Repost ffrom 8/27/2016:
"Supreme Awareness (Chiti, Brahmin, Self, Supreme Auspiciousness) is most often explained using the metaphor of 'light.' Light, and by comparison 'consciousness,' is illuminating, brilliant, bright, shining, luminous, allows us to see, provides visions, can be enlightened, shows the Way. Understanding is a function of seeing, looking, and insight. Light is associated with life, growth, energy, and warmth. Consciousness can be clear, focused, split up, diffused, shadowy, opaque, and magnified. Numerous religions have considered the sun to be a divine being, or their gods and goddesses to give off light, energy, warmth, and to light the way for us. Evil beings keep us in darkness, steal the light away, burn us up or freeze us, or are the Prince of Darkness."
- Mike Garofalo
Sunshine Power. Compiled by Mike Garofalo.
"Sunlight bestows a whopping 12.2 trillion watt-hours per square mile per year. The solar energy hitting the earth per year exceeds the total energy in all forms consumed by humanity per year by a factor of over 20,000 times."
- How Much Solar Energy Hits the Earth? From EcoWorld: Nature and Technology in Harmony.
"At first a small line of inconceivable splendor emerged on the horizon, which, quickly expanding, the sun appeared in all of his glory, unveiling the whole face of nature, vivifying every color of the landscape, and sprinkling the dewy earth with glittering light."
- Ann Reacliffe
The Ancient Four Elements Fire (Sun), Earth (Soil), Air, Water
Showing posts with label Electrical Power. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Electrical Power. Show all posts
Sunday, May 24, 2026
Tuesday, December 07, 2021
Bundling Up in December
The December weather patterns are now upon us in Vancouver, Washington. The mid-morning temperature today in Vancouver is 40F, with light intermittent rain.
It was also cold and raining in December to February in Red Bluff, California.
December Quotes, Poems, Sayings, Lore, Gardening Chores
We tried to reduce electrical and propane bills in Red Bluff, and electrical bills in Vancouver, by keeping the indoor temperature low. We don't heat much at night.
We dress accordingly to stay comfortable indoors. Layered clothing, hat, scarf, and sometimes gloves are often used indoors.
When reading, I bundle up with blankets or afghans.
Here I am in 2012, in my study, bundled up in December.
Labels:
Autumn,
Conservation,
December,
Electrical Power,
Heat,
Red Bluff CA,
Vancouver - Garden,
Winter
Saturday, June 17, 2017
Nuclear Disaster
I am interested in solar power.
I just finished reading:
Fukushima: The Story of a Nuclear Disaster. By David Lochbaum, Edwin Lyman, Susan Q. Stranahan, and the Union of Concerned Scientists. New York, the New Press, copyright 2014 by the Union of Concerned Scientists. Notes and references, index, 309 pages. ISBN: 9781595589088.
"On March 11, 2011, an earthquake large enough to shift the Earth's axis by several inches sent a massive tsunami speeding toward the Japanese coast and the aging and vulnerable Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power reactors. The world watched in horror as the reactor's safety systems failed and explosions turned concrete and steel buildings into rubble. In just a few hours a terrible natural disaster triggered a technological catastrophe - a triple meltdown that became the worst nuclear crisis since Chernobyl."
This book rigorously documents the tragic and unrecoverable losses from nuclear power plant failures due to flooding and electrical power disruption.
Over 20,000 people died from the tsunami. The earthquake was 9 level jolting for over 3 minutes.
This book also covers the 1979 Three Mile Island nuclear accident in Pennsylvania. It draws out insider information about the nuclear power industry, regulatory controls, safety, vulnerability, planning, consumer demand, geography, technology, governmental management and oversight, scientific concerns and experts.
Explosive!!!
I just finished reading:
Fukushima: The Story of a Nuclear Disaster. By David Lochbaum, Edwin Lyman, Susan Q. Stranahan, and the Union of Concerned Scientists. New York, the New Press, copyright 2014 by the Union of Concerned Scientists. Notes and references, index, 309 pages. ISBN: 9781595589088.
"On March 11, 2011, an earthquake large enough to shift the Earth's axis by several inches sent a massive tsunami speeding toward the Japanese coast and the aging and vulnerable Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power reactors. The world watched in horror as the reactor's safety systems failed and explosions turned concrete and steel buildings into rubble. In just a few hours a terrible natural disaster triggered a technological catastrophe - a triple meltdown that became the worst nuclear crisis since Chernobyl."
