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rbkwp

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compliment FRANCE
dont usually, remember the Alamo, i mean French Nuclear Tests/bombng of the Rainbow Warrior in our waters??? ancient days but?? ha
feed the destitute


How France became a global leader in curbing food waste
PROGRESS WATCH

France isn't an obvious frontrunner in food recovery, but new legislation has helped catapult the nation to the top of the 2017 Food Sustainability Index.

1053500_1_0103-food-waste_standard.jpg

Philippe Wojazer/Reuters
|
Caption
Story Hinckley
@storyhinckley
JANUARY 3, 2018 —France is a culinary leader – both at the table and, more recently, in the trash can.

In February 2016, France became the first country in the world to prohibit supermarkets from throwing away unused food through unanimously passed legislation. Now, supermarkets of a certain size must donate unused food or face a fine. Other policies require schools to teach students about food sustainability, companies to report food waste statistics in environmental reports, and restaurants to make take-out bags available.

These laws “make it the norm to reduce waste,” says Marie Mourad, a PhD student in sociology at Sciences Po in Paris who has authored several reports on French food waste. “France is not the country that wastes the least food, but they have become the most proactive because they want to be the exemplary country in Europe.”


France’s efforts have not gone unnoticed. The country earned top ranking in the 2017 Food Sustainability Index, a survey of 25 countries across Europe, the Middle East, Asia, and the Americas conducted by the Economist and Barilla Center for Food and Nutrition Foundation (BCFN).

The people of France wasted 234 pounds of food per person annually, according to the BCFN report, which is drastically better than France’s international counterparts, compared to about 430 pounds per capitathrown away year in the United States.

RTR2UY1W.jpg

How to create a better food system (+video)

Small scraps make big impact
Food waste, or unused, edible food, is a global issue. Each year, some 1.3 billion metric tons, or one-third of all the food produced, is thrown away, according to the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organization. Recovering just 25 percent of that wasted food could feed 870 million hungry people – effectively ending world hunger.

Not only does food waste fritter away valuable resources like water, arable land, and money, but it also fills up landfills, which emit methane. If food waste were a country, it would be the third largest greenhouse gas emitter behind the United States and China.

“Food waste is so urgent because where and how we produce food has the biggest impact on the planet of any human activity,” says Jason Clay, senior vice president of food and markets at the World Wildlife Fund.

“In the US, we don't have champions in government who are thinking much about food, nevertheless food waste,” says Mr. Clay. “That has separated us from France: they have people who took up this issue politically.”


French National Assembly member Guillaume Garot helped frame the legislation with his previous experience as the former junior minister for the food industry – a position that in and of itself proves France’s dedication to the issue, say experts.

However, France is not an obvious frontrunner in this field.

Over the past decade, Britain has demonstrated far more statistical success, says Craig Hanson, global director of food, forests, and water at the World Resources Institute, and Denmark has made news with new projects like ugly produce grocery stores. Comparatively, France’s law is new, and as the Guardian reported after it was passed, only 11 percent of France’s 7.1 million metric tons of wasted food comes from supermarkets.


But to Clay, Ms. Mourad, and other food recovery advocates, the law is important symbolically. Neither the United States, nor Britain or Denmark, have comparable government legislation.

“Making it illegal for supermarkets to throw away food is massive,” says Jonathan Bloom, author of the book “American Wasteland.” “That legislative step has impacted all levels of the French food chain.”

Before the 2016 law, French supermarkets typically donated 35,000 metric tons of food annually, roughly one-third of food banks’ total supply, Jacques Bailet, president of the food bank network Banques Alimentaires, told the Guardian in 2016. If supermarkets can increase their food bank donations by only 15 percent this could mean 10 million more meals for needy French each year.

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This law improves not only the quantity of donated food, say experts, but also the quality. Food banks typically are supplied with canned goods, rather than nutritionally valuable foods like meat, vegetables, and fruit.

“The fight against food waste should become a major national cause, like road safety, that mobilises everybody,” said Mr. Garot in a press release. “That implies that every authority, at every level, plays its part.”

Did this story deliver on progress w

https://www.csmonitor.com/Environme...18&&cmpid=ema:nws:ScienceAndNature_(01-11-18)

some wonderful people in the world
dont need a money hungry Trump or similkar?

