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AI beefs up veggie burgers

By - Aug 18,2021 - Last updated at Aug 18,2021

SATIGNY, Switzerland — Have a beef with beef? A burgeoning veggie burger industry is using artificial intelligence to propose alternatives.

Swiss group Firmenich, one of the world’s leading flavour manufacturers, says recreating the sensation of beef relies not only on flavour, texture and colour, but also on how it responds to cooking and the way it feels in the mouth.

“Finding a protein that resembles meat from a vegetable protein is highly complex,” Emmanuel Butstraen, head of Firmenich’s flavours unit, told AFP at the company’s headquarters in Satigny outside Geneva.

One of the toughest challenges is avoiding an unpleasant aftertaste. Pea proteins tend to release bitterness, which the taste buds are quick to pick up, Butstraen noted.

Vegetable proteins can give off hints of green apples or pears, an aftertaste of beans, astringency or even a feeling of dryness, said Jerome Barra, the company’s innovation director.

To mask these flavours or compensate for them with other tastes, the aromatics experts can call on a vast library of ingredients.

Barra likened the computer-logged database to “a piano with 5,000 keys”, from which the flavours can be composed.

“Artificial intelligence can generate millions of possibilities,” Barra said.

He said the algorithms can generate not only a wide range of flavour combinations but also factor in shifting consumer preferences, along with technical or regulatory constraints. 

They filter down the combination of ingredients from which the experts can create flavours, he said.

Only then are they road-tested in the kitchen with a chef.

The algorithms can propose multiple combinations that the human expert aromaticians might not have conceived.

AI has notably enabled Firmenich to develop an aroma that replicates the specific flavour of barbecued meat, with the algorithms helping to pin down similar flavours in the plant world.

“Plant-based food is a very important shift in consumption,” said Firmenich Chief Executive Gilbert Ghostine.

“I see this trend growing stronger and stronger in future,” he said, pointing to meat and dairy alternatives among the nutrition trends with the highest growth potential.

According to a study by the Credit Suisse bank, the market for meat and dairy alternatives is already worth around $14 billion globally, will reach $143 billion by 2030 — and $1.4 trillion by 2050.

With the rise of flexitarian diets and concerns over meat’s carbon footprint, the market for vegetarian alternatives is booming under the influence of US start-ups such as Beyond Meat or Impossible Foods, as well as industry giants such as Nestle or Unilever, which have jumped on the bandwagon.

“Steaks, cutlets and other vegetable burgers are highly processed foods whose value depends on their ingredients, which vary from one product to another,” Muriel Jaquet, dietician for the Swiss Nutrition Society, told AFP.

The organisation, which works with the Swiss health ministry, recommends eating one portion per day of meat, fish, eggs or alternatives such as tofu.

On vegetarian steaks, it advises consumers to check the salt, sugar and fat content.

After rising 11.4 per cent in 2019, the global growth in sales of meat alternatives slowed to 1.3 per cent in 2020 but should climb again by 5.1 per cent this year and 6.3 per cent in 2022, according to market researchers Euromonitor International.

By comparison, meat products saw only 0.3 per cent growth in 2020, with a more modest recovery of 2.9 per cent expected in 2021 and 4.6 per cent in 2022.

 

In the footsteps of a woolly mammoth, 17,000 years ago

By - Aug 18,2021 - Last updated at Aug 18,2021

AFP photo

WASHINGTON — Walking the equivalent of twice around the world during a life lasting 28 years, one wooly mammoth whose steps have been traced by researchers has proven the huge beast was a long-distance wanderer.

The findings, recently published in the prestigious journal Science, could shed light on theories about why the mammoth, whose teeth were bigger than the human fist, became extinct.

“In all popular culture — for example if you watch [the cartoon] ‘Ice Age’ — there are always mammoths who move around a lot,” said Clement Bataille, assistant professor at the University of Ottawa and one of the lead authors of the study.

But there is no clear reason why mammoths should have trekked great distances “because it is such an enormous animal that moving around uses a lot of energy”, he told AFP.

The researchers were amazed by the results: The mammoth they studied probably walked around 70,000 kilometres, and did not stay just on the plains of Alaska as they expected.

“We see that it travelled throughout Alaska, so an immense territory,” said Bataille. “It was really a surprise.”

 

Readings on a tusk

 

For their study, the researchers selected the tusks of a male woolly mammoth who lived at the end of the last ice age.

The animal — named “Kik” after a local river — lived relatively close to the time of the extinction of the species, around 13,000 years ago.

One of the two tusks was cut in half to take readings of strontium isotope ratios.

Strontium is a chemical element similar to limestone and is present in soil. It is transmitted to vegetation and, when eaten, is deposited in bones, teeth... or tusks.

The tusks grow throughout a mammal’s life, with the tip reflecting the first years of life, and the base representing the final years.

