Sunday, September 16, 2012

A SPOOKY HOTEL


For sale: A friendly
woman ghost
5:30 AM Sunday Sep 16, 2012

The Foveaux Hotel at Bluff, New Zealand comes with its own ghost

A southern New Zealand hotel haunted by a ghost who likes tall men is for sale.
Guests at the Foveaux Hotel in Bluff regularly claim a bedroom door has been opened by a female ghost.
Owner Nikki Little believed the ghost was of Mary Cameron, the original owner of the Temperance Hotel which was constructed on the Gore Street site in 1899.
The Temperance Hotel was demolished to make way for the construction of the art deco-style Foveaux Hotel in the 1930s, but Mary's spirit apparently lived on in the premises.
She said the ghost tended to favor tall male guests staying in room two.
"Every time we have tall men staying in room two they report the bedroom door opening by itself. Sometimes they complain to us that the door is broken or won't close but when we go up it just closes. But it's not a scary ghost," she said.
The hotel will be auctioned by Bayleys in Queenstown on September 27.

More in the Herald: http://www.nzherald.co.nz

Peter’s Piece

For many years a rumor circulated about a ghost in a room at the old Chateau Tongariro in the central North Island.

It was reported that some guests who were ‘unwelcome’ would wake up in the morning to find their luggage already packed and placed outside the door.

I was unaware of these rumors until I stayed in that room one night and was obliged to get up and close the door three times during the night. The last time I checked by pulling on the door after closing it to find that it was firmly shut. But in the morning it was open again.

The old hotel had been used as a mental hospital during the 1940's and rumor had it that a patient had hung himself in that room and some people believed that he was still there protecting his territory with subtle urgings for guests to depart.


Find the friendly ghost in this great read


To download a free sample read, click here


Thursday, September 13, 2012

RULES THAT CAN KILL

Failure of railway crossing regulations caused train crash
3:31 PM Thursday Sep 13, 2012 New Zealand Herald

                                                                Photo / Thinkstock

A New Zealand railway crossing north of Wellington where a bus was hit by a freight train last year failed to comply with regulations, a transport investigation has found.
Six passengers and the driver got out of harm's way only moments before the train smashed into the "super-low-floor" bus after it became stuck on the track on Beach Rd in Paekakariki on October 31.
The crossing and a short section of road leading up to the intersection was not compatible with long and low road vehicles as required by NZ Transport Agency rules, the Transport Accident Investigation Commission has found.
The bus became stuck on two of the three sets of tracks and could not be freed by the driver who tried several methods, said the report.
There was also not enough "stacking distance" for the bus, or other vehicles longer than 10 meters to stop at the intersection and remain clear of the clear of the tracks, the commission found.
Another 251 crossings have similar stacking distance issues.
The report has made a number of recommendations about the layout, profile and stacking distance issues at the Beach Rd crossing and others around the country as a result of the investigation to improve safety.
It also said drivers of large road vehicles should should carry the National Train Control Centre emergency telephone number so they can alert the train controller in any similar situation.


Peter’s Piece

The New Zealand Transport Agency and the rail operator appear not to be on the same planet as drivers of commercial vehicles.

There is a law requiring drivers of buses, and trucks carrying dangerous goods, to stop before crossing tracks that do not have alarms and barrier arms, but at most crossings that is impractical and dangerous.

At many crossings, once a large vehicle is stopped the driver is unable to get a clear view of the tracks. With many crossings a driver can have a good view while approaching but can be blind once stopped because of crossing angles and obstructions.

The law for trucks and buses at railway crossings should be the same as for cars. 






