Archive for September, 2005

Baby update

Hobbit | 9/28/2005 Wed September 28, 2005 @ 12:02 pm

Ok so some fun things have been happening the last week or so. Peanut has really grown, and my lower abdomen is starting to show baby bumps. So of course I feel down there every chance I get. Well I can feel when Peanut is down there, there is a hard spot, some times its a small hard spot, usually a foot or a hand, But the other day it was a very large (comparatively) hard (and quite a bit harder) bump. So I am pretty sure it was Peanut’s head. Which is totally cool. Its fun to be able to feel down there and feel baby parts! I try when I can and when Peanut doesn’t move to get Dan to feel the bumps too. So he can feel that bond as much as heavenly possible! Well that’s my news for now! Love you all!

Ok so I thought I had heard of everything…

Hobbit | Wed September 28, 2005 @ 11:53 am

I would expect this in Roswell, NM but not Puerto Rico…

UFO Landing strip gets mayor’s support

Gave me a good laugh for the day anyways…

Where I have been cause it’s going around now!

Hobbit | Wed September 28, 2005 @ 11:34 am


create your own visited states map

Been to a few states, we used to travel when I was younger, just hopeing I got them all right, I know Dan Logan, I know I am pitiful for hitting 99% of New England, and having not been to Deleware, please don’t hate me!

Now here are my countries, they need some work, since all of them minus the US were reached via cruise ships! Its hard to see them but I have been to Belize, Mexico, Netherland Antillies, Martinique, Bahamas, and US.


create your own visited countries map

Pictures

Hobbit | 9/14/2005 Wed September 14, 2005 @ 7:32 pm

I added some new pictures to my gallery. Got some of the color in my front yard! I was so excited when I went out and took these pictures tonight, I saw a hummingbird when I first walked out. Apparently the bright red flowers on my cantas have attracted the hummingbirds, which is WONDERFUL, now I gotta get a hummingbird feeder. Also there are pictures of my crepe myrtles which are blooming, they are still babies, but have grown so much since they were planted they look very good. There is also a new picture of Keegan in the back yard, just one I found when getting the flower pictures off the camera.

The things we ponder

Hobbit | 9/13/2005 Tue September 13, 2005 @ 2:19 pm

Two nights ago I lay awake for a long time with my brain mulling over so many things, such as global warming and oil consumption and misconceptions. Then today I got an email, and some how the email had 95 percent of the things I was thinking were not only in the email, but spoken about the way I wanted to say them, if only my brain had had the email two nights ago, I would have had more sleep. Well here is the email, so you can see where my brain has been.

Hurricane Katrina has been, first and foremost, a human disaster — a seemingly endless tale of suffering marked by lives lost, communities dispersed and families torn asunder. Our hearts go out to the hundreds of thousands of displaced people who are now struggling to piece some semblance of their lives back together.

NRDC is doing all that we can — as I’m sure you are — to aid the ongoing relief effort in the Gulf states. We’re also contributing our special expertise on oil spills, toxic pollution and drinking water in order to help meet the immediate challenges.

As the flood waters begin receding, Americans are also beginning to gain some much-needed perspective on our fragile place in the natural world. Few events in our lifetime have revealed so dramatically the deep interconnectedness between people and nature.

As an environmental organization, NRDC has a profound obligation to ensure that the environmental lessons of this disaster are not only learned, but that they are heard loud and clear in our nation’s capital. Hurricane Katrina destroyed
more than human lives and homes. She also blew away a decade’s worth of denial about major environmental problems that confront America.

Katrina destroyed the fantasy that we can blithely go on increasing our dangerous dependence on oil — whether imported or domestic. Our oil-addicted economy is just too vulnerable to supply disruptions, as anyone who filled up their gas tank last week discovered. The solution is NOT to drill and destroy the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge — or our beautiful coastlines — as many
in Congress are now suggesting. Drilling in the Arctic would not have any impact on gas prices until 2025, and even then it would only reduce prices at the pump by a trivial 1.5 cents per gallon. Our nation simply does not have enough oil reserves to affect world oil prices. The only way out of this mess is to reduce our appetite for oil by improving the fuel economy of our vehicles
(which consume 40 percent of our oil) and by relying on smarter, cleaner and renewable ways to power our economy.

Katrina also exposed the fiction that we can dredge, bulldoze and fill millions of acres of coastal wetlands without paying a price. Wetland ecosystems are Mother Nature’s perfect buffer against catastrophic storm surges. Destroy that buffer and you destroy the last line of defense, not only for New Orleans but for a host of other American cities. In this case, as in so many others, what’s good for the wildlife of coastal America is also indispensable to its people. We are part of nature.

Katrina demolished the pretense that we needn’t reckon with global warming. While no single hurricane can be directly linked to global warming, climate scientists agree that we are entering an epoch of warming oceans, rising sea levels and much more intense storms. We know full well what kind of pollution controls are required to reverse this trend. If we don’t act, Katrina will be our future. You can’t say she didn’t warn us.

Finally, Katrina tore the lid off one of our nation’s most shameful truths: that petrochemical plants, toxic waste sites, oil refineries and other industrial threats to human health are most often sited next to low-income minority communities. The rest of America regularly averts its eyes from this injustice. But with the poorest neighborhoods of New Orleans drowning in a
hazardous sea of fuel, sewage and chemicals, it’s hard not to notice just which of our citizens are paying the ultimate price.

Oil addiction. Wetland destruction. Global warming. Environmental injustice. You’re well aware that NRDC has been working for years to awaken America to these terrible problems and to champion urgently needed solutions. But Katrina has changed everything. The public is finally paying attention. And officials in Washington are looking to respond.

Our challenge is making sure our leaders take away the right lessons from this disaster and respond with real solutions, not with the old ways of thinking or business-as-usual giveaways to well-connected industries.

It won’t be easy. The Bush administration and congressional leaders have spent the last four years digging us ever deeper into a hole of oil dependence, wetland destruction, global warming pollution and environmental injustice. It’s unspeakably tragic that it took a deadly hurricane to expose this gaping crater.

There’s an old proverb that says, “If you find yourself in a hole, stop digging.” Getting our leaders to stop digging will be a tall order. But with more hurricanes sure to follow in Katrina’s wake, we have no choice but to dedicate ourselves to the task at hand.

Sincerely,

John H. Adams
President
Natural Resources Defense Council