Saturday, 24 April 2010

Astrological Signs

Daftar Hotel - Here’s a bold test to help decide when in spring to start a vegetable garden. Sit on the earth on your bare bottom. If it feels warm, it’s time to plant.

Hotel di Semarang That’s a bit of lore from master gardener Elizabeth Stewart. But if modesty prevails, you might want to study a frost chart instead.

It’s a Canadian tradition to wait until the Victoria Day long weekend in May to plant, when the possibility of frost is past. But a rule for central Saskatchewan may not apply to southern Ontario.

In Toronto, the average date for the last frost at Pearson Airport is May 4; at Bloor St. it’s even earlier, April 16. The date has been advancing since the 1990s.
The latest frost — a temperature at or below zero, but not necessarily a killing frost — reported at Bloor St. was on May 2, 1978. The latest frost recorded at Pearson was May 28, 1949.

There’s a he said/she said struggle this time of year in many households across Toronto about when to plant. More so in a surprisingly warm spring, one of the warmest that gardeners remember. Typically, he says, “Wait,” while she says, “The time has come.”

That’s the case with Teresa and Joe Gallippi of Manning St. “Joe says, ‘We plant on Victoria Day,’ ” Teresa says of her husband. She already has a neat row of green onion tops in her otherwise bare vegetable garden. In pots nearby are lemon trees brought from Calabria 25 years ago. She won’t plant beans, tomatoes or any other plants that grow above ground now — she doesn’t want to see her seedlings, raised in pots in a second-floor room, keel over after a chilly night. Mid-May is the earliest.

“He says, ‘Don’t plant (in early May) or you’ll have to do this all over again,’ ” says Teresa. “Last year we had the same argument.”

Pastry chef Melanie Harris, wearing flip-flops and searching for marigolds and globe thistle at Fiesta Gardens on Christie St., has had a similar dispute with her boyfriend. “He says, ‘Wait, it’s too early.’ I’m sensible, but impatient.”

And Diane Wood, a kitchen and bathroom designer, is engaged in a similar debate. “I’ve been having this argument, but with myself. Is it too early?

“It’s easy to get seduced — it’s hard not to do it now.”

Victoria Day, which falls on May 24 this year, is not the true benchmark, says Elizabeth Stewart, one of 110 Toronto master gardeners who are trained in horticulture and volunteer their time giving free advice to local gardeners. (They can be reached through www.torontomastergardeners.ca or by phone at 416-397-1345.)

“You can put cold weather vegetables in the ground now,” says Stewart, who has an exquisite backyard garden on Richmond St. W. Cool weather plants include peas, lettuce, kale, radishes and spinach. Hold off on vegetables associated with Mediterranean climates, including tomatoes, beans, peppers and eggplant, until the weather is warmer.

She points to her silvery lavender, which is beginning to green — six weeks early. “It’s a very good indication of what an unusual year it is.”

Experienced gardeners develop their own rules of thumb.

In Scarborough, Sarah Allen, a native of British Guiana (now Guyana), says she has never paid much attention to the Victoria Day maxim. Her garden is a showplace with a rose garden, topiary, jasmine, oleander in pots and a backyard vegetable patch. “I have everything in by May 24,” she says. “I find it too late.” This weekend she’ll plant mesclun, cilantro, celery and green onions. Peppers and eggplants growing in pots in the kitchen will be in the garden by the end of the month.

Mostly, Allen, who is 66, observes nature’s progress in deciding when to plant. “I watch robins and other birds when they start to collect little things to make their nests. I watch the tips of gingko trees start to get yellow. You really look at nature; if you follow it year after year, it can tell you exactly how to do it.”

Food writer Naomi Duguid won’t put tomatoes in her garden until May 10 or so. “It feels important to be after the first week in May — otherwise it seems presumptuous,” says Duguid, who was raised in Ottawa, where the May 24 rule applied. This spring is warm, she agrees, and magnolias are about two weeks early in blooming. “But I don’t trust there isn’t going to be a snap back.”

Basil, she adds, is always a latecomer. Like an overly protective parents, she says she coddles the tender leaf herb, which she doesn’t plant in the garden until June.

Duguid uses another seasonal chore as her yardstick — taxes. “I just put my taxes in. When they’re done, then we can think about the garden. It’s a sign we can look outward.”

