Wednesday, July 02, 2008

Cheers as endangered turtle sets off on 20-year journey


Dylan, a nine-year-old the sea turtle, is examined by biologist from the Georgia Sea Turtle Center, Sunday June 29, 2008 in Jekyll Island, Ga. for her release on Monday. Dylan was rescued as a hatchling and has lived her life in captivity. She was fitted with a satellite transmitter so wildlife biologist can track her movement and collect data in the years to come. (AP Photo/Stephen Morton)

Wake Up America, Your Future is HERE !! The Green Governator

Governor entices Tesla to build cars in Bay Area (click title to entry)
In a surprise move, Tesla Motors will build its electric-car factory in the Bay Area, not New Mexico as previously announced, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger said Monday.
Schwarzenegger, along with State Treasurer Bill Lockyer, said California was able to provide San Carlos-based Tesla with incentives, including the waiving of state sales tax on $100 million worth of manufacturing equipment, to entice the company to build its assembly plant here.
"We want these cutting-edge companies not just to start in California and do their research and development here. We want them to build in California," said Schwarzenegger, who toured the Tesla headquarters with Lockyer Monday before his announcement....



Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger prepares to meet the press following a tour of Tesla Motors in San Carlos on June 30, 2008. Tesla Motors makes a two-seater high-performance electric car and plans to make a sedan. Tesla will build aan assembly plant in the Bay Area, the governor announced. (Gary Reyes/Mercury News) ( Gary Reyes )


The crowd packs the garage at Tesla Motors in San Carlos during a visit by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger on June 30, 2008. Schwarzenegger announced that Tesla Motors will build their cars here in California. Tesla Motors makes a two-seater high-performance electric car and plans to make a sedan. (Gary Reyes/Mercury News) ( Gary Reyes )

There is NO NEED for offshore oil drilling !!! The Electric Car has arrived !



Cities plan for world where oil is scarce


Kinsey and Laura Watson of Raleigh look closer at a Toyota Prius electric hybrid car during a sustainable energy conference in Raleigh on April 8, 2008.Credit: H. Scott Hoffmann / News & Record


By Morgan Josey Glover
Staff Writer
Wednesday, July 2
updated 7:40 am

Credit: H. Scott Hoffmann / News & Record
WANT TO GO?
What: Presentation on peak oil by Peter Kauber of Guilford Solar Communities

When: 10 a.m.-noon July 12
Where: Kathleen Clay Edwards Family Branch Library, 1420 Price Park Road, Greensboro
Cost: Free
Information: 375-5876 or send an e-mail to pkauber@triad.rr.com
If Greensboro leaders became convinced the years of cheap fuel are gone forever, what would they do?
Residents could soon find out. A citizen effort to educate the public about peak oil is making its way to City Hall. Mayor Yvonne Johnson said she expects a briefing on the issue later this month.
Knowledge of peak oil, the point at which the amount of petroleum that is economically feasible to extract and refine goes into decline - and prices go through the roof - has spurred some cities in the United States to curb their oil use. Some activists cry out for a World War II-scale mobilization that would transform the economy to run on a fraction of its fossil fuel base.
"The stark reality is that we're looking at a world where not too long in the future, fossil fuel energy will not be around," said David Noer, professor of business leadership at Elon University. "We're in deeper trouble than we think."
Now, Guilford County residents and leaders must decide how that transformation should take place and who should lead the effort: local governments or businesses....

Design Competition for NY Aquarium at Coney Island (video)


...The design creates a bony structure that rises from the perimeter of the Aquarium and the space forms an arch. The structure is minimal, as the structures is iconic of Coney Island. It stays lifted by pulleys of steel and is covered with a network of cables with more than 40.000 LED lights. These solar lights change color every night, according to the energy captured from the sun during the day. The network interacts with the surface of the Aquarium just as with the skin of a fish: it breathes, moves, communicates with the light and the reflexes, filters, protects and regulates the temperature. Actually, it is a series of artificial skins of tiles similar to scales; ascending green surfaces; lenticular images in movement, enormous, dynamic; sound surrounding ambience; facilities are interactive. A water system shapes waves for the whole network, creating a humid network that one likens to an Aquarium."...