Isotope ratios are different depending on geology, and Bataille developed an isotopic map of the region.

By comparing it with the data from the tusks, it was possible to track when and where the mammoth had been.

At the time, glaciers covered all of the Brooks Range of mountains in the north and the Alaska Range in the south, with the plain of the Yukon River in the centre.

The animal returned regularly to some areas, where it could stay for several years. But his movements also changed greatly depending on his age, before he eventually died of hunger.

During the first two years of his life, researchers were even able to observe signs of breastfeeding.

“What was really surprising was that after the teenage years, the isotopic variations start to be much more important,” said Bataille.

The mammoth has “three or four times in its life, made an immense journey of 500, 600 even 700 kilometres, in a few months.”

Scientists say the male may have been solitary, and moving from herd to herd to reproduce. Or he could have been facing a drought or a harsh winter, forcing him to seek a new area where food was more plentiful.

 

Lessons for today?

 

Whether for genetic diversity, or due to scarce resources, it is “clear that this species needed an extremely large area” to live,” said Bataille.

But, at the time of the transition from the ice age to the interglacial period — when they were extinct — “the area shrank because more forests grew” and “humans put quite a lot of pressure on southern Alaska, where mammoths probably moved much less”.

Understanding factors that led to the disappearance of mammoths may help protect other threatened megafauna species, such as caribou or elephants.

With today’s climate changing, and humans often restricting big species to parks and reserves, Bataille said, “do we want our children 1,000 years from now to view elephants the same way we view mammoths today?”

Forest loss threat to one of world’s largest eagles

By - Aug 17,2021 - Last updated at Aug 17,2021

PARIS — Harpy eagles in deforested areas of the Amazon may be among the world’s largest and most powerful birds, but they are struggling to feed their young as their habitat is destroyed, researchers recently warned. 

The long-lived eagles, with legs almost as thick as a human wrist and claws as big as a hand, feed mainly on sloths and monkeys that they catch in the forest canopy. 

Their talons can “perforate the skull of the largest primates in the Americas”, said researcher Everton Miranda of the University of KwaZulu-Natal, who said looking at the raptors was like “looking in the eyes of natural selection itself”.

But a new study he led shows the devastating impacts humans have wrought on the birds, which tend to remain in one nesting site for decades. 

Researchers set up camera traps and identified bone fragments at 16 eagle nests in the Mato Grosso area of the Brazilian Amazon.

They found that eagles cannot find enough food if their territory is deforested above 50 per cent. 

Eaglets starved in their nests in areas of severe forest loss. 

While previous research has suggested harpy eagles can switch to other prey, such as armadillos, when they face food shortages, the latest study found no such switching to hunt other animals.

Miranda said this is partly because the birds, which are listed as “near threatened” by the International Union for Conservation of Nature, need forest cover and plenty of prey in the tree canopy to thrive.

Of 306 prey remains, nearly half were two-toed sloths, brown capuchin monkeys and grey woolly monkeys. 

Once common from southern Mexico to Argentina, the total population of harpy eagles has shrunk more than 40 per cent since the 19th century, with habitat loss and shooting among the biggest causes. 

 

No alternative prey

 

The study, published in the journal Scientific Reports, said 93 per cent of their distribution range is now within Amazonian forests. 

The apex predators, which weigh up to about 7.3 kilogrammes for females and 5.9kg for males, can live for decades, with one wild-caught individual recorded at 54 years old, according to the study. 

Their breeding cycle lasts up to a year and a half, during which they lay two eggs but fledge only a single eaglet. 

The eagles have been known to breed at the same t-shaped nest tree for several decades, the study said, though it noted these “trees are typically of commercial interest to the logging industry”.

In deforested areas, the authors saw that instead of switching to alternative prey, the eagles returned with their normal food less frequently. 

Three eaglets starved in landscapes where deforestation was between 50-70 per cent. In areas where the rate of deforestation was over 70 per cent, no nests were found.

This suggests that broader declines in harpy eagle populations are driven by “prey scarcity derived from habitat loss, which is caused by cattle ranching”, Miranda told AFP. 

He said it was only after checking the camera trap data that they realised the eagles were under “severe food stress”. 

The researchers estimate that deforestation means that around 35 per cent of northern Mato Grosso is now unsuitable for breeding harpy eagles. 

The long-term survival of the harpy eagles depends on forest conservation and Miranda said this would need forest fragments to be reconnected as well as “real action from the government to prevent illegal deforestation”.

In the short term he said groups should give food to starving eaglets. 

“Nowadays, when we monitor individuals under food stress, we offer them supplementary food if required,” he said.

Acceleration of global warming ‘code red’ for humanity

By - Aug 16,2021 - Last updated at Aug 16,2021

By Marlowe Hood
Agence France-Presse

PARIS — We ignored the warnings, and now it’s too late: Global heating has arrived with a vengeance and will see Earth’s average temperature reach 1.5ºC above preindustrial levels around 2030, a decade earlier than projected only three years ago, according to a recently published landmark UN assessment. 