On Manitoulin Island, market gardener Heather Thoma tends her Loon Song Garden on organic and biodynamic principles, which emphasize the interrelatedness of plants, animals, the soil and so on. One element of biodynamic gardening is to plant according to signs of the Zodiac. When the sun is in Aquarius, which is a water sign, it’s a good time to plant leafy vegetables such as spinach and lettuce. Root vegetables are related to Earth signs.

She’s already started planting a few cool weather plants. “Things can go in now and survive,” she says. “But I find if I plant spinach now and more in two weeks, it doesn’t lead to an earlier harvest. It will all be harvested at the same time.”

So it may be best to remember than April can be cruelly unpredictable. Paul Zammit, director of horticulture at the Toronto Botanical Garden, is mindful that of the fact that the temperature just eight days ago was about 2 C. At his home garden in Bloor West Village, he is cleaning his beds, spreading compost and sowing mesclun in a container. He’s moving plants in and out of the garage for protection at night. “I still advise caution,” he says. “The weather can change.”

Monday, 19 April 2010

Handphone Terbaru

Nama Hotel - Nokia menggandeng operator seluler Telkomsel dalam rangka mempermudah pelanggan yang ingin mengunduh (download) konten musik digital maupun yang ingin mengakses layanan Nokia Comes With Music.

Hotel di Surabaya - Haryati Lawidjaja, Software  Service Manager PT Nokia Indonesia menuturkan dengan paket data tidak terbatas maka pengguna ponsel Nokia yang menggemari musik digital dapat mengunduh lagu atau mengakses layanan dengan biaya akses atau download yang dapat disesuaikan kemampuan.

"Ke depannya, kerja sama serupa dapat dikembangkan dengan kalangan operator lainnya," ujarnya kepada Bisnis.com malam ini.

Nokia juga menggandeng 12 perusahaan rekaman untuk memperkaya katalog layanan Comes With Music yang baru diluncurkan. Adapun kerja sama paket data dengan Telkomsel itu mengenakan tarif Rp20.000 dengan kuota pemakaian Internet 125 mega byte (MB) dan Rp50.000 untuk kuota pemakaian Internet 300 MB dalam satu bulan dengan kecepatan 512 kilo bit per second (kbps).

Bob McDougall, Country Manager Nokia Indonesia mengatakan Indonesia merupakan salah satu negara dengan potensi musik yang sangat cerah, di sisi lain kerjasama ini juga memberikan kesempatan bagi artis-artis lokal untuk segera go international.

“Kerja sama dengan 12 perusahaan rekaman diharapkan dapat membantu menekan angka pembajakan musik di Indonesia, nantinya saya berharap grup musik seperti The Changcuters bisa didengar di hingga ke Eropa,” ujarnya di sela-sela peluncuran Nokia X6 hari ini.

Dua belas label music tersebut adalah Aquarius Musikindo, EMI Music, E-Motion Entertainment, Indo Semar Sakti, Musica Studios, Pelangi Records, Sani Sentosa Abadi, Sony Music Entertainment, Trinity Optima Production, Universal Music Group, Virgo Ramayana Records dan Warner Music.

Saat ini Nokia Ovi memiliki lebih dari 9 juta koleksi lagu dari seluruh dunia yang 3 juta diantaranya dapat diunduh (download) oleh pengguna Nokia di Indonesia. Semua konten tersebut bisa diunduh melalui ponsel-ponsel musik Nokia seperti seri X6, 5530 dan 5800 dengan paket data tak terbatas Telkomsel.

Bob menambahkan seiring pertumbuhan ekonomi Indonesia yang semakin baik, penetrasi pasar telepon seluler di tanah air juga semakin menjanjikan. Bahkan, dengan serbuan ponsel-ponsel asal Cina yang harganya relatif murah justru membuat persaingan pasar telepon seluler di Indonesia semakin bergairah.

“Kami sama sekali tak gentar dengan serbuan ponsel asal Cina, nyatanya konsumen di Indonesia masih lebih tertarik dengan ponsel-ponsel branded yang pelayanannya lebih terjamin,” tutupnya.

