Friday, May 24, 2013

AMBASSADOR EATEN


A conversation with the ambassador
Last week I had a Facebook friend request from Terence P Mcculley and so I hovered the mouse over the name and found that Terence was at a university in Norway and there was his clean-cut, suited photo to authenticate him. With 47,000 readers following this blog, the request was not unusual so I confirmed him.

A few days later Terence P Mcculley popped up on Facebook for a chat. Here is the conversation:

Terence P. Mcculley Hello
Me Hi Terence. Where are you?
Terence P. Mcculley I am Ambassador to Federal Republic of Nigeria Do you by any means do business or transaction with Nigeria
Me Interesting. I get lots of emails? from there.
Terence P. Mcculley Ok I will like you to discard every email you receive Mr Lamido Sanusi Lamido Central Bank of Nigeria Governor
Me Oh, yes. Quickly. Nice talking with you.
Terence P. Mcculley Ok I have a package in your name to deliver to you The package is worth 10.8M USD in my possession
Me I'll collect it personally next time I'm in Nigeria.
Terence P. Mcculley I have all the document I will be coming to State Next weekend Cause I have a meeting with government
Terence P. Mcculley Hello are you still thereToday
Terence P. Mcculley Hello

Yesterday there was a missed call on my phone from 0023448057691564 and I immediately suspected Nigeria. The phone rang again this morning at 3.15 am, but I didn’t get out of bed quickly enough to take the call. It was from the same Nigerian number. There and then I decided to Google Terence P Mcculley and found that he really is the US Ambassador to Nigeria and that was from the official US Government website. His Facebook profile is a bit out of date. See below:

Ambassador Terence P. McCulley
U.S. Ambassador to Nigeria
Terence McCulley is a career member of the Senior Foreign Service, with the rank of Minister-Counselor. He was the Deputy Chief of Mission at the U.S. Embassy in Copenhagen, Denmark from 2008-2010. Prior to this posting, he served as U.S. Ambassador to the Republic of Mali from 2005-2008. From 2004-2005, he worked at the State Department in Washington, helping to coordinate reconstruction efforts in Iraq. He has been the Deputy Chief of Mission at the U.S. Embassies in Togo, Senegal, and Tunisia and also served as Consul in Mumbai, India.
Ambassador Terence P McCulley
Joining the Foreign Service in 1985, Mr. McCulley started his career in Niger, followed by assignments in South Africa and Chad. Returning to Washington in 1993, he worked for two years on Central African affairs. He is the recipient of four Department of State Superior Honor Awards.
Mr. McCulley was born in Medford, Oregon, and grew up in Eugene, where he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in European History and French Language and Literature from the University of Oregon. As a Rotary Foundation Graduate Fellow, he studied political science at the Université de Haute Bretagne in Rennes, France. In addition, he attended the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy. McCulley is fluent in French.
Married to Renée McCulley, the couple has two sons.

But Google also told me that an imposter is using the ambassador’s identity and photo to scam people and below I have reproduced a conversation between the ‘Ambassador’ and ‘Ben Dover’ with some of Ben’s comments thrown in.  From Skunkfeathers Blog: http://skunkfeathers57.blogspot.co.nz/

Monday, May 6, 2013

I know that my exchanges with "Ambassador Terrence McCulley" -- the US ambassador to Nigeria -- really weren't conducted with the authentic ambassador.
At least, I think I hope not.
But this series of email exchanges is a rather typical case-in-point about what happens when you get a scammer with a Third World or Washington, DC public school education, off of their talking point template. For instance, I will recap the opening paragraph of the scammer's opening gambit:

My name is Terence Patrick McCulley, the new United States Ambassador to the Federal Republic of Nigeria. The United States Senate had confirmed my nomination on August 5 2010 after being nominated for this position by U.S. President Barack Obama on June 28, 2010. My credentials as the new Ambassador appointed were presented to His Excellency President Goodluck Ebele Jonathan at the Presidential Villa in Abuja, Nigeria, on November 2, 2010. I am a career member of the senior Foreign Service with the rank of Minister-Counselor whose diplomatic career has been spent mostly in Africa or working on African issues.

