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Hedgehog Cacti in Bloom

hogcacti

Photographer: Kathleen Kiefer; Kathleen’s Web site
Summary Author: Kathleen Kiefer

The photo above shows hedgehog cacti blooming in the Ancient Lakes area of Washington State. I had always wanted to see the illusive crimson to cherry colored blooms of the “hedgehog,” which grow on rocky hillsides and flat lands, usually in lithosol areas. Because collectors have been known to dig them up, even though seldom survive under propagation, they’ve become increasingly rare where they were once common. The ones above were found in a rather secluded part of the Columbia Basin, pictured against a backdrop of lichen-covered rocks, larkspur, phlox, and sulphur lupine. Photo taken on April 13, 2013.

Photo details: Top – Camera Model: Canon EOS 7D; Lens: EF-S10-22mm f/3.5-4.5 USM; Focal Length: 22.0mm; Aperture: f/25.0; Exposure Time: 0.0016 s (1/640); ISO equiv: 1250; Software: Adobe Photoshop CS4 Macintosh. Inset – Same except: Lens: EF-S18-135mm f/3.5-5.6 IS; Focal Length: 52.0mm.


Rainbow over Cathedral Rock, Sedona, Arizona


Photo by Trevor Gass (Centennial, Colorado); Photographed July 2010, Cathedral Rock in Sedona, Arizona ~ Original Source

 


Reflections on Butterfly Lake

Photographer: Ray Boren 
Summary AuthorRay Boren

Earlier this summer, I walked around beautiful Butterfly Lake in northeastern Utah’s Uinta Mountains and, as is often the case, found myself mesmerized by the reflections on the water. Someone both observant and clever noticed that this high mountain pond (elevation: about 10,000 ft or 3,048 m) has two winged bays and a peninsular body, hence “Butterfly Lake.” This photo shows an upside down view taken on the lake’s south shore. The dark strands at top, looking like Spanish moss, are in fact a stand of conifers. A light breeze formed small capillary waves on the lake surface that together with the skypools give the scene an artistic look. The Sun kept playing hide and seek behind monsooncumulus clouds that sometimes produced a few sprinkles. The partly cloudy conditions are literally reflected in the cloud-white and sky-blue colors of the lake’s surface.

Photo details: Camera Maker: NIKON CORPORATION; Camera Model: NIKON D60; Focal Length: 75.0mm; Aperture: f/10.0; Exposure Time: 0.0040 s (1/250); ISO equiv: 125; Exposure Bias: none; Metering Mode: Matrix; Flash Fired: No (enforced); Orientation: Normal; Color Space: sRGB; Software: QuickTime 7.6.4.


Toxic Pesticides and the Flight of The Bumblebee: Are We Poisoning Our Future? ~ by Colin Todhunter

SOURCE

Have you heard the buzz lately? Billions of bumblebees have been dying off, and, as a result, the entire global food chain may be in danger. Along with other insects, such as moths and hoverflies, bees pollinate around a third of the crops grown worldwide.

The humble bee is a much under-appreciated creature. In fact, life as we know it depends on it. Bees pollinate wild plants and agricultural crops, including some 90 per cent of the world’s commercial plants. Most fruits, vegetables and nuts, including okra, tomatoes, sunflowers, cucumbers, cashew, onion, cabbage, rapeseed, almonds, citrus fruits and cherries are all pollinated by bees, and coffee, soya beans and cotton are dependent on them to increase yields. Bees are at the forefront of a food chain that also sustains wild birds and animals.

As with other crucial pollinators, bees have been in serious decline around the world for the past few decades. Sydney Cameron, an entomologist at the University of Illinois, led a team on a three-year study of eight species of bumblebees in the US. The findings showed that the relative abundance of four of the sampled species had declined by up to 96 per cent and that their geographic ranges had contracted by 23 to 87 per cent, some within the past two decades. In the US, 50 to 90 per cent of commercial bee colonies are affected by ‘Colony Collapse Disorder’. The decline is however not restricted to the US. It’s a major global issue.

