Monday, 31 December 2012

New Year's Eve Mystery


Mystery Man from Tri-Star Films 1998




My grand children found this action figure in our toy-box.

Imprinted on his backside are the words 'Copyright 1998 Tri-Star Films' but neither my grandchildren or my son know who he is supposed to be.

Can anyone name this character and the actor who played him?

If you can help us out please post details as a comment.

New Year's Day Postscript:

Thanks to Rachel from Essex who recognised our 'Mystery Man' as Victor The Camera Man from Godzilla played by Hank Azaria.  Nice one!

Sunday, 30 December 2012

2013 New Year Resolutions


Us Apes are all back-sliding Animals
On New Year's Eve it is customary to make at least one New Year Resolution.

Some of the more popular resolutions are:

  • To give up smoking.
  • To go on a diet and lose weight.
  • To drink less alcohol.
  • To join a gym or take more exercise.
  • To get a new or better job.
  • To make new friends or re-establish contact with old friends.
  • To find a partner.
  • To spend more time with the family.
  • To save more money or pay off a debt.
  • To learn a new skill or acquire a new interest.
  • To be less selfish and help others more.


Making a resolution is the easy part, keeping a resolution throughout the year is far more difficult.  Human beings are full of good intentions but we are often lacking in resolve. Changing one's established behaviour is a significant challenge and the journey along the road to permanent change is likely to include many detours, periods of static consolidation and much back-sliding.

If you make any unusual or novel resolutions for 2013, why not post them as a comment on my Blog?

Toot and I wish all Blog readers a Happy New Year !

Saturday, 29 December 2012

Mushroom Pasta


Big flavours on a plate







A simple tasty lunch or supper for those who have eaten far too much meaty protein over the Christmas Holiday.

The dish works equally well with fresh or dried pasta and can be made in a few minutes by anyone who can turn on a hob. Don't forget dried pasta takes longer to cook than fresh.






Ingredients:

Enough Pasta of your choice.

The Sauce

One clove of garlic.  

50 grams of butter  

One tablespoon of sunflower oil

Fresh or dried tarragon (you need less fresh)  

Squirt of lemon juice

Half a small glass of white wine  

1/4 of a Knorr vegetable stock cube  

2 large field mushrooms (Portabello mushrooms work well in this recipe) 

One small handfull of dried Cep mushrooms  

Four tablespoons of double cream  

Salt and black pepper to taste  

One teaspoon of caster sugar  

Warning; Tarragon is a powerful herb and it is very easy to overwhelm the flavour of  the mushrooms by over doing the Tarragon. This is particularly easy to do when using   the fresh herb rather than the dried herb. Add a little and taste before adding more.  You can make this sauce without the dried ceps or the white wine but it  does taste less of the forest and what the hell you only live once!    I have never made this dish without the butter and would not recommend this unless you have a dodgy ticker.                    

Method:

1 Peel the clove of garlic and split length ways with a sharp knife.

2 Take a heavy highsided nonstick frying pan and rub the cooking surface with the cut face of the garlic clove.

3 Put the pan on a low heat and add the butter, the oil and the garlic used to rub the pan.

4 Slice the Portabello mushrooms and add to the warm butter and oil.

5  Before the garlic browns remove it from the pan and discard.

6  Add the chopped fresh or dried Tarragon leaves. 

7 Turn the mushrooms in the butter and oil until they are cooked.

8 Whilst the mushrooms are cooking, rehydrate the dried ceps. Place the ceps in a pint glass cover with water. Seal the top of the glass with cling film and microwave for 1&1/2 mins.

9 Squirt the lemon juice on to the mushrooms in the frying pan. 

10 Add a teaspoon of sugar by sprinkling over the mushrooms. 

11 Turn up the heat a little and add the wine to the frying pan. 

12 Crumble the piece of stock cube into the frying pan and stir to remove lumps. 

13 Add the ceps and liquor from the glass and reduce the liquid until it just covers the   the frying pan.

14 Remove from the heat and leave to stand. 

15 Boil water for pasta and cook until ready. 

16 Whilst pasta is cooking gently reheat the mushrooms and just before the pasta is cooked   add cream to the frying pan whilst stirring vigorously to avoid the sauce separating.

17 When sauce is hot turn off the heat.

18 Strain the pasta well and then add to the frying pan and toss in the sauce.  Pasta:Tagliatelle, Pappardelle or Penne work well with this sauce.