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) bombshell — landing 90 days before a key climate summit desperate to keep 1.5ºC in play — says the threshold will be breached around 2050, no matter how aggressively humanity draws down carbon pollution.

Years in the making, the sobering report approved by 195 nations shines a harsh spotlight on governments dithering in the face of mounting evidence that climate change is an existential threat.

Nature itself has underscored their negligence.

With only 1.1ºC of warming so far, an unbroken cascade of deadly, unprecedented weather disasters bulked up by climate change has swept the world this summer, from asphalt-melting heatwaves in Canada, to rainstorms turning China’s city streets into rivers, to untameable wildfires sweeping Greece and California. 

“This report is a reality check,” said Valerie Masson-Delmotte, who co-led hundreds of scientists in reviewing a mountain of published climate science.

“It has been clear for decades that the Earth’s climate is changing, and the role of human influence on the climate system is undisputed.”

Indeed, all but a tiny fraction of warming so far is “unequivocally caused by human activities”, the IPCC concluded for the first time in its three-decade history.

The world must brace itself for worse — potentially much worse — to come, the report made clear.

Invisible threshold

Even if the 1.5ºC target humanity is now poised to overshoot is miraculously achieved, it would still generate heatwaves, rainfall, drought and other extreme weather “unprecedented in the observational record”, it concluded.

At slightly higher levels of global heating, what is today once-a-century coastal flooding will happen every year by 2100, fuelled by storms gorged with extra moisture and rising seas.

“This report should send a shiver down the spine of everyone who reads it,” said Dave Reay, director of the Edinburgh Climate Change Institute at the University of Edinburgh, who was not among the authors. 

“In the unblinking delivery style of the IPCC, it sets out where we are now and where we are headed and climate change: In a hole, and still digging.”

Another looming danger is “tipping points”, invisible thresholds — triggered by rising temperatures — for irreversible changes in Earth’s climate system. 

Disintegrating ice sheets holding enough water to raise seas a dozen metres; the melting of permafrost laden with double the carbon in the atmosphere; the transition of the Amazon from tropical forest to savannah — these potential catastrophes “cannot be ruled out”, the report cautions.

Our natural allies in the fight against climate change, meanwhile, are suffering battle fatigue.

Since about 1960, forests, soil and oceans have steadily absorbed 56 per cent of all the CO2 humanity has chucked into the atmosphere — even as those emissions have increased by half.

Sliver of hope

But these carbon sinks are becoming saturated, according to the IPCC, and the percentage of human-induced carbon they soak up is likely to decline as the century unfolds. 

The IPCC “report is a code red for humanity”, UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres said. 

“The alarm bells are deafening, and the evidence is irrefutable: Greenhouse gas emissions from fossil fuel burning and de-forestation are choking our planet and putting billions of people at immediate risk.”

The report does offer a sliver of hope for keeping the 1.5ºC goal alive.

The IPPC projected the increase in global surface temperature for five emissions scenarios — ranging from wildly optimistic to outright reckless — and identifies best estimates for 20-year periods with mid-points of 2030, 2050 and 2090. 

By mid-century, the 1.5ºC threshold will be breached across the board — by a 10th of a degree along the most ambitious pathway, and by nearly a full degree at the opposite extreme. 

But under the most optimistic storyline, Earth’s surface will have cooled a notch to 1.4ºC by century’s end. 

The other long-term trajectories, however, do not look promising.

Temperature increases by 2090 range from a hugely challenging 1.8ºC to a catastrophic 4.4ºC.

The report’s authors were at pains to emphasise that the 1.5ºC goal is not all-or-nothing.

‘Every bit of warming matters’

“It is important politically, but it is not a cliff edge where everything will suddenly become very catastrophic,” said lead author Amanda Maycock, director of the Institute for Climate and Atmospheric Sciences at the University of Leeds.

Ed Hawkins, a professor of climate science at the University of Reading and a lead author, said that “every bit of warming matters”. 

“The consequences get worse and worse as we get warmer and warmer. Every tonne of CO2 matters.”

Part 2 of the IPCC assessment — on impacts — shows how climate change will fundamentally reshape life on Earth in the coming decades, according to a draft seen by AFP. It is slated for publication in February. Part 3, to be released in March, focuses on ways to reduce carbon in the atmosphere. 

The focus now will shift to the political arena, where a non-stop series of ministerial and summit meetings, including a critical G-20 in October, will lead up to the COP26 UN climate conference in Glasgow, hosted by Britain.

Countries do not see eye-to-eye on many basic issues, beginning with the 1.5ºC goal.

