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Hiya

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Posts posted by Hiya

  1. Snowing heavy now!

    Back from the north now, a few days of moderately wintry mayhem with temps between -1C and 1C for the entire period. Ice bulges and untreated roads fun.

    Couple of snaps from the drive home this evening... Wasn't entirely sure I was going to make it but just 'ploughed on' regardless. ABS clicking frantically on the steep decsent down to the busy main road and deer jumping around in like kangaroos all over the road while I tried to avoid the steep drop to the left were 2 highlights.

    Heavy wet sleet near here recently.

    edit - hey, who's pinched me warning points?

    Brave man going down that road!

  2. I seen proper snow today south of Edinburgh, I was quite surprised.

    I also narrowly avoided a pile up on the motorway there when the road iced over with hailstones. The ice was nearly an inch deep and the melted water on the windscreen started to freeze and put the wipers under some strain. Not something you'd see very often in May!

  3. Almost flat calm for a few hours now so quite a bit of mist around after yesterday's drenching but clearing now. Nice day in prospect. Anyone else seen a swallow yet?

    I seen a house or sand martin last night, more than a month later than I saw the first last year. Probably eating their fill further south and migrating more slowly?

  4. Another starry clear frosty evening currently 1c folowing another sunny day.Nearly all ploughed and another calf born in the field late pm.Never seen the ploughing so dry in November for a long time.If the winter is dry drought will follow in the spring.Picked the last of the late green apples today off a tree which still had green leves on it when the snow arrived at the end of November last year .I wonder if it will happen again? Saw my first gritting lorry on the A96 this evening

    I saw a combine harvester on Saturday, latest I've ever seen one, but there are still a few fields which are uncut.

  5. Only happens when their intruments records an 80+mph gust. Wife just phoned to say our back fence is down and that there are bins all over the road including one blown against our car. Just our luck it is black and blue bin day :wacko:

    Apparently they recorded 90+ mph and closed it. Some power off in Fife.

    I don't think we've seen it this bad in a few years let alone May.

    Apparently there are some poor people stuck in a car with a near on top of it near Kinross. Red warnings indicate risk to life and property? We're being let down yet again.

  6. It'd make you wonder at the lack of impact during the Maunder Min?

    Surely that should have promoted the mother of all global warming spikes?

    You assume that the same process is occuring now as which happened then, with the same effects. I don't think we have reached the point where we can say we have entered a minimum comparable with the Maunder, therefore you cannot assume that an observation made on the incoming radiation from the sun in the last few years is comparable to what happened 400 years ago.

  7. You're absolutely wrong, transgenic crops DO hybridise with weeds thus conferring the improved characteristics, which is one of the key objections. First line from the abstract of the article I linked -

    "The main environmental concerns about genetically modified (GM) crops are the potential weediness or invasiveness in the crop itself or in its wild or weedy relatives as a result of transgene movement."

    What we do not know is how invasive any affected plants may be - not just through the obvious herbicide resistance but a whole range of tolerances - drought, wet, salt, cold, heat, disease, insects plus morphological improvements that may give advantages over rival plants.

    Making a crop resistant to certain chemicals allows those to be used at will, not to use less.

    Do the drugs companies cure so many sick people?

    Hence, will the companies involved in GM crops feed the world?

    What you say and what the quote says are slightly different. To become a weed either:

    -the GM plant must become the weed, which in practice may not be so much of an issue as it first seems since cultivated plants don't tend to do very well in the wild past a few generations.

    -the GM plant must hydridise with a closely related species AND pass on the inserted gene AND that hybrid has to be viable.

    For example if we grew GM maize in the UK it isn't going to hybridise with a dandilion. The inserted genes aren't going to suddenly start appearing in all manner of different plants.

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