19 Serve from the pan into bowls at the table.  Quantity to suit your appetite.

I like to garnish with rocket or other bitter salad leaves but this is optional.  The whole dish can be made in twenty minutes including preparation and creates minimal washing up. Bon Appetite!

Monday, 24 December 2012

Yuletide Penguins


How many ways can you stack a penguin?

No 3 in Yuletide Greeting Formation

May Toot and I wish all Cabine du Jardin Deux Blog readers a very Merry Christmas and a Peaceful New Year.

The Night before Christmas


My Backyard at about 23.00 UT on the 24th December

First cloud free night for some time so decided to get the scope outside in the backyard and do some serious astronomy and astro-photography.

I fix my telescope to the mount, attach my power tank and undertake a three star alignment. Everything is going to plan and definitely all around is a bit 'Silent Night'

One minute its all quiet, the moon is shining and the stars are twinkling.  The next minute all hell breaks loose.

Santa's reindeer have landed on a cloud and have started showering my patio with droppings. The sound of carrots being crunched is almost deafening. No wonder reindeer can navigate in the dark.

Santa is warming his bum on my neighbour's chimney and even from 20 metres his breath smells strongly of sherry and mincemeat. I'm not sure he's in a fit state to drive a sleigh?

About 10.30 pm this great big Robot turns up and tells me his name's Klaatu and that if I don't change my environmentally polluting ways mankind will be eradicated from the face of the Earth.  So, I went indoors and asked Toot to turn the central heating thermostat down a couple of degrees.  I thought he would be pleased but when I told him, he just threw a moody and clammed up.

The fight between the unicorn and the dodo was a bit of a damp squib. The unicorn was far too nice and the dodo just didn't seem to have his heart in it.

Evening ended well though!  I managed to get three or four really good avi-clips of Jupiter and Dr Who turned up to sort out Klaatu.  Not so full of yourself now eh Mr Silver Sulky?

About time for watching the traditional Christmas Eve DVD  'Die Hard'.

 "I'm an exceptional blogger Mr McLane"
  
                                           Yippee ki-ay Mother!

Sunday, 23 December 2012

He's Coming



Don't forget to follow Santa  tomorrow, as he flies his reindeer powered sleigh around the world, delivering presents to all good boys and girls.

For more information see:

http://www.noradsanta.org/en/

NASA's Santa Tracker will be available beginning at 4 p.m. EST Dec. 24 on the Internet at: http://spaceflight.nasa.gov/realdata/tracking/index.html

Friday, 21 December 2012

Jupiter December 2012 Part 2


A not quite so blurry image of Jupiter and two moons
At the moment, the weather is being monsoon like in good old England. There have therefore been few opportunities to photograph Jupiter through my telescope.

In between the heavy rain showers I managed to get a short clip of video which I have subsequently manipulated in various software packages to produce this single image. What I need is a clear dry night and a lot more photons to play with!

The Holly, Ivy and Mistletoe


 Holly and  Mistletoe

Holly and Ivy

The holly and the ivy, now are both well grown,
Of all the trees that are in the wood, the holly bears the crown.
Refrain:
Oh, the rising of the sun and the running of the deer,
The playing of the merry organ, sweet singing in the choir.
The holly bears a blossom as white as lily flower,
And Mary bore sweet Jesus Christ to be our sweet saviour
Refrain
The holly bears a berry as red as any blood,
And Mary bore sweet Jesus Christ to do poor sinners good.
Refrain
The holly bears a prickle as sharp as any thorn,
And Mary bore sweet Jesus Christ on Christmas Day in the morn.
Refrain
The holly bears a bark as bitter as any gall,
And Mary bore sweet Jesus Christ for to redeem us all.

Toot and I have a Holly Tree and lots of Ivy in our garden. This time of year the blackbirds like to eat the red holly berries. and in summer they nest in the Ivy.

Sadly we have no Mistletoe in our garden, at Christmas 'under the Mistletoe' its OK to ask for a kiss and you can never have too many kisses at Christmas!

Credit to Wkipedia

Monday, 17 December 2012

Misplaced Architecture No 14


Santa's Palace and Workshop at the North Pole
Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle all the way. Here comes Father Christmas riding on his sleigh. Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle Bells, Jingle all the way. Santa built his Snow Palace using plans by Antoni Gaudi.