SOLAR-POWERED FLIGHT


Electric Airplane Maker Unveils Solar-Charging Trailer

By Jason Paur  Email Author  September 12, 2012 

 The German electric airplane maker PC-Aero is at the Berlin Air Show this week unveiling its latest effort towards making sport flying not only solar powered, but mobile as well. The company’s Elektra One is a single-seat electric airplane that uses both batteries and solar cells to increase the endurance during flight and is capable of flying more than 100 miles per hour.
The airplane made its first flight in 2011 in the hands of veteran test pilot Jon Karkow. Designed by Calin Gologan, the Elektra One is part of a bigger package Gologan imagines will one day lead to pilots being able to fly without needing an external power source.
PC-Aero has been touting the idea of a solar hangar that could be used to keep the Elektra One for a few years now. The design would include enough solar panels to provide 2.4 kilowatts of charging. Now the company is expanding, or at least mobilizing, the idea of a solar hangar as a power source.
The company’s new solar trailer builds on the long-standing tradition of sailplane pilots who usually store and transport their gliders in trailers. Like many electric airplane designs, the Elektra One borrows heavily from the sailplane world with high aspect ratio wings and lightweight composite structures. The wings are easily detachable, so it’s logical to keep the airplane in a trailer, eliminating the need for an expensive hangar at an airport.
The trailer is designed to have the same 2.4 kW peak power capability as the hangar. Gologan believes this kind of electricity generation could provide up to 300 hours of flying in the Elektra One per year based on the sunshine available in southern Germany (which is far from a sun-drenched desert).
Gologan is aiming for some impressive performance numbers as well. The airplane can fly at more than 100 miles per hour, but he’s hoping for a cruise speed of around 90 miles per hour and a range of up to 600 miles. Though the speed is likely to be even less in order to achieve that level of range. The company says almost half of the airplane’s power requirements will come from solar cells that are laminated into the top of the aircraft.

At last year’s NASA Green Flight Challenge, a few of the competitors did manage to fly for more than two hours while maintaining 100 miles per hour, so the goals for the Elektra One are possible. Though most electric airplanes that have flown so far aren’t quite getting the same kind of range, including the small electric powered ultra light we flew back in 2010. But recent improvements to the Elektra One including reducing the airframe weight, could help the company achieve the ambitious goals of flying for several hours at a time on electricity generated from the airplane’s own travel trailer.
PC-Aero hopes to certify the Elektra One in Germany by the end of this year.
Peter’s Comment

Solar powered aircraft have been around for a few years now and have made some incredible flights.

In 1981 Solar Challenger, designed by Paul MacCready, made the first solar-powered flight across the English Channel.

The first through the night solar flight (26 hours and 9 minutes) was made in Switzerland by Andre Borschberg in 2011 in Solar Impulse. The aircraft climbed to 28,000 feet while charging the batteries and descended slowly on reduced power until sunrise and landed after making a second climb to altitude, proving that continuous solar flight was possible.

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

SHARES VERSUS PROPERTY


Investment:
Research pumps shares
By Tamsyn Parker Wednesday Sep 12, 2012 NZ Herald

Grosvenor director Peter Christensen says a $10,000 investment in New Zealand shares
in 1971 would have been worth $787, 128 at the end of last years.
Photo / Richard Robinson

Study finds 40-year return on stocks more than twice that of property

Investors would have been more than two times better off putting their money into the local share market than residential property over the past 40 years, according to research by KiwiSaver provider Grosvenor Financial Services Group.
Grosvenor director Peter Christensen says a $10,000 investment in New Zealand shares in 1971 would have been worth $787,128 at the end of last year - an average of 11.2 per cent growth a year. The same amount of money invested in houses would have grown to $367,352 - an average annual return of 9.2 per cent.
Christensen said historically investors had favored property investment and many were convinced it offered higher returns for a lower risk.
"However, long-term data proves shares and equities consistently outperform property as [an] investment," he said.
But property investor Olly Newland said it was very difficult to base returns from property on average prices.
He suggested investors would do better to compare the performance of the top 50 suburbs rather than the median price across all property as that meant including small towns.
If the median price of all houses were used, then Newland said a comparison should be made with all listed companies including the small penny-dreadful stocks.
Grosvenor researcher David Beatty said it could not use the figures from all listed stocks as the All Ordinaries index did not go back far enough.
"The NZX50 is the most quoted figure when it came to the share- market and the most used by investment experts," he said.
Beatty said he did not believe including all listed companies would change the figure much.
But Andrew King, president of the Property Investors Federation, said the comparison was flawed and the research was marketing for shares.
"They don't take into account rental income but will take into account dividends on shares," he said.
King added that banks would not lend on shares while they would lend money on property.
"For $10,000 you could buy a $50,000 property back in 1971 and the returns would be a lot higher."
Beatty said the survey had not included rental income in its investment return from property because it was difficult to find reliable data going back to 1971. It was also decided that a lot of rental income was eaten up by the costs associated with property.
Christensen said he was not anti-property, he just wanted people to diversify their investments.
"The message is any wise investor will go into a spread of different asset classes," he said. "By investing in other asset classes you can get a better return than just property . . . . “
More in the Herald: http://www.nzherald.co.nz
Peter’s Comment