Saturday, 17 April 2010

World Cup 2010 FIFA

Daftar Hotel - Bafana Bafana coach Carlos Alberto Parreira has urged South Africans to remain enthusiastic about the 2010 Fifa Soccer World Cup despite problems with the ticketing system on Thursday. Many frustrated and angry soccer fans left long queues on Thursday night when they were unable to get their tickets because Match’s ticketing system crashed on a number of occasions during the day. But authorities have promised to do all they can to prevent further problems on Friday.

Hotel di Jakarta - Parreira said South Africans need to be enthusiastic about the event and support the national team. He said the team was focusing on its performance. “[The] World Cup is always competition but I am sure our team will not disappoint the people,” said Parreira from Germany where Bafana Bafana is based for its second training camp in recent weeks. Earlier this month the national team held a camp in Brazil.

WORLD CUP TICKETING OFFICE AT BRROKLYN MALL

The ticketing offices only open at 9am but scores of fans were pushing and shoving each other as they waited in queues on Friday morning.

Those supporters who were not helped by the time the centres closed on Thursday night were given numbers to ensure they got first preference when the offices opened.

The organisation at the Brooklyn Mall centre was far better than Thursday and scores of police officers were on hand to prevent a repeat of the chaos.

Tactical response officials had to use pepper spray twice on Thursday to control crowds who pushed against the doors of the ticketing office.

SOCCER FANS RETURN TO SANDTON


On Friday morning, Johannesburg soccer fans returned to Laico Isle in Sandton, where up to 2000 people queued for over 24 hours to get their tickets.


Many of them were people who did not manage to get into the centre on Thursday to buy their tickets.


More security guards were on standby to prevent the chaos that broke out at the door on Thursday soon after the centre opened.


Meanwhile, all tickets for Cape Town matches have been sold out.

Tuesday, 13 April 2010

World Cup 2010

Daftar Hotel - Having read several negative articles about South Africa lately, claiming there is a “war” and that the “Brits are scared” to come to the country, I think if it makes them feel any safer amidst the supposed “war”, they should get themselves the t-shirts.

Hotel di Bandung Although it would also make you an easy target for the criminals, who exists in this country like in many others in the world, I wouldn’t advise this t-shirt but if you really really must have one, please feel free. And no, I don’t know where you can buy it.

Please note tourists that there are many serves available to you, like a map book which you can buy at the airport shops when you land in SA, you can use the safe metre taxis, buy the books on local languages and even better, we have the SA Police Services who will are on call 24/7 with the emergency number being 10111, something like 911 in the US.

I say come, have a ball, visit a few great places that you can find on Times Explorer- a guideline of places you can visit while in South Africa- and walk away with a tryully South African experience. After all that is all we as your hosts want to share with you.

Thursday, 8 April 2010

CLASH OF THE TITANS

Tips Hamil - I liked War of Gods as a title, even Dawn of War wasn't bad, but Relativity Media has opted to rename the Greek mythology tale simply Immortals. Whatever you want to call it, filming just got underway in Montreal this week with Tarsem Singh (The Cell) directing.

Buku Panduan Lengkap Cara Cepat Hamil  - According to Universal Pictures, Immortals "follows the mythological tale of the young warrior Theseus, who leads his men into battle with the immortal Greek gods to defeat evil and the powerful elder gods of the Titans in order to save mankind."

Henry Cavill is playing Theseus, John Hurt will play the "earthly manifestation" of Zeus, and Isabel Lucas (best known for her supporting turn in Transformers 2) is Zeus' daughter Athena. Also cast in Immortals are Stephen Dorff, Luke Evans (who, interestingly enough, played Apollo in Clash of the Titans), Kellan Lutz (widely recognized for playing a sparkling vampire), Joseph Morgan, Frieda Pinto, and Mickey Rourke.

Charley and Vlas Parlapanides penned the original screenplay, with Jason Keller writing the most recent draft of the script. Gianni Nunnari, Ryan Kavanaugh, and Mark Canton are producing.

JOHN HURT and TRANSFORMERS: REVENGE OF THE FALLEN star ISABEL LUCAS have joined the hot cast of mythical movie epic WAR OF THE GODS as immortal father and daughter.

British star Hurt will play god Zeus in the film, which has been retitled Immortals, and Lucas will portray Athena.

