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Níl aon tintéan mar do thintéan féin...

Sunday, December 25, 2005

Merry Christmas!

Well, despite my own shock it seems that it is already the Christmas Eve. It's my first Christmas away from home, and also my first Christmas shared with Col.

I was able to attend mass tonight at the 'Adam and Eve'. Here are a few shots from that...

Here you can see the large organ that accopanied a wonderful choir. I took this shot after mass, so all of the singers are scurrying downstairs to receive communion.

Since we have St. Francis to thank for the tradition of the créche (they call it a 'crib' here), it seemed only right to take a few of the Franciscan's version.

I have managed to snap a few Christmas-y photos over the past months, in Derry, Belfast and Dublin... These first three on from pubs in Derry (kissing snowpeople... aww!)

This is of City Hall in Belfast. The smiley face seems to be the city logo (well, at least that of the tourism board). Surreal...

Sprouts... I have tried them but I just don't like 'em. And I know that I am not alone in this. Yet over here, everyone seems to go mad for them at Christmas. A month ago, I don't believe our local M&S stocked any brussel sprouts. Look at this table they had set up today! Madness, I tell ye.

I saw this walking back from Mass tonight. Santa, reindeer, and Guinness. Gotta love an Irish Christmas... :)

Okay, nobody over here sees a problem with this. Yet when I saw it for the first time, it stopped me in my tracks. Over here, kids go visit Mall Santas (*cough* er, Santa's helpers) in 'Santa's Grotto'. Why do I have trouble processing this? Well, Hugh Hefner (of the Playboy empire) has a grotto. I can't deal with any sort of overlap in my brain between those two guys. It's just not right!

Well, if you made it this far down... cheers! I am off to bed soon. Right after I phone home anyways. That 7 hour time zone difference is a killer... :) Tommorow we are off to spend the next two days with Col's family so I might be incommunicadoo.

For now though, I wish you all a very merry Christmas. I hope you can share this time with your loved ones, your family and friends. Oh, and I feel like a public service announcement for saying this, but if you celebrate with the Christmas Spirit that comes in a bottle and is sold at the off-licensee, DON'T DRIVE. It's just not worth it.

"...and to all a good night."

Thursday, December 22, 2005

Blondie & a Brother-In-Law


On Monday of this week, Col and I watched a performance of Blondie in the Olympia Theatre. Col is a big Blondie fan and we secured the tickets over the summer. This was quite a good show, with many of the famous singles getting performed alongside some new material. The guitarist had a good time, and the drummer was a performer who delighted in tossing his sticks high in the air before catching them and playing on without missing a beat. Don't even get me started on the keyboard player who (more than once) carried his gigantic person-sized keyboard off of it's stand and into center stage. However the main attraction was, of course, Deborah Harry. She was always The Blond in Blondie. The lead vocalist, she was certainly the star of the show despite the theatrics of the others. She was hopping around and dancing about the stage the whole night, despite the fact that she is 60! Oh, and no longer a blond (reddish-brown now)... But in what I thought was a nice touch, the mic stand was! Despite our best efforts, our photos didn't come out very well.

Col's brother Mark and his wife Zvia have arrived in Dublin this week. Mark is (of course) from Ireland. Zvia is from Israel. They both now live in Australia. They are staying with Col's parents while they are visiting over the Christmas season. We snuck up to see them on the day they arrived thinking it would be a nice surprise. Unfortunately, it was too much of a surprise. Bushed, the two of them had gone to bed. We stayed and had a visit with Col's parents and resolved to return again. Last night we managed to visit when they were still awake and I finally had a chance to meet the last of the her siblings. The two of them were still rather tired, but at least we had a chance to touch base. We (Mark and Zvia, myself, Col and her parents) are all going to try and meet up tonight to watch The March of the Penguins. It should an interesting process as Thursdays are the traditional 'Late Shopping' night wherein the shops stay open later than 5 or 6 o'clock, and it is the last Thursday before Christmas. Anyways, we shall see how it goes. :)

Wednesday, December 21, 2005

*fingers crossed*

I was down at a job interview his afternoon for an Office Junior position. The HR manager was very nice and I felt comfortable during our interview. It seems as though things would be very hectic in the role, but I feel oddly comfortable with that. It would be a very good experience. These are just a few random pictures I took on the way back. The shot of the canal would have been better, but I was on my mobile at the time... give a girl a break!

Sunday, December 18, 2005

It's Beginning To Look A Lot Like Christmas


Well! Two early Christmas presents from the spud site (a message board I putz about on). Last week, I won a draw and was sent a new CD. Last night at Dragon, at the First (likely to be) Annual Christmas Meet, I won a t-shirt! Well, I was awarded it for being the most festively dressed. Yes... I dressed like a Christmas pudding. But I got my shirt! Oh, and yes... that is a rather irate (though festively dressed! Scarf and hat... awww) potato I am holding. Why? Because it draws the eye away from the pudding on my head of course!

Tuesday, December 13, 2005

...Exposures of the North

Alright, I haven't had a chance to name or caption any of of these photos (do you know how long it took just to upload them to Flickr?). Nevertheless, here they are... a summary of our three days journey in photos. They are in chronological order, but I don't know if that will be of any help to you in identifying the photos.

I'll be back on here to talk about what the photos represent, and where we travelled.