Saturday, 15 December 2012

Santa's Sizewell Robin


When the red red robin comes bob-bob bobbin along, along!
Every December Santa Claus sends his robins out from the North Pole to check  whether all the girls and boys are being good.  Only good girls and boys get left a present on Christmas morning from Santa!  I hope all my readers have been good girls and boys?

Friday, 14 December 2012

The Christmas Tree


Our Christmas Tree



Each year Toot and I decorate our Christmas Tree using new and old decorations. Some ornaments on our tree once belonged to our parents, some were bought by us and some were made by our children when they were very young.



Christmas is all about loving memories of the past, the joy of being loved in the present and great expectations for years of love yet to come; the Ghosts of 'Christmas Past', 'Christmas Present' and 'Christmas Future'.



In the United Kingdom and other countries worldwide the decoration of trees predates Christianity. The winter solstice was celebrated in pagan times and is still 'welcomed in' by eccentrics who dress as Druids and loiter with intent in and around Stonehenge.  The decoration of trees and the hanging of floral garlands are  very ancient customs which we still practice today albeit with our own spiritual spin.



In the 'Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe', C.S Lewis laments a world ruled over by a White Witch who through the application of a cruel spell makes it 'always winter but never Christmas'.  The Christmas Tree; with its baubles, tinsel and candles, brings light and good cheer to the dark cold month of December and we say "God bless it".

Toot and I love our tree - "Oh Christmas tree , oh Christmas Tree how lovely are your branches?"



Thursday, 13 December 2012

Druid Penguin


How many ways can you stack a penguin?
No 2 in Prehistoric Ring of Stones formation.

Wednesday, 12 December 2012

Jupiter December 2012


Blurry image of Jupiter taken through cloud
 with three of the four Galilean Moons visible
Io was behind Jupiter when this photo was taken

The life of an ageing British amateur astronomer is one of challenge and tribulation.  The weather is always a problem and the aspiring astronomer has always to contend with the British climate.  First we have cloud cover which can last unbroken for literally weeks.  Second the clouds can provide copious amounts of rain, sleet and snow which are an anathema to electronics. Third astronomers can experience the joys of mist, fog and high humidity which cause lenses and mirrors to dew up.

Occasionally however, we get a clear and transparent night which is ideal for stargazing. Then we have to cope with light pollution from street lights and the well meaning but amnesiac neighbour who forgets to turn off his or her garden lighting when retiring to bed.

After midnight when our Council turns off the street lights and on a clear night, I unpack my scope, eyepieces, cameras and laptop and take out my kit into our garden.  Well that is if my back is up to it, if my arthritis flares up, chronic back ache can deter my enthusiasm and cut short a night's entertainment at the eyepiece.  Finally; weather, light pollution and health permitting, a night's astronomy can be ruined if my digital cameras, lap top or telescope mount decide to malfunction.  I have on at least one occasion got everything set up only to have my power tank battery fail, having forgotten to re-charge it after a previous viewing session!

The other night was clear and transparent and consequently I decided to try to image Jupiter with my relatively untried QHY5v planetary camera.  Jupiter was high in the sky and shining bright and steady as I set up my 5 inch refractor on my NEQ6 mount.  I aligned my scope, centred Jupiter in a wide-field eyepiece and then connected the camera.  An image appeared upon my laptop screen and I adjusted the telescope focus until I had a nice sharp image.  I pressed the capture button and awaited developments.

Out of a clear sky, suddenly there appeared clouds everywhere!  In the hour I had spent setting up my kit the weather had changed from great to terrible. I managed only two one thousand frame clips taken through intermittent cloud cover and then it rained buckets full of rain.  Thankfully Toot came to my rescue by helping me to dismantle my scope and electronics and get my precious astro-kit undercover.  Herschel had his sister and I have Toot!

One of the night's compensatory factors was that, before the clouds appeared, I had one of my best ever views of the Great Red Spot (GRS) and it is just visible in the blurry image above.

Hopefully before Christmas, I will get another chance to photograph Jupiter but this time without the clouds and rain!

Sunday, 9 December 2012

Sir Patrick Alfred Caldwell-Moore, CBE, FRS, FRAS


Sir Patrick at the eyepiece
 of his 12.5 inch reflector

Today, when the BBC announced the death of Sir Patrick Moore, I couldn't help feeling just a little sad.
I can clearly remember as a ten year old, pleading with my Mum and Dad to be allowed to stop up late to watch the 'Sky at Night' which he presented from 1957 until this year.