The strength and intelligence of Survival - Parrots use beak as a tool with success. They are very clever/intelligent.

Activists Oppose Zoo's Decision To Move Elephant To Mexico


DALLAS -- Some animal-rights activists are asking the city council to overturn the Dallas Zoo's decision to move its lone elephant to Mexico.
Jenny has been a fixture at the Dallas Zoo for more than two decades, but the 31-year-old African elephant is scheduled to leave for a wildlife park in Mexico in the fall. Her companion, Keke, died in May....

Zoos

Gator Falls, albino gator exhibit delights at Lowry Park Zoo
June 30 2008
See related video
HERE.
By Janel Heflin, Special to The News
TAMPA – Tampa’s Lowry Park Zoo officials proudly announced the opening of the much-anticipated Gator Falls flume ride and white “albino” alligator exhibit on June 25.
Gator Falls, a log-type flume ride that offers a bird’s eye view of Tampa’s Lowry Park Zoo, is now officially open.
As of June 25, patrons to Tampa’s Lowry Park Zoo were able to witness first hand the work that took over six months to complete: Flume rider are able to reach heights of 30 feet while viewing the beauty of the Mason M. and Charles P. Lykes Native Florida Wildlife Center. You can see the boardwalk, and numerous Florida species, among them Key deer, gray-green alligators, manatee, and now, albino alligators.

http://cnewspubs.com/attractions/modules/news/article.php?storyid=642



Zoo lions kill golden eagle
Published: June 30, 2008 6:00 PM
Savage as it may look, lions attacking prey is a way of life in the animal kingdom.
But it isn’t something commonly seen at a zoo, let alone captured in photographs, as it was last Friday at the Greater Vancouver Zoo.
Professional photographer Pablo Su, who took his young family to the Aldergrove zoo that day, didn’t think he would be snapping shots of a lioness with the zoo’s golden eagle clasped in its jaws.
“We were essentially done for the day, and had seen everything, when we noticed a little bit of commotion at the lion’s cage,” said Su on Monday. 

http://www.bclocalnews.com/news/22739534.html



Giraffes, zebras star attractions at Dhaka zoo
Tue Jul 1, 2008 10:32am BST
DHAKA (Reuters Life!) - Giraffes and zebras are staple attractions at zoos around the world, but many in impoverished Dhaka are getting their first glimpse of these beasts after a rare upgrade of the city's zoo.
The zoo recently received 27 animals from South Africa and the response from visitors has been overwhelming, with families flocking to the park to see what many are calling unusual creatures.
"They have been expected for a while and zoo authorities wanted to see some foreign animals," park director Aminur Rahman told Reuters.

http://www.reuters.com/article/lifestyleMolt/idUSSP28457220080701



County Council members tour Hogle Zoo, Tracy Aviary in advance of bond vote
By Christopher Smart
The Salt Lake Tribune
Article Last Updated: 07/01/2008 03:20:23 PM MDT
Posted: 3:09 PM- Salt Lake County Councilman Marv Hendrickson rode the lion.
Councilwoman Jenny Wilson sailed along upon the back of a big bird.
And Councilman David Wilde jockeyed a baboon.
Yep, this sure wasn't a budget hearing. It was the County Council's tour of Hogle Zoo, which included rides on the new Conservation Carrousel. Council members also visited Tracy Aviary on Tuesday in advance of a July 15 decision on whether to put bond proposals on the November ballot for both animal parks.
Hogle Zoo - which may have picked up a key swing vote in its ballot bid - wants county residents to award $65 million for a new and expansive arctic exhibit that would feature polar bears and seals; an African savanna with lions, giraffes and rhinos; a bigger animal hospital; and more.

http://www.sltrib.com/news/ci_9755848


Zoo animals try frozen food (video)

Rome's zoo keepers are finding inventive ways of keeping their animals cool in 40C temperatures.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7482635.stm



San Diego Zoo features 'Nighttime Fiesta'

