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Friday, February 25, 2011

Talking bout My Garden OR My Pot only has Herbs

Why do I do it?

The more I putter around in the back garden the more I find myself getting into the whole idea of growing things and making it happen. Just the idea of self sufficiency is attractive.

Photos and comments on the story so far

Here are some pictures I took today of my recent garden developments and things that were going on there today.

Main garden plot

The main plot I have put together in an elevated bed made from old pool paving that I had retained after we disposed of our dilapidated above ground pool .

Before planting I have added horse and chicken manure for nutrients as well as some blood and bone. For the second planting I have moved things about so that plants do not get planted in exactly the same spot each time. This is supposed to help keep the soil fertile.

Mainly I am concentrating on shallow rooting salad vegetables - rocket, iceberg lettuce and cucumbers.

Water at the moment is not a problem as I have installed two new tanks to take all the water off our garage and these are right beside the garden bed and easy to fetch water from when its needed.

Also featuring in my garden in various pots that have been located in shady areas or from hanging baskets is a selection of herb plants and cherry tomato plants.

From left to right - Salad mixed,
More Basil, Rosemary, Sage and
Parsley
From top to Bottom - Basil & Chives,
 Chinese Cabbage,
 Mustard Seed and Cress 


As is plain to see Miss Lilly the cat licks to help in the garden.
Here she is chatting with Madam Iris the flower

Obviously Miss Lilly gets deeply involved in the workload of the garden and treasurers any shady spot she can find. The Iris are a beautiful flower and their deep purple buds short lasting though they are do give wonderful colour to my garden when they are out and blooming.

I will post more pictures as things grow and evolve.

Thursday, February 24, 2011

Tasteless reporting of Disasters by the Media

Disaster Porn - What is it?
Disaster porn a new noun is defined by the Urban Dictionary as … “When the media puts horrific or tragic images on a 24 hour loop, constantly driving them into your head, and then refers to the events portrayed as an ‘unspeakable tragedy’ - despite the fact that they have four different talking heads analyzing it 24 hours a day.”  

Often disaster porn is used to generate financial support.  For example, it was a term associated with 9/11, where every mention of the "terrorist outrage" was followed by an infomercial for NYPD t-shirts and American flag bumper stickers (source Urban Dictionary). 

Another example from 9/11 was commentator Giraldo Rivera  saying:
"This is just horrible. I can't even bear to look."  
This while he rewound the disaster porn tape of the World Trade Center collapsing for the many times that day.  A movie with lots of destruction, explosions and disasters may also qualify as disaster porn, for example: Independence Day, The Day After Tomorrow, or 2012.

Do we need it?
Recently in our own country and nearby there has been a veritable festival of disaster porn emanating from the 24/7 news reporting cycle. Have we not been shocked enough at the floods in Queensland, the mining disaster in New Zealand, Cyclone Yasi  again in Queensland, the Victorian flooding and now again in NZ with the earthquake in Christchurch? Do we really need the doyens of Australian media (NOT) – the ubiquitous weather presenters, the bald finance reports, the you may recall me from 10 year old sitcom presenters  - turning up at the site of peoples misery and pestering them even more to actually know what is going on or is it just some peoples quest for ratings and profits that makes its so? 

Here’s a letter from the Sydney Morning Herald that gets it right  . . .
I am not surprised to hear the stars of Channel Nine and Channel Seven have descended on Christchurch in search of disaster porn. Grant Denyer is no longer welcome on my TV screen after I caught him during cyclone Yasi lollygagging at the wreckage of a little house, turning someone's pride and joy into a mere prop in his Festival of Me. For pity's sake, turn these oafs off. Don't watch their channels and let the advertisers decide.  (Chris Stafford, Ryde)

If you have agreed with this then also read this from the blog called Thevine which ends with the following good suggestion:
One rule long-held by media producers is, “emotions stay with audiences long after facts are forgotten”. Or, “Noah is a better story than flood control”.

Forgive me for diving into the depths of cynicism but it is a rule pushed by advertisers. The moment the collective audience sees Mrs Jones breakdown on air and cry on the shoulder of a reporter who poked and prodded her sensibility is pure gold for the interests selling tissues when the scene cuts to an ad.

Ultimately though, it is audiences and readers who hold the power to stop unethical or tasteless reporting. Turn the TV or radio off, or don’t buy the paper, and see how quickly the question “why?” is asked. If it turns out that people were sick of the predictable, tasteless attempts at sincerity, then things would change.