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Ikeahackers

Reading ‘The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo’, you would be forgiven for thinking that the only pastimes that are of interest in Sweden are drinking coffee and violent criminal acts.

However there is another fine Swedish hobby that has now spread globally.

If you can’t get enough of your Expidit shelf, Udder workbench or Billy bookcase, then IKEAhackers.net is the site for you.

The team at IKEAhackers have collected hundreds of ‘hacks’ to change the way you construct, use or combine your IKEA products. Shelves go on their sides and are combined with doors to become workstations, baskets become bathroom shelves, kitchen utensils double as decorative lights, clocks become tables, sliding cupboard doors become groovy room dividers, and shelving units create a new home for hamsters.

Workplace_storageTrain_tableHamster_homeExpeditTable_clockDivider

IKEAhackers.net has been sharing furniture ‘tweaks’ since 2006, and 5000 people vote annually to determine the hack of the year.

I guess they need something in Sweden to fill the long, cold winter nights.

When the only tool you have is an allen key, everything starts to look like a flatpack.

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Sep 18 2011

Wine Talking

P85

Today, our friend Father Peter told us about two of his parishoners.

They had been married many years. As was their custom, they were sitting on their back verandah, watching the sun set, having a quiet drink.

“I love you”, said the wife.

“That’s a lovely thing for you to say”, her husband said. “But how do I know that it’s not just the wine talking?”

“Oh”‘ replied his wife, “It’s definitely me talking – to the wine”

What I Learnt On 18th September in other years

18th September 2013 The Power of Words
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take a nap.jpg

Cool Tools today features a practical guide to the nap.

Improve your productivity by having a 10 minute kiip.Sounds very civilized to me.

via kk.org

What I Learnt On 17th September in other years

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I like the thinking in the School of Arts and Science at the University of Pennsylvania.

Every few weeks in Spring and Autumn, one of the faculty share their perspectives on topics ranging from human history and the knowable universe, to fractions and fly-fishing – and they are only allocated one minute for the lecture.

Should be compulsory everywhere.

We’ll feature some of these lectures in ‘What I Learnt Today’.

Today – Dennis DeTurck, a mathematician and the Professor for Excellence in Teaching, says “Down with Fractions!”

 

What I Learnt On 16th September in other years

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Sep 15 2011

Reptile World

There are times when it feels like we may be living in Australia Zoo. 

On Sunday a koala climber up a tree to watch the boys play backyard footy. 

Yesterday loud squawking alerted us to a pair of magpies swooping a huge goanna, to drive it away from their nest. They were successful, and the goanna retreated to a refuge under the fig tree. 

And soon after that, Murray the wonder dog started barking madly. A snake had come to visit, and was by the front door. 

Calmy, it slithered through the garage and off to some bushes on the boundary of our house. It was thin, about a metre long, with a greenish sides and a brown back. 

Snake

And today, two more snakes of the same species were sunning themselves in the driveway. 

Identifying snakes is notoriously diffcult. Herpetologists often have to count the number of dorsal scales to be sure of the species (really!).That’s more initmate than I want to get to a snake. 

What snake is that? listed all the snakes in the Northern Rivers, and the one that seemed to match most closely was the Eastern Brown. That’s not good news.

Both What snake is that? and snakecatchers.com.au, a Brisbane based wildlife protection group, offer a service whereby you can email them a photo and they’ll have a go at naming your visitor. After making some disparaging remarks about my photography skills, snakecatchers thought our friends looked liked Yellow Faced Whip Snakes.

Reviewing the photo and description on their site, that is a closer match. 

The highly venemous Eastern Brown causes the most problems around here, with the Red Bellied Black Snake in second place. Dogs are the most common victims, and at this time of year Mike the Vet is getting busy. A local farmer died a few years ago when he was bitten on the bare feet by a brown snake when he went to feed the chooks. This is unusual – most people who are bitten are trying to kill the snake. Bites are fairly common, but envemomation is fairly rare, and nearly always can be treated successfully if appropriate first aid is used.

  • Do not try and catch the snake.
  • Ring an ambulance.
  • Do not wash the bite site (the hospital will take a swab of the venom on the skin to identify the snake)
  • Apply a ‘pressure immobilisation bandage’ – this means wrap the arm or leg up as if the person had a sprained ankle or sprained wrist. Start at the fingers and toes and go as far up the limb as you can.
  • Splint the leg/arm.
  • Keep as still as possible.

Yellow faced whip snakes sometimes bite, if you disturb them enough. Their poison hurts a lot and can cause a severe local reaction, but (generally) they are considered only mildly dangerous.

They can be found over most of Australia, but quite sensibly avoid Victoria.

What I Learnt On 15th September in other years

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