Monthly Archive for February, 2010

Rapist May Be Forced To Marry Goat In Mozambique

And here I was thinking that this kind of thing only went on in Montana:  ;-)

THE owner of a goat allegedly raped is demanding the two accused make traditional wedding arrangements.

State media also said the two young men accused of having sex with a goat in central Mozambique faced criminal charges.

The young men, whose names and ages were not released, were caught in the act by police and arrested outside the rural town of Mbucuta in central Mozambique, the website of the state broadcaster said.

“One of the young men was naked and holding the goat’s head, and the other was having sex with the animal,” witness Mario Creva told Radio Mozambique.

District prosecutor Leonides Mapasse said the two would face trial for simple larceny.

The goat’s owner may also file a civil suit against them, he said.

The owner was demanding the young men pay him damages and initiate a traditional wedding ceremony by paying “lobolo,” a dowry, a family member told Radio Mozambique.  [NewsCore]

It’s Raining Fish In Australia’s Northern Territory

Something fishy going on here in this Northern Territory town:

WHILE the Top End and Central Australia have been battered by torrential rains, a Territory town has had fish falling from the sky.

The freak phenomena happened not once, but twice, on Thursday and Friday afternoon about 6pm at Lajamanu, about 550km southwest of Katherine.

NEWSBREAKER Christine Balmer, who took these photos of the fish on the ground and in a bucket, had to pinch herself when she was told “hundreds and hundreds” of small white fish had fallen from the sky.

“It rained fish in Lajamanu on Thursday and Friday night,” she said, “They fell from the sky everywhere.

“Locals were picking them up off the footy oval and on the ground everywhere.

“These fish were alive when they hit the ground.”

Mrs Balmer, the aged care co-ordinator at the Lajamanu Aged Care Centre, said her family interstate thought she had lost the plot when she told them about the event.

“I haven’t lost my marbles,” she said, reassuring herself. “Thank god it didn’t rain crocodiles.”  [NT News]

Read the rest at the link, but goofy and weird stuff like this always seems to happen in the Northern Territory.  Apparently locals are speculating that a tornado may have blown the fish from lakes hundreds of kilometers away from the town.  I wonder if someone flying overhead with an airplane wasn’t just playing a massive prank on the town?

Australians Ignore Warnings As Tsunami Nears

Apparently Australians are not taking the recent tsunami warnings to seriously:

BEACHGOERS have ignored official warnings of a tsunami hitting Australia’s east coast after a devastating underwater earthquake struck Chile.

The 8.8 magnitude quake struck near Chile’s central coast at about 5.43pm (AEDT), toppling buildings and killing at least 147 people.

The ocean quake has triggered tsunami warnings as far off as Australia, with the possibility of dangerous waves, strong ocean currents and foreshore flooding hitting coastal areas.

In French Polynesia, huge waves have struck the Gambier archipelago, the high commissioner’s office in Papeete said, as the tsunami races across the Pacific.

The Marquesas islands, northeast of Polynesia, were hit by a series of two-metre waves that damaged some boats but no one was hurt, officials said.

A four-metre wave hit Hiva Oa in the Marquesas, officials said.

Back in Australia, swimmers and surfers at Bondi Beach have treated this morning like any other even though effects of the tsunami are due to hit the NSW coast from 8.45am (AEDT) today.

Live cameras at Bondi show lifesavers have since ushered people out of the water.

The State Emergency Service (SES) has issued official warnings for people to stay away from the state’s coastal areas.

“Do not go to the coast to watch the tsunami, as there is the possibility of dangerous, localised flooding of the immediate foreshore,” the SES warning states.  [News.com.au]

Hawaii Braces for Incoming Tsunami After Massive Earthquake In Chile

For everyone living in Hawaii a tsunami may be coming your way:

A tsunami threatened the Pacific Rim on Saturday, with an 8.8-magnitude earthquake off Chile sending potentially deadly waves across the ocean at the speed of a jetliner.

Sirens blared in Hawaii to alert residents to the impending waves, with authorities asking people living near the water to evacuate. On several South Pacific islands hit by a tsunami last fall, police began evacuations of the coast.

The first waves in Hawaii are expected to hit shortly after 11 a.m. Saturday (4 p.m. EST; 2100 GMT) and measure roughly 8 feet (2.5 meters) at Hilo. Most Pacific Rim nations however did not order evacuations, but advised people in low-lying areas to be on the lookout.

Unlike other tsunamis in recent years, emergency officials along the Pacific have hours to prepare and possibly evacuate residents.

“We’ve got a lot of things going for us,” said Charles McCreery, the director of the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center, which issues warnings to almost every country around the Pacific Rim and to most of the Pacific island states. “We have a reasonable lead time.

“We should be able to alert everyone in harm’s way to move out of the evacuation zones,” he said.

