Wednesday 31 October 2012

Really Bloomberg?

I have moved desks at work, so I now have a clear, uninterrupted view of Bloomberg playing constantly.  For those who may not know this is a financial news station on TV.  And what with the hurricane hitting New York they are going a little crazy (NYC being a massive financial hub and all).  The coverage of hurricane Sandy is literally on all day, but really there is not that much to cover, particularly not with a financial spin.  Seriously there was a ten minute piece today about the 45 minute wait for a coffee at a particular cafe, and the only footage they had was the CCTV camera from inside the store.  That's what I call hard-hitting journalism,

I mean I know it's caused massive amounts of damage and people have died (particularly in the Caribbean, not that you'd know since they only got like 10 minutes a couple of days ago).  The way Bloomberg was carrying on though you would think it was end of days or something.

Sunday 28 October 2012

Glacier Point

Half Dome and Yosemite National Park
After visiting Mariposa Grove we were kind of thinking, hey Yosemite is pretty good, the trees are pretty amazing, but we were wondering where the wow factor was.  I mean this place was like the second National Park in the world right, there's gotta be something pretty special for that to have happened right.  And I mean big trees are kind of cool, but second National Park in the world cool?  Hmmm I think not.

But then we went for a drive out to the end of Glacier Pt road and we got our answer.  This was one of the first touristy view points in the Valley, and standing there I can see why.  I don't really need to say much, I think the photos speak for themselves, outstanding!
Dave with half dome

Probably the most famous feature in the National Park is Half-Dome, to climb it you need to get a permit.  Apparently you can do it in a day, it's a 1400m elevation gain, and you have to climb the last 400m holding onto chains.  The whole time we were in the park we never saw anyone on the top  of the rock though, so I'm not sure if the top is actually a fair way back from the edge or what, or maybe our binoculars weren't as strong as we thought they were.
Looking down to Yosemite Valley, we climbed to the top of the escarpment the next day
Three arches at Yosemite Valley
Yet another wonderful view

Thursday 18 October 2012

Best Museum Ever?


Well maybe not, that is a big call after all, but we went to a museum on Saturday that has to be up there as one of the better ones I've visited.  It is rated #24 of #1270 attractions in London on tripadvisor, so surely that's got to count for something, though number one is the Olympic Stadium, so perhaps take that with a grain of salt.  On a side note, really I don't know who reviews things on tripadvisor because come on, a stadium, that's the best London has to offer??

Anyway the museum is housed in the Royal College of Surgeons, the building is still in use, but the museum is across 2 floors in a section of the building.  It is named after John Hunter, the man who started the collection, he came to London in 1748 from a town near Glasgow.  At that time surgeons didn't have to go to university, unlike physicians, which is why surgeons are called Mr/Miss/Mrs/Ms.  It sounded like John Hunter was basically a body snatcher, who used the corpses to study anatomy and various things.  It seemed that he started the museum and had people in one day a week partly so that they would see that he wasn't trying to create some sort of Frankenstein monster.  I'm guessing because the collection is so old it contains things that perhaps couldn't be exhibited/collected nowadays.

They had the skeleton of an "Irish giant", Charles Byrne, who was 2.31m tall.  His express wish was that his skeleton not be displayed after death, and for that reason he wanted to be buried at sea, but John Hunter paid £500 after he died to get his hands on the body.  It's nice to see that the museum is following the British tradition of ignoring the wishes of those people most affected by the exhibits.

What the museum was mainly full of though was just bits of bodies, animal or human.  It was kind of cool to see the affect different diseases had on the bones.  So with rickets you could see the bones were all twisted.  There were also an awful lot of syphilitic bones in there, it looked like syphilis was pretty prevalent back then.  You could see the affect of the lesions on the skull, I guess it's no surprise people went crazy, looking at it's affect on the skull.  The fractures were pretty cool too, you could see where the bone had desperately tried to fuse together, but you're looking at it wondering how painful that must have been to use.

It wasn't just bones though, there was also a lot of jars containing soft tissue too, and I won't get too graphic but there were definitely a number of foetuses, as you would hope for in such a place.

There was also a great section on the history of surgery, how in the past good surgeons could do leg amputations in under a minute, no anaesthetic after all.  Then it moved into the era where people started to realise about germs and keeping wounds clean.  It then moved into another really graphic era around the first world war, where cosmetic surgery really started to get going.  The reason this was the dawn of this branch of surgery is that the soldiers fighting in the wars around that time started to suffer from horrific facial injuries, we're talking no face.  And yes there were 3D pictures.  They need to put those pictures up next to the cool tanks when recruiting kids to the army, because seriously if you were 18 and someone showed you a 3D picture of a guy without a face, and said that could be you, I'm wondering if we would turn into a nation of pacifists overnight.