Now, as you follow the exchanges that took place between my character -- Ben Dover -- and "the ambassador", you will note a serious degradation in his grasp of the English language. Spent too long on social engineering in his DC public skool, I reckon. As usual, all the "ambassador" emails will be in bold, and "Ben" will respond in italics:
What an honor, Mr. Ambassador! And I am pleased -- albeit surprised -- to receive this news from you. Please address the courier package thus:
Mr. Ben Dover
(Bogus Street Address) Central City, CO 80427
Thank you!
Respectfully,
Ben Dover
United States Consulate General Lagos
2 Walter Carrington Crescent
Victoria Island, LagosNigeria.

ATTENTION: Mr. Ben Dover


THIS IS TO ACKNOWLEDGE THE RECEIPT OF YOUR MAIL AND ALSO TO LET YOU KNOW THAT YOU HAVE TO TAKE OUR INSTRUCTION IF YOU WANT YOUR MONEY SENT TO AS STATED IN OUR PREVIOUS MAIL BECAUSE THAT IS THE ONLY WAY YOU CAN HAVE YOUR AWAITED FUND CLAIM.

(it goes on to ask for additional information which I provide as follows):

Your Full name:
Ben U. OverYour country and city: USA Central City
Your home address: (Bogus)
Street, Central City CO 80427Your private phone number: 303-582-****
Your age:
45sex: whenever I canoccupation: professional poultry inseminatorDriver'S License: yes I have oneState ID: see previous answerPassport: 091164377Other government-issued photo ID: N/A

And the email finishes off with instructions on how I wire the required $150 fund to hisself:
Mr Ben .U Over

THANKS FOR YOU EMAIL MR BEN YOU HAVE TO PAY FOR YOUR DELIVERY OF YOUR FUNDS WHICH IS $150 AS SOON AS IT IS DON YOU WILL GET YOUR FUNDS YOU ARE TO SEND THE FEES THROUGH WESTERN UNION MONEY TRANSFER

Receivers NAME: .................. OBINNA AUGUAINE OFILI
ADDRESS:................ LAGOS-NIGERIA
TEXT QUESTION:................. IN GOD
ANSWER:................... WE TRUST
AMOUNT: ....................$150
Senders Name: ....................?
Senders Address: ...............?


HERE IS MY DIRECT CELL PHONE NUMBER FOR YOU TO CALL URGENTLY +234-8122607899.

Funny, but in checking the official US Embassy in Nigeria website, the phone numbers don't match. Oh well...thought I was actually gonna get to talk to hisself. Eh.

So, my response:
Your instructions received and understood. I will visit a Western Union on Monday, April 29, and attend to it.
Ben Dover

From here, the 'ambassador' tends to show flaws in his communication skills:

Thanks mr ben your all the information we you? And why is your phone number not going. I try to call you on phone but going okay you have my number we you so you can call me by monday after send the feel okay . Thanks
Sent from WESTERN UNION OUTLET
The number I gave you is my home number, and I am at work. I will either call or email you when I send the Western Union fee on Monday.
Ben
It okay I wait to hear from you by monday. Thanks have a good weekend
Sent from WESTERN UNION OUTLET
I will be in touch with you by no later than Monday afternoon, without fail.
Ben
Then comes Sunday afternoon, and I decide to start screwing with him early:
Good news, Ambassador: I was able to attend to this a day early. The Western Union fee of $150 has been sent as instructed. I will look in tomorrow to hear from you when I can expect my delivery.
BTW, for a US ambassador, you sure do type funny. Guess it's all that work overseas.
Ben
I wouldn't be 'available' to respond to anything the 'ambassador' sent until Monday afternoon, and boy was he ever chatty:
Mr Ben how are you today thanks for your email. All you need to do is to send me the MTCN number from the western union now. As soon as we pick up the money I will get back to you on how you can get your funds okay. Thanks again am waiting for your email we the MTCN number . Thanks
Terence P. McCulley.
Sent from WESTERN UNION OUTLET
And then came this...
Mr Ben how are you today thanks for your email. All you need to do is to send me the MTCN number from the western union now. As soon as we pick up the money I will get back to you on how you can get your funds okay. Thanks again am waiting for your email we the MTCN number .
Thanks
Terence P. McCulle
Heh...now he can't spell his own name. Then comes this:
Mr Ben can you send me the MTCN NUMBER. From the western union . Thanks
US AMBASSADOR TERENCE P. McCULLEY.
Finally, the 'ambassador' garners a response from Ben:
Dear Mr. Ambassador,
Yes, I can. I'll get right on that.
Ben
That response is not what the 'ambassador' is looking for, since his reply is all caps:
MR BEN THANKS FOR YOUR EMAIL, I HAVE BEEN WAITING FOR THE MTCN NUMBER? SO IF YOU HAVE SENT THE FEE OF $150. ALL YOU NEED IS TO SEND US THE MTCN NUMBER . PLEASE IT TO HURRY.
Yes, I did send you the fee and yes, I will send you the MTCN as soon as I find it.
Ben

