Monday, March 3, 2014

Corks.... I thought this was very interesting even if you're not a wine drinker.


 
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Have you ever wondered where that cork in your bottle of wine comes from?
 
The answer is most likely to be Spain or Portugal,
Where over half of the world’s cork is harvested.
 
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In fact it is the “National Tree” of Portugal.
 
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However, unlike other forms of forestry,
The production of cork
Never involves the death of a tree.
 
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Instead, they are gently stripped,
Leaving a strange but fascinating
Landscape of denuded trunks.
 
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All of this takes some time.
Cork trees can live to over 200 hundred years
But are not considered ready for their cork to
Be removed until they are at least 25 years old.
 
2011 Cork  Oaks,  Portugal
Even then, the first two harvests do not produce cork of the highest quality.
It isn’t until the trees are in their forties that they produce premium cork.
 
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Once the trees have reached the maturity necessary to produce high quality cork
Then they will be harvested only every nine years.
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A tree, in its lifetime, can be harvested (the process is known as extraction) about fifteen times.
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Little wonder then, that in Portugal and Spain the propagation of the trees
And the production of cork has become an inter-generational industry,
With farmers still producing a crop from trees
Planted by their great-great grandfathers.
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The cork must, however, be extracted from the trees without causing any lasting harm to them
– otherwise, 9 years later they will be useless.
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Extraction takes place in the summer when the tree is least susceptible to damage.
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The poor cork which is produced as a result of the first two harvests is known as male cork:
Later extractions provide what is known as gentle cork
Which is what you will screw out of a wine bottle, the contents of which it helps to flavor.
Transporte del corcho en                                                           mulas. Cork                                                            transport on                                                            mules.
The extractors must be skilled at their job.
They make two cuts to the tree.
The first is horizontal and is cut around the tree.
This is known as the necklace and the incision is made at a height
Around three times the circumference of
 
the tree. La saca  del corcho.  The harvesting  of Cork                                                           Oak
Then a series of vertical cuts are made which are called openings or rulers.
Cork oak trees
This is the point at which the extractors must use the most strength
But at the same time be at their most gentle.
They push the handle of the axe in to the rulers and pry the cork away.
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If the cuts are too deep or impatiently done
Then there is a risk that the phellogen of the tree will be damaged.
This is the cell layer which is responsible for the development
And growth of the periderm of the tree – its bark in other words.
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Damage this and the tree will produce poor or no cork in the future: it may even die.
So strength and gentleness must be used in equal measure during the extraction.
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Once the cork is extracted it is stacked in layers and left to dry out.
Once that has taken place it is taken to be processed.
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The technique used leaves the trees alive and the environment intact
– cork production is said to one of the most Eco-friendly and recyclable harvests on the planet.
 
Not only is cork easy to recycle.
The trees prevent the local environment from becoming arid
And so actively help to maintain rare ecosystems.
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Not only that, but the cork forests of the Iberian Peninsula
are home to a number of endangered species
which would find it much harder to thrive
without the presence of the cork oak forests.
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Although 60% of the cork extracted is still used for bottle stoppers
(despite the recent predilection for using alternatives)
cork is an essential component of a number of other things too.
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If you are a fan of badminton, then without cork you would no longer be able to play
– it is a vital component in the manufacture of shuttlecocks.
More sports rely on it too
– the centers of baseball and cricket bats are made of cork.
Cork Trees
 
CORK TREES_1373
 
Cork Trees 01
Cork is also a great material to use for insulation.  I
t is non-allergenic and easy-to-handle and if it does catch fire,
its fumes are not toxic like man-made insulation materials.
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The different segments of woodwind instruments are fastened together
by pieces made from cork and not only that
– the baton of your concert conductor will most likely also be made out of this versatile material.
alcornoques tras la                                                           corcha
 
alcornoque y cabras
Cork has many other uses, too,
including components of the fairings to the heat shields of spacecraft.
alcornoques
Yet ultimately, the fascination is in its production, which leaves so many trees stripped
and bared to the elements and which gives the landscapes of parts of Spain and
Portugal such a unique appearance.
 
 
  
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
 

Strong historical basis - 'IN GOD WE TRUST'

American Minute with Bill Federer

MAR. 3 - 'IN GOD WE TRUST'
On MARCH 3, 1931, Congress adopted "The Star-Spangled Banner" as the National Anthem.