How a Ghanaian decided to set up a food bank
SPIRIT OF HUMANITY


0101-PMAD-MDARKO_2.jpg


https://www.csmonitor.com/World/Mak.../How-a-Ghanaian-decided-to-set-up-a-food-bank
 
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rbkwp

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LISTEN watch video
heard last nighjt/but listening to the audio a change of mind

VERY INTERESTING re Trade/consumers tastes
if your interested n RURAL
i am, again VERY INTERESTING
iconic Australian Golden Crcle
my favourite from the 70s ha

Consumers urged not to boycott Golden Circle tinned pineapples as north Queensland fruit left to rot


9324498-3x2-medium.jpg


Consumers of tinned pineapple have been urged not to boycott Golden Circle, the only company processing Australian pineapples.

Angry Australians vented their fury online this week after NQ Paradise Pines shared a social media poston Tuesday, criticising Golden Circle's Brisbane cannery for not opening early to process a glut of north Queensland fruit

Gavin Scurr says Golden Circle is not to blame for pineapples going to waste
( ABC News )
Farmers said they were being forced to leave hundreds of tonnes of pineapples to rot, due to a glut of the fruit.

But US-based processor Kraft Heinz has broken its silence to refute the claims, maintaining its Golden Circle brand was not to blame for the fresh pineapples going to waste.


http://www.abc.net.au/news/rural/20...Email||8940&utm_content=RuralMail_ArticleLink
 
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185248

Guest
LISTEN watch video
heard last nighjt/but listening to the audio a change of mind

VERY INTERESTING re Trade/consumers tastes
if your interested n RURAL
i am, again VERY INTERESTING
iconic Australian Golden Crcle
my favourite from the 70s ha

Consumers urged not to boycott Golden Circle tinned pineapples as north Queensland fruit left to rot


9324498-3x2-medium.jpg


Consumers of tinned pineapple have been urged not to boycott Golden Circle, the only company processing Australian pineapples.

Angry Australians vented their fury online this week after NQ Paradise Pines shared a social media poston Tuesday, criticising Golden Circle's Brisbane cannery for not opening early to process a glut of north Queensland fruit

Gavin Scurr says Golden Circle is not to blame for pineapples going to waste
( ABC News )
Farmers said they were being forced to leave hundreds of tonnes of pineapples to rot, due to a glut of the fruit.

But US-based processor Kraft Heinz has broken its silence to refute the claims, maintaining its Golden Circle brand was not to blame for the fresh pineapples going to waste.


http://www.abc.net.au/news/rural/2018-01-12/consumers-urged-not-to-boycott-golden-circle-pineapple-glut/9323866?utm_source=sfmc&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=:8940&user_id=cb53a1c368e708ac713d21ca78e70f2312c4d01d8c26bf97af51ee964c35adbc&WT.tsrc=email&WT.mc_id=Email||8940&utm_content=RuralMail_ArticleLink

Yes, saw this on ABC the other night. Did you ever pick Pineapples while in Aus rb? The problem is, we can only consume so many Pineapples. My Grandmother loved them because they help digestion.

They be yummy, sweet and straight off the farm. But, what do we do with them if there are way too many? Millions of Pineapples, and only 22 million people. We farm food for 65 million people, can produce food for 100 million or more.... much of it goes overseas. It's why we have so many interested overseas buyers.

Really, in the long run it is the farmers fault, if they worked together there would not be a glut. I feel sorry for the Pineapple, because to reach maturity for picking it takes 2 years. If Farmers after all this time can not work out 2 years ahead, what hope have we got?

Then again, I suppose no-one can predict weather conditions such as Cyclones, and drought conditions. It's a farmers life.
 
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rbkwp

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smile reminisce days v
no pineapples/sugarcane never tried my hand at
mangoes/tomatores/waremelon in BOWEN
Stanthorpe tomatoes for a season,apples all over whenever/oranges Victoria
prolific growing in Aus alright
water from the the Great Artesian helps
why i am super wary re that FRACKING bussiness,even tho AUSTRALIAS HUGE,everythings connected huh

what do we want food production or ..
seasonal/oversupply can be a bugger tho, you take your chances huh
yes the weather can be perfect for getting super yields of course/better than here ha
apart from your frequent natural weather disasters

diversification is neccessary i think,smaller farms only,very labour intensive of course we had 60 acres nd Dad was an old school grower,a bit of this/that,seasonal crops
master at getting produce 2/3 weeks before they hit the markets proper, invariably damn good prices ha

btw
SPC is my other fav,also Watties NZ
PEACHES the best mmmmmm ha


Click to expand...
Yes, saw this on ABC the other night. Did you ever pick Pineapples while in Aus rb?
 

MickeyLee

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I spent the better part of the day looking for my glasses. As much as you can look for glasses without wearing glasses.

Just when I had accepted my lot of a lower position on the food, a sound. The sound of a small black cat swatting something large across tile floor. Who was the culprit? A small black cat chasing what? My glasses.

