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Best nest

February 23rd 2009 19:37
magpie
Black-billed magpie

In what may be a first in the bird world, two magpies have constructed a nest using metal sticks.

The nest, built in a tree among the high-rises in Hong Kong's Tuen Mun district, was built from more traditional materials plus about 40 metal sticks apparently pilfered from a nearby construction site.


Cheung Ho-fai, of the Hong Kong Bird Watching Society, said it was the first time he had heard of a nest being built with metal.

The magpie is already renowned as the only non-mammal known to be able to recognise itself in a mirror. It just added metallurgy and construction engineering to its résumé.

Magpie facts: pairs stay together year-round and for life unless one dies, in which case the remaining magpie finds another mate; they nest once a year, but will re-nest if their first attempt fails; the female lays up to nine eggs, but the average clutch size is between six and seven; only the female incubates, for 16 to 18 days, the male feeding the female throughout incubation; the young fly three to four weeks after hatching, feed with adults for about two months, and then fly off to join other juvenile magpies; the life span of a magpie in the wild is four to six years.
news.com.au, en.wikipedia.org


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Spend a penny

July 8th 2008 05:52
The great Asian clean-up is gathering pace. I blame the Brits, who started it by changing a deeply embedded cultural tradition a few decades ago when they stopped Hong Kongers spitting in the streets.

Then came the news last week that the authorities in China are aiming to make the same change in time for the Olympics.

And now, in the biggest relief of all, authorities in southern India have announced that they have successfully reversed the habit of centuries and stopped people urinating in the streets.

The method used to achieve this breakthough was as simple as it was effective - they started paying people to use public loos. A Times of India report at the weekend even spoke of queues outside public conveniences in Musiri, in Tamil Nadu state.


The newspaper quoted the authorities as explaining that the payment of close to a US dollar per month to use public toilets was to promote hygiene and research in rural areas. The research factor comes from collecting all that extra urine and testing for its efficacy as a crop fertiliser, an official of the state's agricultural university added.

Pennies well spent.
57
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Beijing has more of everything

July 3rd 2008 23:15
Chinese anti-terrorist training
Picture: Xinhua

Beijing is planning for the Olympics by, amongst other things, preparing a welcome committee for would-be terrorists, telling the President of France that he's not welcome, and annoying just about everybody seeking a tourist visa.

Chinese police and military are undertaking special anti-terrorist training which, judging from the picture below, is both efficient and futuristic. The French leader, Nicolas Sarkozy, has threatened to boycott the Olympics opening ceremony, a gesture aimed at putting pressure on China to be nice to the Dalai Lama during current official talks. A consequent poll of Beijingers shows the locals are strongly suggesting Mr Sarkozy shove his threat up a baguette and stay home. And increased security is causing long queues at Chinese embassies dispensing tourist visas, with one Australian telling a television journalist yesterday, "If I didn't have friends in China, there would be no reason to go."

Really.

I visited New York for the first time about 10 years ago and, after a life-time of expectations, the city had a lot to live up to. Of course, New York laughed at yet another innocent visitor. It didn't so much live up to my expectations as fling them, redefined and refined, in my face.

I had been living for some time in Hong Kong, and I'd been told that the two cities had similar energy. That was true, but as vibrant an over-achiever as Hong Kong is, it can't compete with something the size and stature of New York. I'd been to London and New Delhi and Tokyo - nothing really can compare in sheer everythingness to New York.

Can it?

In 2006 I visited Beijing for the first time and, from my Westerner's perspective, it out-New Yorked New York. It's a big statement, but it feels true in every sense.

Forget 12 million people - try 20 million. Forget Fifth Avenue - it's noisy and drab compared to Wangfujing. Central Park may be bigger than Tiananmen Square but it's less impressive. And what can New York put up against the Forbidden City?

