In celebration of a significant number of decades of wedded bliss, we did a river cruise on the Rhine, courtesy Ama Waterways. The Route I've drawn this by hand, so our actual distance covered was likely more, over 800km. The plan She has consented to do carry-on only luggage, as we have a couple of multi-hour periods where a big bag would be painful to deal with. We reached a good agreement on what is really essential travel stuff. Itinerary Monday May 12th to Montreal, then overnight to Amsterdam arriving May 13. No one had announced direct flight when we booked all this. Stay in Amsterdam at the Rho Hotel See the sites in Amsterdam until we board our boat the AmaPrima on May 14. May 15, we stay docked the first night, and go on a canal tour in Amsterdam in the morning May 16, we dock at Dusseldorf walking tour of Dussledorf walking tour of Cologne May 17, we dock at Rudesheim bike tour of the Rheingau Siegfried's Mechanical Music cabinet May 18, we dock at Ludwigshafen (Mann...
TL;DR: We saw Mercury while on vacation! Wednesday night, we were walking back from dinner, and saw this sight in the western sky. (Picture courtesy GD1): "What is that bright speck at the upper limb of the moon?", I wondered. I vaguely recalled that there was an annular eclipse around now. I was tired from a full day, so my brain said: " Baily's Beads "! This jolted me into action. I yelled "It's an eclipse!" and tore off down the hallway to fetch my 50x zoom camera from the hotel room. Witnesses say I just missed bowling over some alarmed tourists, and numerous grandchildren raced after me. One witness (SIL1) said he'd never seen me move so fast.. A jink and a jag, and I got to our room's balcony, camera in hand, just in time for everything to go behind the clouds. My picture: We're home now, and I've been curating some of our images. I zoomed in on the highlight of GD1's picture: and later SIL2 offered up his, which I zoomed ...
This page at Laurence Livermore National Laboratory is a great time waster. I recommend looking at the following geographies for different years: Texas <-- industry has become less efficient? California <-- not much change, despite the perception of them being a greening economy Iceland <-- it helps to live on top of submerged volcanoes Tanzania <-- huge country, they use no energy, and what they do use comes from biomass. Saudi Arabia <-- no surprise Canada <-- spot the oil sands gas consumption! China is ten times bigger than Canada as far as energy goes, in almost all aspects. Yet their population is almost 40 times more. It's our SUVs and shopping malls! If you squint just right at some location over a decade, you can see North America replacing coal with natural gas. Alternative sources are making some headway, but aren't significant (yet?). One thing I don't understand is why there is more rejected energy, or wasted energy now compared to a dec...
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