Little scoot stole my glasses. I will now be forced to device some sort of glasses security system. One her devious, thievious little ass can't crack.
 
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rbkwp

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follow up
lust for wealth/kill everything in sight
they do a free/unpaid job,still get knocked off by us F'n anmal humans
white man bad,may be black man also, somehow doubt it
always think of white corporates huh
ie chemical companies etc
fungi/pestcides KILLING BEES etc etc

not sure if i Trumplike HATE Trump or MONSANTOS GLYSOPHATE
think both are equally as bad, a real BAD POISON!!!



Honey Bees Attracted to Glyphosate and a Common Fungicide

Modern Farmer

All species evolve over time to have distinct preferences for survival. But with rapidly changing synthetic chemicals, sometimes animals don't have a chance to develop a beneficial aversion to something harmful
.
edit

Among the pesticides tested were the ever-controversial glyphosate, the most common pesticide in the U.S., which previous studies have also shown to be attractive to honey bees.


https://www.ecowatch.com/honey-bees...ail&utm_term=0_49c7d43dc9-dc51e41409-85968677
 

rbkwp

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well
you dident know that


| 1:15 | NEWS |
Orphaned Baby Elephant Saved By Helicopter
Baby elephants in distress are, unfortunately, common to see in our line of work. This one is a little unusual—the calf is so small that they transported it inside a helicopter to the orphanage. Using a chopper to move elephants isn’t as weird as it sounds, but normally they’re not inside the cockpit.

The calf was born too small to nurse from its mother, and is now recovering at theDavid Sheldrick Wildlife Trust orphanage in Nairobi, Kenya.

and/or

980x.jpg




The Power Forest

980x.jpg



980x.jpg


https://www.ecowatch.com/amazon-rai...ail&utm_term=0_49c7d43dc9-dc51e41409-85968677
 
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rbkwp

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of course we'all knew that duh',well
nopt really, in our dreams maybe?? ha
wondrous tho
as he said



iQV-Fgl_M2hm1uxX0dIaQS98dCS4aXKjZSZ6of3QlJRF1ddM3HQnFnZQS1AkGj52HETrb_auLRXzH9qyomkyto6lfUnU006AhxAjOhy9ir3oZN_omw8eQkq9glg9wDrCZklUULoE7k3Jm4Vpvnm7oLBDtYSZZe9OMuCME5wh_byxvl0=s0-d-e1-ft


| 1:25 | NEWS |
Why Niagara Falls Ices Over, But Won’t Freeze Entirely

It's become a tradition for media outlets to report—inaccurately—that Niagara Fallshas frozen solid. The hype may be from haste or the allure of a good symbol. The truth is that Niagara Falls never completely freezes. Even without exaggeration, this especially frigid season has created beautiful scenes around the natural wonder in New York State and Ontario.

take that 111

v-ATvf_VhY0grBHLDZLbenIygKSH_vegVd7BQhMvudg8a9TcbxTC2t4YP1YfDT84jb8rTRMrxMzxnK6AMzR8LGlr9KexNUDxAgYHRXtyhylEIC3feRPf8ek0NKx1rGMZlw_K-LTJERr1278ZtF8oSAeKFYR2d54VzRZ9L21ujZ1rZYxApMXlxDvM=s0-d-e1-ft
 

rbkwp

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fyi
interesting info
and a dopey thing like Trump wants to replace scientists with more uneducated idiots like him,having the USA/World believe in there stupidity huh/or lust/craving for wealth at the expebse of everything else


The Unlikely Survival of Bees in the Arctic
A new species has been identified in an archipelago once used for Soviet nuclear testing.



Bees in the Arctic
The Unlikely Survival of Bees in the Arctic
A new species has been identified in an archipelago once used for Soviet nuclear testing.
image.jpg


These shaggy queens, striped black and flaxen yellow, start their hunt for flowers—Arctic rose, bog blueberry, black crowberry. Even in these cold northern reaches of the world, plants need pollination, and much like their flashier southern counterparts, the bees there fly from bloom to bloom, helping themselves to nectar and nudging plant life along.


It is incredible enough that one species has evolved to handle the Arctic seasons. But there is a surprising amount of bee diversity there.

https://www.atlasobscura.com/articl...89&ct=t()&mc_cid=f272ffad37&mc_eid=d67b59bc0e

CUTE
trees,sustenance of life,along with bees

The Armada Tree
This gnarled old tree supposedly sprouted from seeds kept in the pocket of a 16th-century Spanish sailor.


armada%20tree1.jpg


Spanish%20Armada%20Tree%204.jpg


According to local legend, this Spanish Sweet Chestnut tree sprouted from seeds stored within a dead sailor’s pocket. Supposedly, the 16th-century Spanish sailor buried beneath it had been carrying chestnuts with him while on his maritime journey, likely to ward off scurvy.

