2011年5月30日 星期一

Battersea in pet bedding appeal after laundry room fire

Animals and staff were safely evacuated after the fire in the home's clinic, which cares for sick dogs and cats.

The fire started shortly after 0800 BST on Saturday and caused smoke damage to the laundry room,Largest Collection of billabong boardshorts, meaning it cannot be used for washing.

Battersea is appealing for donations of pet bedding and blankets.
'Comfortable and warm'

The clinic normally handles 20 loads of washing a day.Has anyone done any research on making Plastic mold parts from scratch? The home's main laundry room is working at full capacity and unable to take on the extra loads.

Clinic manager Suzanne Abrahams said: "In the clinic, we care for dogs and cats with all sorts of medical conditions, such as bite wounds,We processes for both low-risk and high risk merchant account.Handmade oil paintings for sale at museum quality, skin problems, malnutrition and broken bones.

"We use lots of bedding to keep them all comfortable and warm, so any donations would be a great help.What are the top Hemroids treatments? As long as it is already clean we can put it to use straight away."

Donations do not have to be new, but must be clean, the charity said. Any bedding and blankets will be welcomed but duvets and towels cannot be used.

Anyone wanting to donate can visit the animal home in Battersea Park Road, south west London, or visit Battersea Dogs and Cats Home's website.

Seattle Seahawks' Offseason Efforts Muddied by the NFL Lockout Storm

In an offseason littered with uncertainty, the Seahawks front office has continued to push towards the future; focused on continuing to breed an innovative, competitive culture surrounding the organization and the society of Seahawks fans, the 12th man.


Pete Carroll and Co. stated their offseason goal, loud and clear, in a thank you letter to the 12th man dated January 21st, signed by Pete Carroll. A few excerpts:

"There were many proud achievements to take away from the 2010 season. Winning the NFC West in our first season together was awesome, but it is just the start of a plan to own the division for years to come. We reached that goal by competing like crazy each and every day in all that we do on and off of the field."; "¡­one thing remained consistent (in prior reference to the teams midseason struggles) all season long and that was you, the 12th Man¡­"; "As John Schneider and I strive together to build this team, we will work tirelessly to continue and give you reason to believe in this team.you will need to get an offshore merchant account."

With the lockout, the team has had very little opportunity, minus the draft, to actually keep building the team. However, the coaching staff was more involved in the pre-draft process given the labor situation; "we've had more opportunity to really dig in draft-wise and do special projects and go back and evaluate and re-evaluate." The Seahawks believe this is an advantage.

The personnel moves to this point are not the topic of discussion, nor are the variety of opinions towards the team's failure to re-sign Matt Hasselbeck prior to the lockout or the approach to the draft. What is important to note is that the team has remained tireless in their competition to field the best team in 2011.

A plan in place to weather the lockout

During an interview with Pete Carroll on 950 KJR on May 3rd, he had this to say in regards to what transpired when the lockout was lifted for one day¡ªthe second day of the NFL draft¡ªand what could happen if the lockout was lifted again:

"Well, let me give you an example¡ªwhen it was lifted for a few hours the other day, we had about a 10-minute meeting with the staff, and it was like 'OK, everybody get ready to just crank it up, burn those phones up, get everything sent out, get the word out that we want the players to come by the area.' I mean, we cranked it up.Welcome to the official Facebook Page about Ripcurl. Within about a half hour, we were a machine pumping out stuff to everybody because we knew it could close at any time. So we did a great job¡­the teaching, the mental side, all of the stuff that we can get going, we would jump into it and we would be ready to have a mini-camp next weekend. So if we had that opportunity, then we're ready to go."

In my opinion, Carroll and his staff have done nothing but remain firm on their promise to deliver the best product possible on the field next season, and his comments only re-enforce the organization's will to adapt to the situation and to be ready to adopt one of their many plans to put in place. They are ready for a variety of scenarios regarding how, and when, the season may start.

Strength coach Chris Carlisle, a USC transplant from Carroll's former staff, has a program awaiting the players when they return to work. A physical regimen focused on functional movement, longevity, and winning championships.

He's hoping the players will adopt his mentality but also offered,Our Polymax RUBBER SHEET range includes all commercial and specialist "You've got to remember, I've seen this all before. I've seen this movie.buy landscape oil paintings online. It's a great ending. And we're right at the beginning."