MR BEN HAVE YOU SEE THE MTCN NUMBER NOW? BUT WHY IS YOUR NUMBER NOT GOING I HAVE BEEN TRYING TO CALL YOU NUMBER ALL THE DAY BUT NOT GOING IS THIS NOT YOUR NUMBER ....................3035825440? YOU HAVE MY NUMBER THEM CALL ME NOW.
Ambassador: I am leaving for work now...you can't call me on my phone when I am online, because I use a dial-up connection for internet, and that number is my dial-up connection. So sorry, but really, don't get your panties in a wad. When I get home from work I will see what this MTCN thing is and send it to you.
WAITING TO HEAR FROM YOU SOON. WE THE MTCN NUMBER OKAY
Sorry Mr. Ambassador...have been busy at work. There are 10 numbers in the MTCN. Which one do you need?
Mr how are you . Are you back from work now pleas check the MTCN number and email it to me now we have no time on our side again. So am waiting for your email now
Thanks
US AMBASSADOR TERENCE P. McCULLEY.
Dear Ambassador, I checked the number and there are, indeed, 10 digits that comprise it. So tell me next what to do.
Ben
I have told you before now that you should send the ten digit number (mtcn control number) or better still scan the copy of the payment slip to me. If you know you can not do this then go ahead and call back your payment.
I knowd I'd piss him off sooner or later. Now that it's sooner, let's throw some more piss on it:
Dear Ambassador:
How would I call back my payment?
(1) It doesn't have a phone.
(2) If it does, I don't know its number.
Please explain this.
As for the MTCN, I have it here.
Ben

Them send me the MTCN number now okay
US AMBASSADOR TERENCE P. McCULLEY.
I can do that...there's ten of them. There's a 6...follered by a 9...then anudder 6...a 5...a 4...a 0...a 1..anuddah 1...anudda 7...anna 3 on the end.
Now, how do I call back my money? Does it have a call back number?
Ben

SEND IT THIS WAY OKAY
Receivers NAME: .................. OBINNA AUGUAINE OFILI
ADDRESS:................ LAGOS-NIGERIA
TEXT QUESTION:................. IN GOD
ANSWER:................... WE TRUST
AMOUNT: ....................$150
MTCN NUMBER
Senders Name: ....................?
Senders Address: ...............?

HERE IS MY DIRECT CELL PHONE NUMBER FOR YOU TO CALL URGENTLY +234-8122607899.
So you want it to be sended looking like this?
Receivers NAME: .................. OBINNA AUGUAINE OFILI
ADDRESS:................ LAGOS-NIGERIA
TEXT QUESTION:................. IN GOD
ANSWER:................... WE TRUST
AMOUNT: ....................$150
MTCN NUMBER
Senders Name: ....................?
Senders Address: ...............?
Okay...I'm sending it that way.
Ben

YES
US AMBASSADOR TERENCE P. McCULLEY

That's how he want it...that's how he get it:
Good. Here it is, just as you asked:
Receivers NAME: .................. OBINNA AUGUAINE OFILI
ADDRESS:................ LAGOS-NIGERIA
TEXT QUESTION:................. IN GOD
ANSWER:................... WE TRUST
AMOUNT: ....................$150
MTCN NUMBER
Senders Name: ....................?
Senders Address: ...............?