The sailor was part of the Spanish Armada. Unfortunately for him and the rest of his crew, gales whipped the waves into a furious frenzy, blowing their ship off course and wrecking it near Northern Ireland. One sailor’s body washed up on the shores of Ballygally in 1588, where kind locals discovered the corpse and buried it in an unmarked grave at St Patrick’s Church of Ireland.

https://www.atlasobscura.com/places...89&ct=t()&mc_cid=f272ffad37&mc_eid=d67b59bc0e
 
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rbkwp

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DEJONITLY ONE OF THE BEST/TOTALLY AGREE

‘Phantom Thread’ is reportedly final film for Daniel Day-Lewis, our greatest living actor
In addition to the terrific ensemble acting and the pleasures of watching an expertly designed human board game being played out, director Paul Thomas Anderson is showcasing the self-immolation of an artist who is both inspired and undone by his muse.
0105_PhantomThread.jpg


https://www.csmonitor.com/The-Cultu...030&jb=51&&cmpid=ema:nws:Weekender_(01-13-18)
 

rbkwp

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just sayin 8 TAMARIND the red monkey
better lookin/performin than Trump,yes!!!
we dont need no lyin to survive


The Amazing Adaptation That Keeps Tamarin Numbers Up
Golden lion tamarins have evolved a clever way to keep their population size steady in the face of predation. They almost always give birth to twins. (3:14)

Read more: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/vide...ReportId=MTIwMTk2Njc2NAS2#pGZYoVK6q2jMSfmd.99
Give the gift of Smithsonian magazine for only $12! http://bit.ly/1cGUiGv
Follow us: @SmithsonianMag on Twitter

OagTgCRyE1YOMKlXjS2e7TDSrGbnZ0TSlYnWS1baHI62rD4uoqjBWxm9WTX9YSchAZr-4j5eDAkXDwuN99RlqSGRKH_PHcZXVO68gm7_S__8iNH774DrGx8DbEUjIYPIWfMuQwqPluZW1QJik26RcwTyPMRla0OuHx9E7d-M8Lc=s0-d-e1-ft


https://www.smithsonianmag.com/vide...pJobID=1201966764&spReportId=MTIwMTk2Njc2NAS2
 
6

693987

Guest
I like meal planning and cooking for Rem and myself.. going to make some veggie heavy + bulgogi bibimbap with multigrain rice. I'm also going to make some Bolognese with spaghetti squash in lieu of pasta. Om nom nom :D
 

rbkwp

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rbkwp

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fish and beef
all thats required
with veges of course
bara/brahman beef

Au land of plenty


The costly fight to save power station barramundi from cold death
Barramundi released into Hazelwood cooling ponds was supposed to attract tourists, instead it has attracted huge costs to keep the tropical fish alive.



History made as first live export of northern cattle heads to China
Two years after a landmark free trade pact was signed, northern Australian cattle are en-route to China from Townsville.



Livestock export standards review 'long overdue': RSPCA
Animal welfare advocates say the review of Australia’s livestock export standards is long overdue and necessary.

 

rbkwp

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rbkwp

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thisis the Trump thread isent it??



Khansa, an eight-month old critically endangered Bornean orangutan, shows off it's two front teeth, at the Singapore Zoo on Jan. 11, in Singapore. The Singapore Zoo is active with its breeding programs as part of its wildlife preservation efforts. This is the Zoo's 46th successful orangutan birth.
View gallery

chamelons,sound familiar?

ULTRAVIOLET LIZARDS: CHAMELEON BONES GLOW FLUORESCENT UNDER UV LIGHT

117glowing-chameleon.png


http://www.newsweek.com/ultraviolet...1&spJobID=950793597&spReportId=OTUwNzkzNTk3S0
 

rbkwp

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The real reason why cats purr and other feline facts

intro.jpg



http://www.grunge.com/30608/cats-pu...&utm_campaign=zergnet_2172042&utm_content=263

cool
humankind getting into/lookingat alternatives

Electric Eels Inspire a New Type of Battery
Researchers took a cue from the electric eel to create a soft, foldable battery that could one day power devices like pacemakers

