Showing posts with label places. Show all posts
Showing posts with label places. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Surfer's Paradise

This award-winning photo captures the moment a surfer in Tahiti, rides the perfect wave as a rainbow forms almost within touching distance. Photographer, Zak Noyle, 26, from Honolulu, Hawaii, scooped the Surfer Magazine 2011 best photo of the year competition this picture of surfer, Christian Redongo


Monday, September 12, 2011

Polar Explorers Explored More Than the Just Poles


Polar explorer Rear Admiral Robert Peary and chief aide Matthew Henson are credited with the discovery of the North Pole in 1909. The two and their crew had set up camp in Greenland in the 1890's and relied on native Inuit men to guide them and help them with provisions and logistics on their journey.

It also seems that being men, they had manly needs to attend to as well, turning to the Inuit women for more intimate explorations. Women who bore the men many children.

The children they fathered so far away from their own wives and families at home, were unknown for decades and what started out as almost a tragedy for them has become a source of pride and success.

"After the Americans left in September 1909, never to return or communicate with the Greenlanders, their Inuit families fell into destitution."

"Admiral Peary's forgotten son first came to outsiders' attention through French explorer Jean Malaurie, who spent a year with the Polar Eskimo tribe in 1950-51 and later wrote of Kaala, who was almost killed by an enraged walrus while hunting.

Anaukaq Henson, who died in 1987, remained little known until Harvard University's S. Allen Counter journeyed to Greenland's far north in 1986 to confirm rumours of ‘black Eskimos'"


1986!

Today the Great-Great Grandchildren of these famed polar explorers are striking out on their own and finding a a globalized world of difference.

American polar explorer Robert E. Peary stands with husky sled dogs.


This photo provided by Robert E. Peary II, also known as Hivshu Ua, shows him in Qaanaaq, Greenland. He is the Inuit great-grandson of U.S. polar explorer Rear Admiral Robert E. Peary


This story is intriguing and a MUST read.

Follow the link for the full article including many more pictures:
News Article

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

'Tonight the streets are filled with love'

150,000 people lined Oslo's streets yesterday for a gathering of love.

Each person held a single rose into the air as a sign and symbol of love for the fallen.

We don't even have words for this it's so beautiful.

Norway, we love you and we will always stand with you.

We love Thor Hushovd, one of our favorite athletes, We cannot get over the irony that during the entire month of July people lined the street of France waving Norwegian flags for Thor and then this happened.

We love Sig and Edgar Hansen from the F/V Northwestern and hope they are all okay right now.

We think of our Norwegian friends fondly and send them our thoughts and prayers during this difficult time.









News Link



Friday, June 10, 2011

The March on Blair Mountain - A Must Read!

ATTENTION ACTIVISTS!!

We are going to reprint this blog in it's entirety from the Huffington Post blog by Robert Kennedy, Jr.

It's SUPER CRITICAL!!

This week an important protest is taking place in the coalfields of West Virginia. The March on Blair Mountain began on Monday as several hundred people embarked on a five-day journey retracing the steps of over 10,000 miners who 90 years ago staged the largest armed insurrection after the American Civil War. Today's march is a protest against both the attack of the union movement in America and the demolition of the Appalachian mountains.

For over 50 years, American unions have served to counterbalance the ascendancy of unsheathed corporate power that threatens now to overwhelm American Democracy. In the past year, the union movement's final redoubt -- the public service unions -- have been vilified and emasculated in traditional union states like Wisconsin, Michigan, and Iowa.

Now one of the biggest union busters in American history, Massey Energy, is launching a final assault on the icon of America's union movement, Blair Mountain.

Blair Mountain's storied history dates back to West Virginia in the 1920s, when the entire state was a company town. Big Coal dominated every aspect of economic life. The industry owned the shops, the homes, of course the mines -- and made sure there was virtually no other source of employment in the state. Working conditions were horrendous: men and their sons worked 12 to 16 grueling hours in dark, dangerous mines dying from a notorious plague of subsurface explosions, cave-ins and black lung.

The companies used local sheriffs to enforce their system of feudal serfdom. When a miner was injured and his family needed to be evicted from their home, the sheriff did the dirty deed. When union organizers appeared, the sheriff arrested, jailed, and routinely beat them, before escorting them to the county line. One sheriff refused to tow the company line: Sid Hatfield, of Hatfield and McCoy lore.

Not only did Hatfield refuse to do the industry's bidding, but he jailed mine operators for mistreating their workers. In the infamous Matewan gun battle, Hatfield helped kill seven mine company private investigators who had evicted union families from their homes.

Hatfield was never convicted for the Matewan shootings, but the mine operators took their revenge and on August 1, 1921 when industry thugs executed Hatfield in broad daylight on the McDowell county court-house steps.

Hatfield's assassination triggered one of the biggest labor demonstrations in American history. Ten thousand miners from the coalfields of Kentucky and West Virginia marched for six days, converging on Blair Mountain to confront their industry bosses. They were met by King Coal's powerful army of thugs and mowed down by Gatling guns.

President Warren Harding, a so-called "friend of coal," like most of the leading politicians of the Gilded Age, authorized the U.S. army to drop bombs and poison gas on the marching miners -- the only time in American History when our military deliberately bombed U.S. citizens. These military measures broke the demonstration but outraged the public, and gave vital traction to the United Mine Workers and the American labor movement.