Thanks for that but no mtcn number again why. Can you go back to the bank and as them for the mtcn number them email it to me okay
US AMBASSADOR TERENCE P. McCULLEY.
Ambassador: yes, I could go to a bank and ask them about this. But I didn't go to a bank; I went to Western Union. Western Union wired the money for me, not a bank. And Western Union is in all kinds of places, as I'm sure you know, having been here before going to all those foreign venues. So, I could go to a bank...but why? Didn't I just send you exactly what you wanted, in exactly the manner you wanted it?
Ben

This scammer is patient if he's anything; he REALLY wants this $150. So he responds:

Okay them go back to western union and ask them to show you the mtcn number okay them send it to me now am waiting thanks
US AMBASSADOR TERENCE P. McCULLEY.
Okay, if you insist I must...but the Western Union I went to won't be open until 8am my time. It is now 5:23am my time. What time is it for you, Ambassador?

It is 12.30pm my time,so am waiting for your email them thanks
US AMBASSADOR TERENCE P. McCULLEY
So I wait two and a half hours, and then we start up again:
Mr. Ambassador, I went to the Western Union from whenst I sent the $150, and I told them what you told me to tell them. And they were great: they gave me a copy of the same receipt I already have, so now I have two. I can mail one to you if you like.
I am at your service.
Ben

send a copy of it.to me now am waiting for the copy

Okay, what's your mailing address? I'll get it out in the mail today.
Ben

THIS IS MY EMAIL ADDRESS ............ terencemcculley2010@gmail.com so send me the copy of it now am waiting for that now
I know your EMAIL address. If you want me to send you this copy, I need your regular mail address. I don't have a working scanner to scan it in.

I think I'm wearing him down finally:

I will advice you send it if you are serious about getting your fund.
US AMBASSADOR TERENCE P. McCULLEY.
Ambassador, I don't think I care for the tone of your email voice. You aren't acting very ambassadory here. I have followed your instructions in the spirit which they were intended, and now that I got you an extra copy of the receipt, you won't give me your mailing address to send it to you. You are the one, I remind you, that contacted me with this deal; I had no clue about it before hearing from you. You're a diplomat; start acting diplomaty and make this work. You want the receipt copy, GIVE ME YOUR MAILING ADDRESS.

Diplomats are supposed to have great patience and aplomb, rising to difficult occasions with finesse and diplomatic rhetorical flourishes, or so I thought. Which perhaps proves that this next is NOT from a real ambassador:

you r not serious. you wast much my times to this. i with you no more.

And just when I was getting to enjoy his patience at collecting a mere $150. Oh well:
Ambassador by AMC;
I guess that, by your refusal to provide a mailing address, you really didn't need the western union receipt after all. Bad ambassador. Very very bad ambassador.
Of course, it did occur to me that you have never actually been THE ambassador, Terrence P. McCulley; you might have been a Nigerian pretending to BE him, since you'd probably cooked and eaten our US ambassador. I know things are a bit backward and primitive in parts of Nigeria that way.
Let me advice you a few things, since you obviously don't want to collect the money I sent you via Western Union: next time you purport to use the seal of the US ambassador to Nigeria, understand that generally speaking, the seal doesn't bark.
Just sayin'.

Since I never heard back from the real ambassador when this nonsense started, perhaps I'm not offbase to assume that my just-concluded Nigerian DID eat the ambassador.

Thursday, May 16, 2013

COUNTRY MUSIC DOWNUNDER

Kiwi entertainers at 
Bay of Islands festival


The scene at Paihia on opening day of the Bay of Islands Country Rock Festival

Last week we traveled north to New Zealand’s beautiful and historic Bay of Islands for the 24th annual BOI Country Rock Festival – a truly wonderful event from Friday to Sunday with more than fifty local and overseas entertainers.

This 12 year-old unofficial artist was later invited to sing with several  draw-card performers 
Friday started with free street performances from most entertainers, line dancers and one or two unofficial acts on the street and in car parks. Passing showers on Friday and Saturday afternoons did little to dampen the enthusiasm of the artists and the thousands who came to hear them.

The Kerikeri River, Bay of Islands, New Zealand
The main program was spread over seven indoor venues in the townships of Paihia, Russell and Kawakawa. Shuttle buses and ferries transported people between venues, but some venues fell short on space for the audience and their suitability for stage performances.

Seventeen year-old Abby singing at historic Russell
The Bay of Islands event has long been New Zealand’s premier country music festival but attendance in recent years has fallen due to hard times and the loss of some key venues due to circumstances beyond the control of long-time dedicated organizer Shirley May.