His life spanned eighty-nine years in which science, engineering, electronics and astronomy have experienced enormous and fundamental development.
Sir Patrick in his long life met; Orville Wright, Yuri Gagarin and Neil Armstrong; the first man to fly, the first to fly in space and the first to walk on the Moon.  He also knew Albert Einstein and as an accomplished musician, accompanied the physicist's piano playing on the violin.


Sir Patrick never had formal training as an astronomer but represented the gold standard for the best that can be achieved by a focused and dedicated amateur. His maps of the Moon compiled from telescopic observations made from his garden in Selsey, England, were used by the Russian Space Agency and NASA.


Sir Patrick has presented the monthly astronomy television programme 'The Sky at Night' since 1957. The Sky at Night is the longest running programme with the same presenter on British Television.


Sir Patrick was also a prolific writer and his book the 'Observers Book of Astronomy' kindled an interest in the night sky for generations of amateur and professional astronomers. I remember buying a copy of this book and reading it over and over again.


Sir Patrick was a one off character, astronomer and educator whose like we will not see again.  His trademark 'monocle' and the music 'At the Castle  Gate' (Pelleas and Melisande by Sibelius) will always bring him to my mind.


Thank you Sir Patrick for my life long interest in the Cosmos and for encouraging the small boy I once was to look out into the night sky and wonder at its beauty.


The next time I look up at the Moon I will wink once for Neil and once for you.

For more information  http://sirpatrickmoore.com/biography/

Friday, 7 December 2012

Misplaced Architecture No13


Brazilian Coffee
On December 5th 2012, ten days before his 105th birthday, the great Brazilian architect, Oscar Niemeyer, died in Rio de Janeiro.   Along with Le Corbusier, Oscar Niemeyer was an Icon for student architects like me who trained during the 1960s.

"I am not attracted to straight angles or to the straight line, hard and inflexible, created by man. I am attracted to free-flowing, sensual curves. The curves that I find in the mountains of my country, in the sinuousness of its rivers, in the waves of the ocean, and on the body of the beloved woman. Curves make up the entire Universe, the curved Universe of Einstein". Oscar Niemeyer, Bohemian, Artist, Architect and Socialist. 

Sounds like a great bloke to me!  

I hope you excuse my bit of fun with your work Mr N.

For more information see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oscar_Niemeyer

Thursday, 6 December 2012

One Man, Two Guvnors




Toot,our friends and I went last night to the Theatre Royal Norwich to see Rufus Hound in 'One Man, two Guvnors' which is on tour.

We had a great time and my friend Dave and I were invited on stage to take part in the slapstick fun.

Its a great fast paced show with broad humour and excellent music. Its top quality fun for all the family. Bright children from about six years upwards would find much of this show hilarious.

Rufus Hound, in the lead role, worked extremely hard from start to finish and made a great show memorable.

I'm sure my grand-children will be impressed when I tell them I met Rufus Hound and was part of the performance!


One Man and one of the Two Guvnors
If you get a chance to see this show during its UK Tour jump at it. 'One Man Two Guvnors' makes for a fabulous evening's entertainment!

Saturday, 1 December 2012

Pascal Penguin



How many ways can you stack a penguin?
No 1 in Pascal Triangle formation.

St Petersburg

The Neva River frozen all winter was thawing rapidly in spring sunshine. As Anita and I walked by the frozen water we could hear the ice groan and crack demonstrating the power of our friendly star 93 million miles away. Photograph taken by Anita Roberts on a hand-held Sony Cybershot camera.




















In spring 2011,Toot and I had a wonderful time in St Petersburg. Its a beautiful historic city with great museums, fabulous churches, the cruiser Aurora, the Hermitage Art Gallery,  and the Winter Palace to visit.  It was however very cold and snowed whilst we were there.  The warmth and kindness of the Russian people we met more than compensated for the chilly weather and Toot and I would recommend a holiday in this fabulous city.

For further information see:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Petersburg
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_cruiser_Aurora
http://www.hermitagemuseum.org/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winter_Palace

Thursday, 29 November 2012

Weather on Mars



A clear November day in  Gale Crater Mars
In the UK we have been experiencing heavy rain and flooding but on Mars it is very very dry. The Mars exploration vehicle Curiosity took the above composite photograph in October and November of this year when the air was clear and free from dust. The day time temperatures on Mars have been unusually warm and large dust storms are caused by temperature differentials, therefore I wonder if Curiosity might soon be in for a dust bath!   In September 2001 there was a global dust storm which obscured geological features that are normally visible from Earth and space. The images below, taken in June and September 2001 by the Hubble Space Telescope clearly show the affects of atmospheric dust.