Over the next 60 years unions became the critical counterweight to corporate power and the principal platform for the growth of the American middle class, which gave our Democracy its wealth, prosperity, and sense of justice as a core value.

Now, as the union movement finds itself battered, beleaguered, and under assault by a legion of corporate toadies in state governor's office from every director to chamber of commerce. Tea Party, talk radio, Fox News and the tsunami of corporate money released by the Citizens United case, Massey Energy has recently announced that it intends to blow up Blair Mountain, the Gettysburg of America's union-based Democracy, to mine it for coal.

For the first time in decades, environmentalists including the NRDC, Sierra Club, Waterkeeper Alliance and local groups have declared common cause with unions in staging a six-day march to retrace the steps of the 1921 Blair Mountain miners. The march convenes Saturday morning June 11 with a final climb up Blair Mountain. Marchers hope to save this historic mountain from Massey by securing its status as a historic landmark.

West Virginia is today's epicenter of one of America's greatest civil disobedience movements. More than 200 people have been arrested protesting mountaintop removal coal mining in the past 18 months. The protesters include college students and local West Virginia marines, former miners, housewives, and an 82-year-old grandmother who was arrested in her wheelchair. They are all calling for an end to mountaintop removal, the extreme form of coal mining that has flattened 500 mountains in Appalachia, illegally buried 2,000 miles of streams, destroyed one million acres of forest, and devastated numerous communities, lives, and towns in the region.

Union busting corporations have commoditized not just the workforce, but the historic landscapes of West Virginia, using great machines and dynamite to eliminate mining jobs. While production has more than doubled in 10 years, industry employment is one-tenth of it what was when my father warned me about strip mining as a 14-year-old boy.

It is time for Americans to march in the footsteps of our union ancestors of 90 years ago to protect our jobs, and save our national patriarchy, the purple mountains majesty, the individual rights and community based values that make our country of the envy of free people.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr. appears in the documentary The Last Mountain (www.thelastmountainmovie.com), currently playing in theaters.

The film reveals the devastating effects of mountaintop removal mining in Appalachia and features the dedicated activists who are fighting to make sure all Americans have access to clean air and water.


So what can we do?

CALL YOUR SENATORS, CALL THE WHITE HOUSE, CALL ALL LAWMAKERS and tell them: Blair Mountain, W. VA MUST BE PROTECTED AS AN HISTORIC LANDMARK!

NATIONAL RESOURCES DEFENSE COUNCIL

FIND YOUR ELECTED OFFICIALS




What a Difference Three Months Can Make


These astonishing pictures show what an incredible effort the Japanese tsunami survivors and volunteers have made in cleaning up and rebuilding after the disaster.

Amazing!





We are super-impressed with the remarkable efforts they have made so far. Let's hope the people of Tuscaloosa and Joplin can also be inspired by this and show how quickly they are cleaning up and rebuilding as well.

Good job!

Tuesday, May 10, 2011

Ayapaneco Language Die Hards

What if you were one of only two men in the WHOLE WIDE WORLD that were the last people ON EARTH to share a common language?

Wouldn't you have fun reminiscing about the old days? Wouldn't you yuk it up in your native language, sad to be the last two people on Earth who spoke it?

Wouldn't you try to enlist the help of younger people or anyone to learn the language so it does not die out with you?

Not these two guys.

The last speakers of the Central American language Ayapaneco hate each other and refuse to talk to one another! They live only half a mile apart and do not converse at all.

Manuel Segovia and Isidro Velazquezto have known each other their entire lives and each is the last of their village to speak in the "old ways" and neither has any intention of talking to the other.

It's nuts!

Isidro Velazquezto continues to speak the language with his wife and son, but they aren't fluent and cannot keep up a conversation, only understanding the jist of what he is saying.

"Those who know the two men are unsure as to whether there is some deep-rooted conflict between them.

Although the Ayapaneco language survived the Spanish conquest it is believed to have suffered as a result of compulsory Spanish education, migration of its speakers and urbanisation.

Daniel Suslak, an Indiana University linguistic anthropologist, is compiling a dictionary to record the existence of the language."

Manuel refuses to speak to Isidro...and vice versa!


Read more: News Article


MOST ENDANGERED EUROPEAN LANGUAGES

Ume Sámi - (Sweden) along the Ume River with around 10 people left

Pite Sámi - (Sweden) along the Pite River by between 25 an 50 people

Ter Sámi - (Russia) by two people on the Kola Peninsula

Livonian - (Latvia) with between five and 30 speakers

Votian - (Russia) by less than 20 people

Italkian - (Italy) around 200 people

Yevanic - (Greece, Israel, Turkey and the U.S.) by less than 50 people

Krimchak - (Turkey) around 2,000 Krimchak people but only a handful still speak the language


Friday, April 16, 2010

Lake....What Was That Again?

We're not sure what the NIPMUC People were Nipping On, but this is the real name of what locals in Massachusetts call Lake Webster. The official Native American name cannot be pronounced by anyone living or dead anymore, and we think even the Indians had a hell of a time with it or at least had half an hour to say it. It is the longest place name in the world with over 40 letters.