It's appropriate to note here that the Seahawks are one of six organizations that promised not to cut pay to coaching staff, this stated as of May 24th, even if the lockout persists into the scheduled season, The Giants, Steelers, Colts, Eagles and Cowboys the other five teams that pledged the same; the Patriots have not made a decision and the Packers have a contingency plan in place.

Interestingly enough, the Steelers and Giants were on a five-team list in an ESPN Football Outsiders article I analyzed in this piece, highlighting the Seahawks' ability to weather a lockout; the Packers and Patriots were other two teams on the Football Outsiders list.

The three other teams highlighted above that aren't on the ESPN FBO list are strongly driven to win championships.The name "magic cube" is not unique. The Seahawks are proving to be among the group of organizations most driven to push through, and possibly even gain an edge, during the hardships of the lockout.

Enhancing the home-field advantage

Recent comments by Seahawks President Peter Mcloughlin on 950 KJR re-enforced the Seahawks are focused on maintaining their competitive mindset, as both an organization and team, through times of standstill.

2011年5月23日 星期一

Colorado company wrapping thin-film solar on electric poles

A tiny new solar company in Colorado took a big idea and turned into something even more useful than imagined.

NextStepElectric started marketing solar panels for power poles in 2008 with the common sense idea that wrapping thin-film solar around the literal pillars of the electric grid would eliminate a lot of the transmission debates in the solar world.

But a funny thing happened when the idea was born, said Osiris Stevens, NextStep founder and president.

"No one was interested," Stevens said.

He had trouble finding a solar manufacture to partner with him on this simple concept and had trouble finding electric utilities that would allow NextStepElectric to install the solar.

Part of the problem for utilities was that they didn't want to open up their power lines, letting energy flow in and out and weakening their security, Stevens said. They also didn't want people to have easy access to the utility's data.

That's when Stevens' business started going a new direction.

"It's kind of morphed into a security system for the utilities," Stevens said.

In order to assure the utilities that the system was secure, Stevens said NextStep had to engineer a monitoring device for its installations that would be secure and keep the utility's data secure. In doing that, Stevens said, they essentially turned a Freewave radio transmitter into a super-secure, smart-grid system that allows utility companies to monitor what's happening on their power lines, how much electricity is coming in and going out and if any of the lines have been illegally tapped.

It also allows the utility to see how much power the thin-film solar wrapped around their power lines is producing, Steven said.

The company has an installation in Longmont, Colo., that's producing 1.5 to 2 kilowatts a day. NextStep is also working with the City of Boulder and has been talking with Colorado's largest utility, Xcel Energy, about installing the combined solar and monitoring security system. The company is always looking for ways to improve and grow.

"We're looking for investors now," Stevens said. "I've been bootstrapping this myself the last couple years."

He said NextStepElectric was chosen as a finalist from more than 200 young companies at the Invest Midwest conference recently, which bodes well for its future.

Refit n' save

REGION - Ararat Greenhouse Action Group (AGAG) will be running two information sessions, today at Lake Bolac and May 12 in Ararat, to help local residents take advantage of the power of the sun.

The information sessions are part of the Refit n' Save project where you can access free advice about a range of sustainable products.

Federal government rebates for solar panels will be reducing at the end of June this year, and the Refit n' Save project officer Aidan Leahy is keen to help the community save through solar.

"We're right at the cut-off date to get solar panels with the full rebate," he said.

"We've also got some great deals on solar hot water systems. Solar is a great option to meet some of your energy needs and the information sessions are there to answer all your questions."

Local residents Jan and Tony Hillier have already made the switch to solar, installing a 1Kw solar system and a gas-boosted solar hot water unit when they were renovating their 1950s' home.

"We've been in this house for fifteen years and although it's not ideal in terms of being energy efficient, we wanted to do what we could to make our footprint smaller. After all, the price of electricity will only go up and we thought we might as well take advantage of the government rebates while they were available," Ms Hillier said.

Aidan Leahy agrees with these sentiments.

"You'll never know if solar is right for you if you don't get informed. We're encouraging people to come along and have a look at what's on offer. Heating water can account for up to a third of your home energy use and solar panels will just sit there and earn their keep," he said.

LaGrand is not used to losing money

sLawyer, conservationist, politician David LaGrand


David LaGrand dreams of living in a world that's green and sustainable.

But unlike most dreamers, LaGrand acts on his dreams.

