Archive for July 1, 2008

Snake Blamed for Sinking Truck in Intracoastal Waterway

JACKSONVILLE, FL — Witnesses say a semi truck driver intentionally swerved his rig off a bridge to avoid hitting a car and a person who were distracted by a snake in the road.

After his truck plunged into Sisters Creek, witnesses say the struggling driver was rescued and revived by a state contractor who happened to be working under the bridge at the time.

The chain of events began Monday at about 7:30 p.m.

The worker who raises and lowers the Sisters Creek Bridge on Heckscher Drive told police she saw a four foot long snake slithering across the bridge, so she left her post and signaled to an approaching driver to stop.

The car stopped. But the driver of the semi truck behind it told police he didn’t have time to stop before he would have hit the car and the woman.

So 58-year-old James Gray squealed his brakes and swerved toward the guard rail, witnesses said.

His tractor-trailer smashed through the railing and nose-dived about 30 feet into the water below.

Read the rest of the rescue at First Coast News.

That was very nice of the truckdriver to risk dying in order to keep from hitting the woman working on the bridge, a car, and the snake, but…..he should have never had to make that decision. People really should know that trucks need a lot more time to stop than cars do, particularly trucks with a trailer full of brick pavers.

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Man Saves Bear From Drowning

TALLAHASSEE, FL — It was a site (sic) you don’t see everyday in the Panhandle in Florida. A man saved a bear from drowning last week. It all started after residents spotted a 375-pound black bear roaming through a neighborhood 40 miles south of Tallahassee. Officials with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) found the bear underneath a beachfront home. They say it was probably trying to cool off. The goal was to lure it back into the wild.

So, officials used a tranquilizer dart on it. But, there was a problem. It did not work immediately. Biologist Adam Warwick, who struggled with the bear, said it tried to escaped and went into the Gulf of Mexico.

It was at that point Warwick said he could see the effects of the tranquilizer on the bear. He made a quick decision. Warwick went in after the animal.

The bear was about 25 yards from shore when it went into the water. Warwick said his adrenaline just kicked in. He didn’t want the black bear to drown.

He saw it losing its mobility. Warwick tried to splash and create a commotion to get it back to shore. That did not work. He said the bear looked confused and then got up on its hind legs as if it were about to lunge at him and fell backwards into the water.

Warwick says after a few seconds the bear popped his head out of the water and moved around, but could not keep its head above water. He went into action. The biologist kept one arm underneath the bear and gripped the scruff of its neck with his other hand. During the journey across the ocean, he walked barefoot over concrete blocks in the 4-foot-deep water with the bear. The job was not easy. It became a bit more challenging when an FWC officer and a bystander with a boat came up to the pair. Warwick says this startled the bear. He lost his grip until the two in the boat moved away.

Just when you thought the story couldn’t get any more interesting, as the two, man and bear, made it to shore a person with a backhoe showed up out of nowhere according to Warwick. They loaded the animal into the backhoe and then into an FWC truck.

The bear survived. Eventually, it was released into the Osceola National Forest near Lake City.

As for Warwick, he cut his feet as we walked over the concrete in the ocean and the bear scratched him once on the foot. Other than that he does not have any major injuries, but he has one big tale to tell

Source: FirstCoastNews.com

D’OH! Glad it ended well with no serious injuries for the biologist and survival of the bear. He probably won’t come back to that neighborhood anymore.

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Experimental Infection of Cattle with H5N1 Virus

The study is in Emerging Infectious Diseases:

Our findings show that HPAIV (H5N1) has the potential to infect bovine calves, at least after high-titer intranasal inoculation, and that conventional HI tests may underestimate such infections. Furthermore, asymptomatic shedding of HPAIV (H5N1) by infected calves and subsequent seroconversion seem to be possible, and even low levels of HPAIV (H5N1) might be sufficient to induce a detectable antibody response in contact calves. However, the possibility that the infectivity detected in the contact calf at 1 dpi was the result of residual inoculum cannot be ruled out. Although the question whether calf-to-calf transmission of HPAIV (H5N1) occurs could not be definitely answered by our study, bird-to-calf transmission resulting in seroconversion is probable.

The incidence of clinical infections of cattle with HPAIV (H5N1) in disease-endemic regions should be low. However, our data indicate that serum from bovine species would be a valuable source of additional information about transmission events, especially in regions like Asia and Egypt, where HPAIV (H5N1) is endemic and probability of contact between poultry and cattle is high. The NP-ELISA is currently the assay of choice for the evaluation of bovine serum, and the VN test should be used for confirmation.

An interesting study that proves that, in theory, calves can be infected with and shed the H5N1 virus. In places where the virus is endemic and infected poultry share the pastures with cattle, this may be an overlooked reservoir of disease.

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Archeologists Find Silos and Administration Center from Ancient Egyptian City Tell Edfu

Administration Building
A University of Chicago expedition at Tell Edfu in southern Egypt has unearthed a large administration building and silos that provide fresh clues about the emergence of urban life.

The discovery provides new information about a little understood aspect of ancient Egypt—the development of cities in a culture that is largely famous for its monumental architecture.