UNION-TRIBUNE
2:44 p.m. July 1, 2008
SAN DIEGO – The San Diego Zoo is now open later each night, and this year's expanded summer nighttime hours have a Latin flair.
“Nighttime Zoo Fiesta!” – a celebration of Latin-American heritage in Southern California – started Friday and runs through Sept. 1.
Zoo gates stay open until 8 p.m., and visitors can stay on the grounds until 9 p.m. Animals including hippos, elephants and gorillas will have nighttime feedings.
The fiesta will kick off each day at 4:15 p.m. with a macaw fly-over at the front entrance. There will be animal encounters near Hunte Amphitheatre at 6 p.m. and Wegeforth Bowl at 7 p.m.

http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/features/20080701-1444-bn01zoo.html



Petting zoo features goats, alpacas, a kangaroo -- and a really old tortoise
July 01, 2008 22:33PM
The pig races at Summer Celebration are most definitely kid-friendly, and so is the petting zoo where you can see plenty of critters.
What you can find in the little corrals are animals not usually found in these parts, like a two-hump camel that most definitely needs some shampoo and a brush.
"There are no pigs at the petting zoo," said Sam Council, 6, of Norton Shores, who'd seen the zoo before heading off to the pig races.
"And you can't touch the tortoise," Sam said. "But he's 129 years old and I didn't want to touch him anyway."

http://blog.mlive.com/chronicle_backstage_pass/2008/07/pig_sidebar.html



S.F. Zoo gets lucky: Baby aye-aye lemur born
Wednesday, July 2, 2008
It's rough being an endangered aye-aye lemur: It takes 2 to 3 hours to copulate, and if you don't have a good teacher, you may never procreate at all.
A pair of the nocturnal creatures from Madagascar got lucky, however. The proof: the baby aye-aye born sometime June 20 or June 21 at the San Francisco Zoo. Like its parents, the baby aye-aye has big ears, wiry fur and, most notably, a long, bony middle finger topped with a razor-sharp claw, which the lemur will eventually use to hunt around trees for grubs.
The birth of the lemur, whose sex is unknown, is significant because it's only the second time an aye-aye has been born in captivity to parents who were also captive-bred, and it's the first time ever that a pair has bred without other aye-ayes around. Until recently, researchers had success breeding only the handful of aye-ayes taken from the wild in 1987 as part of a research program at Duke University.
The parents at the San Francisco Zoo - and their new, unnamed offspring - are part of that research program. The recent birth indicates that captive breeding programs could be successful and boost numbers of the rare primates.

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/07/02/BAC411HJGT.DTL


Rustic cabin in Mendota Heights' Dodge Nature Center is quick urban retreat
A handmade 1930s-era cabin nestled in a restored oak savannah prairie in Mendota Heights offers Twin Citians a quick retreat. Just opened to the public, it's already booked every summer weekend.
By Nick Ferraro
nferraro@pioneerpress.com
Article Last Updated: 07/01/2008 10:41:13 PM CDT

http://www.twincities.com/ci_9758281?nclick_check=1



Czechs arrived in Krasnoyarsk for talks with Krasnoyarsk zoo

12/6/2006 2:23:58 PM
Krasnoyarsk, Dec. 6 (Newslab) - Delegates from two Czech zoos are on a visit in Krasnoyarsk zoo "Royev Ruchey".
Directors of Zoo Brno and Zoological Garden Vyskov arrived in Krasnoyarsk to visit "Royev Ruchey" and have talks on exchange of animals between Russia and Czech Republic.
An agreement to deliver a couple of zebras in late summer 2007 has been reached, Krasnoyarsk zoo deputy-director Yuri Makhrov said. "There have never been any zebras in Krasnoyarsk zoo, so this present from the Czechs will be of great importance," Makhrov noted, "Czech zoos have also promised to help our zoo get a giraffe, although it will be very difficult."
Moreover, Krasnoyarsk is expected to receive two Polar wolves from Czech zoos. The Czechs have not chosen any animals they would like to get in exchange from Krasnoyarsk.

http://english.newslab.ru/news/207891

continued...