He's installed solar panels on the roof of his Heritage Hill home and his Lake Michigan cottage, which also has a small wind turbine. On a sunny day, the meter spins backward.

He's going to put solar panels on the backside of Wealthy Street Bakery, which he and his wife, Melissa, started with their next-door neighbors.

Rather than drive a car and join a health club, he walks to his downtown law firm most days.

The 44-year-old former city commissioner and state senate candidate is not stopping there.

"The more you get into environmental issues, the more you realize the challenge for the future is water and food systems," LaGrand says.

So he's farming now. Inspired by poet Wendell Berry's "Mad Farmer's Manifesto," the lifelong city resident has bought into a 150-acre cattle farm in Cannon Township.

Though LaGrand maintains he's an urbanist at the core, he's been busy buying hay, cattle, fencing and land across the road. The goal is to convert the land from corn and soybeans back into pasture. He envisions a robust market for his grass-fed beef back in the city.

"He loves start-ups," says Melissa, his wife of 19 years. "He loves that phase of making it happen."

He knows value of investments

Despite his green start-ups, LaGrand is averse to throwing money around. Almost every one of his ventures begins with a shrewdly calculated profit motive.

Whether it's the solar panels on his house or the hay he's buying for his cattle, LaGrand can quickly tell you the cost and the return on investment his venture will yield.

He'll quickly recite the cost of those solar panels on his house, rattle off the rates he pays for electricity, the life of the solar panels, the number of hours of sun he expects. It comes up to a 7.5 percent return on his investment.

LaGrand is a big fan of solar energy.

"If every roof in the city had a solar panel, I think you could take the city off the grid," he says. "I think with a full build-out, we could be an energy-producing state."

With a new rack of solar panels he plans to install on the backside of the bakery, LaGrand calculates its energy bill will be cut even deeper. He plans to install more panels at his home.

He estimates he can install solar panels for $3.50 a watt — $2.35 a watt with the available federal tax credits.

The $9,500 wind turbine on his cottage is another story.

"In the last year, it's produced $3 worth of power," he said. "You can only justify it as an investment in principle."

Cutting energy costs at the bakery

While at the bakery, LaGrand is calculating how to cut the energy bills. They've already saved $2,000 a year by converting to compact fluorescent bulbs. Once a new series of LED bulbs qualify for a federal tax credits, he's going to install them.

"That's going to save us $400 more," he says, quickly reciting how the LEDs' higher cost is offset by the lower energy use, assuming they are lit at least 6,000 hours a year.

LaGrand is not used to losing money and has a knack for finding it.

When Melissa got into an accident with their minivan about 10 years ago, he ran the numbers and figured it would cost them about $9,000 a year to replace the vehicle and keep it running.

He decided he would rather spend the $9,000 a year to buy and maintain an abandoned storefront building that was for sale near their home along Wealthy Street SE.

Today, LaGrand grins broadly as he tells the story while sipping a Diet Coke in the Wealthy Street Bakery.

"We bought this place because Melissa got into a car accident," he chuckles.


They began the bakery in 2002 with their next-door neighbors, Jim and Barb McClurg, after concluding the neighborhood would embrace a shop with fresh baked goods. They leased the storefront next door to another neighborhood couple, who opened Art of the Table, a shop that caters to foodies and wine lovers.

Another reason they started the bakery; they were having trouble finding pastries for Four Friends Coffeehouse, a downtown business they began in 1994 with Karl Swedberg and Sara DeBoer, college friends who were moving back to West Michigan from the Seattle area.

"I don't tend to do things without partners. I'm very collaborative," LaGrand says. "We asked six people what color to paint our bedroom before we made that decision."

Early years

LaGrand credits his late grandfather, James LaGrand Sr., with his business acumen and entrepreneurial daring.

"He quit his job and started a lumber company during the Great Depression."

His passion for social justice comes from his upbringing as a preacher's kid. Though his resume indicates he was born in Grand Rapids and graduated from Calvin College, his childhood was more diverse.

He is the eldest of four sons born to James and Virginia LaGrand, an intrepid couple who left Grand Rapids and taught in Nigeria for two years in the early 1960s. His father was a seminarian at Calvin Seminary, and his mom an instructor at Calvin College when LaGrand was born in 1966.

When he was 6 weeks old, they moved to New Haven, Conn., where his father studied at Yale University. When he was 3, the family moved to Chicago, where his father pastored a Christian Reformed mission church in a predominantly black neighborhood.