Saturday, December 10, 2005

Northern Exposure

Col and I have embarked on a 3 day tour of Northern Ireland. We spent last night in the walled city of (London)Derry (most people from the area refuse to call it Londonderry and much of the local signage has the 'London' part spray painted out. Today we did a walking tour along the walls of Derry (guided, we found out later, by the son of Derry's former mayor). We also went to the Giant's Causeway (an amazing sight, especially with the ocean pounding against the rocks and creating spray). Can you believe that in two gift shops I could not find even one Giant's Causeway key chain? Two shops located at the Giant's Causeway! Tonight we are bedding down in Belfast. I am writing this from our hostel. I won't write much as there are many other people waiting to take advantage of the free internet. Needless to say, I have been taking tons of photos and I will be uploading them once we get home.

PS: Thanks to the family for the Christmas card, Col's birthday card, and the insoles. Very much appreciated. :)

Friday, December 02, 2005

Dad, What Do You Think of This?

I stole this word for word (including the photo) from the The Guardian, but I find it rather interesting.



Photo Caption: "At more than 500 metres, Taipei 101 in Taiwan is the world's tallest building. But now geologists fear that its size and weight may have transformed a stable area into one susceptible to earthquake activity. Photograph: Wally Santana/AP"

Taipei 101 is a building with a lot to boast about. Standing 508 metres (1,667ft) high, it is the world's tallest. And at 700,000 tonnes, it must be among the heaviest.

But the sheer size of the Taiwan skyscraper has raised unexpected concerns that may have far-reaching implications for the construction of other buildings and man-made megastructures. Taipei 101 is thought to have triggered two recent earthquakes because of the stress that it exerts on the ground beneath it.
According to the geologist Cheng Horng Lin, from the National Taiwan Normal University, the stress from the skyscraper may have reopened an ancient earthquake fault. If he is right, then it raises concerns about proposals such as Sky City 1000 in Japan, the vertical city that has been proposed to solve Tokyo's housing problems. And it is not just skyscrapers that are a problem. Dams and underground waste deposits may also cause rumblings if they become too large.
Before the construction of Taipei 101, the Taipei basin was a very stable area with no active earthquake faults at the surface. Its earthquake activity was similar to parts of the UK, with micro-earthquakes (less than magnitude 2) happening about once a year.

However, once Taipei 101 started to rise from the ground, things changed. "The number of earthquakes increased to around two micro-earthquakes per year during the construction period (1997 to 2003).

"Since the construction finished there have been two larger earthquakes (magnitude 3.8 and 3.2) directly beneath Taipei 101, which were big enough to feel," says Dr Lin.

Using the construction information, Dr Lin has calculated how much pressure Taipei 101 exerts on the ground. The weight of steel and concrete came to more than 700,000 tonnes. This is spread over an area of 15,081 square metres (3.7 acres), meaning that it exerts a huge pressure of 4.7 bars on the ground below. "The construction of Taipei 101 is totally different to many other high-rise buildings because it used hybrid structures made of both concrete and steel, to give it added protection from earthquakes and fire. Therefore it has a huge vertical loading on its foundation," says Dr Lin.

And it is this exceptional downward stress that Dr Lin thinks may have caused the extra earthquakes.

"I think that the considerable stress might be transferred into the upper crust due to the extremely soft sedimentary rocks beneath the Taipei basin. Deeper down this may have reopened an old earthquake fault," suggests Dr Lin in his paper, published in the journal Geophysical Research Letters.

Other experts are more cautious about blaming the skyscraper for the earthquakes. "A building will change the stress on the ground under the building, but this probably won't reach down to around 10km, the level where the earthquakes occurred," says John Vidale, an earthquake expert at the University of California in Los Angeles.

Zygmunt Lubkowski, an earthquake analyst for the engineering firm Arup, is concerned at the lack of data. "Earthquakes occur on timescales of thousands to millions of years. From just 10 years of earthquake data it is hard to tell if the extra earthquakes are just noise in the signal or due to the building."

Many engineers and scientists are more perturbed about the impact of other types of construction. "It is well known that man can induce earthquakes from things like mining, building reservoirs and extracting oil and gas, where a large load acts over a large area," says Dr Lubkowski.

One of the most convincing examples is the Koyna Dam earthquake, which occurred in 1967. More than 120 people died and many more were injured when a magnitude 6.5 earthquake shook the ground around the recently constructed dam in Maharashtra state, India.

It is thought that the huge weight of water changed the stresses in the ground. Closer to home, the magnitude 5 earthquake in May 2001 in the North Sea is thought to have been caused by a release in pressure from oil and gas extraction.

In 1967, mountains of waste that had been injected into the Rocky Mountains set off a magnitude 5.5 earthquake under Denver in Colorado. A similar earthquake under a nuclear waste store would be disastrous.

Meanwhile, the idea of carbon sequestration - reducing global warming by locking up carbon dioxide in holes under- ground, will be pointless if earthquakes let all the carbon dioxide escape. "Huge amounts of fluid are going to be put in large cavities and earthquakes are a real concern," says Leonardo Seeber, a geologist from the Lamont Doherty Earth Observatory in New York. "I am less worried about nuclear waste as it is more likely to be put in a small tunnels rather than huge cavities," he adds.

Compared with dams and underground waste deposits, skyscrapers such as Taipei 101 are mere pinpricks on the Earth's surface. "It is a point load which is probably going to be insignificant at depth," says Dr Seeber.