In the UK, for instance, three of the 25 British species of bumblebee are already extinct, and half of the remainder has shown serious declines, often up to 70 per cent, since around the 1970s. Bee populations have also been affected in the mainland Europe, China and India.

Reasons for the decline of bees may be many, including parasites, viral and bacterial infections, changes to habitat, pollution, poor nutrition stemming from intensive farming methods and even mobile phone frequencies. However, one of the causes points to the use of neonicotinoids, a nicotine-based pesticide that has been banned in France, Germany, Portugal, Greece, Italy and Slovenia.

In 2010, writer and activist Tom Philpott wrote that the US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) allowed the widespread use of clothianidin, a neonicotinoid manufactured by the chemical and pharmaceutical company Bayer, despite warnings from the EPA’s own scientists.

Philpott’s evidence was based on a leaked internal EPA memo that revealed clothianidin has serious health impacts on bees, which may be directly related to their disappearance. The memo reported that studies show clothianidin is highly toxic and that information from standard tests and field studies, alongside incident reports involving similar insecticides, suggests the potential for long-term toxic risk to honeybees and other beneficial insects. In December, beekeepers and environmentalists in the US asked the EPA to remove its approval of the pesticide.

Nevertheless, the EPA has allowed the widespread use of the pesticide on corn, wheat and other staple food products. Meanwhile, Bayer raked in $262 million in 2009 from its sales of neonicotinoids to farmers.

Bayer continues to export or manufacture its pesticides across the world, including in India. In fact, imidacloprid, another neonicotinoid, is one of India’s highest selling pesticides.

Dr Parthiba Basu from the University of Calcutta argues that India is also experiencing a decline. His research team’s findings show that the yields of pollinator-independent crops have continued to increase, whereas pollinator-dependent crops have levelled off. In an attempt to identify an underlying cause for the pollinator decline, the team is comparing conventional agriculture with ecological farming. Basu states there is an obvious indication that within the ecological farming setting (where harmful pesticides are not used), there is pollinator abundance.

He added that if the team’s findings were extrapolated, this would offer a clear indication that India was facing a decline in natural pollinators, as ecological farming was only practiced on about 10-20 per cent of the country’s arable land. There are serious implications. Unlike those with access to a varied diet, Basu says there are certain vegetable crops that many people living near the poverty threshold rely on. If there is a pollination crisis, Basu suggests nutritional security could be affected.

In India, wild honey collection in the Kutch region of Gujarat in 2010 fell to 50 tonnes from the usual 300 tonnes in previous years because of the fall in the number of honey bees. The yield of certain native crops like date palms, lemon, papaya and kesar mangoes has also decreased. In Malda, West Bengal, mango honey was once good business, but farmers say bees are now avoiding mango trees.

There’s still a lot we don’t know about the massive bee die-offs. But one thing we do know is that bees are in trouble — by implication, we are too.

Given the revelations concerning the EPA in the US with regard to neonicotinoids, another thing we know is that we should no longer leave our food chain or ecology in the hands of the big chemical and pharmaceutical companies — nor should we rely on the regulating and policy bodies that are too often seen to be in their pockets.

Colin Todhunter : Originally from the northwest of England, Colin Todhunter has spent many years in India. He has written extensively for the Deccan Herald (the Bangalore-based broadsheet), New Indian Express and Morning Star (Britain). His articles have also appeared in various other newspapers, journals and books. His East by Northwest website is at: http://colintodhunter.blogspot.com

Global Research Articles by Colin Todhunter


American Farmer at Sunset

As the sun sets, a John Deere 9400 continues on into the night with the dust rolling up from the parched land.

