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The Corroboree

s4L

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Everything posted by s4L

  1. s4L

    australia the proxy state ?

    "U.S Forces give the nod It's a setback for your country" I remember listening to a podcast of this talk last year. Transcript of the fourth annual Michael Hintze Lecture in International Security Delivered by Professor John Mearsheimer Interesting to see what he talked about start to develop.
  2. s4L

    Urgent help

    This link was posted in a recent thread. It has many answers. http://auscactiforum.bigforumpro.com/t197-orange-rot-rust-beginning-on-the-skin-warning-some-viewers-may-find-distressing
  3. s4L

    Acacia ID

    Buckinghamia celsissima, a rainforest plant from north Queensland.
  4. There was a story on the front cover of mX today 'Wattle be next'. It basically explained the proposed changes saying that it would be illegal to wear a sprig of wattle on Australia day, and how ridiculous the laws would be etc. This would have raised the awareness quite a bit.
  5. s4L

    Acidifying cactus soil?

    The best way to go would be iron sulphate because it dissolves easily a watering can and then goes through the soil, takes a couple of days to see an effect. About $9 at cunnings hardware. Sulfur on the other hand needs to be dug in and takes about 3 months depending on temperature and how much life is in the soil.
  6. Once again the government pisses all over the urinal cake that is our freedom.
  7. s4L

    The Great Global Cooling/Warming Thread

    Hutch, Its a bit worrying that you cant see that all the links and information you posted from the climate realists website are total nonsense. They have no basis in reality. Your not actually supposed to take substance D.
  8. s4L

    RBT

    In NSW they have automatic number plate recognition cameras mounted on patrol cars that automates that process now. The arm of the law just grew a bit longer. ANPR
  9. s4L

    The Great Global Cooling/Warming Thread

    I believe one of the tools scientists use is isotope ratios to research ancient climates. I was reading yesterday about how this technique came about. A paper called "Pleistocene Temperatures" was published in the Journal of Geology in 1955 written by Cesare Emiliani at the University of Chicago. He had pioneered the modern use of sediment cores by crushing up the shells of a once living, group of singled celled marine animals called a foraminiferas. "...Washed them in distilled water, pulverised them in a mortar and baked them at 482 degrees C in a stream of helium gas. From that perfectly clean powder of calcium carbonate, Emiliani extracted the oxygen the forams themselves had built into their shells thousands of years ago when they were alive. With a mass spectrometer he counted how many of those oxygen atoms were the light isotope, oxygen 16 which makes up more than 99 percent of all the oxygen on Earth, and how many were the heavier and much rarer isotope, oxygen 18. Normally the heavy oxygen prefers to be in calcium carbonate over water, because that reduces the overall vibrational energy of the molecular system. But as the temperature of the seawater goes up, that slight preference goes down, and with it the ratio of oxygen 18 to oxygen 16 in the foram shells. That ratio was the thermometer Emiliani used to take the temperature of the Pleistocene..." Thats an except from a book called, Fixing Climate, The story of climate science - and how to stop global warming by Robert Kunzig and Wallace Broecker. It's a pretty interesting book which might answer some of your questions.
  10. Try adding a handful of sandy potting mix or soil every so often, since worms can't chew they need grit to eat their food. After I learned this my worm farm doubled in speed and got rid of my fruit fly problem.
  11. s4L

    doing my head in..cant remember name of song

    No wuckas, i listen to the jays everyday
  12. s4L

    doing my head in..cant remember name of song

    Was it Chiddy bang doing the naked and famous's young blood? Edit heres the vid JJJ
  13. s4L

    Cheap filter patch bags

    Put me down for 200 bags in total, i don't mind whether its sea or air. Then posted on. Cheers worowa
  14. s4L

