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To: Raymond Duray who wrote (60951)3/13/2005 3:43:49 AM
From: elmatador  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 74559
 
Money and technology make a big difference in accuracy.

Those two resources, devoted to cimatic research, have been plenty in the last ten years. In the past were next to nothing. The records, in the past, are vastly inaccurate as compared to today exactly due to the innacuracies of previous mesurementes done with dirty cheap low tech methods, made under very different circumstances.

Today we have a remote sensing and good telecoms to relay data and technology -any technology- is dirty cheap. Compare the expeditons taking sea water with a bucket and measuring with a rudimentary thermomether.

We need another 90 years of mesurements, made with the high tech methods we have and them we have a look at it again in 2105



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (60951)3/13/2005 4:09:41 AM
From: elmatador  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 74559
 
Dream wood grows in Brazil <ready for harvest in 14 to 16 years in the warm Brazilian climate, a far faster pace than comparable species, which can take 50 to 70 years in colder climes.>

Associated Press

Last update: March 13, 2005

For years, foresters have sought a fast growing, environmentally responsible hardwood with the dual tangibles of good looks for the home and sustainable growth.

They seem to have found the answer in Brazil.

The hardwood the industry is so soft on is a plantation-raised eucalyptus hybrid reported to be harder than oak, maple, cherry and mahogany. It grows to maturity in roughly one-third the time of comparable woods and after harvest continues to regenerate itself from the stumps and roots of the previous generation of trees.

According to U.S. forest products company Weyerhaeuser, lyptus, as this hybrid is called, fills multiple roles for homeowners.

"Everyone gets excited when they first see it," said Pete Gargano of Weyerhaeuser. He likens lyptus' natural color to cherry but with wood grain similar to mahogany. The wood can be stained for a lighter or darker appearance. "It fills a lot of homeowner needs throughout the house plus it's renewable. "There's a lot of pluses to this wood," Gargano said.

Not the least of which is wood

It grows and re-grows on the same plot of land. The trees are ready for harvest in 14 to 16 years in the warm Brazilian climate, a far faster pace than comparable species, which can take 50 to 70 years in colder climes.

The plantations are not standing row after standing row of hybrid eucalyptus either. The timber is grown alongside indigenous Brazilian woods that are not cut down. Fully one-third of plantation land remains native plants. This forest management practice maintains a natural balance to local ecosystems, says Ian Firth of Weyerhaeuser building materials.

Company officials add that minimal disturbance of land for eucalyptus cultivation as a major plus to this hybrid.

Lyptus only recently appeared on a national scale, and already has drawn converts. Mike Garner of Lafferty Lumber in Lemoyne, Pa., sold two floors within days of lyptus hitting his local market. "Everyone who sees the floor asks right away 'What is this?' " Garner said. He sees consumers as ready for a tough new hardwood alternative in the home flooring marketplace.

Up to 32 million board feet of the lumber are slated for harvest each year. Brazilian mills process the timber before it is shipped to the United States for final fabrication.



To: Raymond Duray who wrote (60951)3/13/2005 5:52:51 PM
From: elmatador  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 74559
 
Finally rains falling now. heat wave woke bug up. Daughter in hospital for rehydration. The heat wave keeping steady higher temperatures have spread a bug ad have caused quite a few kids to fall sick. At least that's my theory.

35% of the summer harvest is gone in most of the south. Cooled down to +21C.

It is nice to hear the rain pouring with a glass of Shiraz.