Photo of the Day: June 27, 2012

Jenny Braun (Hampton, Minnesota); Photographed October 2011, Wanamingo, Minnesota

SOURCE


Full Moon Over the Bonneville Salt Flats


Photographer: Patrick Wiggins
Summary Author: Patrick Wiggins; Jim Foster

Flying back from Wendover, Nevada to Salt Lake City, Utah on the evening of July 3, 2012, I was entranced by the appearance of the full Moon hanging low in the eastern sky. The Bonneville Salt Flats are in the foreground with the Cedar Mountains in the background. The Moon appears to be in the middle of the rising Earth’s shadow, from the observer’s perspective, sandwiched between the tan-colored salt flats and the pink-tinged Belt of Venus. Note that the Moon is not being eclipsed by the Earth’s shadow. The pinkish color is a result of a mixture of the deep blue of the Earth’s shadow and sunlight reddened by the long path length of light at sunset. The vigorous wind caused a number of little sandstorms at ground level, giving a pleasing texture to the salt flats. The photo was taken through the open window of my Cessna 172, some about 1,000 m above the surface.

Photo details: Camera Maker: NIKON CORPORATION; Camera Model: NIKON D70; Lens: 28.0-300.0 mm f/3.5-6.3; Focal Length: 28mm (35mm equivalent: 42mm); Aperture: f/3.5; Exposure Time: 0.020 s (1/50); ISO equiv: 400; Exposure Bias: none; Metering Mode: Matrix; White Balance: Auto; Flash Fired: No; Orientation: Normal; Color Space: sRGB; Software: Adobe Photoshop CS5 Windows.


Gone Gardening … ciaoo ;) ~ Vintage Photo: War Gardeners

click image to enlarge/original link

SOURCE

Victory gardens, also called war gardens or food gardens for defense, were vegetable, fruit and herb gardens planted at private residences and public parks in the United States, United Kingdom, Canada and Germany[1] during World War I and World War II to reduce the pressure on the public food supply brought on by the war effort. In addition to indirectly aiding the war effort these gardens were also considered a civil “morale booster” — in that gardeners could feel empowered by their contribution of labor and rewarded by the produce grown. This made victory gardens become a part of daily life on the home front.

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Thomas’s Two-striped Grasshopper ~ The Firefly Forest

Thomas’s Two-striped Grasshopper

Thomas’s Two-striped Grasshoppers (Melanoplus thomasi) are colorful grasshoppers found in Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, and Mexico. These grasshoppers are typically found in lush riparian areas with abundant herbaceous plants to feed on, and they can sometimes occur in surprisingly large numbers.

While walking along a dry wash in southern Arizona’s Empire Ranch, my dad and I encountered hundreds of Thomas’s Two-striped Grasshoppers. With our every step, we sent several of these and other grasshoppers hopping away. It was mid-November and thus very near the end of grasshopper season, so it was surprising to see so many grasshoppers still around. My dad managed to capture an especially colorful one so that I could photograph it.

An adult Thomas’s Two-striped Grasshopper is usually mostly blue-green in color and has orange antennae, large, dark eyes, two pale yellow dorsal stripes that converge near the hind legs, and red tibiae on its also two-striped hind legs.


The Sliding Rocks of Racetrack Playa, Death Valley, California

The Sliding Rocks of Racetrack Playa

One of the most interesting mysteries of Death Valley National Park is the sliding rocks at Racetrack Playa (a playa is a dry lake bed). These rocks can be found on the floor of the playa with long trails behind them. Somehow these rocks slide across the playa, cutting a furrow in the sediment as they move.

Some of these rocks weigh several hundred pounds. That makes the question: “How do they move?” a very challenging one.

The truth: No one knows for sure exactly how these rocks move – although a few people have come up with some pretty good explanations. The reason why their movement remains a mystery: No one has ever seen them in motion!

Let’s learn how they are thought to move….

About Racetrack Playa

Racetrack playa is lake bed that is almost perfectly flat and almost always dry. It is about 4 kilometers long (2.5 miles – north to south) and about 2 kilometers wide (1.25 miles – east to west). The surface is covered with mudcracks and the sediment is made up mainly of silt and clay.