Hubble Space Telescope images from 2001

Wind blown sand in Gale Crater
images taken by Curiosity's Mast Camera


Credits for images Curiosity and the HST NASA




Sunday, 25 November 2012

Sleeping Beauty





Last night we went to see Matthew Bourne's Sleeping Beauty at the Theatre Royal Norwich.

It was a wonderful experience, beautiful music, excellent dancing and brilliant set design.

If you can still get tickets, Toot and I would recommend catching a performance of Sleeping Beauty at Sadler's Wells in December.

To quote our eight years old grandson, Felix, " Too good for words"!

Recommendations don't come better than that!

Sunday, 18 November 2012

Orion the Hunter


Orion photographed from our backyard

It has come around to that time of year when the constellation Orion at midnight peeps over our backyard fence to say hello.

Toot and I are very fond of Orion and for astronomers it contains a number of real treasures. Of course it is the other way up for my readers in the southern hemisphere!

Orion is host to a vast molecular cloud, parts of which, are visible to the naked eye and look spectacular through binoculars or a small telescope.

Parts of the molecular cloud shine because molecules of hydrogen gas are being ionised by infrared and ultraviolet radiation from new born stars.
An easily observable example in Orion is the so called Trapezium in M42 found in Orion's Sword which sits below the belt stars; Alnitak, Alnilam and|Mintaka.  The new born Trapezium Stars, recently created in the last million or so years by the gravitational collapse of cold hydrogen gas molecules, are radiating in the ultra-violet spectrum, ionizing the gas cloud and causing it to shine through the emission of photons.

(Above)The Trapezium photographed
from my backyard through my 5 inch refractor.
(Right) M41 data from ESO, photo put
together using Iris by me.
 

The constellation Orion contains a number of famous astronomical wonders including;

  • The red super-giant and semi regular variable star Betelgeuse, which is entering the final phase of its life on the main sequence and will in the next  million years, go super-nova to finally end its days as a planetary nebula.  Betelgeuse has run out of hydrogen fuel and is now fusing helium to create carbon. It will work its way up the Periodic table fusing one element after another until it gets to the element iron and at this point it will explode in a cataclysmic type II super-nova.  Earth will be quite safe as Betelgeuse is estimated to be some 1300 light years distant. 
  • The bright star Alnitak, the easternmost star in the Belt of Orion, shines ultraviolet light into the Flame Nebula and this knocks electrons away from the great clouds of hydrogen gas that reside there. Primarily,the glow results when the electrons and ionized hydrogen recombine. Additional dark gas and dust lies in front of the bright part of the nebula and this is what causes the dark network that appears in the center of the glowing gas. 
  • The Horsehead Nebula  is a dark cloud of dust and gas and is a region in the Orion Nebula where star formation is taking place right now.  The area of the Orion Nebula containing the Horsehead is a stellar nursery. The darkness of the massive nebula is not explained by this dust and gas, but by the complex blocking of the light from stars behind it.  The Horsehead is only observable through large amateur telescopes and from dark sites.

Thanks to the European Southern Obsrvatory (ESO), Wikipedia and Sky and Telescope

Monday, 12 November 2012

Echoes from Kitty Hawk


Wilbur, Orville and Buzz; Pioneers of Flight

Buzz Aldrin made a rare live appearance upon BBC Radio 4.  It wasn't a high -brow programme, more a  light comedic thirty minute interlude between the six o' clock news and a long running radio soap.  It filled a half hour of our time whilst Toot and I were driving to Norwich.  Mr Aldrin took an active part in the banter and with good grace completed his appearance alongside a random collection of minor celebrities from the British Entertainment Industry.  As long as I can remember, I have been risk averse and so courageous pioneers such as astronauts have always scored high in my pantheon of the great and good.

My grandfather once took me to see the former great world champion boxer, Primo Carnera who towards the end of his life and in financial difficulty had resorted to taking part in professional wrestling matches.  Even as a small boy, the sight of this huge man, once a world champion, being manhandled by a youth, half his size and age, in a make shift ring at  Maidstone Corn Exchange, was a very sad spectacle indeed.

