
Something for the Weekend


Ten Things this month takes a brief look at where the money goes.
Ten Things I’ve Bought in the Last Month:

Another meme, courtesy AJB on Facebook. It’s almost inevitably a variant on previous ones but is about the height of my abilities today.

Join in if the mood takes you.
Some while back I wrote about the Tavel Rosé, Richard Maby’s Prima Donna, I’d bought from the Wine Society. We continue to enjoy it. In fact it gets better as the supply has now moved on from the 2016, which is what I wrote about, to the 2017 vintage.
And yes, the 2017 is even better than the 2016. It is a little paler in colour, but if anything bursting with even more red berry fruits – especially raspberry.
Now the Wine Society have very recently got what was obviously a small parcel of Maby’s new Tavel, the 2016 Libiamo. I grabbed a case of six without hesitation.
At £17 a bottle Libiamo is significantly more expensive than the Prima Donna, at a mere £11. But if I thought the Prima Donna was good, Libiamo is just out of this world. It’s the same deep coloured rosé, with the same burst of red berry fruits. But oh! how the oak barrels in which it is aged come through: as a delightful ambiance of dry sherry. So much dry sherry that it almost feels like a fortified wine – which is brilliant. We were both stunned!
We’ve just drunk a bottle with a quite rich spaghetti with prawns in a sun-dried tomato pesto sauce. They went so well together; the richness of each complementing the other.
No wonder Libiamo is already sold out! I can only hope there will be further supplies!
There’s again a lot in this month’s round up of items you may have missed the first time. So here goes …
Science, Technology & Natural World
Maglev trains have been around for a surprisingly long time, so why aren’t they ubiquitous?
Inter-species hybrids were once looked on as just biological misfits, but science is now coming to appreciate their importance for evolution. [LONG READ]
Did you know that witches’ brooms grow on trees? You do now!
Tidal power is supposed to be able to provide a significant percentage of the world’s energy needs, but a close look suggests it won’t. [£££]
Health & Medicine
Here’s a little about how Moorfields Eye Hospital in London really has changed the world.
It’s only a matter of time before we get the next major pandemic. An American-centric look at our preparedness? [VERY LONG READ]
The medical profession prescribe a lot of opioid painkillers. But are they all they’re cracked up to be, and would we miss them if they weren’t there?
Restoring life using CPR is brutal and rarely works. So why do people have so much faith in it and demand resuscitation at all costs?
Against most specialists expectations there’s work going on to develop a single vaccination to prevent several common cancers. It’s about to start a major trial in dogs.
While we’re on cancer, the placenta may just give us insights into cancer treatment – it’s just one of nine ways the placenta is so amazing. [£££]
Scientific American recently asked “When Does Consciousness Arise in Human Babies?”
Did you know you have an “inverse piano” in your head? Well actually there are two and they’re in your ears.
Finally in this section, Fred Pearce in the Guardian, takes another look at the real fallout from the Fukushima Dai-ichi disaster.
Sexuality
Why was it ever in doubt that women can have multiple orgasms?
Environment
Here are two articles on the length of time it takes garbage to decompose. The first is fairly general; the second gives us the following graphic looking at plastic and other rubbish in the sea.

And while we’re on plastic, Annie Leonard in the Guardian says that the “plastic crisis” is too big to be solved by recycling alone.
The Woodland Trust are understandably – and quite rightly – angry at Network Rail’s apparent plans to clear trees from railway embankments.
Social Sciences, Business, Law
History tells us that all cultures have their sell-by date, so has the West’s time come and are we on the brink of collapse?
Oxford and Cambridge Colleges own a bigger portfolio of property than Church of England.
The rail industry are running a public consultation on rail fare structure prior to submitting proposals to the government. Do have your say.
History, Archaeology & Anthropology
Aethelflaed: A Saxon warrior queen who was out to vanquish the Vikings.
London
Layers of London is a super resource which allows you to overlay a number of old maps on the current street plan of London. One of the best is the Tudor layout of 1520. IanVisits takes a look.
Lifestyle & Personal Development
So just why are Dutch teenagers among the happiest in the world? And couldn’t we learn something from their approach?
Here’s Zen Master and writer Brad Warner contemplating the problem of spirituality, religion, the ego and intellectual honesty. It is readable, and well worth a read.
Meanwhile the Guardian (again!) reports that UK homes vulnerable to a staggering level of corporate surveillance from smart TVs, smartphones, laptops, security cameras etc.
Shock, Horror, Humour

And finally, just because it isn’t 1st April … a prep school in Derbyshire has lost its Bakewell pudding in space. So very careless!
More next month!
Amused this afternoon to come across this image on Google …

especially when the said Google juxtaposes it with …

So, yesterday the UK’s Supreme Court ruled that allowing only same-sex couples to have a civil partnership was discriminatory. See, for example, the BBC News report.
Well what a surprise! Surely this was so easily foreseeable by even the most intellectually challenged politician.
So on top of everything else they have to worry about, the government now have to do something – although they will naturally drag their heels as long as they can, and probably until someone takes then to court again because they’ve done nothing. They have a track record, after all.
But really, where is the problem? Isn’t the answer so very simple?
Just what were the politicians thinking of in making the current mess in the first place?
Gawdelpus!
David Banister, Emeritus Professor of Transport at University of Oxford, has landed another scathing assessment of the proposed Heathrow Runway Three:

And here’s another …
Follow your bliss and don’t be afraid, and doors will open where you didn’t know they were going to be.
[Joseph Campbell]
Another in my very occasional series of articles on depression – my depression. They are written from a very personal perspective; they are my views of how I see things working and what it feels like on the inside. Your views and experiences may be vastly different. My views and experiences are not necessarily backed by scientific evidence or current medical opinion. These articles are not medical advice or treatment pathways. If you think you have a problem then you should talk to your primary care physician.
Here’s a small selection of links to articles on depression which you may find useful and/or interesting.