Last weekend I ran images from a local company's team building event --- a run down the Thames River starting at the Springbank Dam in London and ending at a small town west of town. My health has not been the greatest lately and so I am pulling another image from that day's shoot. Thanks for the patience.
Saturday, August 28, 2010
Friday, August 27, 2010
My inspiration
What's in here? |
Pretty good, eh? |
At 11 months she has become an explorer. She explores my home. She does her keister-scoot from bedroom to kitchen and all points in between. She has discovered where her tub-toys are kept, in the bathroom, and her thick-paged books, in the living room.
The little tyke can't do a lot but what she can do, she does. She squeezes every bit of pleasure from her days.
Like I said, she's my inspiration.
My tub-toys! |
Wednesday, August 25, 2010
Water Strider or Pond Skater
Water striders on the still water at the edge of the Thames River in London, Ont. |
Today's picture features water striders, the familiar semi-aquatic bugs often sighted gliding across the surface of the Thames River at the water's edge where the current is slow and the water almost still. These bugs have a novel body form that allows them to walk on water. According to the U of T, this was not always the case.
To achieve this gliding ability required the evolution of a unique arrangement of the legs, with the mid-legs greatly elongated. Scientists at the U of T's Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology have discovered the gene behind this evolutionary change, the Hox gene.
U ot T research scientists found it not only lengthened the mid-legs but shortened the hind-legs, creating an unusual body form that allows water striders to glide on the water surface. They glide along taking advantage of the water's surface tension. They apply just the right amount of force as they skate along. If too much energy was used, they would break the surface tension.
Tuesday, August 24, 2010
Japanese Beetle in Ontario
A Japanese beetle sighted in Komoka Provincial Park near London, Ontario. |
"As the name suggests, the Japanese beetle is native to Japan. The insect was first found in the United States in 1916 in a nursery near Riverton, New Jersey. It is thought that beetle larvae entered the United States in a shipment of iris bulbs prior to 1912 when inspections of commodities entering the country began. "The first Japanese beetle found in Canada was in a tourist's car at Yarmouth, arriving in Nova Scotia by by ferry from Maine in 1939. During the same year three additional adults were captured at Yarmouth and three at Lacolle in southern Quebec."
The brightly copper toned beetle is not very destructive in Japan, where it is controlled by natural enemies, but in North America it is a serious pest of about 200 species of plants, including rose bushes, grapes, hops, and other plants. They cause damage to plants by skeletonizing the foliage, that is, consuming only the leaf material between the veins.
Sunday, August 22, 2010
Canoeing the Thames (in Ontario)
It was interesting to see 8 kayaks and a canoe being launched just west of the Springbank Dam in London, Ontario. The dam is not for spring flood control but rather it is for keeping the summer water level in the urban river deep enough for canoeing and kayaking.
The dam, though, doesn't work. After an overhaul a few years ago it jammed and the question of who will shoulder the repair bill will be decided by the courts.
Yet, despite the failed dam, here were kayakers and canoeists about to paddle down the river from the dam to Delaware.
This raises an interesting question: Why is the dam necessary? Why is it so important to canoe within the city limits?
Clearly, canoeing the river just outside of the city is possible without a multi-million dollar dam.
The dam, though, doesn't work. After an overhaul a few years ago it jammed and the question of who will shoulder the repair bill will be decided by the courts.
Yet, despite the failed dam, here were kayakers and canoeists about to paddle down the river from the dam to Delaware.
This raises an interesting question: Why is the dam necessary? Why is it so important to canoe within the city limits?
Clearly, canoeing the river just outside of the city is possible without a multi-million dollar dam.
Friday, August 20, 2010
A simple snapshot
It finally rained in London, Ontario. My grass is crispy brown and the local newspaper is running stories telling people to water their trees. Many trees in town are showing signs of stress. We still need another good downpour, or two.
Wednesday, August 18, 2010
21st Century Suburbia
These apartments in the southwest of London, Ontario, make the claim that they are the finest in the city. Hmmm.
For the story that goes with this picture, check out my post on Rockin' On: the blog.
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