Mr Aldrin thankfully, although out of place on this programme and in such lightweight company, retained his humour and dignity and I for one was thrilled to hear him speak. Its not everyday you can hear words 'real time' from the once and second 'man on the moon'.  It never much interested me as to which one descended the ladder first, I just thought the whole Apollo Programme was brilliant and probably one of mankind's finest achievements.  I'm not impressed by the purveyors of  'We never went to the Moon bullshit conspiracies'.  I have a memory that I read somewhere that Mr Aldrin once punched someone for promoting such a theory in his presence. I hope this is true and if it was 'Good on you Buzz'!

I then got thinking about his place in history and time and realized that my childhood was more or less the same temporal distance from Wilbur and Orville Wright as my grandchildren are from Buzz Aldrin's journey to the Moon.  Am I that old or does time and technology just come and go too quickly?

Credits for images: NASA and Wikipedia.


Sunday, 4 November 2012

Brancaster Mussels



In East Anglia, the mussel season is in full swing and last night I made Toot and I a bowl of Moules Mariniere. The best mussels of course are caught at Brancaster Staithe in Norfolk.  My Granny always said "Only eat mussels when there's an 'R' in the month".  Having eaten mussels in Spain and in August and having survived to tell the tale, I believe this advice to be a bit suspect.

In September each year, the new season Brancaster Mussels appear on our fishmonger's slab and they are quite delicious when cooked in wine.

Recipe for Moules Mariniere  

For a main meal for two people you will need about 1.5 kg or 3 lbs of live mussels in their shells, two shallots or one small white onion, 5 sprigs of traditional parsley (not flat leaf), 4 tablespoons of double cream, 1 ounce or 25 grams of butter, half a bottle -35 centilitres - of white wine (German Hock works well) and black pepper to taste.  You can add a little fresh celery or garlic but Toot and I prefer it without.  You can substitute good quality cider for the wine if you so prefer.

Clean all the mud and remove attached weed from the mussels. This is best accomplished under running water with the mussels in a sieve.   Discard any mussels that have broken shells or are open.  In this way you will avoid any potential for food poisoning.

Slice white onions or shallots very finely on a board.
Chop fresh parsley finely on the same board and add to the sliced onions

Place the mussels in a pan, add the onion, parsley and black pepper. If adding garlic or celery it should be done at this stage.

Add the wine to the pan, the wine does not have to cover the mussels as they will cook in the steam.  For this to work,the pan does need a lid and this should be kept on throughout the cooking process.

Place the pan on the hob and cook over a high heat.  Shake the pan from time to time to ensure they all cook through evenly. They are cooked when all the shells are open.  Do not over cook as this will cause the mussel flesh to shrink and become tough.  Sometimes the odd mussel refuses to open during cooking, do not overcook the rest awaiting the odd one or two to open. Not opening does not mean there is anything wrong with it.  Just lift it out with the rest and it might open anyway.

When cooked lift the mussels out of the wine and place them in two bowls.  Put the bowls in the oven on a low heat to keep warm.

To make the sauce; discard  half the cooking liquor (or better still save for use as a stock - makes a good base for a fishy spaghetti), return the remainder to a simmering boil and add the butter stirring vigorously.  When the butter has melted into the wine add the cream slowly whilst stirring taking care not to separate the sauce.  Pour the cooked sauce, onions and parsley  all over the mussels and serve straight away with crusty French bread batons.  You can drink the remaining half bottle of hock with the Moules but I prefer a drier French or Kiwi white.

Why not give Moules Mariniere a try and give your taste-buds and autumnal treat!


Friday, 2 November 2012

Jupiter and Moon Conjunction


Photograph taken from our garden last night
 using Toot's  hand-held Sony Compact Camera








You might have noticed that the Moon had a bright companion last night.  The planet Jupiter appeared to be sitting alongside the waning gibbous Moon.  It was however, a line of sight illusion as Jupiter varies  between 629 and 928 million  km in distance from Earth and the Moon only varies between 363 and 407 thousand  km.  Jupiter is also much much larger than the Moon, it's diameter being approximately 45 times bigger.  Jupiter only  appears as a star-like point of light because it is so far away, viewed under 25x or more magnification in a small telescope it presents clearly as a disc.  