Crowd pleaser Dennis Marsh
Perhaps the time has come to re-locate the festival to Rotorua or Queenstown, also tourist towns, but with an abundance of excellent facilities at that time of the year. The Rotorua District Council and the Rotorua business community would leap at the opportunity to fill beds, shops and conference facilities.

Roger Tibbs, 'The Golden Voice'
The Bay of Islands Country Rock Festival could retain its good name while spreading the event over more than one locality and weekend. The absence of organized tour groups at the festival was noticeable and Rotorua and Queenstown could add thousands more visitors from overseas.
Win Blakeborough and festival organizer Shirley May
Graeme McCardle, a regular attraction at the festival
Meanwhile, the Bay of Islands, although historic and scenically attractive, only attracts about 5% of New Zealand’s overseas visitors. Even the best brands need re-inventing from time to time and re-invention requires looking right outside the square.
Top performer Marian Burns 



Enjoying the fun of the festival, Margaret and Geoff Arthur
We traveled and camped at nearby Haruru Falls with fellow motor-homers Bob and Judy from Thames, Lloyd and Joan from Taupo, and Graeme and Fay from Napier.

When it was all over we took the scenic route back home. Not recommended for large vehicles
or rentals. The state highways are much better.

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

LANE DRIVING RULES


Oregon, Arkansas pursue
left-lane use limits
By Keith Goble, Land Line state legislative editor

State lawmakers in multiple states are considering bills to keep most drivers out of the fast lane.

An Oregon bill would make the left lane off limits for everything except passing.

Truckers already are prohibited from using the far left lane but Sen. Ginny Burdick, D-Portland, thinks that limits should be in place for all vehicles that may impede traffic.

“We need to give the Oregon State Police more enforcement authority to make sure that traffic flows smoothly and safely,” Burdick testified to the Senate Business and Transportation Committee . . . .


Full story: Landlinemag

Peter’s Piece

Sometimes tinkering with driving rules that are as old as motoring itself will only make the problem worse, and sometimes it is better to throw out everything that has gone before and make a completely new start.

Peter's truck in 40 American states
Current lane driving rules have not changed since it was discovered that the world is not flat.

These rules are suitable only for roads that have no more than a single lane in each direction. In most countries the rule is keep right and overtake on the left of traffic moving in the same direction. When the first multi-lane road opened a new set of rules should have been enacted.

There is an increasing trend among drivers on multi-lane roads to drive in the far-left lane. They feel safe there because it is less crowded and there is less interference from traffic joining or leaving at interchanges. The far-left lane is becoming a cruising lane and other lanes are becoming maneuvering lanes for joining, leaving and overtaking.

Anyone who thinks about that for a moment will realize that those drivers are doing what aircraft and ships have always done; cruising at high altitude, or far out from the coast, while the maneuvering is done close to the ground or the coast. It’s safer that way.

It is just as safe to overtake on one side as the other and if we substitute ‘fast lane’ for ‘cruising lane’ and ‘slow lane’ for ‘maneuvering lane’ the traffic will flow more freely and more safely with less lane changing near on and off ramps.

This is already happening by default and if legislators try to outlaw the trend they will be going against the flow and legislating for more chaos. It just requires some bold, new thinking.


Friday, January 25, 2013

PROGRESS AND UNEMPLOYMENT


WILL SMART MACHINES CREATE A WORLD WITHOUT WORK?
By PAUL WISEMAN and BERNARD CONDON

WASHINGTON (AP) — They seem right out of a Hollywood fantasy, and they are: Cars that drive themselves have appeared in movies like "I, Robot" and the television show "Knight Rider."
Now, three years after Google invented one, automated cars could be on their way to a freeway near you. In the U.S., California and other states are rewriting the rules of the road to make way for driverless cars. Just one problem: What happens to the millions of people who make a living driving cars and trucks — jobs that always have seemed sheltered from the onslaught of technology?
"All those jobs are going to disappear in the next 25 years," predicts Moshe Vardi, a computer scientist at Rice University in Houston. "Driving by people will look quaint; it will look like a horse and buggy."
If automation can unseat bus drivers, urban deliverymen, long-haul truckers, even cabbies, is any job safe?
Vardi poses an equally scary question: "Are we prepared for an economy in which 50 percent of people aren't working?" . . . . 
Full story: bigstory.ap.org

Peter’s Piece

Moshe Vardi is an alarmist.