The final, awesome, part of the museum was that they had a couple of videos on various surgeries.  We got to see heart bypass surgery, it starts and the chest has already been cut open, and you just see the heart beating.  It was unbelievable, the doctor is literally holding this persons beating heart.  I would go back to the museum just to watch the rest of the movies.  There was one on brain surgery that we didn't get to see.

If slightly macabre, but incredibly interesting things are what you like then definitely pay this place a visit, and even better is that it's free.  I love London museums.

Saturday 6 October 2012

Mariposa Grove - or the Land of the Big Trees

A giant redwood
Another thing which was a bit of a must-see whilst we were in San Francisco were the giant Redwoods.  Dave really wanted to see them, I don't know, maybe he feels an affinity to ridiculously tall things.  So after 3 days of the city we were in our hire car and off to Yosemite National Park. It was a bit of a drive there, ended up being 4 hours.  And the highways are completely insane!  The car is definitely king in this land.  The highways were packed the whole way out, and that's 10 lanes of dual carriage-way.  I gotta say these 10 lanes weren't particularly well-maintained either.

It was so nice to get out to Yosemite, beautiful skies every day, unbelievable views, awesome flora and freaky fauna.  What more can you ask for, plus I saw a coyote on the way there.  That was cool, so classically American, standing in a field of yellow grass, with rolling hills behind it.  That was pretty special.

It was Memorial Day weekend, but luckily we got there before the weekend started and left again on the Saturday, so we were definitely travelling in the right direction going there and coming back.  The queue to get in on the Saturday looked painful.
Dave with the National Park "tram"
Dave with a ridiculously big tree
One weird thing was that if you were in the military you got to go in for free, it didn't seem as if that was something particular to Yosemite (perhaps some historical reason), but it seems that case for all National Parks.  I couldn't really figure out why that is, I mean the military and the National Parks Service don't seem like natural bedfellows to me.  Just look at the surroundings once there's been military intervention somewhere, not generally somewhere on the top of the list as a place of great natural beauty.

One thing I didn't appreciate about Yosemite was how high it is, the carpark was at 1700m, then the highest point, Wawona Vista, was at 2075m, which is not all that much lower than My Kosciuszko.  Let's just say the difference in the surroundings was dramatic.  On top of Mt Kosciuszko you are very much in alpine territory, and there's definitely a chill to the air.  Here the sun was beating down, I was in shorts and there were massive pine trees all around me.

Unusual squirrel in the grove
Redwoods amongst normal pines
I would definitely recommend making the trek to the upper part of the park, as a whole Mariposa Grove is a massively popular place to visit, but there are far fewer people who make it to the upper reaches. And they are mainly the people on the tram, who don't venture far from the road.  Though when I say tram I actually mean massive truck.  Only in the US would you find a lorry pulling tourists through the nature.

It felt as if the lower part of the park was full of the blockbuster trees, the ones which had names, and I guess these were the famous trees which people hear about when they are children.  The upper part, didn't have as many named trees, but I actually think it was nicer.  It was cooler for one, and it seemed a bit more lush, less burnt out than the lower down parts.

Away from the "tram" stops there were heaps of redwoods and hardly any people in the upper elevations.  And the redwoods really are red, it's not some slight reddish tinge, but a real glow.  It's hard to describe, or capture in a photo, but they are mixed in with these other, normal, pine trees and they really stood out.  There weren't heaps of them, which made it even better I think, because everywhere you looked you were reminded of the contrast between what had, up to that point, been quite large pine trees, and these monsters.

As a comparison to Kauris, the biggest trees I had seen up to that point, the Kauris have a comparable trunk diameter, but the redwoods are almost twice as tall.  And they sure were tall.

Evidence of fire
Walking through the hole in the tree
There was certainly evidence of how people in the past struggled with the concept of conservationism.  And you wonder if we have got it right now either, just because of what people were doing in the park only fairly recently.  Mariposa Grove became a National Park in 1890 and at the time it seemed like National Parks were early versions of theme parks.  People went round cutting holes in a few of the trees, big enough so that waggons or cars could drive through them.  Obviously this wasn't so good for the trees and eventually they would fall down.

It is a bit different now, most of the trees have fences round them, keeping the hordes of their shallow root systems.  And certainly no more cutting holes in trees.

The giant sequoias need fire in order to grow, they need the lack of competition to get their start when they are seedlings, the adult ones have such thick bark that they are impervious to the fire, whilst the other trees don't really stand a chance.  Once the grove came under federal protection they were finding there weren't many redwood seedlings around any more.  This was because they had stopped the wildfires, and the normal pines were out-competing the little seedlings.  Looking around on our visit though it seems that have either re-started controlled burning, or there was a particularly brutal wildfire through this area recently.