Jupiter is a gas giant, 90% hydrogen and  9% helium.  It has the fastest rate of spin of all the planets and completes a full rotation every 9.9 hours.  The resulting centrifugal force (or lack of centripetal acceleration) causes the shape of Jupiter to deform from the pure sphere dictated by gravity.  Jupiter's diameter measured around its equator is therefore significantly greater than when measured over its poles. Jupiter's shape is described as oblate.  In a small telescope this deformation is quite obvious to even an untrained eye.
Jupiter has its own retinue of  some 63 moons, four of which. the Galilean Moons, can be seen through 10x50 mm binoculars. The number of these larger moons visible and their positions vary according to their position in orbit around Jupiter and whether they are or not in eclipse.

Thursday, 1 November 2012

The Incredible Shrinking Old Man


Architectural Minimalism

Yesterday I had my annual check up at our Doctor's Surgery.  Help I've shrunk!

 I'm not sure whether it was the recent spinal surgery, just getting older or both but, which ever way you look at me, I'm not as tall as I was.

I used to be a 5 feet ten inches tall practicing architect and now retired, I'm only 5 feet eight and one quarter.  For those more decimal in their outlook, that is a whopping  reduction of some 44 millimetres.  Where did they go and where will this all end?  I don't want to become a 'knee high to a grasshopper octogenarian'!  You shouldn't look down on the elderly its 'ageist'.

Tuesday, 30 October 2012

Misplaced Architecture No 12


Jabba the Hutt's  extended Palace on the desert world Tatooine
His guided tour of the recently completed extensions to Hutt Palace had not gone well and having concluded that  he was more; atmospheric and carbonite than picturesque and limestone,  the gangster Jabba decided to eat his young Jeddi architect.  Perhaps it would look better in moonlight?

Friday, 26 October 2012

Misplaced Architecture No 11


Commander Bond, I suspect we have a mole inside MI6
To celebrate the 50th anniversary of the James Bond franchise and the iconic SIS Building, nearly 20 years the London home of British Intelligence, designed by Sir Terry Farrell  (Toot's favourite architect).

PS; Toot and I have now been to see SkyFall and its excellent, Bond back and at his best! We recommend it to you all.


Saturday, 20 October 2012

Pasmore, Rothko and Cassini amongst the Rings of Saturn.






I was much impressed with these recent images returned from NASA's Cassini spacecraft. They show the large, orange, hazy hydro-carbon cloaked moon Titan accompanied by the smaller moons Tethys and Dione, all set against the backdrop of Saturn and its ice rings.

I was reminded of the graphic cool of abstract paintings by Victor Pasmore and the drab but intense colour-ways of Mark Rothko,








Credits for images: NASA and the TATE


Thursday, 18 October 2012

Aurora Borealis


Images taken with my tripod mounted Canon DSLR in Tromso, Norway, 2011

As the prevalence of sunspots comes close to maximum in the current 11 year solar magnetic activity cycle, the Aurora is being seen in Northern Ireland, Scotland, Northumberland and as far south as Norfolk in England.  After Christmas and if the UK remains snow free, Toot and I may venture North to see if we can view the Aurora once more. In January 2011, we had a marvelous time in Tromso and witnessed the Aurora for the first time.  I understand that for my blog readers in Scandinavia, Canada and Russia seeing the Aurora may be rather common place but for us Brits located in the south of our Islands, the experience is a very rare and awesome treat.

Toot and I have visited Norway and Sweden a number of times and  always enjoyed the hospitality and company of our Scandinavian friends and acquaintances. If you have never been, why not book a holiday right now?  Some of our best memories are of: swimming in Oslo Fjord, seeing a Viking longboat, watching golden eagles quartering the land high in the mountains between Norway and Sweden, hearing Elk grunting as we watched them swim across a lake, waiting for hours by a dam to catch a glimpse of a beaver and swimming and canoeing in ice-cold lakes with our then young children.

Then of course, if you visit between the months of September and March, there is always a chance you will see the Aurora in all its glory

For an Aurora taster see:

 http://www.asc-csa.gc.ca/eng/astronomy/auroramax/connect.asp

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aurora_(astronomy)

Sunday, 14 October 2012

Misplaced Architecture No 10



The Umpire State Building

In October 2011 we stayed in a hotel, just off Time Square. We really enjoyed New York City and hope to return some day. During our stay, we went to the top of the Empire State Building and enjoyed the views over Manhattan.  Whilst we were queuing to get into the elevator, I was much pleased by the friendly lady who, checked our tickets and looking at my beret,  said  " Gee don't you look dapper in your Tambourine"!