The climate in this area is arid. It rains just a couple of inches per year. However, when it rains, the steep mountains which surround Racetrack Playa produce a large amount of runoff that converts the playa floor into a broad shallow lake. When wet, the surface of the playa is transformed into a very soft and very slippery mud.

Are They Moved by People or Animals?

The shape of trails behind the rocks suggest that they move during times when the floor of Racetrack Playa is covered with a very soft mud. A lack of disturbed mud around the rock trails eliminates the possibility of a human or animal pushing or assisting the motion of the rocks.

Are They Moved by Wind?

Recent research by NASA on Racetrack Playa

This is the favorite explanation. The prevailing winds that blow across Racetrack Playa travel from southwest to northeast. Most of the rock trails are parallel to this direction. This is strong evidence that wind is the prime mover or at least involved with the motion of the rocks.

Strong wind gusts are thought to nudge the rocks into motion. Once the rock begins to move a wind of much lower velocity can keep the rock in motion as it slides across the soft and very slippery mud. Curves in the rock trails are explained by shifts in wind direction or in how the wind interacts with an irregularly shaped rock.

Are They Moved by Ice?

A few people have reported seeing Racetrack Playa covered by a thin layer of ice. One idea is that water freezes around the rocks and then wind, blowing across the top of the ice, drags the ice sheet with its embedded rocks across the surface of the playa.

Some researchers have found highly congruent trails on multiple rocks that strongly support this movement theory. However, the transport of a large ice sheet might be expected to mark the playa surface in other ways – these marks have not been found.

Other researchers experimented with stakes that would be disturbed by ice sheets. The rocks moved without disturbing the stakes. The evidence for ice-sheet transport is not consistent.

Wind is the Favored Mover!

All of the best explanations involve wind as the energy source behind the movement of the rocks. The question remains is do they slide while encased in an ice sheet or do they simply side over the surface of the mud? Perhaps each of these methods is responsible for some rock movement?

Perhaps this story will remain more interesting if the real answer is never discovered!

NASA Studies on Sliding Rocks

NASA sent a team of interns and mentors to Racetrack Playa during Summer 2010. They made observations, performed tests, compiled data and developed some ideas about how the rocks might move. Check out their report and photos.

Photos of Sliding Rocks Below!

Movement of a large rock across a barren surface is almost impossible to believe. However, good photographs can serve as evidence for those who can not travel to Death Valley National Park. Thanks to Steve Geer, Stephan Hoerold, Skye Bajoul, sartriano, John Alcorn and Mike Nortan for the great images used here.

Contributor:

More Photos Here <-


Daniel Boone National Forest, Kentucky USA

click image to enlarge/original link

SOURCE

Photographer: Ross Wehner; Ross’ Web site
Summary Author: Ross Wehner

The photo above was taken from the Red River Gorge in southeastern Kentucky, just inside the Daniel Boone National Forest. I was hiking up Double Arch Trail on this early spring day and noticed that part of the trail had been washed out by a recent deluge. The red rock and soil here likely derive their flaming colors from iron oxides. Geologically, the Red River Gorge is part of the Pottsville Escarpment. Note that the trees, several of which are chestnut oak (Quercus prinus) had just begun to leaf out. They contrasted beautifully with the red soil formations and Columbian bluesky. Photo taken on April 6, 2012.

Photo details: Camera Maker: PENTAX; Camera Model: PENTAX K-x; Lens: smc PENTAX-DA 18-250mm F3.5-6.3 ED AL [IF]; Focal Length: 18mm (35mm equivalent: 27mm); Aperture: f/8.0; Exposure Time: 0.0031 s (1/320); ISO equiv: 400; Exposure Bias: +0.30 EV; Metering Mode: Matrix; Exposure: aperture priority (semi-auto); Exposure Mode: Auto Bracketing; White Balance: Auto; Flash Fired: No (enforced); Orientation: Normal; Color Space: sRGB; Software: Aperture 3.2.3.


Already have our quarrels fill’d the world with widows and with orphans

Joseph Addison
From Cato (1713)

Cato.