China, India, Brazil, South Africa and Russia are lukewarm on it, US special presidential envoy for climate John Kerry told the New Yorker last week. Rich countries, meanwhile, have badly missed a deadline to provide funding for developing nations to green their economies and adapt to climate change already in the pipeline. 

“The new IPCC report is not a drill but the final warning that the bubble of empty promises is about to burst,” said Saleemul Huq, director of the International Centre for Climate Change and Development in Dhaka. 

“It’s suicidal, and economically irrational to keep procrastinating.”

Land Rover Defender 110 P400: Keeping the faith

By - Aug 16,2021 - Last updated at Aug 16,2021

Photos courtesy of Land Rover

 

 

Long anticipated since the DC100 concept was unveiled at the 2011 Frankfurt motor show, the new, next generation Land Rover Defender was bound to divide opinion regardless of how good and successful it were, or not. 

Successor to the British auto maker’s iconic off-roader, the new Defender is a radical departure from a series of less complicated and more old school predecessors, the first of which the first eponymous model arrived in 1948, and which was followed by progressively slow development over several generations.

Futuristic re-interpretation

A decidedly futuristic yet retro-influenced design built on a monocoque frame and brimming with the latest engine, safety, convenience and infotainment technologies, the new Defender is undoubtedly a much more modern take on Land Rover’s most off-road capable vehicle line. Retaining a high degree of off-road ability, the new Defender has been embraced by many Land Rover customers, but at the same time, hasn’t by other more traditional hardcore fans who prefer the uncomplicated ruggedness of its predecessor.

A decidedly stylised and concept car-like take on the iconic and uncomplicatedly basic Land Rover design with its upright cabin, the modern Defender, however, features flush surfaces, rounded edges and a higher waistline. Its monocoque design allows for improved body rigidity over its predecessor, while it features similarly short overhangs and ground clearance. However, with its monocoque design, bigger alloy wheels, integrated bumpers and lower slung body panels, it is perhaps more susceptible to off-road scrapes and probably more expensive to repair.

Smooth six

Offered either 3-door “90” or 5-door “110” versions, the former short wheelbase model is aesthetically tidier compared to the latter long wheelbase version, which with unchanged short rear overhang seems slightly stretched, similar to 5-door versions of other iconic off-roaders like the Ford Bronco, Jeep Wrangler and Lada Niva. However, both versions have great near equal width to height proportions and excellent off-road clearances, including 38° approach, 40° departure, 28° break-over and 45° side slope and ascent/descent angles for the driven Defender 110

Available with various petrol, diesel and hybrid engines including 4-cylinder and supercharged V8 versions, the driven second-to-top P400 delivers all the power and pulling ability one needs. Powered by a new Jaguar Land Rover developed turbocharged 3-litre in-line 6-cylinder engine, the P400 produces 394BHP 5,500rpm and 406lb/ft throughout a broad 2,000-5,000rpm range. Silky smooth and more refined than Land Rover’s previous supercharged V6 engine, the Defender’s new “straight-six” carries the 2,343kg Defender 110 through 0-100km/h in just 6.1-seconds and onto a 191km/h maximum.

Confident comfort

Responsive from standstill with quick spooling turbo, the Defender is confident and swift off the line and is abundantly versatile throughout a broad and easily accessible mid-range torque-rich sweet spot. Meanwhile, its smooth and naturally-balanced engine is eager to rev to its comparatively low peak power point. The Defender P400 also features a mild hybrid system, which harvests kinetic braking energy to run electric systems, very subtly assist the combustion engine when necessary, and help return comparatively restrained 11.3l/100km combined fuel consumption.

With monocoque construction and independent suspension, the new Defender is a significantly smoother and more refined ride than its predecessor ever could have been, and is relaxed, reassuring and confidently stable at speed. Comfortable and well-cushioned but settled vertically in most circumstances, the Defender meanwhile dispatches lumps, bumps, cracks and poorly paved and dirt roads in its stride. Its adjustable air suspension can meanwhile be raised for a maximum 291mm ground clearance, 900mm water fording capability and 500mm wheel articulation for off-road driving.

Grip and go

Driving all four wheels through a slick, smooth and quick shifting 8-speed automatic gearbox, the Defender delivers terrific road holding and also features low gear ratios and the ability to modulate power and traction as necessary for off-road conditions. This, along with other off-road electronic features, is accessed through its user-friendly infotainment screen and driving mode Terrain Response system. That said, the Defender 110 P400 was driven on road for the purposes of this review, where it exceeded expectation in terms of handling ability. 

More agile, manoeuvrable and tidier turning into corners than to be expected for a high riding off-road oriented SUV, the Defender is confident, composed and quick through sprawling and winding country lanes. Through corners, its rear grips hard while body lean is to be expected, but well controlled for its class. Pushed harder through tighter corners, the long wheelbase Defender has an instinct for under-steer, while weight transfers noticeably to the outside front wheel as the inside front wheel lightens when coming off a mid-corner dip.