Eight years later, the family moved to England, where they lived in Sheffield and Cambridge while his parents pursued their studies and research. When David was 11, the family moved to Halifax, Nova Scotia, where his father served as pastor to a Christian Reformed Church.

As an honors student at Queen Elizabeth High School, LaGrand distinguished himself as a public speaker, winning provincial oratory contests and placed second in a national debating seminar.

With all of the moving around, LaGrand's summers usually included long visits to his grandparents. Both sides lived in Grand Rapids and owned cottages along Lake Michigan.

"I loved Grand Rapids, and I loved coming back to Grand Rapids and seeing relatives, which is why Lake Michigan in the summer is my favorite place in the world."

Clean-tech venture capital jumps 54% in first quarter 2011

Venture capitalists spent the first quarter of the year dousing the clean-tech industry with attention, giving more money to fewer companies and hiking investment 54%.

Green companies raised $1.1 billion in the first three months of 2011 compared to $743.3 million in the same period last year, according to Ernst & Young and data from DowJones Venture Source. The number of deals fell to 69 from 79.

Santa Clara-based MiaSole, which makes thin-film photovoltaic solar panels, raised $106 million in one deal in February and is considering going public.

In the lead since at least 2005, California had by far the most deals -- 30, compared to seven in Massachusetts. The state's clean-tech companies attracted $637 million in investment in this year's first quarter, nearly 42% higher year over year.

Northern California's 24 deals pulled in $505 million compared to 32 deals drawing $332 million over the same period last year. Six deals total in Southern California ended up with $132 million -- $84 million from the Los Angeles metro area, $48 million from San Diego and a sliver from Orange County.

The energy-generation sector was the major player over the quarter, reeling in $450 million compared to $158 million year over year. Solar power companies alone hooked $363 million compared to last year's $139 million pot.

Energy storage was also hot -- venture capitalists put in $262 million, a whopping 670% increase from the $34 million raised during the first quarter of 2010. Both the battery and fuel-cell segments saw similar booms.

The $50 million poured into natural gas companies in the first quarter exceeded the $40 million invested over all of 2010.

Compost bedding helps newborns flourish

Compost bedding in the pre- and post-fresh barn at Five Star Dairy is a win-win for both cow and calf comfort.

The compost in the barn, which was built a couple years ago on the Elk Mound, Wis., dairy is tilled twice a day, says co-owner and DCHA member Jean Amundson.

"The compost heats so when you sit down on it, it's warm – even in the winter time," Amundson says.

During extreme cold weather, the natural heat generated during the composting process helps cows avoid frozen teats and helps prevent frozen ears on newborn calves. Calves move from the calving area to a warming room. In-floor heating in this room also helps to warm newborns and dry their hair coats before they move to outdoor hutches.

Warming calves is important for antibody absorption, Amundson adds. "They just don't absorb antibodies out of the colostrum well when they're cold. You can give them all the colostrum you want, but they're not getting the goodies out of it."

Making sure newborns have a clean, dry environment is one of several housing benchmarks advocated by the Dairy Calf & Heifer Association in its Gold Standards I. Assess how well your operation meets these goals and make changes to fix shortcomings that can jeopardize calf well-being and health.

Oving solar farm approved by councillors

A new solar farm is now set to be created in sunny Sussex following approval from Chichester district councillors.

The scheme, approved on Wednesday, April 27, will involve the erection of 58 rows of photovoltaic panels, each up to 2.7m high, on land at Woodhorn Farm, Oving, facing south at an angle, to maximise exposure to the sun.

The district's southern area development control committee heard the project, proposed by Vogt Solar Ltd – which has seven solar farms in Germany – would produce clean renewable energy for the equivalent of more than 1,200 homes annually.

The site would remain in agricultural production through the grazing of sheep and farming of the non-panelled areas.

The scheme was supported by both Tangmere and Oving parish councils, and the RSPB said proposed improvements to hedgerows had the potential to benefit farmland birds.

A submission by the applicants said the site comprised 17.9 hectares of arable farmland, forming part of Woodhorn Farm, a 607-hectare mixed organic farm supporting 250 milking cows and employing 23 people.

There would be a social benefit from the use of the solar farm, and conservation work, in farmer John Pitts' educational tours of his farming business.

Recommending approval, planning officers said although the scheme in itself did not directly result in an increase in local jobs, the income from it could be used to support the farm as a whole.