We also visited the viewing platform at the the top of the Rockefeller Centre from which this photo was taken.

Toot and I had a wonderful time in the Big Apple . The City offers the tourist many treasures and the New Yorkers we met were  friendly, open and warm. Toot and I recommend visiting this fine City it is an interesting and surprising place!

Dickie Bird OBE is England's highest profile cricket umpire. Mr Bird is now retired from professional cricket but like the Empire State Building has iconic national status. So I thought I would put them together!

http://www.thedickiebirdfoundation.co.uk/

Dickie Bird OBE International Umpire
Sir Vivian Richards KNH OBE Captain of the West Indies 

Credits: Wikipedia and the Dickie Bird Foundation

Saturday, 13 October 2012

Curiosity Rocks




Curiosity commences real science in Gale Crater
The Mars rover 'Curiosity' has completed an analysis of a rock named 'Jake Matijevic' which, it encountered on day 45 of its drive towards the Glenelg Area.  Curiosity's first real science  will be undertaken at Glenelg using its on board rock drill.

The route to Glenelg from Bradbury Landing


The Rock Jake


 
NASA engineers have adjusted the white balance of this image of Jake and exaggerated the colour of the rock to show differences in mineral composition.

The red marks show where Curiosity's Chem Cam Laser was aimed and hit the rock. The circular black and white areas were where the Chem Cam  looked for the pits created by the laser.  The purple circles indicate where the Alpha-Particle X-Ray Spectrometer trained its view whilst obtaining the spectra.




The graph shows the elements (the black-line) that were found in Jake by the Spectrometer. The red-line shows spectra from the calibration rock taken by Curiosity from Earth to Mars. Jake is probably volcanic in origin.  It has quite high levels of Sodium, Aluminium, Silicon and Potassium which are often common in feldspar minerals.  It is is relatively low in iron and magnesium compared with other rocks found elsewhere on Mars. It has very low levels of Zinc and Nickel. The chlorine and Bromine shown are thought to be from surface dust.

Feldspar minerals were also discovered during the Apollo missions to the lunar uplands.
Jake's Spectra

Credits to NASA for the images and information.



Friday, 12 October 2012

I'm Back


I had a dream last night

A big thank you from me to the NHS team at the Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital. My damaged disc has been removed and my vertebra chipped away to allow my spinal chord a bit more room to send messages to my feet.

The surgery was undertaken on Wednesday afternoon and I am home sitting in our living room, writing this at 19.15 on Friday. All surgery and aftercare completely free thanks to the National Health Service!! A top quality service worth fighting for!!

I no longer have pains in my legs and feel remarkably well. May I also thank our family and friends for their support and well wishes. In particular a very big thank you to Jude and Jon for looking after Toot and a huge thank you to Toot for all her love and care.





I must say morphine is a great help when you are in pain but a bit of a trial when you stop taking it.  Last night, about five hours after I refrained from using the morphine pump, my skin started itching and I had a dream worthy of a Pink Floyd album cover.  I prepared the above sketch based upon my experiences, I must say I prefer Raphael to Hieronymus Bosch (although the latter does make exceedingly fine dish-washing machines).

Monday, 8 October 2012

Spinal Tap Part 3

Hereward the Wake





This week and subject to the availability of a hospital bed, I shall be appearing in a matinee performance of 'Look back in Anger' at the Orthopedic Operating Theatre, Norwich.  Mine will be a non speaking part mainly because I will be in the arms of Morpheus courtesy of a NHS Anesthetist   My surgeon will be making sculptural changes to my back which I hope will enable me to resume a number of  more  active outdoor hobbies that I have had to temporarily suspend.

Since January, I have been suffering back pain as the result of a herniated lumbar disc and spinal stenosis.

In lumbar stenosis, the spinal nerve roots in the lower back are compressed and this can lead to symptoms of sciatica (tingling, weakness, or numbness that radiates from the low back and into the buttocks and legs).



The probable causes of my Stenosis are:

  • Old damage which occurred in my twenties from playing rugby as a front row forward.
  • Aging
  • Osteoarthritis
  • Vertebrae instability
The surgeon is going to carry out a disc decompression and chip away vertebra bone that is pressing on my spinal chord.  I believe he will use a mallet and chisel, so its just like sculpture really!

I hope to be well and active in the 'Cabine' within a couple of weeks but in the meantime may I wish all blog surfers my best regards!


Credits  for images Wikipedia




Wednesday, 3 October 2012