutters that nested inside plastic drinking straws. Those bees were never attacked by parasitic wasps, which were unable to sting through the plastic, but up to 90 percent of their brood still died because the plastic didn't let enough moisture escape, encouraging the growth of dangerous mold.

The plastic bags also didn't stick together as well as leaves do, the researchers note, and easily flaked off when they were inspected. But the bees took steps to minimize this structural deficiency, locating their plastic pieces only near the end of a series of brood cells. Because of this, and the blending of manmade with natural materials, "bee naivete does not appear to be the cause for the use of plastic," the study suggests.

It's still unclear why exactly leafcutter bees are using plastic, but as non-biodegradable materials continue piling up in nature, this kind of behavior could become increasingly important. "Although perhaps incidentally collected," the researchers write, "the novel use of plastics in the nests of bees could reflect ecologically adaptive traits necessary for survival in an increasingly human-dominated environment."

Editor's note: This story has been updated with new information since it was first published in February 2014.
 
your health and mine
do suffer occasionally

but seasonal,compared to Migraine sufferes



How to identify pollen allergy symptoms
Learn how to spot them and how to find relief.

SARAH F. BERKOWITZ
March 17, 2016, 11:37 a.m.


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A surefire sign of spring, blooming grasses and trees can spell doom for people suffering from pollen allergies. (Photo: Rebecca Krebs/flickr)

Roughly 40 million Americans suffer from pollen allergies, also known as hay fever, allergic rhinitis or seasonal allergies. But whatever term you use when fighting pollen allergy symptoms, they can range from annoying to life-threatening. The aggressors in this case are nearly invisible, egg-shaped cells that originate in flowering plants and are carried through the environment by insects or wind currents.

Where pollen is found


How to identify pollen allergy symptoms
 
An alarming amount of toxic mercury can now be found in coastal fog
BRYAN NELSON
November 26, 2019, 8:48 p.

https://www.mnn.com/earth-matters/c...ail&utm_term=0_fcbff2e256-0836f7da92-42644469
fog.jpg.653x0_q80_crop-smart.jpg

Coastal fog might be a heath hazard. (Photo: Aileen Devlin, Virginia Sea Grant [CC BY-ND 2.0]/Flickr)

It's been nearly 40 years since John Carpenter's cult-classic horror film, "The Fog," was unleashed upon the world, and it continues to haunt us in some unexpectedly realistic ways.

In the film, a deadly supernatural fog engulfs a California coastal town, killing all those who wander into its mist. Now it turns out this zany plot might actually contain more truth than fiction, and living in coastal communities everywhere might bear serious consequences.



An alarming amount of toxic mercury can now be found in coastal fog
 
R.I.P Clive JAMES
one of Australas genuine best,ever
gentleman comedian


Clive James, the kid from Kogarah, dies aged 80
Updated about an hour ago

PHOTO: Clive James was a celebrated broadcaster and author. (News Online Brisbane)

RELATED STORY: Clive James reflects on confronting mortality
EXTERNAL LINK: Mark Colvin interview
One of Australia's most acclaimed cultural exports, Clive James, has died in England aged 80.

He had been diagnosed with leukaemia and emphysema in 2010 and since then, had been telling the world of his impending death.

A statement on his website confirmed he died at home in Cambridge on Sunday (local time) and a funeral was held Wednesday.


Australian broadcaster and author Clive James dies, aged 80