Monday, 5 April 2010

UK election campaign takes on a US tinge ‎

Cara Cepat Hamil - When David and Samantha Cameron revealed this week that they were expecting their fourth child they must have been prepared for the onslaught from Fleet Street. “Wham Bam Sam Cam’s Going to be a Mam (She’ll need a new pram)” went the front page headline in The Sun, Rupert Murdoch’s UK tabloid, offering news that the family, who polls show is most likely to be moving into the prime minister’s official residence in Downing Street after an imminent election, would have one more member.

Buku Panduan Cara Cepat Hamil - “Samantha Cameron’s labour bombshell,” quipped The Guardian. Mr Cameron’s Conservatives are trying to unseat prime minister Gordon Brown’s ruling Labour party.

In its own peculiarly British way, the episode fits neatly into what has become the process story of this year’s election: even before it has officially begun and more than any other in Britain’s history this campaign has some very American tinges.

Personality is making a play to trump policy – and not everyone likes it.

Also, for the first time, voters will this year see the heads of the main political parties in US presidential-style live television debates in the lead-up to the election, widely expected on May 6. They are turning on their TVs on Sunday nights to discover candidates discussing dark moments in their lives in confessional, sometimes teary interviews more suited to Oprah Winfrey than the BBC’s normal political line-up.

And they are seeing the personal lives, habits and even, per this week’s Cameron family news, virility of candidates commented on vigorously in newspapers and on blogs.

The response has featured plenty of dismissive scorn from some of the country’s political elite. “He is getting so am-dram about the pram-dram,” Ann Treneman, political sketch writer for The Times, wrote of Mr Cameron this week.

“Sounds like a load of rubbish to me. . . This American style electioneering should be sent back over the Atlantic,” read one recent blog post in response to the unveiling of the rules for the three debates scheduled to take place in the coming weeks.

Just who will benefit from the change has also drawn much of the debate.

With his working wife, young family, easy charm and Clintonian agenda Tony Blair won a broad mandate in 1997 on the back of American-style personality-driven politics. But the oft-repeated argument is that Britons grew sick of his polish and when, in 2007 Mr Brown, his jowly finance minister, rose to the prime ministership they liked the latter’s gruff substance.

Mr Cameron is a telegenic 43-year-old Etonian who has been trying to modernise the once stuffy Conservative party and thereby replicate Mr Blair’s efforts to remake Labour.

He and 38-year-old Samantha, who works as creative director of Smythson, a London fashion and stationery brand, offer what can seem to be the perfect, compelling modern political family narrative.

If all goes to plan with both the election and their pregnancy, the Camerons will be adding their fourth child in September, in the middle of the UK’s annual political convention season. He will become only the second – after Mr Blair – prime minister in more than 150 years to have a new-born child in office.

News of the pregnancy has reminded voters that the Camerons lost their eldest child, six-year-old Ivan, a year ago in a personal tragedy that is widely seen to have softened Mr Cameron’s image as a fast-rising son of privilege.

Yet, it is Mr Brown and his campaign team who have for the most part been leading the charge towards confessional politics.

The prime minister used a televised interview to discuss the death at 11 days of his first child and how he proposed to his wife Sarah, a former PR executive, whom he married while he was chancellor of the exchequer.

The interview, which also featured asides on his drinking habits as a student, and the confession that his minders had ordered him to smile more drew more than 4m viewers.

Mr Cameron’s Sunday night interview this month drew 2.7m viewers and also featured Mrs Cameron’s public debut before the cameras.

The big question is how Mr Brown, Mr Cameron and Nick Clegg, leader of the Liberal Democrats, the third-largest party, will emerge from the televised debates scheduled to take place once the campaign officially gets under way.

Like their US counterparts, Britain’s political parties have done their best to negotiate rules meant to avoid any embarrassment for their candidates.

“It will be argued, reasonably enough, by the producers that the debates are something completely new and different for the British public,” wrote Dominic Lawson, a former editor of The Spectator political magazine.

“[But] It’s the equivalent of the high-minded bit during the Miss World contest in which the competing beauties tell us what they would do to make the world a better place,” he added. “At the end of it all, across the nation, millions of voters will stagger away from their television sets saying, ‘Is that it?’”

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