Written by Francis Scott Key during the War of 1812, the 4th verse of includes the lines:

"Then conquer we must, when our cause it is just;
And this be our motto 'IN GOD IS OUR TRUST'!
And the Star Spangled Banner in triumph shall wave,
Over the land of the free and the home of the brave!"



The 'Star-Spangled Banner' stirred patriotism across America, with its 4th verse inspiring the 125th Pennsylvania Infantry to use 'IN GOD WE TRUST' as its battle cry at the Battle of Antietam.

During the Civil War, Rev. M.R. Watkinson wrote to the Treasury Department, November 13, 1861, suggesting the recognition of "Almighty God in some form in our coins."



Treasury Secretary Salmon P. Chase, who Lincoln later appointed Chief Justice, assigned the task to James Pollock, the Philadelphia Director of the Mint.

James Pollock was the former Governor of Pennsylvania and a former U.S. Congressman. 



Complying with Secretary Chase's request, The Report of the Secretary of the Treasury on the State of the Finances (U.S. Dept. of the Treasury, 1863, page 190-191), gives James Pollock's reply:

"We claim to be a Christian nation - why should we not vindicate our character by honoring the God of Nations... Our national coinage should do this. Its legends and devices should declare our trust in God-in Him who is 'King of Kings and Lord of Lords.'" 



James Pollock continued:

"The motto suggested, 'God our Trust,' is taken from our National Hymn, the 'Star-Spangled Banner.' The sentiment is familiar to every citizen of our country - it has thrilled the hearts and fallen in song from the lips of millions of American Freemen. 

The time for the introduction of this...is propitious and appropriate. 'Tis an hour of National peril and danger - an hour when man's strength is weakness - when our strength and our nation's strength and salvation, must be in the God of Battles and of Nations. 


Let us reverently acknowledge his sovereignty, and let our coinage declare our trust in God."  

Treasury Secretary Salmon P. Chase wrote to James Pollock, December 9, 1863:

"I approve your mottos, only suggesting that on that with the Washington obverse, the motto should begin with the word 'Our,' so as to read: 'Our God and our Country.' And on that with the shield, it should be changed so as to read: 'IN GOD WE TRUST.'"

 
Salmon P. Chase's proposal was passed by Congress on April 22, 1864, allowing the motto on one-cent and two-cent coins.

On MARCH 3, 1865, Congress voted to approve the motto 'IN GOD WE TRUST' for all U.S. coins.



House Speaker Schuyler Colfax noted:

"The last act of Congress ever signed by President Lincoln was one requiring that the motto...'IN GOD WE TRUST' should hereafter be inscribed upon all our national coin."



"IN GOD WE TRUST" was inscribed in the U.S. House Chamber above the Speaker's rostrum; 

above the Senate's main southern door; 

on a tribute block inside the Washington Monument; 

and on a stained-glass window in the U.S. Capitol's Chapel.



President Truman stated October 30, 1949:

"When the U.S. was established...the motto was 'IN GOD WE TRUST.' That is still our motto and we still place our firm trust in God."

President Eisenhower remarked at a ceremony issuing the first stamp bearing the motto "IN GOD WE TRUST," April 8, 1954:



"America's greatness has been based upon a spiritual quality...symbolized by the stamp that will be issued today... Regardless of any eloquence of the words that may be inside the letter, on the outside he places a message: 

'Here is...the land that lives in respect for the Almighty's mercy to us.'...Each of us, hereafter, fastening such a stamp on a letter, cannot fail to feel something of the inspiration that we do whenever we...read "IN GOD WE TRUST."



The same day, President Eisenhower stated to a Women's Conference:

"I have just come from assisting in the dedication of a new stamp... The stamp has on it a picture of the Statue of Liberty, and on it also is stated 'IN GOD WE TRUST'...

All of us mere mortals are dependent upon the mercy of a Superior Being... The reason this seems so thrilling is...the opportunity it gives to every single individual who buys the stamp to send a message - regardless of the content of a letter...that this is the land of the free and 'IN GOD WE TRUST.'"



President Eisenhower remarked at the 75th Anniversary of the Incandescent Lamp, October 24, 1954:

"'IN GOD WE TRUST.' Often have we heard the words of this wonderful American motto. Let us make sure that familiarity has not made them meaningless for us. 