The archaeological work at Tell Edfu was initiated with the permission of the Supreme Council of Antiquities, headed by Zahi Hawass, under the direction of Nadine Moeller, Assistant Professor at the Oriental Institute, University of Chicago. Work late last year revealed details of seven silos, the largest grain bins found in ancient Egypt as well as an older columned hall that was an administration center.

Long fascinated with temples and monuments such as pyramids, scholars have traditionally spent little time exploring the residential communities of ancient Egypt. Due to intense farming and heavy settlement over the years, much of the record of urban civilization has been lost. So little archaeological evidence remains that some scholars believe Egypt did not have a highly developed urban culture, giving Mesopotamia the distinction of teaching people how to live in cities.

“The traditional view of ancient Egypt has been biased by the fact that most excavation work so far has focused on temples and tombs. The mounds which comprise the remains of Egyptian cities were either ignored, buried under modern towns, or else destroyed by modern agricultural activities. Edfu is one of the very few remaining city mounds that are accessible for scientific study,” said Gil Stein, Director of the Oriental Institute.

“The work at Edfu is important and innovative in that it finally allows us to examine ancient Egypt as an urban society, whose cities and towns housed bureaucrats, craft specialists, priests, and farmers. Nadine Moeller’s discovery of silos and local administrative buildings shows us how these cities actually functioned as places where the agricultural wealth of the Nile valley was mobilized for the state. Grain as currency provided the sinews of power for the pharoahs,” he added.

“Ancient Egyptian administration is mainly known from texts, but the full understanding of the institutions involved and their role within towns and cities has been so far difficult to grasp because of the lack of archaeological evidence with which textual data needs to be combined,” Moeller said.

At Tell Edfu, archaeologists have uncovered what amounts to a downtown area. The community, halfway between the modern cities of Aswan and Luxor, was a provincial capital an important regional center. Tell Edfu is also rare, in that almost 3,000 years of Egyptian history are preserved in the stratigraphy of a single mound.

The administrative building and silos were at the heart of the ancient community. Because grain was a form of currency, the silos functioned as a bank and a food source. The silos’ size indicates the community was apparently a prosperous urban center.

The grain bins are in a large silo courtyard of the 17th Dynasty (1630-1520 B.C.) and consist of at least seven round, mud-brick silos. With a diameter between 5.5 and 6.5 meters, they are the largest examples discovered within a town center.

The team unearthed an earlier building phase for the hall that predated the silos. In that phase, a mud-brick building with 16 wooden columns stood at the site. The pottery and seal impressions found in the hall date it to the early 13th Dynasty (1773-1650 B.C.). The building layout indicates that it may have been part of the governor’s palace, which was typical of provincial towns.

There is no exact parallel for such a columned hall being part of the administrative buildings. Scribes did accounting, opened and sealed containers, and received letters in the column hall. The ostraca, or inscribed pottery shards, list commodities written on them.

The administrative center was used when Egypt’s political unity was lost and a small kingdom developed at Thebes (modern Luxor) and controlled most of Upper Egypt.

“During this period, we can see an increase in connections between the provincial elite, such as the family of the governor, to the royal family at Thebes, who were keen on strengthening bonds through marriage, or by awarding important offices to these people,” Moeller said.

“It is exactly at this period when Edfu seems to have been very prosperous, which can now be confirmed further by archaeological discoveries such as this silo-court, a symbol for the wealth of the town,” she said.

Source: University of Chicago

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Governor Crist Signs The Criminal Gang Prevention Act

Gov. Charlie Crist came to Palm Beach County on Monday to sign a law that he and other political leaders hope “will drive a stake into the heart of gangs in Florida.”

The Criminal Gang Prevention Act provides for possible life imprisonment for street gang leaders and for gang members convicted of a felony and later found in possession of firearms.

It strengthens witness protection measures in gang-related prosecutions, and makes it harder for gang members to be released on bail by emphasizing that money used for bail not be profits derived from criminal behavior.

It also makes it a crime to use any electronic communication, including the Internet, to promote gangs or to threaten others in connection with gang-related activities.

”We will not give up one street corner to gangs,” said state Sen. Jeff Atwater, R-North Palm Beach, a sponsor of the law. “We will not give up on the youth of this community.”

Many of the law’s provisions are based on recommendations from an 18-member state grand jury that has been meeting in Palm Beach County since last summer.

The summoning of that grand jury followed an outbreak of gang violence around the state in the previous two years. Palm Beach County, in particular, saw an increase in gang-related shootings and homicides.

Statewide prosecutor William Shepherd, speaking at the signing Monday, said the grand jury had been convened in Palm Beach County, “because many of the problem solvers were right here.”

But so were many of the problems.

Palm Beach Sheriff’s Lt. Mike Wallace, head of the county’s Violent Crimes Task Force, estimated Monday that gang-related homicides ”were down about 40 or 50 percent” in the first quarter of this year compared with last year. He credited increased law enforcement presence.

Friday, authorities announced the arrest of 11 members of the Top 6, a largely Haitian-American gang based in Lake Worth and Boynton Beach.

The gang had been connected to some 150 shooting and 14 homicides in recent years.