Let not a torrent of impetuous zeal

Transport thee thus beyond the bounds of reason:

True fortitude is seen in great exploits

That justice warrants, and that wisdom guides,

All else is towering phrenzy and distraction.

Are not the lives of those who draw the sword

In Rome’s defence intrusted to our care!

Should we thus lead them to a field of slaughter,

Might not the impartial world with reason say

We lavish’d at our death the blood of thousands,

To grace our fall, and make our ruin glorious!

Lucius, we next would know what’s your opinion?

Lucius.

My thoughts, I must confess, are turn’d on peace.

Already have our quarrels fill’d the world

With widows and with orphans: Scythia morns

Our guilty wars, and earth’s remotest regions

Lie half unpeopled by the feuds of Rome:

‘Tis time to sheath the sword, and spare mankind.

It is not Caesar, but the gods, my fathers,

The gods declare against us, and repel

Our vain attempts. To urge the foe to battle,

(Prompted by blind revenge and wild despair)

Were to refuse th’ awards of Providence,

And not to rest in heaven’s determination.

Already have we shown our love to Rome,

Now let us show submission to the gods.

We took up arms, not to revenge ourselves,

But free the commonwealth; when this end fails,

Arms have no farther use; our country’s cause,

That drew our swords, now wrests them from our hands,

And bids us not delight in Roman blood

Unprofitably shed; what men could do

Is done already: heaven and earth will witness,

If Rome must fall, that we are innocent.

source


Blue Jet Observed Over Central Michigan

click on image to enlarge/original link

Photographer: Mark Grubaugh
Summary Author: Mark Grubaugh

The photo above shows a seldom seen blue jet emanating from a distant thunderhead as observed over Elsie, Michigan. It’s the faint bluish jet or streak of light just above the black walnut tree (Juglans nigra) on the right side of the barn. I was photographing this lightning storm, which was probably about 30 mi (48 km) to the north of my home, in the early summer of 2008. At the time, I didn’t even realize what I had captured until going through my lightning archives a few months back. I recently contacted Dr. Walter Lyons at FMA Research who confirmed that this was indeed a rare ground capture of a blue jet — most observations are made from aircraft.

Blue jets are a type of high altitude lightning phenomenon, distinct from red sprites. These jets are optical ejections from the top of the electrically active core regions of thunderstorms — quite often severe storms. After emerging from the top of the storm, they’re observed to propagate upward in narrow cones of about 15 degrees and at velocities of roughly 100 km/s (Mach 300). They typically disappear from view at heights between about 65-80 mi (40-50 km).

Photo taken at 11:41:01 p.m. on June 15, 2008. I was shooting from a cornfield with a gibbous Moon to my back. The camera was pointed north and slightly east. Cassiopeia lies above the black walnuts and to the left of the blue jet.

Photo details: Camera: Canon EOS DIGITAL REBEL XTi; Lens: Tamron 28.0-80.0mm; Focal Length: 41/1mm; F Number: f/10; Exposure Time: 60/1; ISO Speed Ratings: 800; Metering Mode: Average; Exposure Program: Manual; White Balance: Auto white balance; Flash: Flash did not fire, compulsory flash mode; Software: Adobe Photoshop Elements 9.0 Windows.


Cinco De Mayo, The 5th Of May

The holiday of Cinco De Mayo, The 5th Of May, commemorates the victory of the Mexican militia over the French army at The Battle Of Puebla in 1862. It is primarily a regional holiday celebrated in the Mexican state capital city of Puebla and throughout the state of Puebla, with some limited recognition in other parts of Mexico, and especially in U.S. cities with a significant Mexican population. It is not, as many people think, Mexico’s Independence Day, which is actually September 16.