We carry the torch of freedom as a sacred trust for all mankind. We do not believe that God intended the light that He created to be putout by men."

Eisenhower continued:

"Atheism substitutes men for the Supreme Creator and this leads inevitably to domination and dictatorship. But we believe - and it is because we believe that God intends all men to be free and equal that we demand free government. 

Our Government is servant, not master, our chosen representatives are our equals, not our czars or commissars."



Eisenhower concluded:

"We must jealously guard our foundation in faith. For on it rests the ability of the American individual to live and thrive in this blessed land -and to be able to help other less fortunate people to achieve freedom and individual opportunity. 

These we take for granted, but to others they are often only a wistful dream."

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Get the book, American Minute-Notable Events of American Significance Remembered on the Date They Occurred


On July 11, 1954, a month after the phrase "UNDER GOD" was incorporated into the Pledge of Allegiance, Congress enacted Public Law 84-140 which put the motto, 'IN GOD WE TRUST,' on all national coins and currency.



In 1956, the phrase 'IN GOD WE TRUST' was legally adopted by Congress as the official United States' National Motto.

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John F. Kennedy stated February 9, 1961:

"The guiding principle of this Nation has been, is now, and ever shall be 'IN GOD WE TRUST.'"

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President Reagan stated in his National Day of Prayer Proclamation, March 19, 1981:

"Our Nation's motto 'IN GOD WE TRUST' - was not chosen lightly. It reflects a basic recognition that there is a divine authority in the universe to which this Nation owes homage."

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Reagan stated at a White House observance of National Day of Prayer, May 6, 1982:

"Our faith in God is a mighty source of strength. Our Pledge of Allegiance states that we are 'one nation under God,' and our currency bears the motto, 'IN GOD WE TRUST.'"

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Reagan said following a meeting with Pope John Paul II in Vatican City, June 7, 1982:

"Ours is a nation grounded on faith, faith in man's ability through God-given freedom to live in tolerance and peace and faith that a Supreme Being guides our daily striving in this world. Our national motto, 'IN GOD WE TRUST,' reflects that faith."

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President George H.W. Bush met with Amish and Mennonites at Penn Johns Elementary School in Lancaster, PA, March 22, 1989. 

When a Mennonite leader stated: 

"We want to keep that theme, 'IN GOD WE TRUST,' which is stamped on our money," 

President Bush replied: "It's staying there. Nobody can knock that off."


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President George H.W. Bush remarked on the National Day of Prayer, May 4, 1989:

"We are one nation under God. And we were placed here on Earth to do His work. 

And our work has gone on now for more than 200 years in the Nation - a work best embodied in four simple words: 'IN GOD WE TRUST.'"
 

Get the book, America's God and Counry Encyclopedia of Quotations

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In a 2003 joint poll by USA Today, CNN, and Gallup reported that 90% of Americans support "IN GOD WE TRUST" on U.S. coins.

In 2006, on the 50th anniversary of its adoption, the Senate reaffirmed "IN GOD WE TRUST" as the official national motto.

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In July 2010, a Federal Appeals Court in the District of Columbia ruled 3-0 the National Motto was constitutional under the First Amendment, quoting the 1970 decision, Aronow v. United States:

"It is quite obvious that the national motto and slogan on coinage and currency 'IN GOD WE TRUST' has nothing whatsoever to do with the establishment of religion."

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On March 7, 2011, the Supreme Court denied a challenge by an atheist who was intolerant of the National Motto, by letting the decision of the Federal Appeals Court stand.

On November 1, 2011, the House of Representatives passed an additional resolution in a 396-9 vote reaffirming "IN GOD WE TRUST" as the official motto of the United States.

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Muslim Brotherhood Leader Meets Obama in White House

Muslim Brotherhood Leader Meets Obama in White House

The American people better  wake up and soon or it will be too late. Elect true patriots only! VOTE AND VOTE CORRECTLY DO YOUR RESEARCH AMERICA'S FUTURE IS IN YOUR HANDS AND I'M NOT KIDDING!  Spread the word to all in your orbit.


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RT @anti_commie32: Keep up the great work!!! https://t.co/FIAnl1hxwG

RT @anti_commie32: Keep up the great work!!! https://t.co/FIAnl1hxwG — Joseph Moran (@JMM7156) May 2, 2023 from Twitter https://twitter....