Monday, 28 January 2013

Shop Log: An Unexpected Visitor

Shop's Log.  Halifax NS.  January 28th, Monday, 13:22.  Weather: Bright & sunny, -4℃.

It was quiet and peaceful in the shop...as usual...when we heard some noise in the back room.  Nobody was supposed to be there.  A peek revealed nothing out of the ordinary.  And then, there it was again!  ...a sort of fluttering sound.  Before it got any creepier, we investigated more carefully.

Finally, we found our unexpected guest!


It must have squeezed its way through the vent in the furnace room.  That's my best guess.  Every time we tried to shoo it out, it went and hid behind our stockpile of boxes.



Finally, using our butterfly nets (Yes, we keep a couple handy just for this kind of situation...he! he!), we were able to make it understand that the back door was open. 


Good-bye little guest.  Sorry, we didn't mean to scare you.  And it's not that we didn't like you.  But it was probably best that you found your way back to your friends and family.

And that was the highlight of the day!

(Photo credits: Yours truly.  All rights reserved.)

Saturday, 12 January 2013

Shop Log: The Rockefellers Did It!

Shop's Log.  Halifax NS.  January 11th, Friday, 20:34.  Weather: Few clouds, -5℃.

It was getting late and I was about to close the shop when two men walked in.  Then, they started talking...and I engaged.  I always liked a good exchange of ideas.  Only one of them was doing most of the talking.  Here are some snippets...

Man: All your stuff come from Japan?
Me: Most but not all.
Man: You know, the Russians stopped buying Japanese cars because they're radioactive.
Me: Really?  I did not hear about that.



...and I tried to explain why I think there isn't a lot of danger of radioactive contamination in Japanese products. (See chart below.)  But, a brick wall might've been a better listener.  I should have just kept quiet then but I was curious about what they were thinking.

Man: We test the atmosphere around here whenever it rains for radioactivity.  The nuclear reactors in Japan are still spewing radioactive particles everyday.  They never covered them.
Me: You got Geiger counters?
Man: Yeah, we got Russian ones.  They're good.  Got them from eBay.
Me: And what are your findings?
Man: The air is contaminated to dangerous levels.  The stuff comes from Japan.  In Chernobyl, the Russians immediately covered the reactor with a sarcophagus.  150,000 people died from radiation poisoning doing that work.

Did I just open a can of worms?  I should have stopped there as the conversation was beginning to be iffy...but I decided to probe a bit more.

Me: What exactly are "dangerous levels"?  What unit of measure do you use?  micro sievert per hour?
Man: They're dangerous levels and we are breathing them in!
Me: Do you know what type of radioactive particle is contaminating our air here?
Man: There's thousands of them.
Me: But their half-lives are different, no?
Man: They will all last long after you are gone.
Me: Not Iodine-131.  

(I-131 has a half-life of 8 days...and was what mostly got sprayed in the air when one of the nuclear reactor container buildings in Fukushima blew its top....and caused panic buying of potassium iodide in the U.S.)
 http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,2059408,00.html 

I thought maybe they were measuring radon gas...which is a real problem...but I stopped myself.  I was already trying to apply brakes to this conversation. (More on radon gas here: http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/hl-vs/iyh-vsv/environ/radon-eng.php )

Man: You know, they intentionally caused the explosions. [in the nuclear reactors]
Me: Who's they?
Man: The Rockefellers.
Me: (???)
Man: Japan is their slave.  The Rockefellers made the tsunami happen too.
Me: (speechless)
Man: Do you pay taxes?
Me: Yes, of course.
Man: Then you're their slave too.

By this time, I stopped engaging and started simply to agree with their "theory"...just to get them off my back.  Things started to get not-so-nice... They wanted to come back with their Geiger counters and test everything in the shop.  Partly my fault because I had earlier joked (when things were still light-hearted) that maybe we could test some of our stuff just to show that nothing is radioactive.  