My most enduring memory of Beijing is travelling down a 700-year-old cobbled street with 700-year-old buildings on either side. The buildings house restaurants and cafes and Fendi and Gucci shops, and the atmosphere is richer and thicker than anywhere I have ever been.

Beijing didn't bother laughing in my face - its supreme self-confidence leaves it indifferent to innocence. And it didn't so much live up to my expectations as shove them, redefined and refined, up my baguette.



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Hong Kong environment

October 27th 1999 07:01
hong kong harbour
"Hong Kong, unlike Singapore, never had a mandate for eternity. As a borrowed place in borrowed time, it evoked about as much protective instinct as a hotel room"

I lived in Hong Kong for 16 years until 2007. In 1998 and 1999 I wrote a series of political and social commentaries for a quirky institutional newsletter - quirky in that it was intended to be as much contentious, offbeat and humorous as it was informative. I was working as an editor, and I wrote the articles under the pseudonym Red Inque. I post them here for anyone interested in a look at life in Asia at the time, and in Hong Kong just after its return to Chinese sovereignty.

[ Click here to read more ]
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A storm in a stockmarket

September 20th 1999 06:47
I lived in Hong Kong for 16 years until 2007. In 1998 and 1999 I wrote a series of political and social commentaries for a quirky institutional newsletter - quirky in that it was intended to be as much contentious, offbeat and humorous as it was informative. I was working as an editor, and I wrote the articles under the pseudonym Red Inque. I post them here for anyone interested in a look at life in Asia at the time, and in Hong Kong just after its return to Chinese sovereignty.

And here is the weather forecast. Tomorrow will be muggy. Followed by Toogy, Weggy, Thurgy and Frigy. -- Anonymous

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A public relations coup

May 7th 1999 09:08
I lived in Hong Kong for 16 years until 2007. In 1998 and 1999 I wrote a series of political and social commentaries for a quirky institutional newsletter - quirky in that it was intended to be as much contentious, offbeat and humorous as it was informative. I was working as an editor, and I wrote the articles under the pseudonym Red Inque. I post them here for anyone interested in a look at life in Asia at the time, and in Hong Kong just after its return to Chinese sovereignty.

The consumer isn’t a moron; she is your wife. -- David Ogilvy (Confessions of an Advertising Man)

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Consumer confidence

April 27th 1999 08:50
I lived in Hong Kong for 16 years until 2007. In 1998 and 1999 I wrote a series of political and social commentaries for a quirky institutional newsletter - quirky in that it was intended to be as much contentious, offbeat and humorous as it was informative. I was working as an editor, and I wrote the articles under the pseudonym Red Inque. I post them here for anyone interested in a look at life in Asia at the time, and in Hong Kong just after its return to Chinese sovereignty.

Tell me Dobkins: How long have you been with us – not counting today? -- David Frost (The Sack and How to Give It)

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Chill wind from Beijing

February 8th 1999 03:57
I lived in Hong Kong for 16 years until 2007. In 1998 and 1999 I wrote a series of political and social commentaries for a quirky institutional newsletter - quirky in that it was intended to be as much contentious, offbeat and humorous as it was informative. I was working as an editor, and I wrote the articles under the pseudonym Red Inque. I post them here for anyone interested in a look at life in Asia at the time, and in Hong Kong just after its return to Chinese sovereignty.

They dream in courtship, but in wedlock wake. -- Alexander Pope

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Bad press

December 7th 1998 03:16
I lived in Hong Kong for 16 years until 2007. In 1998 and 1999 I wrote a series of political, investment and social commentary articles for a quirky institutional newsletter - quirky in that it was intended to be as much contentious, offbeat and humorous as it was informative. I was working as an editor at the time, and I wrote the articles under the pseudonym Red Inque. I post them here for anyone interested in a look at life in Asia at the time, especially in Hong Kong just after its return to Chinese sovereignty.

Accuracy to a newspaper is what virtue is to a lady; but a newspaper can always print a retraction.-- Adlai Stevenson

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