Thursday, December 20, 2012

Invites, RSVP's, Programs and Welcome Packets

Found a Martha Stewart DIY wedding program kit at a thrift store for $4 and I love the whimsical combination of dinosaur skeletons and bows

 Found 8x11 envelopes, glued on airplane cut outs from etsy and changed mail to welcome to create personal welcome packets for the guest to receive at the hotel.

The packets included a welcome letter, complete with a scavenger hunt and an itinerary of events as well as a packet of trail mix from Cosco, a post card and a folding fan.
Did some basic computer designs and had the cards printed at the local printer

I was able to print the insides at home and spray glue them on... each one came out a bit different  but I loved the had crafted feel


RSVP cards were on recycled postcards, once again printed at home and attached with spray glue. They were such fun to get in the mail!

Friday, December 14, 2012

Well spews oily mist


Ill be leaving North Dakota on Monday, so this might be one of the final posts I make about the absurdity of life in the North Dakota Oil Patch.

Well spews oily mist near Parshall

PARSHALL — An oil well that began to malfunction Wednesday evening continued to spray a mist of oil into the air late Thursday but is expected to be contained this morning, an official at the scene said.
By: Amy Dalrymple, Forum Communications
PARSHALL — An oil well that began to malfunction Wednesday evening continued to spray a mist of oil into the air late Thursday but is expected to be contained this morning, an official at the scene said.
The mist of oil from the well about nine miles west of Parshall appeared to be contained shortly after 3 p.m. Thursday. Crews used the bucket of a backhoe to cover the mist and keep it from blowing up into the air, said Kris Roberts, environmental geologist with the North Dakota Department of Health.
But the risk of a static spark that could start a fire was too high, so crews removed the equipment about 4 p.m. and the mist continued to spray to the north Thursday evening, Roberts said.
“One spark would have been one way too many,” he said.
About 6 p.m. Thursday, crews were closing down for the day because it was getting too dark, Roberts said.
They will resume working this morning, he said.
The well did not pose any danger to public health and there was no need for evacuations, Roberts said.
Kyle Waliezer, Rockies area superintendent for Slawson Exploration Co., said a crew was working on the well between 6 and 7 p.m. Wednesday when an equipment malfunction occurred. No one was injured, he said.
The malfunction, which is under investigation, caused the workers to lose control of the well, Waliezer said.
A specialized team from Houston flew to North Dakota Wednesday night to get control of the well, but a brownish mist, occasionally surging higher than the top of the service rig, continued to spray into the air. They will continue their work Friday.
Lake Sakakawea, less than one mile to the south of the well, was not in danger of being affected, Roberts said.
The well sprayed oil, gas and water containing brine, Roberts said. The mist drifted more than 2,000 feet to the southwest of the well before the wind shifted, he said. The mist was spraying to the north and Roberts estimates it has affected an area of about 1,500 feet. The amount of oil released is unknown, Roberts said.
Cleanup crews would not begin working until the well was contained, Roberts said.
Slawson hired a firm to monitor gas levels in the area to ensure the safety of nearby residents, Waliezer said.
Workers constructed dikes around the well site to contain the spill and prevent it from getting to a drainage area that could affect the lake. Waliezer said Slawson constructs its well sites so oil can be contained on site in the event of a spill.
“They’ve done an excellent job of trying to make sure they’re safe and contained,” Roberts said.
Prior to the incident, the well had been in production, but a workover rig, or service rig, was brought in to clean out sand and improve production, Waliezer said.
The state Department of Mineral Resources and other agencies also were on the scene investigating.
A safety officer from the Three Affiliated Tribes energy division also was monitoring the well, which lies within the Fort Berthold Indian Reservation.

Saturday, December 8, 2012

Trying Hanukkah

Ian and I decided during our engagement that we were going to explore holidays. Both of us feeling overly familiar but under attached to the traditional christian American holidays we want to branch out. Getting married in August our first year of holidays has been: Halloween (American), Thanksgiving (American), and now Hanukkah (Jewish).

So how dose one who is not Jewish begin to explore and try Hanukkah? Well what we have done is
1) Made all gifts given Hanukkah gifts, wrapped with ladles and blue ribbons with instructions to be opened during Hanukkah.
2) I made a Pandora station of Hanukkah music, which in Truth is not all that different sounding than Christmas music.
3) We are having a Hanukkah dinner on Sunday with Potato Vegetable Kluge, Cole Slaw, Smashed Potato Lakes, Apple Sauce, Jelly Filled Donuts, Popcorn and Chocolates.
4) We got 5 different Hanukkah movies that we are going to watch.

