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GO NZ: The best of the Wairarapa, from Martinborough to Greytown to Featherston


GO NZ: The best of the Wairarapa, from Martinborough to Greytown to Featherston
10 Mar, 2021 02:26 AM
8 minutes to read
Ascending the 253 steps to Cape Palliser lighthouse s observation deck offers views out across the Cook Strait. Photo / Belinda Craigie
Ascending the 253 steps to Cape Palliser lighthouse s observation deck offers views out across the Cook Strait. Photo / Belinda Craigie
NZ Herald
By: Belinda Craigie
Belinda Craigie
Are you ready? , my friend and walking companion asks as we approach the section of the Patuna Chasm walk that calls for stepping into the cool waters of the Ruakokoputuna River. We wade in, gulping at the considerable change in temperature. But the cold and soggy shoes are soon forgotten as we walk upstream toward a waterfall and take in the scenery. ....

North Island , New Zealand General , New Zealand , Cape Palliser , Ruakokoputuna River , South Island , United States , New Zealanders , John Richards , Haritina Mogosanu , Alison Tipler , Alan Wilkinson , Theo Wijnsma , Samuel Leske , Cook Strait , Belinda Craigie , Lake Ferry Hotel , Martinborough Hotel , Royal Hotel , Patuna Chasm , Patuna Farm , Remutaka Cycle Trail , Remutaka Mountain Range , Mata Rangi , Classic New Zealand Wine Trail , Peppers Parehua ,

Eagle feather allows options for swearing legal documents at RCMP detachment


The Drumheller RCMP detachment has taken a step forward with the receipt of an eagle feather. This will allow Indigenous members of the community to swear legal documents at the detachment in their tradition.
Staff Sergeant Ed Bourque says he was contacted by Cpl. Colleen Skyrpan with the Indigenous Policing Unit of K Divison. He says this is a broader effort towards reconciliation.
“The Alberta RCMP aims to foster respectful, trusting relationships with Indigenous Peoples, communities, and employees through fairness, honour, and in good faith as part of our Reconciliation efforts. The Eagle Feather Protocol is also a part of the RCMP’s commitment to create a more inclusive and relevant justice system for Indigenous people. The Alberta RCMP employees and clients, including victims and witnesses, now have the option to swear legal oaths on an eagle feather at some RCMP detachments in Alberta,” reads a statement from the RCMP. ....

Ken Cardinal , Colleen Skyrpan , Sergeant Bourque , Sergeant Ed Bourque , Indigenous Intervention Centre , Eagle Feather Initiative , Drumheller Institution , Salvation Army , Indigenous Policing Unit , Indigenous Peoples , Eagle Feather Protocol , Elder Ken Cardinal , Eagle Feather , Elder Cardinal , கேன் கார்டினல் , சார்ஜென்ட் பெரியூ , சார்ஜென்ட் எட் பெரியூ , உள்நாட்டு தலையீடு மையம் , கழுகு இறகு முயற்சி , டிரம்ஹெல்லர் நிறுவனம் , இரட்சிப்பு இராணுவம் , உள்நாட்டு போலீஸிஂக் அலகு , உள்நாட்டு மக்கள் , கழுகு இறகு ப்ரோடொகால் , மூத்தவர் கேன் கார்டினல் , கழுகு இறகு ,

Dino 'Parasites' Trapped in Amber Not What They Appear to Be


Image: Taiping Gao
Scientists are challenging the reported discovery of fossilized lice-like bugs crawling through dinosaur feathers, but the original researchers are standing by their interpretation. Y’all know what this means, right? Science fight!
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In this corner, we have a team led by Taiping Gao from Capital Normal University in China. Back in 2019, this group claimed to have discovered a previously unknown louse-like insect, dubbed
Mesophthirus engeli, found trapped in Burmese amber. A total of 10 specimens were found in two chunks of amber, all dating back some 100 million years ago to the mid-Cretaceous. Damaged dinosaur feathers were also detected within the amber fossils, prompting the scientists to declare it the oldest known example of dinosaur parasitism in the fossil record. Their resulting peer-reviewed paper was published in Nature Communications. ....

New York , United States , Chen Wang , American Museum Of Natural History , David Grimaldi , Taiping Gao , Nature Communications , Nature Communications Matters , Capital Normal University , University Of Illinois At Chicago , Isabelle Vea , American Museum , Natural History , Nature Communications Matters Arising , Scale Insect , Chung Kun Shih , Burmese Amber , Delusional Parasitosis , Mesophthirus Engeli , புதியது யார்க் , ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் , சென் வாங் , அமெரிக்கன் அருங்காட்சியகம் ஆஃப் இயற்கை வரலாறு , டேவிட் க்ரீமல்தி , இயற்கை தகவல்தொடர்புகள் , இயற்கை தகவல்தொடர்புகள் விஷயங்கள் ,

Shells and feathers as medium for Kerala artist


Shells and feathers as medium for Kerala artist
Updated:
Updated:
Sreeja Vijaykumar uses sea shells and feathers to express in her ongoing exhibition Kakkothy
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Kakkothy, the iconic character from the 1988 film
Kakkothikkavile Appooppan Thaadikal, was a free spirit who wore large beads around her neck and feathers in her hair. Inspired by the gypsy girl, self-taught artist Sreeja Vijaykumar s latest exhibition also called Kakkothy uses seashells and feathers as a medium of expression. “Everyone is attracted to the seashell,” says Sreeja, who explains that the offbeat has always been her way of expressing herself. “For many, it is just part of Zoology. Others collect it and place it in their showcase but not on their walls. For me it is a canvas.” ....

Himachal Pradesh , Kanya Kumari , Tamil Nadu , Chaliyar River , India General , Sreeja Vijaykumar , Kakkothikkavile Appooppan Thaadikal , Forest Department , Cheraman Juma Masjid , Limca Book , Kerala Artist , Sreeja Vijayakumar , Sea Shells , Artistic Expression , இமாச்சல் பிரதேஷ் , கன்யா குமாரி , தமிழ் நாடு , சாலியர் நதி , இந்தியா ஜநரல் , ஸ்ரீஜா விஜய்குமார் , காடு துறை , செராமன் ஜுமா மஸ்ஜித் , லிம்கா நூல் , கேரள கலைஞர் , ஸ்ரீஜா விஜயகுமார் , கடல் குண்டுகள் ,

PET TALK: Hen Molting: What to egg-spect


While the average pet owner may be familiar with the seemingly never-ending tufts of fur shed by their cat or dog, the hobby farmer may be more familiar with another loss of overcoat — hen molting.
Molting is the annual process through which hens cease to lay eggs and, instead, divert their energy toward replacing their feathers. Molting occurs in both backyard and commercial flocks, though commercial flocks generally molt by artificial stimulation.
“Hens molt to replace their feathers for the winter months coming,” said Dr. Ashley Navarrette, a clinical assistant professor at the Texas A&M College of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences. “Discontinuing egg production at this time allows them to focus all nutrients on feather regrowth.” ....

Ashley Navarrette , Veterinary Medicine , ஆஷ்லே நவர்றேட்டே , கால்நடை மருந்து ,