lukegreen.co.uk
living life one day at a time!
and other stuff!
So I was just looking through some internet stuff this evening and randomly got stuck in to a weird loop on blogger – I kept clicking the next blog button. I must say it’s a great way to watch everyone else’s lives flash before your eyes , it can be quite intriguing if not sometimes weird what you find. Anyway, I digress – during my cyber travels tonight it quickly became apparent as I flicked idilly through each blog, that there was a ALOT of babies, families and babies, toddlers, families and babies – I don’t mean just one or two in every now and then, but a constant stream of toddlers, family photos, DIY triumphs and first steps achievement blogs.
Now given recent events in my life, it’s fair to say that either google knows (paranoia) or I could be switching on to something thats always been there (like when someone mentions a car you haven’t seen for ages and then you see hundreds of them) but it seems to me that the generation who first signed up for a yahoo account at college, moved on to blogging and eventually surrendered there entire brain space to Facebook has suddenly got all grown up and had kids!
Clicking through the hordes of blogs that detail every waking moment of their families lives would have, up until recently filled me with panic, and most probably the more cynical response “what’s the big deal about YOUR baby!” but something intangible happens when you become a parent. Suddenly those screaming crying things that you always intended to “have”, but “oh not for another couple of years we’ve got things we want to do”, become the most important and precious things in your life, you find you and your partner having serious debates about the fact that your baby is sooo much better looking than all the other babies! Conversations generally become rundowns of the sleep you didn’t have, and you become intoxicated by the smell of your babies head!!
Moreover life somehow, becomes a little richer – like the colour has been turned up a notch. So not only can I add the categories “Ethan” and “Parenting” to my blog but also a big horay to babies, families and first steps I now understand what all the fuss is about!
Welcome to the world Mr Ethan Marley Green!
So looks like another cold winter is on the way for the UK, it seems a number of factors are again conspiring to set the stage for the white stuff!. One of the reasons for last years cold spell was a massively negative North Atlantic Oscillation (NAO)

Because of this a blocking weather pattern can establish for the UK, with high pressure sitting over Iceland and low pressure over the Azores. This acts like a massive wall for all the windy, wet and mild storm systems that run in from the west and pushes them further south into Europe. This then opens the UK up to Easterlies, Northerlies and the big daddy of snow makers the Polar Low. According various reports we have a high chance of a strongly negative NAO this year, and with continued Low Solar output there seems a good chance again of seeing some pretty cold snowy weather conditions in the UK.

As you can see (as of Oct 10th 2010) the NAO is currently predicted to go negative, and the weather patterns are duly sitting into place over the UK as a big high pressure establishes itself for the coming week.
For the experts view on this read BBC norths Paul Hudsons Post.
So below is the first ever bit of political correspondence I have felt the need to write. At the time of posting this America of all places (yes that country with some of the most aggressive foreign policy and single minded pursuit to secure Oil and access to Oil at all costs around the world) is currently accusing the UK Brown/Blaire government of shady oil deals!
America accuses the UK government of releasing Megrahi (the man charged with the Lockerbie Pan-Am flight bombing) to secure oil interests with Libya. Now maybe there is a connecting strand here, but it strikes me as completely hypocritical and cynical of America to try and take the moral high ground on this. It’s widely thought that the Lockerbie bombing was in response to America shooting down Iran_Air_Flight_655 as neatly highlighted in Christine Grahame (MSP) sturdy Newsnight response.
Here’s the email I sent her…
Christine
I have never felt the need to contact a political figure before, but have been so angered by America’s recent hypocritical stance on the Megrahi release, shady BP Oil deals accusations, that I had to send my congratulations to you for your robust response to John Bolton on Newsnight. I find America’s position particularly reprehensible given their foreign policy and decisions over the past, many motivated by Oil and access to Oil. Thank you for showing a high degree passion and backbone in your response to another American, drunk on the idea that when his country grumbles everyone else should cower.
Yours Sincerly Luke
You can watch the news night interview while its available on the BBC iPlayer
Each nation must find the best use of its resources to sustain civilisation for as long as they can, argues James Lovelock. Published in The Independent, 16 January 2006.
Imagine a young policewoman delighted in the fulfillment of her vocation; then imagine her having to tell a family whose child had strayed that he had been found dead, murdered in a nearby wood. Or think of a young physician newly appointed who has to tell you that the biopsy revealed invasion by an aggressive metastasising tumour. Doctors and the police know that many accept the simple awful truth with dignity but others try in vain to deny it.
Whatever the response, the bringers of such bad news rarely become hardened to their task and some dread it. We have relieved judges of the awesome responsibility of passing the death sentence, but at least they had some comfort from its frequent moral justification. Physicians and the police have no escape from their duty.