Now some interesting learning's have come from this exploration. Your work place is not closed so no real opportunity to feel that sense of celebration that comes with holidays. The thrift store in Dickinson has nothing you can use to decorate your home for Hanukkah. No business or office in town is in the Hanukkah mood. The only encouragement I have had is seeing FB friends making posts about the holiday or the one Jewish person in Dickinson, offering to share tips on cooking. I am glad we are doing this and look forward to movies and Jelly Donuts this weekend!

We are planning on keeping New Years (American) but I hope to add at least one more this spring or summer that we have not done before .... some ideas I have are: Imbolc, Bahá'í Naw-Rúz or Purim. My hope is being near a large city this spring we might be able to find a festival of some sorts for our next holiday =)

And what you may ask are we doing with our vacation days during the traditional holidays? Going on vacation =)

Friday, November 30, 2012

Western North Dakota 1000+ Pigs

Auction
Updated:11/30/2012
Description:1000+ pig collection (Cookie jars, pictures, lots of figurines, kids rocking pig & much more) for sale at the Goldy Morrow Estate AUCTION on Saturday, December 8, 2012 at the Beulah Civic Center in Beulah, ND starting at 10:00 am CT. Selling Real Estate (2:00 pm CT) Household, Anitques, Collectibles, Yard & Garden for more information or pictures contact G & G AUCTIONEERS or go to www.midwestauctions.com/gandg/ or www.globalauctionguide.com or www.auctionzip.come
  Website
URL:http://www.midwestauctions.com/gandg/
  Contact Information
 
Beulah, ND
Day: 701-290-7611, Evening:
glass@westriv.com
  Photos

Sunday, November 25, 2012

Wedding Hike

Following our morning reception a few of the hardy wedding adventurers along with Ian and I did a 4 mile hike starting at 3pm at the Meadow Trail-head in Lake Leahterwood Park.

Here is a great blog post by a couple that did this trail 2 summers back. http://arklahomahiker.org/2011/07/31/lake-leatherwood-beacham-and-fuller-trails-2011-05-21/

Now 2012 was one of the worst droughts in decades and the lake was quite low, but several enjoyable points made it well worth our time. As a note this trial is very maintained and several stretches are gravel/ maintenance roads, so shoes for such surfaces are recommended.





Wedding Karma

Two days after after our wedding, Ian, myself and a few of our hardy wedding adventure friends went to the turpentine creek wildlife refuge for a morning of volunteering.

http://www.turpentinecreek.org/



Ivy was our contact point and group leader. She gave us a wonderful tour of the facility and put us to work on a painting project that was in dire need of prep work... donated paint that had fully separated, scattered materials... overall we spent most of our time prepping the project for the group that was going to be there the next day. But we did get some areas done and had lots of fun =)

Friday, November 16, 2012

I made the local paper


Frustrating traffic concerns could be improved by Dickinson 'roadmap'

If adopted as presented Thursday evening, the proposed improvements in “Dickinson 2035: Roadmap to the Future” would cost the city $400 million. This does not include maintenance or upkeep costs of existing infrastructure.
By: Katherine Grandstrand, The Dickinson Press
If adopted as presented Thursday evening, the proposed improvements in “Dickinson 2035: Roadmap to the Future” would cost the city $400 million. This does not include maintenance or upkeep costs of existing infrastructure.
The presentation at the Biesiot Activities Center was the final public input meeting for the Dickinson 2035 comprehensive and transportation plan. Kadrmas, Lee and Jackson, which prepared the plan for Dickinson, will take comments on the project through its website, via email or through the U.S. Postal Service until Dec. 15. The Dickinson City Commission is expected to vote on the plan early 2013.

The plan is not set in stone and is flexible based on actual population growth, Project Manager Bob Shannon said.

“This is if the city can accommodate the development,” Shannon said. “It’s not necessarily a forecast, it’s a ‘If you can build it, here’s what they think would come.’”

The study estimates Dickinson will have a population of 40,000-plus by 2035, but will peak at more than 45,000 around 2020 as oil development in the area grows.

One of the biggest concerns of the public was traffic flow, especially when getting on and off Interstate 94 and Highway 22, he said.

“We’ve also looked at truck traffic,” Shannon said. “We’ve heard a lot of comments. That’s the biggest impact to people’s quality of life, other than unaffordable housing.”

One of the issues that KLJ faced was mixing city projects with North Dakota Department of Transportation projects in the timeline, Shannon said.