Last-ditch effort to save Tasmanian devils for the wild


Vets Jemma Bergfield (right) and Colette Harmsen, of Tasmania's Department of Primary Industries and Water, give a devil its final health check before it is shipped to the mainland.Photo: Peter Mathew

THE first of a "Noah's Ark" collection of Tasmanian devils leaves today for mainland zoos as the disease devastating the marsupial intensifies.
The 47 healthy young animals will found a captive breeding population as last-ditch insurance against extinction of the species in the wild, where they are succumbing to a form of cancer known as devil facial tumour disease.
More than half of all wild devils have died in recent years from the disease, according to scientists tackling the crisis.
The latest research shows the disease is forcing wild females to breed much younger, reducing these "teenage mothers" to a single litter in life before they die. Previously they would have raised three litters of offspring....

Zoos Dated

2-decade effort has kept ferret alive
By RUFFIN PREVOST
Gazette Wyoming Bureau
MEETEETSE, Wyo. - After two decades of captive breeding and intense recovery efforts, black-footed ferrets remain among the most endangered mammals in America, with an estimated 700 living in the wild.
But they might have become extinct, were it not for a dog named Shep.

http://www.billingsgazette.net/articles/2006/12/02/news/wyoming/25-ferret.txt


Nandankanan big cats may face displacement

Bhubaneswar, Nov 29. (PTI): Some of the big cats roaming around in the Nandankanan zoo near here may face displacement soon, a senior zoo official has said.
The zoo, nestling in natural surroundings as it is part of the Chandaka forest, has 28 Royal Bengal Tigers and an equal number of lions, but as per the directive of the Central Zoo Authority, no big zoo is allowed to have more than 10 animals belonging to a particular specie, he said.
The CZA has also laid down that captive breeding of species having no conservation value would not be allowed in the zoos.
This circular has come in the wake of the Supreme Court directive that breeding should be stopped in 250 zoos across the country in view of overcrowding leading to inadequate space.

http://www.hindu.com/thehindu/holnus/008200611290310.htm


Activists query native animal exports
Andrew Darby
November 29, 2006
AdvertisementAdvertisement
MELBOURNE and Sydney zoos are pushing ahead with plans to export Australian animals to a controversial Thai wildlife park in exchange for their new elephants.
Chiang Mai Night Safari, the park where the deal obliges the zoos to send the animals, had a high death rate of exhibits, and had to ditch plans to offer some on its restaurant's menu.
A project of deposed prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra, Night Safari was recently reported to have "borrowed" Indonesian orang-utans from wildlife authorities and was under a legal attack for being located inside a national park.

http://www.theage.com.au/news/national/activists-query-native-animal-exports/2006/11/28/1164476205183.html


Thin Line of Defense Against Exotic Animal Meat

The Associated Press (Posted by MSNBC.com)
28 Nov 2006
Photos Courtesy of Associated Press
Bird flu, viruses could easily be brought into U.S. by unsuspecting travelers
Wildlife inspector Bryan Landry can spot threats everywhere at Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport. A backpack carried off a flight from Nigeria contains plastic bags of meat from the bush that could harbor the lethal Ebola virus. Those salted duck eggs from South Korea, a delicacy not easily found here, could carry the dreaded bird flu.
And the exotic birds taped to a passenger’s legs and the pair of monkey paws concealed in a bag could harbor any one of several diseases that jump to humans. Landry and fellow inspectors with the U.S Fish and Wildlife Service are a last line of defense against such risky items before they come across the border, often with unsuspecting people intending only to bring back a taste from home, an exotic pet or a travel memento.

http://wdin.blogspot.com/2006/11/thin-line-of-defense-against-exotic.html


Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital
The Vet Med Teaching Hospital is a
research facility and shares UC Davis' mission of public service to the State of California. The hospital offers a full range of services whether your creature is great or small, large or exotic, and they're essentially open 24hrs/day, 365 days a year [appointments during regular hours preferred]. As a teaching hospital, many procedures may be performed by veterinary students under the supervision of a licensed veterinarian. Oftentimes, a private practice vet will refer clients to the VMTH for a second opinion or more in-depth treatment. This is also the only place on campus where you can see lamas!