In Hawaii, boats and people near the coast were being evacuated. Hilo International Airport, located along the coast, was closed. In Honolulu, residents lined up at supermarkets to stock up on water, canned food and batteries. Cars lined up 15 long at several gas stations.  [Associated Press]

You can read more at the link but it is good to see that residents in Hawaii have plenty of time to react to this possible tsunami.

Hawaii Debates Legalizing Gambling On the Islands

I love Hawaii, but it would be a shame to see the islands spoiled by casino gambling and everything else that comes with it:

Hawaii has always been known for its sun, sand and surf. It may soon add another attraction: slot machines.Hawaii is one of the last two states with no form of legalized gambling — the other is Utah — but Hawaiian lawmakers facing billion-dollar budget deficits and hunting for ways increase revenues are thinking about allowing casinos in tourist-filled Waikiki or on Native Hawaiian lands.

Proponents say casinos would draw much-needed new money and jobs into the long-troubled, tourism-dependent economy.

They insist tourists from the mainland would skip Las Vegas to sun on pristine beaches and take a turn at the roulette tables. Coveted high-rollers from Asia could avoid the long trans-Pacific flight, shortening their trip to the slots while also checking out the hula dancing.  [Mainichi Daily News]

Gambling is an easy source of revenue, but it seems like that revenue would be off set by fewer tourists coming due to the family friendly atmosphere of Waikiki where most tourists go being spoiled.  If the casinos are established on traditional Hawaiian lands away from the major tourism areas it probably would not be that big of a deal.

Rescue of Cliff Climbing Drunk Man Costs Taypayers $10,000

Here is another example of wasted taxpayer money:

A NIGHT of drunken skylarking has left a Ukrainian tourist with a hangover he will always remember – and taxpayers with a huge bill.

After a night on the drink, the 19-year-old man scaled down a cliff at Sydney’s northern beaches suburb of Manly but got stuck half way and passed out, The Daily Telegraph reports.

After being alerted by a fisherman, rescue workers found him asleep on his back on a ledge 30m above sea level at North Head early yesterday morning.

The rescue operation will cost taxpayers at least $10,000.

But the man will only be charged the cost of the road trip to hospital – likely to be as little as $700.  [The Daily Telegraph]

Trash Island Discovered North of the Caribbean

This is just disgusting:

SCIENTISTS have discovered a giant rubbish tip made up of plastic bottles, bottletops and toothbrushes floating in the Atlantic Ocean.

The discarded plastic, which lies north of the Caribbean, is known to harm seabirds and marine life.

Sea Education Association’s Dr Karen Lavender Law said that the problem in the Atlantic had been “largely ignored”.

Researchers said the dump has 200,000 pieces of debris per square kilometre but it was impossible to measure the exact size of the patch as much of it floats beneath the surface.

“That’s a maximum that is comparable with the ‘great Pacific garbage patch’,” Dr Lavender Law said.

The great Pacific patch lies between Hawaii and California.  [News.com]

Drug Abusing Mom Gets Second Taxpayer Funded Liver Transplant

This is jacked up especially when the tax payers have to foot the bill for such irresponsibility:

TAXPAYERS may have to foot the bill for a dying drug user’s flight to New Zealand for life-saving surgery.

Claire Murray, a 24-year-old mother-of-two, has been told by doctors that she only has months to live if she does not receive a liver transplant.

It would be her second transplant after years of drug abuse, including heroin and amphetamines, PerthNow reports.

She has admitted to taking drugs after her first liver transplant last year – but has pledged to make the most of her second chance at life after being told she could not be considered for a second transplant in WA.

Health Minister Kim Hames said there were seven other people in WA who were waiting for their first liver transplant.

He said it would be “patently unfair” for Ms Murray to jump the queue for a second liver.

But Dr Hames said the State Government was prepared to pay for her and her father to travel to New Zealand so she could be considered for a “live” liver transplant.  [PerthNow]

I don’t understand why the state is allowing her to jump in line ahead of other people waiting for a transplant?  The state at least should make her or her parents pay for this transplant.  She can afford to buy enough drugs to destroy two livers, but can’t afford enough money to at least pay for a plane ticket to New Zealand?  I wonder if such cases like this goes on with MEDICAID in the US?

El Paso’s Project Bravo Linked to Wasteful Spending

I was recently watching the KFOX news here on El Paso when they had a segment criticizing the non-profit group Project Bravo for improper accounting and use of money.  The report also talked about how this non-profit was receiving economic stimulus money.  So I did a quick Google Search to see what this stimulus money was for and this is what I found:

Project Bravo will begin its Green Affordable Housing project today in Montana Vista.

The group will mark the construction of the first green affordable home in the area.

