As we get more weekend rain, I can post a few more story links I've come across. We've got all our corn planted, along with one field of beans, so planting is proceeding well. Here you go:
American Pharoah Is America's Next Bachelor - Cincinnati Magazine. More like gigolo.
Inside the World of Professional Rock Paper Scissors - Priceonomics. Rock can't lose, isn't that correct, Matt Hoying?
Canadian Restaurant Sources Humane Beef From United States, Infuriates Canadians - Modern Farmer
Yogurt Buyers Send Dannon Back To The Farm - New York Times
The U.S. is Sitting on a Mountain of Cheese - AgWeb
Germany's Beer Purity Law Is 500-Years-Old. Is It Past Its Sell-By Date? - The Salt
A Mine vs. A Million Monarchs - New York Times
The Faithful - The California Sunday Magazine
How Information Graphics Reveal Your Brain's Blind Spots - ProPublica
Why Scientists Are Banking on Drones for Tracking Coastal Climate Research - Pacific Standard
The Kentucky gun owner who developed his own count of gun violence in the US - The Guardian
A Leak Wounded This Company. Fighting the Feds Finished It Off - Bloomberg
The Braves Play Taxpayers Better Than They Play Baseball - Bloomberg. What a scam.
Saturday, April 30, 2016
Sunday, April 24, 2016
A Fighting Chance
A Fighting Chance from A Fighting Chance on Vimeo.
NASA Photo of the Day
April 17:
Asperatus Clouds Over New Zealand
Image Credit & Copyright: Witta Priester
Explanation:
What kind of clouds are these?
Although their cause is presently unknown, such unusual atmospheric structures,
as menacing as they might seem, do not appear to be harbingers of
meteorological doom.
Known informally as
Undulatus asperatus clouds,
they can be stunning in appearance, unusual in occurrence, are relatively unstudied,
and have even been suggested as a new
type of cloud.
Whereas most low cloud decks are
flat bottomed,
asperatus clouds appear to have significant vertical structure underneath.
Speculation therefore holds that
asperatus clouds might be related to
lenticular clouds that form near mountains,
or mammatus clouds associated with thunderstorms,
or perhaps a foehn wind --
a type of dry downward wind that flows off mountains.
Such a wind
called the
Canterbury arch
streams toward the east coast of New Zealand's
South Island.
The featured image,
taken above
Hanmer Springs in
Canterbury,
New Zealand, in 2005,
shows great detail partly because sunlight illuminates the undulating clouds from the side.
Image Credit & Copyright: Witta Priester
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