http://daviswiki.org/Veterinary_Medical_Teaching_Hospital


Poor Yogi was smarter than average, but we are much more deadly
E.J. Montini
Republic columnist
Nov. 30, 2006 12:00 AM
The Arizona Game and Fish Department doesn't assign names to the wild animals that it tranquilizes and then kills, but I'll refer to the deceased bear as Yogi.
After all, he was smarter than the average bear, like the cartoon character. And though he was captured and euthanized, it wasn't intelligence that lead to his demise but poor judgment.
Those of us who roam the wider animal kingdom - or at least that section known as the "rat race" - understand that even the most intelligent among us sometimes make personally destructive decisions.
advertisement
In this particular instance, which occurred about a week ago, a 2-year-old male black bear was caught rummaging through some garbage pails in the Gold Canyon area outside of Apache Junction.

http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/local/articles/1130montini1130.html



Survival of the fittest

MICHELLE PAINE
December 01, 2006 12:00am
TASMANIAN devils are expected to be flown to interstate zoos as early as today to help establish insurance populations.
The 29 young devils and 18 of their babies carry with them the hopes of wildlife lovers around the world. Zoos in four states will work to establish a genetically viable "Project Ark" population in case the devils' wild cousins are destroyed by Devil Facial Tumour Disease.
It is believed up to 80,000 devils have died from the disease during the past decade.
The healthy animals will be flown free by Qantas, which has been promoting the cause of the endangered marsupial.

http://www.news.com.au/mercury/story/0,22884,20851764-5007221,00.html


Teeny Frog Saved From Extinction In Zoos
Panamanian Golden Frog Expected To Go Extinct
POSTED: 9:19 am MST November 28, 2006
DENVER -- The Denver Zoo is part of an effort to save a disappearing frog species that has become Panama's national symbol of nature.
Scientists fear that sometime next year, the last wild Panamanian golden frogs will die. The species is being destroyed by a fungus that is also wiping out other amphibian species. But about two dozen zoos including the Denver Zoo have several hundred of the frogs in captivity.
The fungus was only the final blow for a species whose numbers have long been dwindling because of deforestation, overcollection and water pollution.

http://www.thedenverchannel.com/irresistible/10413514/detail.html


Library museum pass programs
A number of libraries have programs where you can borrow a pass for a local museum for a day. Here are a number of projects I've been able to identify.
The
Lynn, Massachusetts library has a museum pass program sponsored by the Friends of the Lynn Public Library for patrons for borrowing low-cost passes to museums which include the Museum of Fine Arts (Boston), the New England Aquarium, the Boston Children's Museum, the Harvard Museum of Natural History and the Stone and Franklin Park Zoos. The Friends support the museum pass program and members of the Friends get discounts on passes.
The
Keene, New Hampshire Public Library offers free or greatly reduced admissions to the Boston Museum of Science, the Canterbury Shaker Village, the Currier Museum of Art, the Magic Wings Butterfly Museum and the Museum of New Hampshire History. These passes may be booked in advance and are checked out with a Keene Public Library card.

http://vielmetti.typepad.com/superpatron/2006/11/library_museum_.html


Ackermann's Settlement Payment May Go to Soccer Clubs, Zoos
By Elena Logutenkova
Dec. 1 (Bloomberg) -- Deutsche Bank AG Chief Executive Officer Josef Ackermann and five former Mannesmann AG officials, after agreeing to pay millions of euros to settle a lawsuit, may end up helping soccer clubs, zoos and other civic organizations.
The Dusseldorf regional court has received ``150 or even more'' requests from varied organizations for the money, said court spokesman UlrichThole. The court ruled Nov. 29 that 40 percent of the 5.8 million-euro ($7.7 million) settlement will be distributed for community purposes.
Requests for the money included a soccer club asking for a set of new jerseys for its youth section, museums, voluntary fire brigades, zoos and botanical gardens, Spiegel reported in its online edition. Thole declined to name examples of requests, citing confidentiality.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601100&sid=a5dWV8UjrsrU&refer=germany