The program is financed through a $149,212 HUD Rural Housing and Economic Development Capacity Building grant and $2.3 million in American Recovery Act funding. It is aimed at developing affordable, energy-efficient homes for low-income residents of the Montana Vista colonias.  [El Paso Times]

As regular readers of the site would know, this is the same green program that ABC News recently uncovered as being a wasteful government program that is costing tax payers over $57,000 a home for insulation and weatherization.  How come I suspect this same wasteful weatherization spending is going on with Project Bravo based off of what I just saw on the news?

On Walkabout At: Alamo Mountain, New Mexico

Prior Posting: Crossing the Otero Mesa

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After driving across the Otero Mesa using various remote dirt roads I found myself in front of the cattle corral that marks the start point to the hike up Alamo Mountain:

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There is a lot of water underneath the Otero Mesa and the various wells on the mesa filled with water for the cattle is indication of how much water is underneath the ground here:

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I parked my truck next to the corral and proceeded to walk down a dirt road towards the dormant volcano:

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Alamo Mountain is one of many dormant volcanoes that composes the Cornudas Mountains that straddle the New Mexico / Texas state line.  The volcanic past of this mountain is easily recognizable when viewed from Google Earth:

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The dirt road only took me to the base of the mountain and from there I had to break brush through the high desert scrub up the increasingly steep slopes of the mountain:

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After only about 20-30 minutes of hiking I soon found myself well above the cattle corral where I had parked my truck at:

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Something else I saw from my perch was this group of rocks out in the distance that I definitely want to go check out sometime because it looks very similar to Hueco Tanks State Park near El Paso:

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As I got higher up the mountain the terrain became rockier and steeper, which for some reason meant even more yucaa plants for me to traverse around:

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Doing some prior research about Alamo Mountain I became informed about some Native American rock art that could be found on the mountain.  This rock at the base of the mountain I hoped would be a sign of things to come since it had a few drawings on it:

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Anyway I continued to ascend up the mountain working my way up some steep rocks and eventually climbed up to the bench of land that leads to the final push to the summit of the mountain:

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From just this bench area I had just a superb view of the other volcanic peaks of the Cornudas Mountains:

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What else I began to see on the bench were the first signs of the large amounts of snow that has fallen in the El Paso region this winter:

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I also began to see quite a few antelope droppings which shows that these animals work their way up the mountain to graze on the grass that grows here:

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To reach the summit of the mountain a bit of rock climbing up this rock wall is necessary:

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It is nothing to hard to climb, but the snow right up against the rocks was surprisingly quite deep at some points coming up to my ankles.  Anyway I scrambled up the rocks carefully avoiding the various icy spots and soon I was on the summit looking at the rocky ridges below me:

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What was really amazing to me was the amount of pinon pine trees that are able to survive in the caldera of this extinct volcano.  The Otero Mesa is nearly treeless so it is quite striking to see so many trees on the summit:

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I then headed out across the relatively level caldera towards the northwestern portion of the mountain where most of the Indian rock art is said to lie:

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From the northwestern edge of the mountain I had expansive views towards the Sacramento Mountains:

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I also saw across this vast mesa the rising peaks of the Organ Mountains:

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I also had a view to the west of the Hueco Mountains:

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With an even closer look I could make out the distant Franklin Mountains out in the far distance:

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I walked along the northwestern rim of the mountain looking for petroglyphs on the rocks:

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And there was plenty of rocks to check out:

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However, everywhere I looked I couldn’t find the petroglyphs on any of these rocks:

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There are a lot of rocks to check out on this mountain and I spent about an hour and a half on top of the mountain looking at the rocks.  I even walked into the interior of the caldera looking for any possible rock art:

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The only thing I found was that someone had gone camping up here some while ago:

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It was fun though walking around the interior of the summit just taking in this wilderness of pinon trees and cactus:

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Here is the view from the mountain looking directly towards the south and into Texas:

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Here is the view once again back towards the Sacramento Mountains in the north:

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Finally I took in the view of the rugged Cornudas Mountains that lie to the east backdropped by the distant Guadalupe Mountains:

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I had no luck finding the petroglyphs on the mountain and would have to come back here when I had more time to look because I had to meet my wife later on in the day to watch my daughter, which caused me to abandon my search for the Native American rock art.  On the way down I decided to follow a fence line instead of breaking the same brush I did on the way up:

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Following the fence line was actually a pretty good way to go up the mountain and I recommend it for those hiking up the mountain.  All in all this was a fun hike though very remote.  I saw no one on the mountain the entire day and in fact saw one rancher with a pick up on the dirt roads the entire day.  The remoteness of this mountain makes it a great place for hikers that want to escape the crowds of more popular trails in places such as the Franklin Mountains.  It is a bit of drive on dirt roads to get to, but the expansive views once on top of the mountain makes the work to get there worth it.