This book rigorously documents the tragic and unrecoverable losses from nuclear power plant failures due to flooding and electrical power disruption.
Over 20,000 people died from the tsunami. The earthquake was 9 level jolting for over 3 minutes.
This book also covers the 1979 Three Mile Island nuclear accident in Pennsylvania. It draws out insider information about the nuclear power industry, regulatory controls, safety, vulnerability, planning, consumer demand, geography, technology, governmental management and oversight, scientific concerns and experts.
Explosive!!!
Labels:
Disasters,
Electrical Power,
Nuclear Energy,
Solar Energy
Friday, August 26, 2016
Catching the Sun
The United States needs to intensify its implementation of solar energy electrical power production as have Germany and China. The near future is obvious!
I will begin studying renewable energy topics during in the next eight months.
Solar Energy - Wikipedia
Catching the Sun. Documentary film, 73 Minutes, 2015.
Filmmaker: Shalini Kantayya. Wikipedia article.
Labels:
Economics,
Electrical Power,
Energy,
Future,
Solar Energy,
United States
Sunday, May 20, 2012
Weekend Chores
Karen and I replaced the pump in our field well today. We had tried to fix the old pump setup twice before in the last three months but were unsuccessful.
The pump is a SHURflo, 9300 series, $700. The pump runs off 24 volt direct current, 120 watts, 4.0 maximum amps. It will pump water up from a depth of 250 feet at full power. We use a solar panel to provide the electricity for this pump.
Our well is 126 feet deep. The water level in the well is at 46 feet. I keep the pump at about 90 feet.
This pump, running on solar power, will deliver 1.4285 gallons per minute outflow. This steady flow of water will add about 1,027 gallons of water each 12 sunny hour day into our small ponds.
The water we pump up is used to fill our two ponds and for drip irrigation on trees and shrubs all around our property.
This pump, running on solar power, will deliver 1.4285 gallons per minute outflow. This steady flow of water will add about 1,027 gallons of water each 12 sunny hour day into our small ponds.
The water we pump up is used to fill our two ponds and for drip irrigation on trees and shrubs all around our property.
Check out some of my previous blog posts for some information about the history of this well.
We also worked on our front yard. Mowing the lawn. Pruning and weeding. Improving the rock borders. Setting some pavers in place. Setting in some new drip irrigation lines. The small yard looks very nice now.
We also worked on our front yard. Mowing the lawn. Pruning and weeding. Improving the rock borders. Setting some pavers in place. Setting in some new drip irrigation lines. The small yard looks very nice now.
Yesterday, I attend a workshop in Sacramento from 9-6 pm. It was the Group Exercise Instructor Certification course from the Aerobics and Fitness Association of America. The instructor, Jessica De'Haven, provided a very engaging and highly informative workshop, and was an impressive athlete. I got lots of exercise and I am a little tired and a bit sore today. The typical attendees at these workshops are nearly all young, slender and fit women. I'm a rarity at these events: 66 years old, a man, and a very BIG man. It was an enjoyable experience! Fitness instructors, like myself, have to keep various certifications current to stay employed in this industry. Hopefully, I passed the battery of written and practical tests at this workshop.
Karen works 30 hours a week as an instructional aide in an special education classroom run by the Tehama County Department of Education. I work 24 hours a week as a technology and media services supervisor and grants coordinator for the Corning Union Elementary School District. We have both worked at these jobs for the last 13 years. Consequently, like most folks, weekends keep us quite busy with chores.
"Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work."
- Thomas A. Edison
- Thomas A. Edison
"Man was not made to rust out in idleness. A degree of exercise is as necessary for the preservation of health, both of body and mind, as his daily food. And what exercise is more fitting, or more appropriate of one who is in the decline of life, than that of superintending a well-ordered garden? What more enlivens the sinking mind? What is more conducive to a long life?"
- Joseph Breck
- Joseph Breck
"I find that the harder I work, the more luck I seem to have."
- Thomas Jefferson
- Thomas Jefferson
Labels:
Electrical Power,
Fitness,
Red Bluff CA,
Solar Energy,
Water,
Water Well
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