“What happened to the clovers?” Dickinson resident Deraod Payne asked of an interstate on/off ramp style. “When they put these interstates in years ago in the ’80s, that was supposed to be the common way of doing it.”

That could be a solution to congestion, but doing that now would mean the ramp area would take up more space and business would have to be bought out, Shannon said. The DOT has some signal work planned to help provide more gaps for eastbound vehicles to make a northbound left turn onto Highway 22 at Exit 61.

Propositions to improve traffic flow include widening some roads, like Villard Street, creating in-town truck routes, adding a fixed-route bus system and adding a second railroad overpass or underpass, most likely at State Avenue, Shannon said.

“Right now, most of these congested (traffic) areas are (designed) so people have to get on them to get to their basic things, the grocery store, the school, work,” Dickinson resident Laura Hann said. “And it looks like we’re going to have a lot of solid residential blocks … with all of the commercial development on those busy corridors. Are we just going to keep boxing ourselves into more congestion on those corridors or are we looking at putting some of the offices and commercial areas intermixed with the residential so not everyone has to get on the main roads to buy milk or go to school.”

There is a plan to allow neighborhood commercial development, KLJ Representative Scott Pickett said.

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Signs of the water crisis continue


Farmworkers’ Endless Worry: Tainted Tap Water

SEVILLE, Calif. — Like most children, the students at Stone Corral Elementary School here rejoice when the bell rings for recess and delight in christening a classroom pet.
Jim Wilson/The New York Times
Fifth and sixth grade students in Seville, Calif., took a water break before physical education class.
Jim Wilson/The New York Times
Bertha Diaz used the seat belts in her car to strap in a five-gallon water bottle she filled at a vendor's stand in Orosi, Calif., to provide drinking water for her family.
But while growing up in this impoverished agricultural community of numbered roads and lush citrus orchards, young people have learned a harsh life lesson: “No tomes el agua!” — “Don’t drink the water!”
Seville, with a population of about 300, is one of dozens of predominantly Latino unincorporated communities in the Central Valley plagued for decades by contaminated drinking water. It is the grim result of more than half a century in which chemical fertilizers, animal wastes, pesticides and other substances have infiltrated aquifers, seeping into the groundwater and eventually into the tap. An estimated 20 percent of small public water systems in Tulare County are unable to meet safe nitrate levels, according to a United Nations representative.
In farmworker communities like Seville, a place of rusty rural mailboxes and backyard roosters where the average yearly income is $14,000, residents like Rebecca Quintana pay double for water: both for the tap water they use only to shower and wash clothes, and for the five-gallon bottles they must buy weekly for drinking, cooking and brushing their teeth.
It is a life teeming with worry: about children accidentally sipping contaminated water while cooling off with a garden hose, about not having enough clean water for an elderly parent’s medications, about finding a rock while cleaning the feeding tube of a severely disabled daughter, as Lorie Nieto did. She vowed never to use tap water again.
Chris Kemper, the school’s principal, budgets $100 to $500 a month for bottled water. He recalled his astonishment, upon his arrival four years ago, at encountering the “ghost” drinking fountains, shut off to protect students from “weird foggyish water,” as one sixth grader, Jacob Cabrera, put it. Mr. Kemper said he associated such conditions with third world countries. “I always picture it as a laptop a month for the school,” he said of the added cost of water.
Here in Tulare County, one of the country’s leading dairy producers, where animal waste lagoons penetrate the air and soil, most residents rely on groundwater as the source for drinking water. A study by the University of California, Davis, this year estimated that 254,000 people in the Tulare Basin and Salinas Valley, prime agricultural regions with about 2.6 million residents, were at risk for nitrate contamination of their drinking water. Nitrates have been linked to thyroid disease and make infants susceptible to “blue baby syndrome,” a potentially fatal condition that interferes with the blood’s capacity to carry oxygen.
Communities like Seville, where corroded piping runs through a murky irrigation ditch and into a solitary well, are particularly vulnerable to nitrate contamination, lacking financial resources for backup systems. Fertilizer and other chemicals applied to cropland decades ago will continue to affect groundwater for years, according to the Davis study.
“You can’t smell it,” Mrs. Quintana said of the dangers of the tap. “You can’t see it. It looks like plain beautiful water.”
Situated off the state’s psychic map, lacking political clout and even mayors, places like Seville and Tooleville to the south have long been excluded from regional land use and investment decisions, said Phoebe S. Seaton, the director of a community initiative for California Rural Legal Assistance. Residents rely on county governments and tiny resident-run public utility districts. The result of this jurisdictional patchwork is a fragmented water delivery system and frequently deteriorating infrastructure.
Many such communities started as farm labor camps without infrastructure, said John A. Capitman, a professor at California State University, Fresno, and the executive director of the Central Valley Health Policy Institute. Today, one in five residents in the Central Valley live below the federal poverty line. Many spend up to 10 percent of their income on water. “The laborers and residents of this region have borne a lot of the social costs of food production,” Professor Capitman said.