Facts about Dolphin Drive Hunts in Japan
During drive hunts, migrating pods of dolphins and other small whales are first panicked and confused by loud banging, then herded, by the hundreds, into shallow coves and butchered, one by one, by fishermen. Every year, some 20,000 small cetaceans of several species, some of which are endangered, including bottlenose dolphins, striped dolphins, spotted dolphins, Risso's dolphins, short-finned pilot whales, white-sided dolphins and false killer whales, are killed or taken in the drives, sometimes illegally.
This cruel and inhumane practice is sanctioned and controlled by the Government of Japan, which claims that these animals compete with the fishermen and slaughtering them is a means of pest control, but no evidence for this claim exists. The dolphins are processed and used as pet food or fertilizer, and the government is encouraging the consumption of dolphin meat. In fact, the hunts would be economically unviable without the sale of live dolphins captured during the drives to dolphinariums in Asia and elsewhere.

http://flyingorca.spaces.live.com/Blog/cns!BA2341B4E893C3D6!114.entry



Slippery leopard shot dead in zoo farce in east China
(Xinhua)
Updated: 2006-12-06 18:38
BEIJING -- A leopard, a species under top-level state protection in China, was shot dead by local police Tuesday after escaping from its cage in a zoo in East China's Fujian province.
Armed policemen keep guard near an escaped leopard at a Shishi park, southeast China's Fujian Province December 5, 2006. Police shot dead the leopard after they failed to capture it and a feeder was bitten during the trapping attempt. [photobase.cn]
The leopard was found roaming the grounds of the Yuanyangchi Zoo at 7 a.m., sparking off a series of blunders by zoo staff and local police.
The zookeeper, with the assistance of the police, failed several times to shoot the leopard with a hand-made bow and anesthetic arrow before being attacked and injured by the irritated animal.

http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/china/2006-12/06/content_752294.htm



Chattanooga Zoo, And Its Animals, Slowly Recovering From Nov. 7 Fire
by Judy Frank
posted December 5, 2006
The Chattanooga Zoo is slowly recovering from a Nov. 7 fire that claimed the lives of several animals.
On Tuesday, G-Tort the tortoise, swathed in a towel and cradled in the arms of Chattanooga Zoo director Darde Long, waved her front legs impatiently, oblivious to the half dozen people crowded around trying to get a good look at her.
G-Tort is the miracle survivor of the fire that swept the zoo’s education building on Nov. 7, Ms. Long said. Discovered alive after firefighters had left the scene and workers had given up on finding any more survivors, she was nearly dead.

http://www.chattanoogan.com/articles/article_97821.asp



Molly is walking tall at the zoo

10:07am Monday 4th December 2006
CBy Staff reporter »
BEING this good looking is no tall order for Chester Zoo's latest addition.
Molly is the first Rothschild giraffe to be born at the zoo. Mum is Kelly, six, and dad Thorn, five.
Kelly has taken to her new role as mum and just 30 minutes after she was born, Molly, who weighs 70kg, was on her feet.
Mike Jordan, Chester Zoo's Curator of Mammals and Birds, said: "To begin with, Kelly was a little anxious in her role as a new mum and we were on standby to intervene and help the calf. "But they have now taken to each other and Molly is suckling and mum Kelly is being very attentive. She is coming along very well and we are delighted with her progress."
The birth of the zoo's first Rothschild giraffe is all the more welcome as there are only 600 Rothschild giraffes left in the wild in Kenya and Uganda.

http://www.wirralglobe.co.uk/news/1055493.molly_is_walking_tall_at_the_zoo/



Britney at the zoo

Britney Spears celebrated her b-day at the L.A. zoo with her son Sean Preston

http://www.waleg.com/photos/displayimage.php?album=677&pos=0



New Kea in Dodge Rare Animal Conservation Center
Name: “Maui”; named after a character in Maori folklore that was always portrayed as a prankster and a trickster (the Maori are the indigenous people on the South Island of New Zealand, the natural habitat for keas.)
Hatch Date: December 23, 2005
Hatch location: San Diego Zoo
Maui arrived at the Philadelphia Zoo on August 9. We were planning to pair him with our female kea, Pepper. Unfortunately, she passed away just a few days after his arrival. Currently, we are checking with other zoos to try to find another young kea (of either gender) to house with Maui.
There are several ways to estimate the age of a kea. Juveniles have yellow feathers on the top of their head, yellow eye rings, a lighter lower beak and a yellow cere (fleshy area at the top of the beak). Maui still has all these characteristics, which will fade as he ages.