Dave with an over sized pine cone - but not from the redwoods surprisingly
There was an awful lot of wildlife around the park, I guess there are a lot of people to feed off.  There were so many squirrels, but they weren't the normal grey squirrels you get in London.  I kind of thought there was only one type of squirrel in America, but actually there are heaps.  I guess the red squirrel is lucky only one type of squirrel made the trek across the ocean.  Whilst we were in California we actually didn't once see the traditional grey squirrel.  Mostly we saw ground squirrels, like the one in the photo above, but we also saw Douglas fir squirrels and golden-mantled ground squirrels, which looked almost exactly like chipmunks.  They were definitely my favourite.  No bears, maybe that's a fortunate thing, but we saw a bunch of birds, including a goshawk, which was my favourite of the birds, just hovering, looking for chipmunk-type squirrels I guess.
The view from Wawona Vista - where we saw the goshawk

The meadow near the museum
Up the top of the park there is this lodge, which is now a bit of a museum, this is the final stop of the tram, so the ranger up there sits around waiting for the tram to arrive.  Everyone gets off, and he gives a quick 5 minute spiel about the trees, people pick up a bit of a bark, and handle a pine cone, then it's back on the tram.

They had chosen the location of the lodge well, in perhaps my favourite part of this park, in a grassy meadow, surrounded by massive redwoods.  When there wasn't a tram in, it was really peaceful.

I'll leave you with a few more pictures, mainly of trees, so if you don't like trees, the story ends here.



The Bachelor and the Three Graces - all the truly large trees had special names

Me with old grizzly, the most famous tree in the park, I'm sitting about 20m in front of it, 1800 years old, and the second biggest tree in the park, at 64m tall.
Dave with a regulation redwood - no special name here
The track to the upper section - this middle section had no redwoods - I don't know why 
How red is that tree!

More redwoods standing guard around the museum 
Dave in shorts at 2000m

Redwoods next to normal trees

The cute little museum - hopefully not made from redwood

Wednesday 3 October 2012

British Musings

There's been a few funny Britishisms I've noticed in the past couple of weeks.  One is I have discovered a new fruit, a Satsuma, it's an evil mandarin.  It's from Japan, and is meant to be a cross of an orange and a mandarin, but I think somewhere along the way a grapefruit got mixed in there.  Maybe it was masquerading as an orange.  Definitely my biggest fruit disappointment here so far.

Another thing I have struggled with here is finding antiseptic, a weird thing to struggle with here.  But the ubiquity of the Boots pharmacy chain has meant you can basically only find Boots-branded anything in the way of first aid.  I am a massive convert of betadine, it's an iodine based antiseptic, and it's basically the only thing I have ever used.  But I'm shocked to discover nobody sells it over here.  They very rarely even have iodine based products.  The only thing close I could find was an iodine spray, I have never seen antiseptic in a can.  And what is weirder is that it is produced by Savlon, which in the world of antiseptics is my arch-nemesis.  So I've had to cosy up to a product that when I was 5 years old caused an allergic reaction, and pushed my moving date to Australia back until I had recovered.

I always felt a bit uneasy spraying Savlon-based iodine on wounds, so I was pretty happy when I discovered Dettol over here.  It being one of the few brands I recognised, who says advertising isn't useful :).  When I went to get some more in the supermarket I couldn't see it with all the rest of the first aid stuff, which I thought I was a bit weird.  So I asked the pharmacist and he took me to the cleaning products aisle, where I found it sitting next to the toilet cleaner.  So you can appreciate I'm back to feeling a bit uneasy with my choice of germ-fighter.

With our newly purchased TV license I've been getting into more of the BBC iplayer shows.  Gotta say the BBC iplayer is an awesome application.  I'm wondering which came first, BBC or ABC with that little idea?  But it means I've been watching more British comedy, and I have to say I'm noticing a few differences between Australia and here.  They have this show, The Revolution Will Be Televised, which is like the first season of The Chaser, back when no one knew them.  But there's only 2 of them, and they have a much smaller budget.

Obviously with both these shows a lot of the humour is in how the unsuspecting public reacts to them.  That's where the difference is the most noticeable, the British public is awesome! These two strangers come up to them and start saying the most bizarre things, and the public actually engages with them, doesn't just treat them like the lunatics they are behaving like.  I really like that, I feel that the British are much more willing to engage with strangers.  Whilst I like it, and it always amuses me when I see it on the tube, I don't think I'll ever be able to do it with the ease they do here.  But it does make their comedy shows much more amusing.