Ruggedly premium

Safer and more predictable than a tendency for over-steer, the Defender’s tightens its cornering line through its electronic stability controls or by easing slightly off the throttle through such unlikely conditions. One expects the short wheelbase model to be an even more rewarding, eager and agile drive through narrow routes. Meanwhile inside, the Defender’s commanding driving position is upright, alert, comfortable and supportive, with good front visibility. Meanwhile, 360° and 3D cameras help manoeuvrability and visibility around its thick C- and D-pillars.

Ruggedly premium in character, the Defender’ cabin well integrates quality textures with easy clean surfaces, big chunky controls and a modern touchscreen, and has an ambiance befitting a potential luxury expedition vehicle. With controls within easy reach, the Defender’s cabin is utilitarian and versatile with a big passenger dash shelf and USB port, split folding and sliding mid-row seats, flat folding rear seats, generous head and legroom for the first two rows, and plenty of cargo room, depending on how its seven seats are configured.

TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS

  • Engine: 3-litre, turbocharged, in-line 6-cylinders
  • Bore x stroke: 83 x 92.29mm
  • Compression ratio: 10.5:1
  • Valve-train: 24-valve, DOHC, variable timing, direct injection
  • Gearbox: 8-speed automatic, four-wheel-drive, low gear transfer case
  • Ratios: 1st 5.5; 2nd 3.52; 3rd 2.2; 4th 1.72; 5th 1.317; 6th 1.0; 7th 0.823; 8th 0.64
  • Mild Hybrid system: Permanent magnet motor, lithium-ion battery
  • Reverse/final drive ratios: 3.993/3.55
  • Power, BHP (PS) [kW]: 394 (400) [294] @5,500rpm
  • Specific power: 131.5BHP/litre
  • Power-to-weight: 168.2BHP/tonne
  • Torque, lb/ft (Nm): 406 (550) @2,000-5,000rpm
  • Specific torque: 183.5Nm/litre
  • Torque-to-weight: 234.7Nm/tonne
  • 0-100km/h: 6.1-seconds
  • 80-120km/h: 3.7-seconds
  • Top speed: 191km/h
  • Fuel economy, combined: 11.3-litres/100km
  • CO2 emissions, combined: 257g/km
  • Fuel capacity: 90-litres
  • Length: 4,879mm (with spare wheel): 4,758mm (5,018mm)
  • Width: 1,996mm
  • Height: 1,967mm
  • Wheelbase: 3,022mm
  • Track, F/R: 1,704/1,700mm
  • Overhang, F/R (with spare wheel): 845/891mm (1,151mm)
  • Aerodynamic drag co-efficiency: 0.4
  • Seating capacity, standard/optional: 5/7
  • Luggage capacity, min/max: 231-/2,233-litres
  • Weight: 2,343kg (7-seat)
  • Approach/departure/break-over angles: 30.1-38°/37.7-40°/
  • 22-28°
  • Towing, braked/unbraked: 3,500/750kg
  • Suspension, F/R: Double wishbones/integral link, adaptive air suspension
  • Steering: Electric-assisted rack & pinion
  • Turning circle: 12.84-metres
  • Brakes, F/R: Ventilated discs, 363/350mm
  • Tyres: 255/60R20

Play-based learning at home

By - Aug 15,2021 - Last updated at Aug 15,2021

Photos courtesy of Family Flavours magazine

Not only is play-based learning in classrooms important, but did you know it could also play a role at home?

In March 2020, Jordan went into total lockdown due to the COVID-19 outbreak. Suddenly, everything had to be online and from home, including education. As everyone scrambled to adapt, the pressure (on teachers, parents and caregivers) to continue providing quality learning was immense. Whilst some older students might have relished the opportunity to Zoom into lessons from their bedrooms, the reality was that most students, particularly those at the critical developmental age of three to eight years old, were missing out on vital skill-building during this period.

 

Impact of social interaction

 

When a child is between three to eight years old, interactions in a school environment with peers and teachers are vital for acquiring foundational, social and communication skills. We know that play-based learning is effective in the classroom. It gives children the opportunity to work on their self-regulation (the ability to understand and manage one’s behaviour and reactions), problem-solving and decision-making skills through class games, interactive stories and physical participation.

As the months of school closures rolled on, something was needed to fill this gap. The question arose: How could these learning opportunities be recreated at home, through a screen? How could children develop social skills while locked indoors without other children their age (siblings aside)? And how could parents and caregivers be supported to provide this learning when teachers themselves were still navigating new waters?

 

Meeting the challenge

 

When Seenaryo was approached to develop remote learning options for kindergarten children, we knew we had a challenge on our hands. After all, live video calls are not the ideal option for children at this age. Plus, many families face Internet instability and children this young struggle to work independently.