But he will probably be a popular alarmist because he is predicting something that many people will find easy to believe.

This same theory has been peddled many times since the beginning of the industrial revolution when the Luddites went around smashing up machines in the mistaken belief that they were saving jobs.

However, the history of industrialization and its relationship to employment is clear. Industrial efficiency stimulates employment while inefficiency puts people out of work.

In the early 1800s less than half London’s population was in regular, legitimate, paid employment. The rest of the population was made up of child labor, criminals trying to survive and others starving on their way to an early grave.

Slowly, mechanization changed that. As products began to be produced more efficiently, more people could afford to buy them, demand increased and more products became available, and with them more job opportunities appeared.

That’s how the economic merry-go-round works and, as the ride gathers momentum, more and more people are able to join in.

Many occupations disappeared with horse-drawn transport, but many more new occupations were created by the huge auto industry that replaced it. Town crier was another job that vanished, but look at the huge numbers of people working in radio, television, newspapers and now internet businesses.

People no longer manufacture and sell the office machines of the early 20th century, but look at the size and efficiency of the computer industry that has replaced them.

Every time an additional new product or service reaches the market it can only succeed if people have the money to buy it. The number of new products and services that have been developed and successfully sold during our lifetime is a sure indicator that more people are now in employment and getting a worthwhile share of the economic cake.

I don’t see anything on the horizon to indicate that this will change anytime soon.

Thursday, January 24, 2013

DRIVING ON LEFT OR RIGHT


Road risks in spotlight downunder
as tourists tally 400 crashes
Thursday Jan 3, 2013 by Andrew Koubaridis

Long driving times, rural roads and driver fatigue contribute to accidents, AA says.
The aftermath of a crash at 8 Mile Junction near
New Zealand's Waitomo Caves


Overseas drivers were involved in more than 400 crashes on New Zealand roads last year, and failure to keep left, poor handling and fatigue the leading causes of deadly crashes.
The number is down on previous years - in line with a wider trend of a reducing death toll on New Zealand roads - but the number of foreign drivers involved in multi-victim crashes has prompted calls for tourists to make themselves familiar with the country's "unique driving challenges".
Three American tourists were killed in a crash near Turangi in May, and four Argentines died in a head-on crash in July in the central North Island.
Figures released to the Herald show there have been 15 fatal accidents involving foreign drivers last year - about 7 per cent of the total number of fatal crashes.
Transport Agency spokesman Andy Knackstedt said the agency was focused on ensuring everyone using the roads, including tourists and recent arrivals, had a safe journey.
He urged them to take advantage of the free information available.
"We don't want anyone to have their holidays marred by an avoidable tragedy," he said.
"Taking a few minutes to think about New Zealand road rules and the unique challenges of driving here is time well spent.

Driving on the other side of the road 
doesn't come naturally. 
This driver tells all in Highway America

Now available as an eBook from: Smashwords.com

"In particular we urge tourists to plan their trips carefully and to avoid the risks of driver fatigue by taking frequent breaks, sharing the driving, and not trying to drive too far in a day. We want people to take their time and to enjoy their journeys."
Automobile Association general manager of motoring Mike Noon said a common mistake overseas drivers made was pulling out on to a road in front of other vehicles.
The death of Canadian tourist Michele Smith near Waitomo in February was one example of that.
"They pulled out in front of a concrete truck. What happened is they looked the wrong way - the road was clear and [the driver] pulled in front of another vehicle that they didn't expect to be coming."
Mr Noon said the New Zealand road environment was a challenge.
"We have quite hilly, quite narrow roads. And a lot of those roads are winding."
Another difference was that New Zealand mainly did not have a national motorway system, which could make travel times deceptive.
"I think sometimes they fail to comprehend the time of travel here. So they think we just go to Rotorua in the morning and Wellington in the afternoon or drive from Rotorua to Queenstown."
It was not commonly realized that New Zealand was equivalent in size to the United Kingdom or Japan.
The AA was also aware of tourists beginning their driving almost straight after coming off big flights and crashing because of fatigue.
Mr Noon said another aspect of New Zealand driving that could cause problems for tourists was remote, rural roads which could be single-lane and gravel, something new to many overseas drivers.
Results from Tourism New Zealand's latest visitor experience survey found respondents were less satisfied with road safety than in 2011.