Setting The Stage
The battle at Puebla in 1862 happened at a violent and chaotic time in Mexico’s history. Mexico had finally gained independence from Spain in 1821 after a difficult and bloody struggle, and a number of internal political takeovers and wars, including the Mexican-American War (1846-1848) and the Mexican Civil War of 1858, had ruined the national economyArchduke Ferdinand Maximilian
During this period of struggle Mexico had accumulated heavy debts to several nations, including Spain, England and France, who were demanding repayment. Similar debt to the U.S. was previously settled after the Mexican-American War. France was eager to expand its empire at that time, and used the debt issue to move forward with goals of establishing its own leadership in Mexico. Realizing France’s intent of empire expansion, Spain and England withdrew their support. When Mexico finally stopped making any loan payments, France took action on its own to install Napoleon III’s relative, Archduke Maximilian of Austria, as ruler of Mexico.

Mexico Confronts The Invasion
CINCO DE MAYO FESTIVALS, PARTIES

France invaded at the gulf coast of Mexico along the state of Veracruz (see map) and began to march toward Mexico City, a distance today of less than 600 miles. Although American President Abraham Lincoln was sympathetic to Mexico’s cause, and for which he is honored in Mexico, the U.S. was involved in its own Civil War at the time and was unable to provide any direct assistance.

Gen. Ignacio Zaragoza

Marching on toward Mexico City, the French army encountered strong resistance near Puebla at the Mexican forts of Loreto and Guadalupe. Lead by Mexican General Ignacio Zaragoza Seguin, a smaller, poorly armed militia estimated at 4,500 men were able to stop and defeat a well outfitted French army of 6,500 soldiers, which stopped the invasion of the country. The victory was a glorious moment for Mexican patriots, which at the time helped to develop a needed sense of national unity, and is the cause for the historical date’s celebration.

Unfortunately, the victory was short lived. Upon hearing the bad news, Napoleon III had found an excuse to send more troops overseas to try and invade Mexico again, even against the wishes of the French populace. 30,000 more troops and a full year later, the French were eventually able to depose the Mexican army, take over Mexico City and install Maximilian as the ruler of Mexico.

Maximilian's bullet riddled shirt on display Maximilian’s rule of Mexico was also short lived, from 1864 to 1867. With the American Civil War now over, the U.S. began to provide more political and military assistance to Mexico to expel the French, after which Maximilian was executed by the Mexicans – his bullet riddled shirt is kept at the museum at Chapultepec Castle in Mexico City. So despite the eventual French invasion of Mexico City, Cinco de Mayo honors the bravery and victory of General Zaragoza’s smaller, outnumbered militia at the Battle of Puebla in 1862.

Today’s Celebration

For the most part, the holiday of Cinco de Mayo is more of a regional holiday in Mexico, celebrated most vigorously in the state of Puebla. There is some limited recognition of the holiday throughout the country with different levels of enthusiasm, but it’s nothing like that found in Puebla.

Traditional Mexican dancers Celebrating Cinco de Mayo has become increasingly popular along the U.S.-Mexico border and in parts of the U.S. that have a high population of people with a Mexican heritage. In these areas the holiday is a celebration of Mexican culture, of food, music, beverage and customs unique to Mexico.

Commercial interests in the United States and Mexico have also had a hand in promoting the holiday, with products and services focused on Mexican food, beverages and festivities, with music playing a more visible role as well. Several cities throughout the U.S. hold parades and concerts during the week following up to May 5th, so that Cinco de Mayo has become a bigger holiday north of the border than it is to the south, and being adopted into the holiday calendar of more and more people every year.

[Sources: Encyclopedia Encarta, Encyclopedia Britanica, Prescott’s Mexico:1900, HistoryChannel.com, other sources. minor edits April 25, 2007]

Original Link Here


Sogni D’oro ~ Moonlit Canoe, Allagash River

 

click to enlarge/original link

Moonlit Canoe, Allagash River

Photograph by Michael Melford, National Geographic

This Month in Photo of the Day: Nature and Weather Photos

Moonlight bathes a birchbark canoe on Maine’s Allagash River, a tranquil spot for paddlers.

See more pictures from the November 2011 feature story, “Boundless: America’s Wild and Scenic Rivers.”