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/14/us/tainted-water-in-california-farmworker-communities.html?hp

Monday, November 12, 2012

Christmas, Santa and Oil

I wish I was a more eloquent writer and had a way to truly paint the picture for you but lacking those talents this is going to be a crude description of the Christmas season and Santa Clause in the oil town of Dickinson ND.

The Best Friends Mentoring Program in collaboration with the Prairie Hills Mall and White Drug has hosted the traditional Santa Pictures at the Mall. The scene is an iconic small town america Christmas scene played out a lackluster shopping centers from thanksgiving to Christmas  An overweight Caucasian man wears a velvety suit pulled out of storage and decades old, with a fake beard and a Santa hat, sits on a oversize chair surrounded by fake Christmas gifts and holiday decorations. Parent pay to have their child sit with "Santa" have their picture taken and an opportunity to tell Santa that they have been a good child and want such and such a toy.

We are now 4 Christmas seasons into the bakken oil boom and this year things are about to go oil. Santa has arrived for opening picture day at the Prairie Hills Mall via fire truck. I don't know why that has been done, but its they way its always gone. This year .... Santa is going to arrive in an oil truck, additionally there is going to be a bonus picture day where Santa is going to trade in his velvety suit and be wearing a Red FR (Fire Resistant) Jumper and oil company hard hats.

Now I am not a big fan of Christmas, in fact this year have opted to celebrate Hanukkah instead(might be another blog post),  but I know commercialism is the reason for the season, but i can not help but think that the true history behind this tradition is about the birth of a great spiritual leader and wonder just how far we have been blinded by oil money to even betray the commercial ideals of Santa Clause.



The New Release from the Dickinson Press:

Santa coming in oil truck to Prairie Hills Mall

Chris Hammond and Kris Kringle, best known as Santa Claus, have more in common than a similar first name. They have a heart for children. As Santa, Hammond is arriving at Prairie Hills Mall at 11 a.m. on Saturday. He’ll be riding an oil field truck, escorted by Dickinson fire and police vehicles. The Dickinson High School band will play Christmas carols when he arrives.
By: Linda Sailer, The Dickinson Press
Chris Hammond and Kris Kringle, best known as Santa Claus, have more in common than a similar first name. They have a heart for children.
As Santa, Hammond is arriving at Prairie Hills Mall at 11 a.m. on Saturday. He’ll be riding an oil field truck, escorted by Dickinson fire and police vehicles. The Dickinson High School band will play Christmas carols when he arrives.
“Santa loves Dickinson — it’s one of my favorite places to come and visit,” Hammond said.
To recognize the families who are working in the Oil Patch, Hammond will make a one-day appearance as Oil Field Santa from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. on Monday, Dec. 3, at the mall.
“I’ll be dressed in a traditional oil field workers’ bright red, fire retardant suit, with Santa work gloves, Santa hard hat, Santa safety glasses and steel-toed safety shoe,” Hammond said. “Santa likes driving truck and getting dirty too,” he said.
The appearance is an opportunity for anyone, especially children with ties to the oil field, to have their picture taken with Oil Field Santa. Families may bring hats associated with their businesses to wear for the photos.
Several hats representing oil field companies will be available for the photos.
Prairie Hills Mall looks forward to having Santa come each year, Manager Peggy O’Brien said.
“For me, one of the highlights of decorating for Christmas is preparing Santa’s home.”
She described the mall’s atmosphere as one filled with excitement and magic.
“Children have a twinkle in their eyes when they meet Santa,” she said. “He listens to their wishes, hands out candy canes and the mall provides reindeer ears for all the kids.”
This is the third year that Hammond is Santa. With homes in Annandale, Minn., and Dickinson, he works in the oil fields, hauling production water. But when the holidays arrive, he makes time for Santa.
He said the magic of Santa is talking to the children.
“The kids are so curious — they want to know all kinds of stuff — that Santa is not a figment of their imagination, that he’s real,” Hammond said. “Kids want to know what’s going on in the North Pole. I tell them about my flying buffalo — Santa’s sleigh is getting heavier so we’re trying to get flying buffalo in my herd. I even have a Max-the-flying Buffalo song.”
While the mall is hosting Santa, the photos are a partnership between White Drug and the Best Friends Program. The cost is $10 for two photos.
“When I met Santa a few years ago, he told me he always wanted to be Santa,” Best Friends Director Kris Fehr said. “He’s very much able to converse with the kids and establishes a good rapport with them. He’s got his regulars who come back, maybe every week. We’re pretty lucky to have him.”
The idea of an Oil Field Santa is an opportunity to recognize the energy industry, Fehr said.
“It might be fun to have a picture of Santa dressed in a fracking suit and wearing a hard hat from a particular company,” she said. “It can be a unique keepsake — how many places get to see Santa wearing oil field clothes?”
A percentage of the Santa photos goes to support the Best Friends — a mentoring program for at-risk youth in southwestern North Dakota.
For more information, call the Best Friends office at 701-483-8615.

Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Photos of a North Dakota Gone By



“I’m the oldest man in town,” says Ragnar Slaaen, 96. “That house used to belong to some people from Montana, been empty at least 50 years. They farmed a little bit. What happened to them? I suppose they got old and croaked. “I was born in 1911, twelve miles (20 kilometers) north of town on a homestead. My father came from Norway. He died when I was two. I can’t imagine where my mother found the food. I went eight grades to a country school. Nobody went to high school—we had to work. I worked for a neighbor at age eight picking up rocks all day. “I got my own farm in ’36. I plowed with horses. We didn’t have any rain at all. With the dusters, it was so dark you couldn’t see anything inside the house. Everything just blew away. You had to get used to breathing dirt. “Our first baby was a girl, stillborn. Do you know what stillborn means? We had two boys. “I’ve had a good life, a lovely wife. She died seven years ago. I’ve still got my hair. You know I sit here alone for six months at a time, nobody comes to see me. I’ve outlived them all. I’m the oldest man in town.”


http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2008/01/emptied-north-dakota/richards-photography

Some fantastic photos of a North Dakota before fracking 

Dickinson Community Resource List

North Dakota, Dickinson


I have been here for over a year now and have tried numerous times to find something like this. While not 100% accurate it should be a good launching point for anyone looking for resources in the Dickinson Area.

http://www.dickinsoncap.org/projectace/Files/ProjectAceResourceGuide2011.pdf


Thursday, October 25, 2012

Holiday Highlight Dickinson ND

Well its the holiday season in Dickinson ND and I wanted to share with those of you who are here and those who are just interested in life here, Ladies Nigh Out, the premier shopping and social event for women in Dickinson during the holidays



see all this years info at: http://dickinsonlno.com/

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

oppose drilling in Killdeer Mountains


Published October 23, 2012, 12:00 AM

Proposed wells draw controversy: Rancher, tribal member oppose drilling in Killdeer Mountains

Home to one historic battlefield site already, the Killdeer Mountains are the subject of a new North Dakota fight. This time, however, the battle is not between the U.S. Army and tribes of Native Americans, but rather between the oil industry and the people who live near and use the mountains, which begin about eight miles northwest of Killdeer.
By: Bryan Horwath, The Dickinson Press