Given that Seenaryo teaches through play and play-based activities requiring a level of real-time communication and human touch, we concluded that we had to put you, the parents and the caregivers at the centre of whatever we designed. And so, in a quick but careful response to these needs, “I Learn From Hom”e was born.

“I Learn From Home” is a remote learning programme with videos sent to caregivers via WhatsApp. The idea is that you, as parents and caregivers, watch these videos and then go and apply the lessons with your child at home. These video lessons contain step-by-step instructions on leading play-based, participatory activities (games, songs and role-play) supported by written lesson plans. They are short (no more than four minutes), have high production values (so they look good!) and have Seenaryo actors (themselves at home in lockdown) playing the role of the caregiver and the child.

The aim is not to increase a child’s screen time, but rather to give you, as caregivers and parents, the tools you need to be actively involved in your child’s learning and development. In addition, videos of interactive stories led and filmed by Seenaryo facilitators are also sent for children to watch and interact with, igniting their creative and critical thinking skills. To date, I Learn From Home has reached more than 9,500 families across Lebanon and Jordan.

 

Well-being 

and resilience

 

Play-based learning at home is much more than making sure children don’t miss out academically. One of the biggest risks of being out of school is the negative impact on children’s well-being and resilience. Using play-based activities delivered via caregivers, allowed us to focus on social and emotional skills and tackle that issue head on. 

Nader, a widowed father who received I Learn From Home, said, “It’s been a very difficult journey, to be honest, but extremely rewarding.” He feels that it helped him improve his communication with his children and he realised “that I am capable of looking after my children and providing them with the best education they need”.

Although distance learning has been a strain and a challenge for all those involved in education, we’ve witnessed how quickly and effectively even nonteachers can deliver child-centred, play-based methods. If we can bring this forward into schools with skilled teachers, we can ensure that every child is accessing learning through play. Activities that involve play, human interaction and opportunities for children to make decisions and express themselves, can positively impact their healthy development.

This article is by Seenaryo, specialists in theatre and play-based learning with marginalised communities

Reprinted with permission from Family Flavours magazine

Final chord: royal piano restorer sells lifetime’s collection

Aug 14,2021 - Last updated at Aug 14,2021

Royal piano restorer David Winston is selling his collection of antique pianos, including a rare Pleyel grand, made in Paris in 1925 (AFP photo by Tolga Akmen)

BIDDENDEN, United Kingdom — There’s little to distinguish the farm building in Kent, southeast England, from others nearby, except for one thing: the royal warrant over the door.

“By appointment to Her Majesty the Queen, conservators and restorers of pianos,” it reads.

Inside the building in Biddenden, near Ashford, is a treasure trove of 26 quirky and rare pianos, amassed over a lifetime by Californian David Winston. 

Winston’s entire collection is now being sold off at auction, with estimates that some individual instruments could go for up to £60,000 ($83,000, 71,000 euros) each.

“I’m nearly 71 now, it’s kind of time,” Winston, who initially trained as a violin maker before specialising in pianos, told AFP.

Some of his work has included on pianos belonging to Queen Elizabeth II herself but he is cagey about the work he did on the Royal Collection’s keyboards.

And with good reason: other than saying he worked on “quite a few of their instruments”, he is mindful of the story of a woman who once spilled the beans on royal bra fittings.

She lost her warrant not long after.

What he does say is that other major commissions have included restoring the French Pleyel piano belonging to his “great hero” Frederic Chopin.

He also worked on Ludwig van Beethoven’s Broadwood piano at the Hungarian National Museum.

“When I first walked into that room, and that piano was sitting there with Beethoven’s name on it, the hair on the back of my neck just stood up,” he recalled.

 

Pedal power

 

Winston shows off his collection of pianos dating from the 18th to 20th century.

Chinese pianist Xiaowen Shang, a student at the Royal Academy of Music in London, plays a Schubert sonata to demonstrate a piano Winston built himself as an exact replica of a 19th-century Viennese instrument. 

The most striking feature is that it has five pedals, while most modern pianos have three. 

The extra ones produces a drum and bell sound effect or a bassoon-like rasp — perfect for the martial music fashionable at the time.

“Compared to the modern piano... this is more gentle and has a very sensitive sound,” says Shang, calling it her favourite.

She says she also enjoys playing the French Pleyel Duoclave: a piano with keyboards at either end, allowing pianists to sit face-to-face with the sound rising up between them. 

“They’re really rare: they only made about 50 of them,” says Winston.

This instrument belonged to Madeleine Lioux, a renowned French concert pianist, whose husband was the Resistance hero, novelist and later culture minister Andre Malraux.

The collection does not just focus on antique period instruments but includes instruments designed for 20th-century lifestyles.

 

Up in the air

 

Winston gets out sheet music to “The Way We Were”, a 1970s ballad recorded by Barbra Streisand, and asks Shang to play it on a futuristic grand piano with a sparkly silver aluminium frame.