All 11 gang members were held in lieu of $1 million bail on racketeering charges, which carry a potential 30-year sentence.

In December, 10 alleged members of the national Sur 13 gang were also arrested and charged with racketeering. Prosecutors have used criminal statutes that had traditionally been employed against organized crime mobsters, such as the Mafia, to go after the gang members.

Source: MiamiHerald.com

I’m of mixed emotions about this. Yes, we have a huge criminal gang problem, and it needs to be addressed. However, once government enacts broadened law enforcement powers, there tends to be mission creep into other facets of law enforcement.

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State of Florida Executed Mark Schwab at 6 p.m. Today

STARKE, FL — Gretl Plessinger with the Florida Department of Corrections is keeping the media up to date on how all the proceedings will go with the first inmate execution in 18 months.

She tells us Mark Schwab, convicted of kidnapping, raping and murdering 11 year old Junny Rios Martinez in Brevard County in 1991, is set to be executed by lethal injection at 6 p.m.

Plessinger says Schwab requested for his last meal of 2 fried eggs, 4 strips of bacon, 2 sausage links, hash browns, buttered toast, and a quart of chocolate milk.

She says he’s been calm and compliant today, and will visit with his mother and aunt until Noon.

He has also requested to meet with his religious advisor later this afternoon.

She says Schwab will be offered a final shower, and about a half hour before the execution, will be removed from his cell and placed on the gurney.

This execution will be different than the last one in Florida, with all 37 recommendations from the governor’s commission put in place.

Changes include additional lighting and a consciousness check. The solution in the injection, however, remains the same.

Plessinger says about a dozen reporters will be present for the execution, as well as the victim’s family, which hasn’t arrived at the prison yet.

Plessinger says she’ll be back to give us updates throughout the day.

No word yet on whether Schwab’s attorney will attempt another appeal.

Source: First Coast News

For updates, check the link above as 6 p.m. approaches.

Update: Mark Schwab has been executed.

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Risk and Return Analysis of Highbush Blueberries in Georgia

Southern highbush blueberries (Vaccinium corymbosum x V. darrowii hybrids) are a rapidly emerging crop with a bright future in Georgia; however, blueberries, like other fruit crops, are subject to price and yield fluctuation. These volatilities depend on several factors, including the cultivar produced and sold (i.e., fresh or frozen), locality, aggregate productivity, targeted market, and timing. As a result, profit margin is hard to determine. The objective of this study was to estimate total costs of cultivating southern highbush blueberries in soil under Georgia conditions and determine profitability, if any. Although there are several methods of profit determination, the risk-rated method was adopted for this study.

The first-year establishment and maintenance cost of growing southern highbush blueberry in soil in Georgia using high organic matter (greater than 3%) spodic-type or allied sand soil series with supplemental pine bark incorporated was estimated at $9585.55/acre.

The second-year establishment and maintenance cost of growing, harvesting, and marketing was $3691.99/acre less return from receipts of $2375.00/acre equal to $1316.99/acre.

The third-year establishment and maintenance cost was $7068.20/acre. The total returns for the same year were $9500.00/acre. Subtracting the cost of $7068.20 from $9500.00 gives a net return of $2431.80/acre.

The fourth-year cost, which was considered to be the first year of actual full production, was estimated at $13,547.35/acre. The compounded and recaptured establishment annual costs were $2176.43/acre.

The risk-rated expected returns over total costs 66% of the time were $5452.65/acre. The chances of making profit were 92% and the base-budgeted net revenue was $6456.00/acre. Total budgeted cost was $3.38/lb. The estimated annual total fixed machinery cost was $290.41/acre. Total annual cost of solid set irrigation was $657.81/acre.

Source: American Society of Horticultural Science

Blueberries, as I have cause to know, are a rather challenging crop especially (sigh) to people that have livestock that just loooove to munch on yummy blueberries and the leaves, branches, bark…in other words, I’ve have bushes eaten completely to the ground and destroyed.

I would urge people that do NOT have sheep curled up snoozing on their front porch after a successful early-morning raid on the flowerbeds, or chickens and ducks pooping purple all over the sidewalk, to add a few blueberry bushes to the landscape even if you do not wish to have a commercial crop. Three or four (adult) blueberry bushes can produce an astonishing amount of berries that are easily picked, washed and frozen to be eaten throughout the year.

Caution: Keep away from children. Those purple stains on the side of a white house after a blueberry fight can be difficult to remove, although having the miscreants scrubbing and then painting can insure that next year more blueberries go into the freezer.

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Georgia Parched

From Southern Farmer:

While summer rains started picking up in much of the Southeast during June, most of Georgia continues to be dry – and getting drier, according to University of Georgia climatologist David Stooksbury.

“With June temperatures routinely hitting the 90s and little rain so far this summer, drought conditions have worsened across Georgia,” Stooksbury says. “Conditions in the western half of south and middle Georgia have deteriorated the most. A few weeks ago, these regions were classified as abnormally dry. They are now in severe drought.”

North Georgia already was in severe drought.

About the only thing that will alleviate Georgia’s drought at the point is going to be a tropical depression that stalls over most of the state.

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