http://philadelphiazoo.blogspot.com/2006/12/new-kea-in-dodge-rare-animal.html



Kea
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to:
navigation, search
For other uses, see Kea (disambiguation).
Not to be confused with
Kia.
Kea
The Kea (Nestor notabilis) is a species of
parrot (family Psittacidae) found in forested and alpine regions of the South Island of New Zealand. The Kea is one of the few alpine parrots in the world, and includes carrion in an omnivorous diet consisting mainly of roots, leaves, berries, nectar and insects. Now uncommon, the Kea was once killed for bounty as it preyed on livestock, especially sheep, only receiving full protection in 1986.[1]
Kea are legendary for their intelligence and curiosity, both vital to their survival in a harsh mountain environment.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kea



Patrons flock to the Waffle House zoo
Myron Pitts
Migrating Canada geese and a few ducks have managed to make a nice home in a corner of one of the city’s busiest shopping areas.
The geese flock by the dozens to a water retention pond between the Wal-Mart Supercenter parking lot and the Waffle House at Yadkin and Skibo roads.
The fenced-in pond was built to collect storm water and prevent flooding from the Wal-Mart lot, which has 1,006 parking spaces. But the shallow body of water is also a bird sanctuary that draws families and children who come to feed the waterfowl.
Waffle House employee Heather Cox says it’s easy to recognize the geese among the other birds.

http://www.fayobserver.com/article?id=248774

continued...


The Antarctica Ice Chime
Posted by Picasa

Catatrophic Flooding with levees destroyed and chronic storms the land is saturated. (click here for Wis. weather forecast - chronic thunderstorms)


July 1, 2008
Lone Rock, Wisconsin
Photographer states :: Flying over LNR today and saw the damage that the flooding did to the airport. The rains were almost 3 weeks ago and the airport remains closed. The ramp and approach end of RWY 9 were covered in water.

The Region never gets a chance to dry out.

TODAY...A CHANCE OF SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS THIS MORNING. MOSTLY CLOUDY NORTHWEST WITH THUNDERSTORMS LIKELY SOUTHEAST THIS AFTERNOON. HIGHS FROM THE MID 70S NORTH TO THE UPPER 80S FAR SOUTHWEST..

TONIGHT...EVENING THUNDERSTORMS LIKELY FAR SOUTHEAST...A CHANCE OF EVENING THUNDERSTORMS SOUTH AND EAST. PARTLY CLOUDY NORTHWEST HALF.LOWS FROM THE MID 40S FAR NORTHWEST TO NEAR 60 SOUTHEAST..

THURSDAY...MOSTLY SUNNY. HIGHS IN THE LOW TO MID 70S. SLIGHTLY COOLER NEAR THE GREAT LAKES..

THURSDAY NIGHT...MOSTLY CLEAR. LOWS IN THE MID 40S NORTH TO MID 50S SOUTH..

INDEPENDENCE DAY...MOSTLY SUNNY. HIGHS IN THE MID 70S. SLIGHTLYCOOLER NEAR THE GREAT LAKES..

SATURDAY...PARTLY CLOUDY. LOWS IN THE 50S. HIGHS 80 TO 85. COOLER NEAR THE GREAT LAKES..

SUNDAY...A SLIGHT CHANCE OF THUNDERSTORMS DURING THE DAY NORTHWEST. A CHANCE OF THUNDERSTORMS SUNDAY NIGHT ALL BUT SOUTHEAST. LOWS 55 TO 60. HIGHS IN THE LOW TO MID 80S.



Flooding aftermath plagues some Wisconsin beaches (click here)
By ROBERT IMRIE
Associated Press Writer
12:46 PM CDT, June 28, 2008


WAUSAU, Wis. - The aftermath of torrential rains that flooded southern Wisconsin in early June is now plaguing some swimming beaches as the long Fourth of July weekend approaches.


The flooding dumped rich nutrients into the lakes, creating ideal conditions for more potentially toxic blue-green algae, said Bob Masnado, a water evaluation specialist for the state Department of Natural Resources.