Home to one historic battlefield site already, the Killdeer Mountains are the subject of a new North Dakota fight.
This time, however, the battle is not between the U.S. Army and tribes of Native Americans, but rather between the oil industry and the people who live near and use the mountains, which begin about eight miles northwest of Killdeer.
Much to the chagrin of some Dunn County residents and native tribes that use the land for ceremonial purposes, the North Dakota Department of Mineral Resources Oil and Gas Division, an arm of the Industrial Commission, will host a hearing Wednesday in Bismarck regarding the addition of a number of new oil drilling sites in the county and around the state, several of which would be in the immediate area of the mountains.
“It’s a travesty,” said Loren Jepson, a rancher who lives about 15 miles northwest of Killdeer. “People should be concerned about this. If you care about hunting, searching for native artifacts or birdwatching in the Killdeer Mountains, that’s all in jeopardy.”
Though drilling is not allowed in certain areas in and around the mountains, Jepson said the addition of four — and possibly more — hydraulic fracturing sites in the area could exacerbate issues residents are already facing because of drilling north of Killdeer along ND Highway 22, such as heavy truck traffic, dust and noise.
“It’s a quality of life issue,” Jepson said. “We know that there has been and will continue to be drilling here, I just wish the oil companies would have more respect for the people who have lived here their whole lives. I wish the oil companies would just work with people.”
The proposed new wells — which are just a few of dozens that will come before ND Oil and Gas this week — would be in close proximity to the Killdeer Mountain Battlefield State Historic Site and certain areas that some Native American tribes consider to be sacred, such as Medicine Hole, a cave-like site in the mountains that has been part of Native American lore for decades.
A member of the Three Affiliated Tribes and an instructor of Native American studies at Fort Berthold Community College in New Town, Delvin Driver Sr., said the Killdeer Mountains — especially Medicine Hole — have a lot of spiritual significance for his people.
“This is an area where people from different tribes, from all over, come to fast and make contact with different spirits,” Driver said. “This is sacred land. The native people are spiritual people and the land is who we are. If there is a lot of interference for the people who go in those mountains, it’s not going to be a good spiritual experience for them.”
Driver added he understands that drilling is a fact of life in North Dakota.
“The oil industry is here and it will continue to be here,” Driver said. “But they don’t really see our views — they see money. They’ll step on anybody’s foot to get more.”
The historic battlefield site in the Killdeer Mountains commemorates an 1864 skirmish between the Army and a gathering of Yanktonai, Dakota and Teton Indians. As legend has it, Medicine Hole is a narrow passageway leading off the mountaintop through its base used by natives to escape U.S. soldiers during the conflict more than a century ago.
Jepson said he has retained the Dickinson law firm Mackoff Kellogg to fight the location of the proposed wells and will be in attendance at the hearing on Wednesday.
“I don’t know what to expect,” Jepson said. “I know a lot of others in the community feel the same way I do, but it seems that nobody will do anything about it. I’m trying to do something about it.”
Hess Corp. is listed as the proprietor of the wells on ND Oil and Gas documents. Representatives from Hess could not be reached for comment Monday.

Monday, October 22, 2012

century training week 8

Monday: Cross training: Never had to use the names of the equipment before so some of these might be wrong but you will get the general idea

Stretching
free weights 3 reps of 10 with 5 lbs
Sholder Press 20lbs - 3 reps of 10

Incline Chest Press 30lbs - 3 reps of 10

Chest Pull 50lbs - 3 reps of 10
Lat Pull Down 40lbs - 3 reps of 10
.25 mile walk
10 min on the elliptical
stretch 

also while searching these out i found this great site that i might try to use again this winter http://www.beyondstrengthperformance.com/upper-body-pull-exercises


and Monday was the end of my training for the week, life just caught up with me this week, was very busy and truly did not have time to work out. I did however accept a part time job at Any Time Fitness so i see an increase of working out in my future! 

Tuesday, October 16, 2012

Cardboard Bicycle


For About $20, Cardboard Bicycle Could 'Change The World,' Inventor Says



Israeli inventor and his cardboard bicycle.
EnlargeBaz Ratner /Reuters /Landov
Israeli inventor and his cardboard bicycle.
Reuters today catches up on a story that's been getting some traction in recent weeks:
An Israeli inventor has come up with a way to make a bicycle almost entirely out of cardboard — and so inexpensively that he thinks retailers would only need to charge about $20 for one.
The inventor, Izhar Gafni, believes the bike could be a boon to the world's most traffic-congested cities and help people in remote parts of the Third World get from place to place. He's reached a deal to start mass production in a few months, Gafni tells Reuters.
How did he do it? As Reuters says, "once the shape has been formed and cut, the cardboard is treated with a secret concoction made of organic materials to give it its waterproof and fireproof qualities. In the final stage, it is coated with lacquer paint for appearance."
This video posted by Gadizmo helps explain more about how the bike is built, and shows it in action.




-This is awesome - Laura

Monday, October 15, 2012

Movie Recommendation: Where the Green Ants Dream

Where the Green Ants Dream

Based partly on the Milirrpum v Nabalco Pty Ltd case and making use of professional actors as well as Aboriginal activists who were involved in the case, it was a mix of facts and fiction. The ant mythology was claimed as Herzog's own, however some natives did consider the green ant as the totem animal that created the world and humans. Wandjuk Marika noted that the ant dreaming belief existed in a clan that lived near Oenpelli in the Northern Territory.[1] The film is set in the Australian desert and is about a land feud between a mining company (which he called Ayers to avoid any legal threats from Nabalco) and the native Aborigines. The Aborigines claim that an area the mining company wishes to work on is the place where green ants dream, and that disturbing them will destroy humanity.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Where_the_Green_Ants_Dream