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Jennifer Marohasy

Jennifer Marohasy

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A Note from Canadian Tories Online

April 12, 2009 By jennifer

The following is an email sent to you by an administrator of “BloggingTories.ca”.

 

Message sent to you follows:

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

The Blogging Tories Forums are as vibrant as ever thanks to our community’s strict adherence to intelligent and mature debate. Our community continues to grow quickly. We are closing in on 1,500 members (no bots) and have over 60,000 posts. Recent interesting topics include…

 

The Brian Mulroney Controversy…

http://www.bloggingtories.ca/forums/viewtopic.php?p=66914

 

Billy Bob Thorton and Mashed Potatoes…

http://www.bloggingtories.ca/forums/viewtopic.php?p=66907

 

A Purported Plot to Replace Harper…

http://www.bloggingtories.ca/forums/topic7289.html

 

Are We Headed Towards a One-World Government…

http://www.bloggingtories.ca/forums/topic6919.html

 

I welcome everyone to participate in these and other discussions.

Filed Under: Community

Six Tons of ‘Geoengineered’ Iron: Just another Drop in the Ocean

April 11, 2009 By jennifer

THERE were concerns that a plan by the German government to reduce atmospheric carbon dioxide levels by dumping iron in the southern ocean would have all sorts of perverse outcomes.   

Earlier in the year a spokesperson for the World Wildlife Fund suggested the plan may violate international agreements on marine protection because the algae growth from the iron pollution would result in eutrophication, defined as a proliferation of plant life that reduces oxygen content in water and eliminates other sea life.   Some no doubt had images of Blue whales turning belly-up from such a misguided intervention.

The plan was described as the biggest trial ever of iron fertilization, a technology which could stop global warming at very little cost.

[Read more…] about Six Tons of ‘Geoengineered’ Iron: Just another Drop in the Ocean

Filed Under: News, Opinion Tagged With: Climate & Climate Change

Easter Musings on Life and Environmentalism

April 9, 2009 By jennifer

MANY in Australia and around the English-speaking world will celebrate Easter this long weekend.  I usually go to Church on Easter Sunday. I’m a Christian by culture while an Atheist by choice.   I am inspired by the natural world, its beauty and natural order, so perhaps I am also an environmentalist. 

Easter can be a time for reflection including about the world around us and how we choose to live our lives. 

Practicing Protestant and climate change sceptic, Graham Young, reflects on the meanings of being a modern Christian today at e-journal Online Opinion.  He writes:
“Christianity is not even a broad church, but often a seething mass of denominational theological debate. While one cannot condemn science on the basis of ‘eugenics, nuclear warheads and pollution’ no defence of science would be complete that did not deal with these things either.

“Likewise a defence of Christianity that refuses not only to deal with religious extremism but the sort of evangelical Christianity that dominates outside of Europe, Canada, Australia and the north-east and the west coast of the USA, is flawed. All Christians are not creationists, but many are. This cannot be ignored.”

[Read more…] about Easter Musings on Life and Environmentalism

Filed Under: Opinion Tagged With: Philosophy

Australian Farmers Finally Benefit from GM Canola

April 9, 2009 By jennifer

MONSANTO Australia Ltd has released the final results from a survey of its 2008 Roundup Ready canola growers – that is those farmers who choose to grow genetically modified canola this last season.

Canola is an important crop in Australia, particularly as part of a wheat rotation.  While North American farmers have been growing GM canola for some years, because of bans in Australia following a successful anti-GM campaign spearheaded by Greenpeace, 2008-2009 was the first season for GM canola in Australia.

The results taken from 92 of the 100 growers that delivered GM canola grain, indicate that Roundup Ready canola outperformed alternative herbicide tolerant canola varieties when it came to yield and overall benefits. 100 percent of growers surveyed said they will plant Roundup Ready canola again.

[Read more…] about Australian Farmers Finally Benefit from GM Canola

Filed Under: News, Opinion Tagged With: Food & Farming

The Camel Ride: A Note from Joan Turnour

April 7, 2009 By jennifer

UPON returning from an eighteen day cruise Sydney to Perth via the top end people have been asking me what was the highlight.  Well there were many highlights but one very memorable event.  My daughter Jennifer had asked me to send her a card from Broome and while buying one in ‘The Camel Shop’ we decided that the camel ride on Cable Beach at sunset would be ‘something to remember’. It turned out to be ‘something never to forget’.