Shares have several distinct advantages over residential property and not all the advantages have been shown above.

For example, investing in shares allows a greater spread of investment dollars. For the price of one house an investor can have shares in dozens of listed companies, in a number of industries, or in many countries. It’s an old rule: Don’t put all your eggs in one basket. And a house is an expensive basket.
Also, if you need the cash, or you see a better opportunity elsewhere, a house usually takes months to sell and reach settlement and the fees take a huge bite out of the proceeds.

Shares can be traded online in minutes and the proceeds banked within three days. That makes it possible to use the highs and lows in the market and individual companies to pick up quick profits over and above those shown in the 11.2% above. It is this trading for quick profit strategy that makes shares the most attractive place for money with sharp investors making an extra 10-20% a year.

Others prefer to just invest and wait for it to grow while banking, or reinvesting, the dividends.

Naturally, an investor would steer clear of a company that could be vulnerable to an unexpected three month period without income (unless it was a seasonal business). But a residential property investor faces that prospect all the time. The tenant may suddenly leave and it could take three months to find another tenant, or worse six months to repair the damage.

True, a company could have an unexpected loss of income due to a strike, fire or other forced closure. But the wise investor has many other small investments and one company faltering or even failing completely will have little effect on the overall portfolio. Spreading the risk is like free insurance.

I suggest that a reason for not including rental income in the figures above is that it is so widely variable. Often with residential property after one allows for repairs, rates and periods without a tenant, there is little or no net income.

Saturday, September 8, 2012

AIRLINERS OF THE FUTURE


Airbus Presents Measures to Reduce
Industry's Environmental Footprint
By Jens Flottau jens_flottau@aviationweek.com 
Source: 
AWIN First  September 06, 2012



Airbus on Sept. 6 will unveil five measures it says will make the aviation industry environmentally sustainable by 2050 despite projected growth for global air transport.
In its “Future by Airbus” vision, the manufacturer describes how an optimized air traffic management system alone would help reduce average flight times by 13 minutes within the European Union or the U.S. This projection does not include any air traffic management initiatives that could be developed in the coming decades.

Airbus also foresees a new method for takeoff, with renewably powered propelled acceleration allowing aircraft to climb steeper and reach cruise altitude faster. This in turn would allow airports to build shorter runways and minimize land use.

Once in cruise, aircraft should be able to self-organize and select the most efficient routes, says Airbus. On dense routes, aircraft could fly in formation, like birds, to take advantage of drag reduction opportunities.

In Airbus’ vision, aircraft will descend without using engine power or air brakes and would be able to decelerate quicker and to a lower final approach speed enabling them to use shorter runways.

On the ground, Airbus proposes autonomously and renewably powered carriages that would move the aircraft from runways to gates or parking positions. This would enable them to shut down the engines quickly after landing and save on fuel consumption.

Fuel is a key component of Airbus’ proposal, and the manufacturer says the use of biofuels hydrogen, electricity and solar energy will be required to reduce the industry’s environmental footprint.

Details of the proposals will be presented on Thursday evening in London.

More in Aviation Week:http://www.aviationweek.com/

Peter’s Comment

Airbus has come up with some interesting concepts here, but conspicuous by its absence is any suggestion of future supersonic airliners. At one time it was proposed that airliners would be so fast in the future that they would cruise in inverted orbit.

The concept of flying in formation on busy routes is not beyond the realms of future possibility and will be a natural extension, aided by precision technology, of what is happening now with approaching and departing parallel runways.

The ‘autonomously and renewably powered carriages’ could be improved versions of today’s terminal tractors, but all of that may be unnecessary after a complete rethinking of optimum airport designs.