Me: I changed my mind, don't come with your Geiger counters.
Man: (hotly) You are afraid of what we will find.  You are covering it up.
Me: No, I am concerned about your health.  I don't want you to come back because this place is contaminated.
Man: It's for all our future, man.  We must find out the truth.

At this point, I was no longer behind the counter but standing next to him, almost toe-to-toe, staring him in the eyes....and inching both of them towards the door.  Not really sure how this'd pan out now.

Me: No, I said I've changed my mind. Don't. Come. Back. Here.
Man: You're just scared.
Me: Yes, you're right. I'm scared of what you might find.

I may have a little Jedi in me as my force of will pushed them further towards the door.  Finally they left without incident.  It was bizarre to say the least.  It's funny now...but at that time, I wasn't sure how the night would end.  I was just thankful it wasn't my wife who had been there...but then again, she probably wouldn't have goaded them into a conversation! 


OK, if you are not too bored yet...  Here are some a-little-bit-more scientific figures.

In Halifax, the typical dose that people receive from natural background radiation is 2.5 milli sievert per year.  Apart from that, we get doses from artificial sources like medical procedures.



"In all, natural radiation accounts for approximately 60% of our annual dose. Medical procedures account for roughly 40% of our annual radiation.  There is no difference between the effects caused by natural or man-made radiation."

In Tsukuba (a city about 250 km from Fukushima), the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology has been measuring daily and hourly radiation doses since March, 2011.  Here is the results chart:


The unit is in micro sievert per hour.  (Note: 1000 micro sievert = 1 milli sievert)
The daily doses seem to have stabilized at roughly 0.1 micro sievert or less per hour.

Now, let's do the math...assuming one never went indoors for one whole year.   
0.1 micro sievert per hr x 24hrs x 365days = 876 micro sievert per year ...or 0.876 milli sievert per year.  Only.

Now, I need to interview the Rockefellers and find out what they've really been up to.


Sunday, 6 January 2013

On A Cold, Snowy Day

I could see that a prowler had been afoot.  She wore size 11 shoes...kiddy size, that is... and did not seem to be too heavy...and is about 7 years old.

This prowler went on to our deck and proceeded to build what I thought were mole hills but later turned out to be mini igloos.

I learned later on she had had help from big 13-year old sister.  The igloo looked quite nice at night. :-)

Meanwhile, back in the bat cave...er, I mean the dining table, somebody else, a certain 11-year old boy, had been hard at work creating... Bat Cat!

I asked him why the logo on the chest was a fish.  Reply: "I didn't want to get in trouble with copyright laws."  Smart beyond his years, this boy.

How does your family spend cold, snowy days?

Tuesday, 1 January 2013

Happy New Year 2013

A new year.  A new home...for this blog.  I have been orphaned by Apple when they shut down MobileMe.  Now, in anticipation of being orphaned by Twitter as they plan their shutdown of Posterous, I move to Blogger.  O Google, I hope you don't shut this down!

Hat tip to +Rich Levin  for the heads up.
OK, maybe Posterous was really just providing a back-up tool...as innocent as that...but I do feel that the writing is on the wall and the article confirms it.

New Year's Eve was spent with the family together...always a happy time for me.  We were all at the shop checking our year-end inventory.  Then dinner at a nearby Greek restaurant.  That's my shrimp and lamb souvlaki. :-)


New Year's Day had been a relaxed stay-at-home day until my son and I decided to go see The Hobbit.  Long movie but enjoyable enough.

Best quote: 
"Saruman believes it is only great power that can hold evil in check, but that is not what I have found. I found it is the small everyday deeds of ordinary folk that keep the darkness at bay... small acts of kindness and love.  Why Bilbo Baggins? That's because I am afraid and it gives me courage."  ~Gandalf

And here was the Halifax sky on the first day of 2013.

Happy New Year!


P.S.  All blog posts before this one were imported from the old Posterous one.