There are some things the importance of which just supersede everything else. This is one of those...
When a container of bath toys, including yellow rubber ducks, fell into the Pacific Ocean in January 1992, it allowed scientists such as Curtis Ebbesmeyer to gain insight into the hidden world of ocean currents. Over the years, the ducks washed up on several different continents, revealing a worldwide network of currents, that had been invisible. The duck’s story led to a greater understanding of how all our seas are connected and seemed, to the Blue Planet II team, an inspiring story to re-tell.
Curtis is a pioneer in following the paths of floating objects on the ocean and has even coined the term ‘Flotsametrics,’ which underlines the importance of measuring where flotsam goes, to help us understand how the sea works.
Over the next 25 years, the plastic toys washed up all over the world. Many landed on the coast of Alaska, some went south to Australia, and remarkably some even went through the Arctic ice via the Bering Straits, to pop up in the Atlantic years later. One of the bath toys even landed in Scotland and it’s thought that today as many as 2000 remain at sea spiraling around in circular currents called ‘gyres’, still sometimes landing on shores from Alaska to Japan. Many have been found intact, hardly even bleached, years after they entered the sea.
What all this tells us is that all the world’s oceans are really one big connected system, and that plastic persists for a very long time (some people estimate at least 500 years, and there are reports of plastic parts from WW2 battles that have been at sea for more than 70 years). The ducks also tell us that we are connected to everywhere in the Big Blue ocean, and that a piece of plastic dropped at the coast might well end up thousands of miles away in the most remote parts of our planet, to potentially wreak havoc to marine creatures - no doubt not the intention of the careless litter bug.
Reconstructing the release of these ducks presented the team with a fresh challenge. While we wanted to tell their story, the team was also well aware of the ironies of putting plastic ducks in the sea. We were used to removing plastic from the ocean, and if we were to introduce any ourselves, we’d need to be very careful to make sure every single one was collected again afterwards.
To film the re-enactment of the release was the biggest challenge, as part of it meant we’d need aerial drone footage of all 250 of them floating in the middle of the open ocean, and most importantly collect all 250 again. We were 30 miles off the coast of Costa Rica with several large nets, an enthusiastic team and a drone with its pilots Mark Sharman and Jack Delf. We were always vigilant to collect every single duck. We counted them out and we counted them all back in again, returning to the UK with all 250 – well, except the few the Costa Rican team wanted to keep as souvenirs of a very unique part of the shoot!
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Leesburg is the next town over from where I live, and Bike Week is a really big deal down here. The people who run the thing claim that it's the third largest in the country after Sturgis and Daytona. Back in 2020 before all this covid shit hit the fan, they attracted over 210,000 bikers over the three days, and managed to maintain order to a degree - there was only one fatal shooting...
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Striving to stay relevant can sometimes be an admirable thing, but the folks at Fakebook wouldn't recognize relevance if it smacked 'em in the fuckin' chops. Tell me what the fuck good would something as stupid as a covid survey do for anyone? I swear these people live in one of those bubbles the guy up top is blowing. Jeez...
money odds. Time to get serious.
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you're my kinda guy. Juss' sayin'...
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If Kamala was running the ship of state...
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over there in jolly old England...
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Starbucks workers at the company’s flagship Seattle Roastery in the coffee giant’s hometown have voted to unionize, marking the union effort’s biggest victory yet as workers at corporate-run stores across the US launch a nationwide organised labor campaign.
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A movement called “No Mow May” is persuading some people not to mow their lawns for the month of May. It originated in the U.K. and is intended to help increase the bee population.
However, the thought of “No Mow May” is already eliciting some strong reactions from New Jersey and other State's residents.
Those in support of the movement say less time spent mowing your lawn increases the amount and diversity of wildlife, “including bees and other pollinators.” It also creates a home for them.
- Those against the movement have cited concerns that include:
- Local ordinances that require grass to be manicured at certain times
- Un-mowed lawns can provide a habitat for harmful ticks
- It hurts landscaping businesses
“No Mow May” was a conservation initiative first popularized by the British organization Plantlife, and the movement eventually made its way to North America.
In 2020, Appleton, Wis., residents and their city council agreed to suspend their weed ordinance for the month of May.
The yards that were not mowed for the month had three times higher bee species richness and five times more bees than the regularly mowed lawns, according to a study.
Since then, other studies have looked into how mowing lawns less can impact bees, save water and reduce emissions from gas-powered lawn mowers.
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Of course, ya also havta be some kinda fuckin' moron to put on some lame-ass friggin' homemade Mickey suit to go support something you most likely don't even understand, but that's a story for another day...
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Bike Weeks are consistently less criminal than "Black College Weeks."
ReplyDeleteHmmmmmmmm
DeleteGood post. Most of the plastic in our oceans is from China and Southeast Asia, they just don't feel the same way about litter as westerners do. On the other hand, I don't believe all the experts when they tell us the longevity of certain wastes. Most materials will degrade and reduce to dust is allowed to sit in sunlight.
ReplyDeleteThe duckies don't degrade - I hope...
Delete55 years old and doesn't know to put gas in the vee-hickle.
ReplyDeleteAnd nobody has ever carried drugs or too much money eastbound on I-40 before; usually they're caught on the east side of Shelby County just before they enter Fayette County.
Momma said stupid is as stupid does...
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