Buster (aka Booman)
Rest in peace.
A Welcoming Community
Buster (aka Booman)
Rest in peace.
Meet the newest members of our furred and feathered family.
Nina, and her six-month-old son, Inti. They are Peruvian Alpacas. Nina is pregnant again, and will have her next cria in either November or December.
I’ve always had a special fondness for parrots. I even had one as a pet many years ago.
Now, living in Australia, I have them in my backyard.
These Green Rosellas are members of a group of seven that frequent our property. There are two other groups that also regularly visit – one with four members, and one with twelve. I took these photos in our backyard this morning.
In this shot in particular, you can see how well their colors match the Australian bush.
They mostly feed on grass seeds. Hence the fossicking about in the grass.
While for most of you it’s Spring, downunder it’s Fall. This photo was actually taken last Spring, but on a grey day.
Luna really enjoys her walks in our bushland – as do we. Her greatest joy seems to come from her nose. She runs back and forth following scent trails left by the many Wallabies and Pademelons that live and graze on our property. If she sees one – which is often – the ears are up and she does everything in her power to go joyfully bounding after it, which means she ends up bunny-hopping on the end of her 30′ lead.
The critters have got pretty used to us, and while they hop away, they do it at a pretty leisurely pace, and don’t always go far. It’s a good thing, as one of the problems with introduced cats and dogs in Australia is that the native animals simply aren’t adapted to cope, and dogs that are allowed to run loose not only frequently kill things, but their very presence running and hunting through the bush drives many natives out of their habitat.
I think our ‘hoppies’ have figured Luna out for the largely harmless galoot she is.
Sorry, I don’t have any animal action shots for today’s post.
Instead, I offer you Albert, in his “so I’m on the couch – so what” pose.
Which is a bit ironic since we don’t care if he gets on the couch. But he always acts like he’s been caught in the act. I think he just enjoys being “naughty.”
We’re back! After a much needed break following the Tasmaninan election and the lingering chest cold that followed.
Luna and I (with only a few hits on my inhailer afterwards) completed our first “mock” Dog Agility trial this last Sunday. Luna was fairly agile, I was less so, and made most of the mistakes.
All photos were taken by my partner Imogen/myriad. Or in Luna terms “not-the-momma.”
I will never cease to be amazed at what dogs find comfortable.
I had one fellow, Bart by name, who would drape his body across his (sizable) bed, while resting his head on the concrete – every single time.
My appologies for not keeping up with the dog blog of late.
I’ve recently been appointed editor for Green Tasmania Magazine (the magazine of the Tasmanian Greens party) and since we (Tasmania) have an election coming up in a week and a half, I’ve been frantically putting together an “election special issue.” Luna has been feeling the neglect as well.
Good thing there are old towels to keep her somewhat occupied.
On the flip, I’ve posted my first editorial for the magazine.
Un-Supersize me
The MacDonalds® business model is simple. Step 1) make a low value product with a small profit margin and then sell billions of them. Step 2) minimise costs by simplifying and mechanize the process to the greatest degree so that workers can’t move their way up the pay ladder through acquiring more knowledge and skills, thus keeping your labor plentiful and cheap.
There are, of course, a few more intricacies involved. Like getting the government to subsidize the whole supply chain and workers’ salaries through farm subsidies, road and infrastructure building and maintenance, and “worker employment and training” schemes. Then, as a matter of policy, constantly squeeze suppliers and sub-contractors, forcing them to keep lowering their costs, or lose their contract. Costs such as their workers’ salaries. And, because money `invested’ on political lobbying has such a high rate of `return’, spend even more money on convincing politicians that you need even more subsidies and to pay even less for public resources (i.e. those pesky taxes). Add to this the costs of pollution and unsustainable practices, and you get a perfect example of privatizing profits through socializing losses.
Some `free-market’ types tout this model as the pinnacle of `business evolution’, because of how completely it seems to have decimated `the competition’. But Social Darwinism always ignores the reality of social promotion – i.e. what gets ahead does so largely because it is deliberately helped ahead by structures under human control. Structures such as the laws that govern employee/employer relationships, taxation, and most importantly, articles of incorporation. Corporations are fictions, given their rights and responsibilities, and indeed their very existence, by our governments. They exist at our pleasure, and for our benefit, not, as so many of our politicians seem to have forgotten, the other way around. That’s just as true in Australia and Tasmania as it is in the good old US of A.
The attraction of this business model is clear: executives have such a large base to skim that they can award themselves huge salaries and still manage to pay a reasonable rate of return to stock holders. Since executives make most business decisions, it’s not hard to see why so many industries have followed the MacDonalds® model.
Industries like wood chipping, for example. Trees don’t have to be made into chips, any more than beef has to be made into cheap burgers. And while there is a place for low-skilled entry-level jobs, they shouldn’t be allowed, much less encouraged by our government, to lead nowhere or to become a greater and greater proportion of our job market.
The main difference between the low-value/high-volume markets and higher-value/lower-volume markets is the need for skilled workers. Workers who can usually demand a decent wage in exchange for their abilities. From the same material inputs, come vastly differing outcomes. A choice made by the governments we vote for.
Plenty of businesses are good corporate citizens. They create good products while paying decent salaries, and are working to eliminate their impact on the environment, or even help reverse our collective environmental debt. Australian solar research and technology used to lead the world, but now our solar businesses get offers from Texas and California, but can’t get the Howard Government to show any interest, much less provide industry support. Even BP, one of the largest makers of solar panels, could not get the Howard Government to support the industry by expanding Australia’s renewable energy market, and as a result, BP may yet have to close down its Australian plant that employs several hundred people.
At the same time as our solar companies are getting left out in the cold, corporations that own the rights to mine Australia’s brown coal, the worst greenhouse gas producer of all time, have had no difficulty in securing the promise of additional brown coal- fired electrical generating stations. We clearly should be converting the ones we already have, not building more.
This is classic example of “Looking out for the BIG GUY” so favoured by both Liberal and Labor. Howard sold his Industrial Deform as being based on flexibility – ours, obviously – not industry’s. We have to keep on-our-toes whichever way the global industrial winds might blow. But big businesses can be as unyielding and as backward as they want, with the government’s support and blessing.
Lennon has promised us, in typical big project fashon, he’ll see a billion dollar pulp mill built, locking in us in to the low-skill, low-value woodchip industry. All I see are two plastic golden arches casting a perpetual shadow across our future.
Tasmania’s great fortune in unique hardwood trees and fine agricultural soils could be providing good salaries to skilled workers. As could industries making both tried-and-true and innovative energy efficient and renewable energy products. It’s not too hyperbolic to say that we could be an Island of artisans. Giving people, both tourists and workers, yet one more reason to come here. Other places, especially islands, have done it – with the support of their government.
I’m still bogged down with work, but here’s Luna to get you started.
Some of you may remember that I’ve been raising tadpoles in the house – ever since the pond started to dry up (about a month ago).
This little fellow’s gone a bit awry. We call him Yogi, ‘cuz his feet are usually somewhere near his ears.
There are three (out of at least a dozen) that had something strange with their legs. I contacted Parks and Wildlife, and a researcher there wants me to document them. He suspects it’s just a developmental deformity, but wants a detailed report all the same.