The ideal airport of the future may well abandon the principle of designated runways as we know them now and be replaced by a circular layout with terminal facilities on a lower level at the airport’s center. This layout would allow aircraft to always land and take-off into the wind with minimum taxiing time.

There should be no doubt that future airliners will have lower take-off and landing speeds as well as higher cruising speeds. The flight envelop has been expanding progressively ever since the Wright Brothers first flew with a gap of about two knots between stalling speed and maximum speed.

With books like these holding your attention
you will never notice that you are flying inverted

Thursday, September 6, 2012

WEIRD PLACE NAMES


How Did They Name That Town?

Mars, Pennsylvania is home to the moving flying saucer

By LENA KATZ, JustLuxe.com
Aug. 31, 2012
Fact: There are 28 Springfields in the United States, according to the United States Census Bureau--and that's not even the most-recurring place name in the country. But for every uninspired destination name, there's one that's so wacky, you might wonder whether some town official from way-back-when named it on a dare.
In some cases, that's not far from the truth. But family names, language gaps and indigenous species have more to do with the far-fetched place names of middle America. Get your trivia fix right here.
The Town of Duck in North Carolina started off as an Outer Banks waterfowl hunting haven, and now is a charming beach destination that caters to families. Ironically, Duck has only been an official town for 10 years, so the namesake activity had long since disappeared before its inception…replaced by summer concerts in the amphitheater and family outings to Duck's Beach.

The town of Chinchilla, Pa., on the other hand, was named after an animal that never lived there in any quantity. According to a published report in the Northeast Pennsylvania Newsletter, Chinchilla was named by a woman sometime between 1880 and 1890. It might have been a postwoman or a postman's wife, but either way, it was someone who felt the original name—Leach's Flats—had to go. 

 There are varying accounts of how Hell, Mich., comes to have its name. The most popular is that George Reeves, the most notable of the first settlers and owner of the general store, told Michigan state officials who inquired what to name it, "You can name it Hell for all I care."
That was in 1841, and well into its second century, the tiny community of Hell has come to not only accept, but love its name. Businesses include Hell in a Handbasket and Hell's Kitchen—and on the semi-official website, you can buy the honorary title "Mayor of Hell" for a day, for $100.

Nobody is sure how the borough of Mars, Pa., got its name. The best guess from local historians is, it's a shortened version of Samuel Marshall, the forefather who helped bring in a post office. Regardless, town kitsch plays up the interplanetary. There's a flying saucer that moves to different locations around the town—and in case visitors can't find it, a flying saucer stencil on the welcome sign coming into town.
Valentine is barely a blip on the vast landscape of West Texas—except for a few weeks out of the year, when the post office gets inundated with requests to stamp love letters from Valentine. According to multiple sources, it was named by railroad workers after the day they founded it: February 14.

Not only festively named, the town of Santa Claus, Ind., is also cheerily Christmas-themed, with one tag line being "Celebrate Christmas every day of the year." According to the official community website, a child suggested the name during a Christmas Eve town hall meeting in 1852. It would take 80 years before anyone started establishing Christmas-themed shops and attractions to go along with the name, but today, there's Santa Claus Land of Lights, Santa's Candy Castle and the Santa Claus Museum as well as the official Santa Claus Post Office.