"There were a lot of beaches that were under water," he said. "We are probably past that point of general concern over the bacteria conditions. We are starting to see more blue-green algae problems. That poses another risk altogether."

As of late last week, nine of 14 public swimming beaches in Madison were closed because of algae, said Kirsti Sorsa, an environmental supervisor for the Madison-Dane County Health Department....


Wisconsin Boy Hospitalized, Sickened by Floodwaters (click here)
June 30, 2008
University of Wisconsin Hospital officials say a 6-year-old boy with a life-threatening kidney disease may have been infected while playing in contaminated floodwater.
Dr. Ellen Wald says the child has been on dialysis and in intensive care since Sunday. She says he will probably stay in the hospital for at least a week.
It's the first known health problem linked to widespread flooding in Wisconsin earlier this month. But authorities again warned that sewage plants were overwhelmed during the storms and water may be contaminated with bacteria.
Wald says the boy started vomiting three days after playing in a flooded creek near his home in Richland Center.
She says a test for E.coli 0157 was negative, but doctors think he has another, hard-to-detect strain of the bacteria.
Copyright 2008 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

The Hurricane Cycle has changed this year as well. The storms are Pacific and NOT Atlantic storms.

The Pacific storms are simply developing one after another.


July 2, 2008
0930z
UNISYS GOES West Water Vapor Satellite (click title to entry for 12 hour loop)

There are seven named Tropical Storms in the Pacific this year compared to four or less in previous years. Most years there has only been ONE that has occurred by July 1st in the Pacific. There isn't enough supporting humidity in the lower troposphere until the tropics at the Equatorial latitudes are utilitzed for their water vapor.

A report by NASA shows higher turbulence in the oceans caused by winds increased by Human Induced Global Warming.


This image from NASA (click here) shows drastic Sea Level Rise due to high wind turbulence and the 'piling up' of waters at the western borders of the oceans including the northern oceans as well. The wind has become so dramatically higher that the 'lower' sea levels of the Eastern Pacific can be noted to be lower and allowing upwelling normally only observed on El Nino 'CYCLE' years. The Earth's climate cycles no longer exist, but, only the unrelenting heating cycle of the rotation of Earth in relation to the Sun.

This is still another sequelae of the negative feedback loop of Human Induced Global Warming. The winds are so strong across the planet they are causing a 'chronic' El Nino effect by pushing ocean waters to the western boarders of the oceans allowing 'upwelling' of once contained carbon dioxide from the deep oceans on the eastern boarders of the oceans.



McCain wants to pump more oil. That's unacceptable.

Earth will warm dramatically faster with larger regions of drought when the ice in the Artic Ocean is depleted. This event carries a great deal of peril.

Tony Blair did introduce Climate Change as an agenda at the G8. The year was 2005 (click here), the same time of the London Bombings by al Qaeda. The bombings gave Bush a platform to distract from Human Induced Global Warming at the G8.

Blair being the gentleman he is never thought it important to point a finger at Bush to condemn him for letting Osama bin Laden escape the campaign in Afghanistan in 2001. I remember Blair before the British Parliament on more than one occassion defending his stand on supporting the USA in Iraq, but, at the same time he neglected to condemn the failed campaign of Afghanistan which lead to the London bombings with terrorists trained in Pakistan.

The current Prime Minister Gordon Brown needs to 'speak truth to power' with Bush on the issue of Climate Change as well as taking on Mugabe.




The weather at Glacier Bay National Park (Crystal Wind Chime) is the same as San Francisco, California today.

The Current Conditions in San Francisco at 5:35 AM EST is 54 F with Overcast Skies.


Elevation :: 33 ft / 10 m

Time :: 5:00 AM EST

Temperature :: 52 °F / 11 °C

Conditions :: Mostly Cloudy

Humidity :: 88%

Dew Point :: 48°F / 9 °C

Wind :: Calm

Pressure :: 30.01 in / 1016 hPa (Rising)

Visibility :: 10.0 miles / 16.1 kilometers

UV :: 0 out of 16

Clouds:
Scattered Clouds 800 ft / 243 m

Mostly Cloudy 11000 ft / 3352 m

(Above Ground Level)