“This is from the 60s. It’s really stable and it sounds quite good,” he says of the piano made by now-defunct Dutch company Rippen.

“They had quite a few of them on ships and there was even one on a blimp [airship] at one time.”

Equally eye-catching is a walnut “butterfly grand” from Wurlitzer — a company better known for organs and jukeboxes. 

The lid opens from the centre in two wings, creating a stereo effect. 

A gorgeous piano decorated with red and gold chinoiserie from 1925 plays piano rolls, a once-popular technology that allows a piano to play music automatically.

Potential buyers could be “amassing a collection of rare instruments” or “just looking for something really unusual and rare that will just completely make a room”, Winston says.

Some might attract rock “n” roll clients, suggests Will Richards, deputy chairman of auction house Dreweatts, which is organising the online sale from September 1.

After the sale, Winston plans to spend more time at his flat in Venice, where he is a member of a rowing club, as well as focusing on photography.

Restoring pianos is becoming tough physically, he says.

“It’s getting harder on my body: bending over all the time and lifting stuff and crawling underneath pianos. Sometimes I just feel like a car mechanic.”

 

Don't bet on eruptions to lessen climate change — study

By - Aug 12,2021 - Last updated at Aug 12,2021

Eruptions from volcanoes such as Indonesia's Mount Merap won't counteract the effect of greenhouse gases (AFP photo)

LONDON — Climate change could magnify the atmospheric cooling effects of once-in-a-century volcanic eruptions, but also lessen the impact of smaller eruptions, according to new research released Thursday.

Scientists at the University of Cambridge and the UK Met Office examined how rising temperatures are likely to affect the ash and gases shot into the atmosphere by volcanoes.

The emerging "feedback loops" between the changing climate and eruptions were not accounted for in this week's landmark scientific report by the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), said lead author Thomas Aubry of Cambridge's Department of Geography.

"It could shed new light on the evolution of future volcanic influences on climate," he said of the study.

"Even if volcanoes have a limited influence on climate compared to human greenhouse gas emissions, they are an important part of the system." 

The research, published in the journal Nature Communications, used climate and volcanic plume models to project future changes. 

It also looked back at the worldwide impact of Mount Pinatubo's eruption in the Philippines in 1991, the second largest of the 20th century.

The giant plume of ash and gas generated a layer of haze that caused global temperatures to drop by as much as 0.5 degrees Celsius the following year. 

'Relatively minor' climate impact

The study found that climate change, by warming the atmosphere, will allow future Pinatubo-sized plumes to rise even higher — blocking more sunlight, dispersing aerosols faster and heightening the cooling effect worldwide by up to 15 per cent.

"However, the effect of volcanic aerosols only persists for one or two years, while anthropogenic greenhouse gases will affect the climate for centuries," the researchers said.

And for smaller outbursts such as the 2011 Nabro eruption in Eritrea, which tend to occur annually, the cooling effect will be reduced by about 75 per cent under a high-end warming scenario. 

"This is because the height of the tropopause — the boundary between the troposphere and the stratosphere above it — is predicted to increase, making it harder for volcanic plumes to reach the stratosphere," the scientists said.

"Aerosols from volcanic plumes confined to the troposphere are washed out by precipitation in a matter of weeks, making their climatic impacts relatively minor and much more localised." 

Human activities have already warmed global temperatures by more than 1.0 degree Celsius since 1850 and under the IPCC projections, the world is on course to reach 1.5C of warming around 2030, a decade sooner than previously forecast.

That assumes there is no major volcanic eruption in the next decade, the UN report said, while stressing that any cooling effects would be temporary.

Bikers flock to giant South Dakota rally despite COVID surge

By - Aug 12,2021 - Last updated at Aug 12,2021

WASHINGTON — Tens of thousands of leather-clad bikers roared into a small town in South Dakota this week for a mass motorcycle rally, despite a renewed surge in coronavirus cases across the United States.

Health officials have warned that the annual rally — set to draw as many as half a million people — could turn into a COVID-19 "superspreader" event, as was the case last year, with the more infectious Delta variant heightening concerns.

But organisers said the 10-day event, held in Sturgis for the 81st time, was too important for the local community and economy to pass up.

Asked about health concerns, town spokeswoman Christina Steele emphasised the ready availability of vaccines and the fact most events are being held outdoors — with the city letting bikers consume alcohol outside to avoid crowding in bars.

"This year people are just happy to be out and to be travelling again and having fun and meeting up with their friends they haven't seen in a while," Steele told AFP.

"People are not concerned about COVID right now," she said.

The rally has no vaccine, testing or masking requirements — but it is providing visitors with free tests and vaccines, even though it takes several weeks for immunity to kick in.

Sanitizer and face masks were available on request, though most participants were choosing to stay mask-free.