This article is the most difficult I have written and for the same reasons. My Gaia theory sees the Earth behaving as if it were alive, and clearly anything alive can enjoy good health, or suffer disease. Gaia has made me a planetary physician and I take my profession seriously, and now I, too, have to bring bad news.
The climate centres around the world, which are the equivalent of the pathology lab of a hospital, have reported the Earth’s physical condition, and the climate specialists see it as seriously ill, and soon to pass into a morbid fever that may last as long as 100,000 years. I have to tell you, as members of the Earth’s family and an intimate part of it, that you and especially civilisation are in grave danger.
Our planet has kept itself healthy and fit for life, just like an animal does, for most of the more than three billion years of its existence. It was ill luck that we started polluting at a time when the sun is too hot for comfort. We have given Gaia a fever and soon her condition will worsen to a state like a coma. She has been there before and recovered, but it took more than 100,000 years. We are responsible and will suffer the consequences: as the century progresses, the temperature will rise 8 degrees centigrade in temperate regions and 5 degrees in the tropics.
Much of the tropical land mass will become scrub and desert, and will no longer serve for regulation; this adds to the 40 percent of the Earth’s surface we have depleted to feed ourselves.
Curiously, aerosol pollution of the northern hemisphere reduces global warming by reflecting sunlight back to space. This ‘global dimming’ is transient and could disappear in a few days like the smoke that it is, leaving us fully exposed to the heat of the global greenhouse. We are in a fool’s climate, accidentally kept cool by smoke, and before this century is over billions of us will die and the few breeding pairs of people that survive will be in the Arctic where the climate remains tolerable.
By failing to see that the Earth regulates its climate and composition, we have blundered into trying to do it ourselves, acting as if we were in charge. By doing this, we condemn ourselves to the worst form of slavery. If we chose to be the stewards of the Earth, then we are responsible for keeping the atmosphere, the ocean and the land surface right for life. A task we would soon find impossible – and something before we treated Gaia so badly, she had freely done for us.
To understand how impossible it is, think about how you would regulate your own temperature or the composition of your blood. Those with failing kidneys know the never-ending daily difficulty of adjusting water, salt and protein intake. The technological fix of dialysis helps, but is no replacement for living healthy kidneys.
My new book The Revenge of Gaia expands these thoughts, but you still may ask why science took so long to recognise the true nature of the Earth. I think it is because Darwin’s vision was so good and clear that it has taken until now to digest it. In his time, little was known about the chemistry of the atmosphere and oceans, and there would have been little reason for him to wonder if organisms changed their environment as well as adapting to it.
Had it been known then that life and the environment are closely coupled, Darwin would have seen that evolution involved not just the organisms, but the whole planetary surface. We might then have looked upon the Earth as if it were alive, and known that we cannot pollute the air or use the Earth’s skin – its forest and ocean ecosystems – as a mere source of products to feed ourselves and furnish our homes. We would have felt instinctively that those ecosystems must be left untouched because they were part of the living Earth.
So what should we do? First, we have to keep in mind the awesome pace of change and realise how little time is left to act; and then each community and nation must find the best use of the resources they have to sustain civilisation for as long as they can. Civilisation is energy-intensive and we cannot turn it off without crashing, so we need the security of a powered descent. On these British Isles, we are used to thinking of all humanity and not just ourselves; environmental change is global, but we have to deal with the consequences here in the UK.
Unfortunately our nation is now so urbanised as to be like a large city and we have only a small acreage of agriculture and forestry. We are dependent on the trading world for sustenance; climate change will deny us regular supplies of food and fuel from overseas.
We could grow enough to feed ourselves on the diet of the Second World War, but the notion that there is land to spare to grow biofuels, or be the site of wind farms, is ludicrous. We will do our best to survive, but sadly I cannot see the United States or the emerging economies of China and India cutting back in time, and they are the main source of emissions. The worst will happen and survivors will have to adapt to a hell of a climate.
Perhaps the saddest thing is that Gaia will lose as much or more than we do. Not only will wildlife and whole ecosystems go extinct, but in human civilisation the planet has a precious resource. We are not merely a disease; we are, through our intelligence and communication, the nervous system of the planet. Through us, Gaia has seen herself from space, and begins to know her place in the universe.
We should be the heart and mind of the Earth, not its malady. So let us be brave and cease thinking of human needs and rights alone, and see that we have harmed the living Earth and need to make our peace with Gaia. We must do it while we are still strong enough to negotiate, and not a broken rabble led by brutal war lords. Most of all, we should remember that we are a part of it, and it is indeed our home.
Taken From James Lovelocks Personal Website