ME

ME
Sweat Lodge, Accokeek MD

Friday, January 7, 2011

Trick Letters to DHS and Maryland Officials Lampoon the National Security Craze


NBC reported today that matching letters were received by Janet Napolitano and Gov. O'Malley  and the Maryland Secretary of Transportation of :

Package addressed to homeland security chief ignites in D.C.

No one injured; mail similar to fiery parcels sent to Md. government buildings day earlier

"Mail addressed to Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano ignited Friday at a U.S. Postal Service facility in Washington, a day after suspicious letters "flared up" at state government buildings in neighboring Maryland, authorities said. 

and 

A worker ripped the pull tab on the first package, addressed in typeface to the recently re-elected governor [O'Malley of Maryland] and adorned with holiday stamps, in Annapolis where mail for O'Malley's office is routinely checked. The building is just blocks from the governor's office, which is inside the State House in the heart of the capital.
The message read: "Report suspicious activity! Total Bull----! You have created a self fulfilling prophecy.

Get the whole story at: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/40967486/ns/us_news-crime_and_courts/


Thursday, January 6, 2011

Set Your Watch: The Brood X Population of 17 Year Cicadas Arrives in only 10 Years!

The Brood X cicadas  (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brood_X), the largest in area and numbers of the 17-year "periodical" cicadas. were last seen here in 2004. By the literally billions they crawled up out of the ground in spring, each leaving a burrow as big around as your finger. 


It stretches from Illinois to New York to Georgia. to a good X population of 17 Year Cicadas Arrived Here in 2004 They are the biggest of them all. 
They’ve all been eaten or squashed. A few paltry millions have reproduced, leaving cast-off wings and skeletons on the ground, in a nice, nitrogen-rich mulch. 

Afterwards plants are practically springing out of this recharged ground. This big pulse of fertility (nitrogen from their bodies and shells, birds too fat to fly, cats and dogs, raccoons and foxes stuffed too, refusing to eat another bite).   

In addition, all of the bugs and berries and other prey that didn’t get eaten (everything from butterflies to aphids), because the big clumsy slow-flying cicadas were available by the billions, have thrived and reproduced more thickly than before.

I suspect that a kind of secondary effect of the cicadas has been heavier mortality of birds.  The neighborhood cats have been knocking them off, because they are too well fed and sluggish to escape.

As of October, neighbors were reporting heavier than usual predation of squashes by too-plentiful squirrels.  

Then there is the aerating services they have provided.  The normally heavy clay soiled is lighter and airier than usual. 

Needless to say, we have filled our freezer with them.  In Bangkok we learned to eat them, three at a time, on bamboo skewers.  Not!  But you have to admire people who do eat them.

Wednesday, January 5, 2011

Producing Insects for Food Would produce Less GHG than Pork or Chicken Do Now.

If you really want to lower your carbon footprint, why not eat meal worms or cockroach? Some helpful Dutch entomolgists people did the math for us.  

 That would be the day!   Most of  us resist change in eating habits, Arlington County forbids backyard chickens, let alone pigs or cockroaches.   

Eating whitetail deer--which are scourges of our gardens and fields-- would be more to the point.  The "Locavore Hunter" in the DC area  trains suburbanites to kill and butcher their own deer, and butts up against the Bambi syndrome everyday. (at: http://rule-303.blogspot.com/)

They studied in detail these inset species: 

  • Fifth larval stage mealworms Tenebrio molitor L. (Coleoptera: Tenebrionidae)

  • Fifth and sixth nymphal stage house crickets Acheta domesticus (L.) (Orthoptera: Gryllidae), 

  • Third and fourth stage nymphs of migratory locusts Locusta migratoria (L.) (Orthoptera: Acrididae), 

  • Third larval stage sun beetles Pachnoda marginata Drury (Coleoptera; Scarabaeidae) and 

  • A mix of all stages of the Argentinean cockroach Blaptica dubia (Serville) (Dictyoptera: Blaberidae). They point out ahat  "Currently, T. molitor, A. domesticus and L. migratoria are considered edible, while P. marginata and B. dubia are not. The latter two species were included since they are a potential source of animal protein, for instance by means of protein extraction. These two species can be bred in large numbers with little time investment and are able to utilise a wide range of substrates as feed."

It's in An Exploration on Greenhouse Gas and Ammonia Production by Insect Species Suitable for Animal or Human Consumption by Dennis G. A. B. Oonincx1*, Joost van Itterbeeck1, Marcel J. W. Heetkamp2, Henry van den Brand2, Joop J. A. van Loon1, Arnold van Huisin the journal PLos ONE  [http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.0014445