"There are free masks available, but I don't think anybody is coming to get one," Steele said.

Last year, the rally drew 445,000 visitors from around the country and was blamed for a large outbreak of the virus.

According to a study published in the Southern Economic Journal in December, the event may have been responsible for more than 260,000 new COVID cases in the United States.

While South Dakota has stabilised infections in recent weeks, there are fears that attendees coming from out-of-state will bring the virus with them.

This year, authorities expect even more visitors and Steele said the crowd already looks bigger than in 2020.

As motorcycles hummed through the streets of Sturgis, Kristi Noem, South Dakota's Republican governor donned a black leather jacket, got on a bike and joined the rally.

In the Midwestern state's Meade County, where Sturgis, a town of 6,600 people, is located, only 37 per cent of the population is fully vaccinated, compared with some 50 per cent nationwide.

President Joe Biden's top infectious disease adviser Anthony Fauci warned last week that holding the rally was too risky given the surge in COVID cases.

"This could be a superspreader. We don't want it to be but that's the reality," Dr Shankar Kurra, vice president of medical affairs at Monument Health Rapid City Hospital, told CBS News.

Kurra said his entire hospital team would be staying in place through the rally, with vacations put on hold and extra staff hired in anticipation of a rise in COVID cases.

Hair today, green tomorrow: UK stylists join eco-drive

By - Aug 11,2021 - Last updated at Aug 11,2021

Photo courtesy of wordpress.com

LONDON — Hairdressers across Britain are being urged to do their bit for the environment by recycling snipped-off hair to help clean up oil spills, make compost or generate energy. 

At an east London salon, Fry Taylor, one of the founders of the Green Salon Collective, demonstrates spare hair being used in depolluting filters.

He shows how a cotton net stuffed with hair, swept across the surface of a tank of water contaminated with motor oil, instantly cleans up the pollutant.

“The hair just naturally will absorb the oil and hold on to the oil, that’s the important factor,” Taylor, a former hairdresser, told AFP. 

A kilo of hair can absorb up to eight litres of oil, according to experts.

The idea of using hair filters originated in the United States and has already been tested in real disasters, such as when a Japanese tanker sank off the coast of Mauritius a year ago.

Britain was lagging behind in recycling unwanted hair when the collective formed last summer, according to Taylor. 

“There are, in other countries around the world, recycling systems for hairdressing salons,” he said. 

“In the UK and Ireland, they just don’t have the infrastructure.

“We’re not going to wait another five or 10 years for governments and councils to have these systems in place, let’s just do it ourselves,” he added.

 

Green tax

 

The waste produced by the hairdressing industry in the UK each year could fill 50 football stadiums, the collective said.

Most rubbish, including aluminium foil, coloured tubes and 99 per cent of cut hair, is sent to a landfill site, it added.

Another big problem is chemical waste such as dyes and bleaches. 

“There are currently approximately 30,000 salons and another 100,000 freelancers” who are pouring hydrogen peroxide and ammonia into water systems, Taylor said.

The collective is encouraging salons to save these products in a small bin, which it then collects and sends to a facility to produce electricity.

Hair stylist Adam Reed, who owns a salon in London’s trendy Spitalfields neighbourhood, is a recent convert to the recycling mission and proudly explains his system to customers. 

Saying he was “blown away” by what the Green Salon Collective had taught him, the internationally-renowned hairdresser added he “didn’t quite realise the enormity of it” beforehand.

“It made me realise that sustainability in salons is something that had been missing and it’s really easy to bring into the salon,” he said.

“We have our bins, all labelled, so it’s easy to navigate.” 

Hair, protective equipment, metals, papers and plastics each have their own bin. 

The salon, which pays a £120 fee ($192, 140 euros) to be a member of the collective, also recycles leftover dye product. 

Reed charges clients a “green tax” of one or two pounds, and has so far received a “very positive response”. 

 

‘Super food’

 

Composting is another green use of hair, whose rich nitrogen content makes it an ideal fertiliser supplement. 

Collective member Ryan Crawford, owner of a salon in the town of Milton Keynes, northwest of London, has experimented with hair on his vegetables in the garden. 

On a sunny July day, he showed AFP two young cabbage shoots: One, surrounded by hair, is intact; the other, planted without hair, is skeletal and gnawed. 

“It’s like a protective barrier around the base of the new seedlings,” he said.

“It’s definitely worked keeping things like slugs or snails off,” he added, saying that putting hair directly into the soil also helps retain moisture and acts as “a super-food for the earth”, replenishing nitrogen levels.

Over the last year, around 600 salons in the UK and Ireland have joined the collective, which has amassed around 500 kilos of hair.

It has been used to clean up waterways, an oil spill in Northern Ireland in May and for composting. 

The collective has also gathered 3.5 tonnes of metal, which is being recycled. 

It now hopes to export the model on a large scale across Europe.

 

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