Read more: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/inno...w-type-battery-180967801/#bGiel04Ajb5w6Oql.99
Give the gift of Smithsonian magazine for only $12! http://bit.ly/1cGUiGv

electric-eel.jpg


https://www.smithsonianmag.com/inno...pJobID=1202228951&spReportId=MTIwMjIyODk1MQS2
 

rbkwp

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yes
landofplenty as in whatever reason industrial disputes/over production even/unfortunate for those countries afar no doubt
pineapples 2 weeks ago/mangoes today
just too much, but
what can we do /what can be done/transport costs prohibitive
then recipient countries having distribution difficulties,nence rotting fruit on wharfs etc etc

happened once re our fresh fruit/veg aid to Fiji
in a natural disaster they suffered once

Free mangoes for people in need sparked by a generous farmer's war on waste
In a sweet gesture of generosity, a Queensland mango farmer is giving away his entire crop of juicy fruit to charities and people in need.



then
nature tales a hold

Brumbies feel the heat as drought worsens
Bone-dry conditions prompt carers at a Hunter Valley brumby sanctuary to spend thousands of dollars hand-feeding the herd.

 

rbkwp

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yeah yeah yeah
we are all going to crap out and die/ soomer than later/be harmed because the 'experts' say so and feel obliged to warn us

super officious health fiends, pathetic

as if our Mother Fathers never used wood and or never took sensible hygiene pecautions
many living longer than we are likely to?
as well



Email
Health and safety issues to consider when eating food served on wooden boards
ABC Radio Sydney
By Luke Wong
Updated January 18, 2018 17:43:20

PHOTO: Meals served on wooden boards are a popular way to present food. (Supplied: Foodie Factor)


MAP: Sydney 2000
The trend of food served on wooden boards can divide opinion across the table, but should diners be worried about them being unhealthy?

Recently a restaurant in Birmingham, England, was heavily fined after ignoring advice from health inspectors regarding the cleanliness of their serving boards.

External Link: Twitter: Birmingham City Council food


So, what are the health and safety rules regarding their use in Australia?

Gary Kennedy is a food and safety auditor who has managed a food consultancy business in Sydney for 15 years.

"There's a perception of some people that wood is illegal in a food business, well that's just not true," he said.

Wood for food service, nothing new
While Mr Kennedy said there were no specific NSW laws regarding the use of wood in food service, he said it came under the same scrutiny like any other material used in the industry.

"What the rules say is that it must be washable and impervious and it must not contaminate the food," he said.

"Things like coffee stirrers, toothpicks, bamboo steamers — they all legally have to be showing that nothing comes out of the wood that contaminates.

PHOTO: Natural materials, like in this bamboo steamer, are regularly used for serving food. (Flickr: Avlxyz)



"Pesticide residues, wood treatments and varnishes, all of that still has to be food-grade and if it does in any way get out and get into the food, it's got to be shown to meet the legal limits in the food standards code."

He noted that wooden serving boards were usually oiled, giving them some water resistance.

"Of course, if you repeatedly cut it with a knife you're going to cut through that coating which is one of the problems."

Mr Kennedy recalled visiting local restaurants during his childhood where he regularly saw food served on wooden boards and said the current trend was nothing new.

"Roast meats have always traditionally been served on wooden chopping boards," he said.

"Provided they're maintained and cleaned properly, there's no problem with them."

We asked if you were concerned about being served food on wooden boards. Read the discussion in the comments.


PHOTO: Use dedicated chopping boards for preparing food like raw meats and others for specifically serving cooked food.(Pexels: Lukas)



He stressed, however, the importance of avoiding cross-contamination and advised using separate boards for preparation, especially when handling raw meat, and using others solely for serving cooked food.

Keeping things clean
Mr Kennedy said some overseas studies had shown wooden chopping boards could hold anti-bacterial properties.

University of California research into wooden cutting boards found them to potentially be safer to use than plastic ones.

However, Mr Kennedy said proper cleaning and maintenance of serving boards greatly contributed to food safety.

Take the food safety quiz

What temperature should you cook chicken to be confident you won't spend the next 24 hours in the bathroom?



"If there's a crack in it, it's no good because you can't clean in a big crack. If it's got splinters, don't eat [the food]," he advised.

"The board should be roughly the same colour. If you can see bits that look dirty there's a problem with it."

As for cleaning your wooden boards at home, Mr Kennedy gave some simple tips.

"Putting it through hot water, like a dishwasher, kills all the bugs and most of the commercial sanitisers that you use in a dishwasher, they'll kill everything as well.

"Air drying is the best way to dry it as opposed to drying with a tea towel as they pose their own problems."

food-safety, food-and-cooking, occup

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2018-01-...tm_content=ABCNewsmail_topstories_articlelink