Apparently Christmas Eve is a popular time to name towns: Moravian missionaries named Bethlehem, Pa., based on their German patron's Christmas Eve sermon in the year it was settled (1741, according to East Pennsylvania historians).
Were it in any of 49 states, the town of Unalaska would make perfect sense. But there's nothing unalaskan about this town since it's in Alaska. If this seems like an oxymoron, stop thinking in Latin-based languages and look to the language of the indigenous Aleut. They named it Ounalashka ("near the peninsula") and in the 1700s, incoming Russian settlers Westernized it to the current spelling.
Don't go to Happy, Texas, looking for mood enhancement. It got its name because of nearby Happy Draw, a waterway serving cowboys in the mid-1800s. At the turn of the century, there were signs that Happy might boom. It got a post office…but not a railway stop. And thus it remained a small farm town, with a population hovering well below 700. There's not much to see there besides a grain silo and a welcome sign…but the slogan remains, optimistically, "The Town Without a Frown." 
And finally, there's Truth or Consequences, a town name that sounds like a game show…or possibly a Western romance title. Actually it's the latter. The New Mexico town voted to name itself that in 1950, after radio host Ralph Edwards publicly wished that someone would name their town after his program. Edwards came and broadcast his show live there the same year…and according to the Chamber of Commerce, he returned every year for 50 years.
Peter’s Comment
And it doesn't end there. The following is from the pages of my travel adventure, Highway America, available in several eBook formats from Smashwords.
Plain City can be found in Utah a few miles north of Salt Lake City while Boring is a place in Oregon. On a more positive note Georgia has a Hopeful. The state of Indiana has a Boggstown, Dillsboro, Oldenburg and a Birdseye. In Ohio they have Singing Hills and Dry Run.
To download a free sample of this
e-book click here

A traveler can have Tea in South Dakota but will have to drive almost 2,000 miles to find Toast in North Carolina. A person from Hornytown in North Carolina can find Friendship in populous New York State, Intercourse in Pennsylvania and Climax in Michigan before going back to New York to recover at Sleepy Hollow.

Missouri has its fair share of odd and unusual place names too with Black Jack, Peculiar, and Useful to mention a few.  Utopia is found in Texas but so also is Cheapside and a place called Cut and Shoot. Kentucky has Cranks, Ages, Dwarf and Fancy Farm while Virginia has Rustburg and Goose Pimple Junction. Luck is found in Wisconsin, Shady Cove in Oregon, Flasher bares all in North Dakota, What Cheer takes heart in Iowa, but Dismal is a place in Tennessee. Kill Devil Hills (the actual place where the Wright Brothers first flew) is near Kittyhawk in North Carolina along with Intelligence and Blowing Rock.

Georgia has a Handy, an Enigma and an Experiment as place names. There’s Bad Axe, Michigan; Bayonet Point, Florida; Skull Valley and Surprise, Arizona; Accident, Maryland; Bitter End, Tennessee; Hazardville, Connecticut, Big Ugly, West Virginia and Frog Suck in Wyoming to puzzle over.

Wyoming is a treasure trove of place names and historical sites: Fort Supply, Buckboard Crossing, Names Hill and Register Cliff (where pioneers scratched their names) Muddy Gap, Devil’s Gate, Hell’s Half Acre, Lost Cabin, Lost Springs, Hole-in-the-Wall, Massacre Hill, Recluse, Spotted Horse, Freedom, Medicine Bow, Bitter Creek, Whiskey Peak, Steamboat Mountain, Battle Pass, Teapot Dome, Little America, Wamsutter, Cugwater and Tensleep.

Scattered across the country there is at least one Hookersville, Hawesville, Dogville, Humanville, Idiotville, Nuttsville and a Looneyville. One must assume that these final place names were named not by the actual unfortunate inhabitants but by settlers in neighboring villes, bergs, towns and tons . . . . 


Australia has its share of weird and wonderful place names too and perhaps the most spectacularly unpronounceable one would have to be Boonahnoomoonah which is not actually at a town at all any more since it lost its post office in 1939 but it’s still on most maps. Like the boomerang, I guess the mail kept coming back.

Australia also has a Blow Clear, Bland, Broke, Break O Day, Cheepie, Doo Town, Burrumbuttock, Break-Me-Neck Hill, Come-by-Chance, Damboring, Diehard, Humpty Doo,  Nar Nar Goon as well as a Nowhere Else.

But pride of place for  place names must go to the United Kingdom with Beggars Bush, Boggy Bottom, Scratchy Bottom,  Crackpot, Giggleswick, Titty Ho, Wet Rain and Brokenwind. Yes, I’m still writing about towns – towns to make you laugh, and maybe laugh so hard that you have some broken wind.

And finally, New Zealand can boast the longest single word place name in the world with -

Taumatawhakatangihangakoauauotamateapokaiwhenuakitanatahu. It's a real place and it can be found in the south east corner of the North Island.







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...