The tour operator dropped us off at 5 pm with the promise that he would return for a pickup at 7.30 sharp. The ship was scheduled to depart at 8 pm.  “No worries”, we were assured.  “It is a ten minute walk across the sand from the carpark so give yourselves plenty of time”.  Booked for the 6-7 pm ride we were there with plenty to spare, paid for the obligatory photographs, and chatted amiably with the lady from the Broome Camel Shop with whom we had booked. Friends from the ship, replete with our own camera, promised to catch the moment.

Listening avidly to the advice ‘hold tight and lean back’ given those mounting one line of camels we stood patiently as our line returned from the half-hour 5 pm trip to dismount. Time seemed to be getting away but the proprietors assured us we would be back in plenty of time.  So as you do, when you have no choice, you submit to the occasion.  I followed the advice of my son Jim –  ‘Enjoy the moment’.

As mounting began from the back of the line and we were in the lead it was well after six o’clock before we followed the instruction ‘put your left hand on the front of the saddle and with your right hand on the back lift your leg up and over the pommel. I had no idea that the girth of a camel is so wide that it demands a rider to perform the splits and I was still wondering if indeed I could cope when the instruction to ‘hold tight and lean back’ came before I was prepared. No one adjusted my stirrups and with my dangling legs desperately trying to gain leverage for my feet,  I tried to raise my body together with the help of my left hand on the pommel and my right on the back of the saddle, to mitigate the ‘splits’, when a rather gung ho young man of about fourteen quite nonchalantly tossed the lead rope over his arm and we set off.

As the first ‘string’ was a few yards in front, following the water’s edge, we set out to catch up and in fact overtook, riding parallel but higher up on the beach.  At this time a photographer was running beside us taking individual shots while admonishing the young man to slow down ‘It isn’t a race.’

The camel following behind me now decided to come abreast. I chatted to it in my most friendly voice upon which he leant his head into my lap. I scratched it behind the ears but when they lay flat, which normally indicates an animal is cross, I decided to stop.  “Remember they bite and spit” was the advice from my daughter Caroline earlier in reply to my text that I was booked to ride a camel.  Now completely out of my comfort zone I decided reducing the ‘splits’ demanded my whole attention.

It was now nearly 6.45 and being within earshot of the young man I suggested maybe it was time to turn around.  He ignored me but to my relief the photographer took control, gave marching orders to the young man telling him this was the last time he would lead a group. The pace slowed which made riding easier.  We turned for home and fell in behind the other line. I estimated we would be back by 7.15 with every chance of making the deadline.

As we looked into the sunset and the camels formed this famous line at the water’s edge my camel made definite leanings to the left. This meant I had to lean purposely to the right to maintain my balance.  Looking back the gentleman with the lead rope opined that “Sarah doesn’t like getting her feet wet so not to worry.”  “Not to worry”!!  Couldn’t he at least lead the lot back from the edge. Anyway we were facing in the right direction; I was actually on a camel at Cable Beach; there really was a sunset of which I was part; so why not enjoy it.  And I did.

We got back at 7.15 and I counted the minutes as the dismounting began from the back. When it got to me, once again I was completely overtaken by the sudden lurch below but with some help I managed to ease my leg back over the pommel and slip with a thump to the sand.  Aware that John was being helped out of his saddle, and willing my knees to come together, I took off to the tray-back vehicle with the photographs.  It was then I saw John being helped into a 4-wheeldrive which promptly left for the car park.

The first few yards on hard sand were easy but I soon bogged in the heavy dry sand higher up the beach. Remembering that people had been left behind in Darwin an urgency overtook me and I was propelled up the beach, onto the rocks and into the carpark, arriving with minutes to spare.  ‘How did you get back so quickly?” John asked. “I thought you wouldn’t make it and was just preparing to lie down in front of the bus”.

Joan Turnour
Brisbane, Australia

Filed Under: Community

Italian Authorities Ignored Earthquake Warning

April 7, 2009 By jennifer

An Italian scientist, Gioacchino Giuliani, predicted Monday’s earthquake at L’Aquila, Italy, weeks ago but his warning were not taken seriously …  he based his forecast on concentrations of radon gas around seismically active areas.  Read more here.

Filed Under: News

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Jennifer Marohasy Jennifer Marohasy BSc PhD has worked in industry and government. She is currently researching a novel technique for long-range weather forecasting funded by the B. Macfie Family Foundation. Read more

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