Peter’s Piece

New Zealand drivers belong to a minority worldwide who drive on the left side of the road. Driving on the left is the norm in countries representing only 2 billion of the world’s 7 billion people.
Those countries, including New Zealand, should consider changing to driving on the right. It has been done before without widespread chaos and can result in an immediate reduction in road fatalities.
Meanwhile, rental vehicle hirers from countries that drive on the other side should be required to pass a driving test or spend time in a driving simulator.

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

THE DRIVE OF YOUR LIFE

Norwegian Atlantic Road
How would you like the job of building this road?
  
The road is built on several small islands and reefs, and is crossed by eight bridges, several roads and overpasses.  This road has views of the open sea, which is rare on the roads along the Norwegian coast.  You can see fjords and mountains near the road.
  
This spectacular road quickly became a tourist attraction. Precautions should be taken while driving it, because of the special hazards and the presence of sightseers and photographers.
Imagine you are driving.


Sunday, January 20, 2013

KINGS OF THE ROAD


 The unique life of a truck driver
Author Unknown

If it weren't for trucks and the drivers in them, you'd have nothing.

Truck drivers are a unique group of people, a group of men and women from all races and religions. The one thing that they have in common is that they spend their days and nights driving the highways of the world. There are drivers that only drive close to their home town, which allows them to be home with their families most nights. The group of drivers that I wish to tell you about are the ones that are only home a few days a month, if that.



The world of over-the-road truck drivers has improved over the years mostly due to technology. My grandfather retired in 1969 after spending 32 years in the cab of a truck. He drove before the invention of cell phones or small portable computers; he would call home only once a day from a pay phone. But the fact was he spent most of his time alone, with only a radio for company.

Truck drivers today have cell phones, CB radios, computers and nice sleeping quarters in their trucks. This makes their days a little more comfortable. The truth is they still spend the majority of their time alone. The cell phones allow them to talk to loved ones whenever they feel the need, computer technology even allows them to see their loved ones. Unfortunately this technology does not make it possible for them to hug their spouse and kids before they lay down to sleep each night.

A truck driver's own story . . . .


Now available as an e-book from: Smashwords.com

You must understand that most of these drivers love what they do; it is this love of the open road that allows them to be happy, living such unconventional lives. Loving what they do might make it a little easier to leave their families for days or months at a time; however, it does not make them any less lonely. The cell phones make it easier to help solve problems at home, make business decisions, or just have daily communication with family members; but they do not replace the needed hugs and kisses.

Loneliness is just one aspect of a truck driver’s life; they also deal with a heavy stress load. They pull large heavy trailers through bumper to bumper traffic, sitting for hours in traffic jams, as well as driving in terrible weather conditions in order to make a delivery deadline. They deal with irate customers because a load is an hour late due to a wreck that had the highway shut down.

There are good things about a truck driver’s life, they get to meet many interesting people and learn of many different cultures. One of the most wonderful aspects to the world of over-the-road truck driving is that they get to see places and scenery that most of us can only dream about. 

The men and women leading these unconventional lives are responsible for transporting and delivering the goods that most of us just take for granted will be on the store shelves when we need them. These are the people that we depend on in an emergency to get the necessary supplies to those that have been ravaged by Mother Nature. They are responsible for transporting the building materials that make it possible for our large cities and small towns to grow. Basically, they are the heart of our economic growth and prosperity.

So the next time you are sitting at a traffic light grumbling about how slow the truck in front of you is moving, please remember that the driver of that truck makes it possible for you to have access to most of the things that you have around you. Remember that driver might have been away from his family for weeks or months, so instead of grumbling or making mean gestures, smile and wave. You might just make his day, and let him know that the unconventional life that he leads is appreciated.


Without truck drivers the world stops!

BEYOND THE SEAS

This is my latest historical novel  Beyond the Seas When twelve-year-old orphan Nathaniel Asker is shipped from the back alleys of London to...