    Bridgesii Help

    I'd say too little water probably, because they look like unglazed terracotta pots that dry out pretty fast. And because of the warmer weather in the past month they've started to put on new growth, which you can see at the top where the glaucous sheen stops and the bright green growth is. I'd move them gradually into more sun and only water after the soil has dried out, maybe remove a small area of the pebbles on the pot to monitor the moisture.
  15. s4L

    where to blue bamboo

    I was looking for a blue bamboo awhile ago too, and these two sites looked ok. Never got around to buying anything though as they are pricey plants http://www.byronbamboo.com.au/ and http://www.bamboo-oz.com.au/index.html
  16. Here's a story on a newly found species in Gove NT. Pics in this link Solitary survivor gives hope to threatened plant species Research scientists at Sydney's Royal Botanic Gardens have been able to show there's hope for the survival of rare plants despite climate change. Botanic Gardens Trust Executive Director Dr Tim Entwisle said in our modern botanic garden we not only collect and protect species but we want to understand how they interact with the environment and what 'makes them tick'. "We can now extract DNA from plants cells to test the health and viability of the population," Dr Entwisle said. Botanic Gardens Trust Principal Research Scientist, Dr Maurizio Rossetto said a year-long study of a rare plant in the Northern Territory, a new species of Erythroxylum, has shown plants can adapt and survive despite having been restricted to very small populations by long-term climatic change. "DNA investigations on the history of this small shrub first of all told us that it once was widely distributed across what is now the Gulf of Carpentaria. When the sea levels rose around 7000BP the NT and Cape York were separated. While the species remained locally common in Cape York, in the NT it only survived as a single genetically isolated individual," Dr Rossetto said. The study shows that although the single plant that survived in the NT could not produce viable seeds, it persisted and expanded through time by resprouting from underground shoots and by generating mutations. Although theory predicts that a single individual can survive in isolation by accumulating genetic mutations, this study provides unique empirical evidence. "From this study we've been able to show that some plants have a range of characteristics that enable them to persist even through extreme environmental change. However, this natural resilience does not make them less vulnerable to direct and indirect human activities, such as clearing or the pressure from introduced harmful species," Dr Rossetto said. Head Ecologist, specialising in Flora for MET Serve, Chris Spain was also a key player in the research of this plant. "When a plant has a genotype with some flexibility our study shows it might allow them to adapt to a changing environment. So if our climate becomes a few degrees hotter , this sort of adaptation can potentially take place in large areas of undisturbed vegetation," Mr Spain said. "We just need to be aware that these processes are most likely to take place within unfragmented landscapes which allow an increased ability for plants to spread over large areas." Please note: Botanic Gardens Trust's Marlien van der Merwe a specialist in genetics was lead author in the study and is now on maternity leave. The yet to be described Erythroxylum species is a small subshrub, that barely reaches a height of 30 cm and has inconspicuous white flowers and bright red fruit that can only be produced in the presence of two genetically distinct individuals.
  17. s4L

    Importing cultures

    Here is a link to AQIS's import conditons for spawn or cultures. AQIS I thought about importing some but take note of the fees at the bottom of the page. $40 per item, plus $85 for electronic lodgement fee.
  18. s4L

    Took 25g Calea

    I usually brew a tea with a couple of table spoons of calea and smoke a couple of calea rollies untill you can hear what sounds like your heartbeat, then theres a short window in which to catch the calea wave. Sleep is shallow and broken up by hypnopompic and Hypnagogia states with many vivid detailed dreams. Wake up feeling very tired. Didn't get and deep sleep, just felt like REM. Sometimes it wont work at all, seems a bit hit and miss. Also cannabis inhibits or makes you unable to remember dreams usually.
  19. s4L

    sydney hit from the field

    I've seen them pop up at the end of May with that period of rain in Sydney's cbd.
  20. s4L

    Salvia, the right setup?

    Its better to make your mix uniform I wouldn't put sand at the bottom of the pot because all this will do is create a perched water table. Water won't move from a fine textured soil into a coarser material until the finer soil is saturated. So it does the opposite of whats intended.
  21. s4L

    Sub ID

    Hi there fellow mycology enthusiasts, These mushrooms were growing from woodchipped garden beds. I believe they are subs because they have all the features, mottled grey white hollow stipes that bruise blue, caramel brown caps with an umbo. But as I have never ID'd them before I want to be 200% sure. Any comment would be much appreciated.
  22. For your cacti I reckon you need to change your mix to something with more air. I use 100% washed river sand in a takeaway container, like this
  23. s4L

    Sub ID

    Thanks for the replies guys
  24. s4L

    Various fungi

    Went searching in the mountains the other day and came across these guys chillin in the leaf litter....didn't find any subs though
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