Blog

Tasmanian Photos Updated

Wednesday, October 22, 2008

Thanks to a campervan holiday in July this year, my collection of digital Tasmanian photos has grown - and I’ve just added a selection of them to this website. They can be accessed using the Photography link in the header or footer, or follow these links to the five pages - Central Highlands, Cradle Mountain, Forests & Waterfalls, Hobart and Southwest Tasmania.

Upper Florentine forest, TasmaniaMy goal of building a quality digital collection of photos covering all of Tasmania remains just that - an unrealised goal. I have photos from most of Tasmania, but the majority are slides or negatives taken on earlier trips. Some have been scanned, but removing countless dust spots is a time-consuming process and the results are often not that great. If I want good digital shots from all of Tasmania, a much more appealing option is to keep revisiting Tasmania with a digital camera - as good an excuse as any to visit such a lovely place!

Concord To A380 - Some Things Never Change

Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Airbus A380 visiting Perth AirportWay back in the 1970s, the first flight to Australia by the Concord was a big event. I remember being excused from primary school by my dad to go to Sydney airport and see the arrival of this supersonic airliner. Three and a half decades later, some things haven’t changed much. I am once again a student, and again went to see the historic arrival of an impressive new aircraft - the Airbus A380 on its first trip to Perth.

The aircraft in question is the first Airbus A380 - the largest passenger plane ever built - purchased by Qantas. Yesterday it flew into Perth as part of a pilot training exercise and national publicity tour. As with the Concord all those years earlier, a large crowd turned out to watch it land and get a closer look at a groundbreaking aircraft which has been in the news. The photos show it parked at Perth airport yesterday.

Airbus A380 visiting Perth AirportIn perfect spring weather the plane flew low and majestically above the airport and across the city, then impressed the crowd with a neat and gentle landing. I should confess here that I find the landing of large aircraft to be a particularly stirring sight. Until now a Boeing 777 landing has moved me the most, but the A380 is at least as impressive. That such a massive and powerful vehicle, flying at high speed, can touch down so gently and precisely is quite remarkable, and a sight to savour … or at least it is for me!

Some boys may lose their fascination with cutting edge aircraft as they grow older, but not me. Judging by the size and enthusiasm of the crowd at Perth airport yesterday, I’m not alone.

Another Benefit Of Drinking Coffee

Wednesday, October 8, 2008

Like other coffee enthusiasts, I see many pleasures and benefits in drinking quality coffee. Now I can claim another one, although in this case it’s other people who benefit from this drinking habit.

I buy green (raw) coffee beans through an Australian website known as CoffeeSnobs, and roast them myself. Last year Andy Freeman, the guy who runs the site, started a scheme whereby fifty cents from every kilogram of beans sold goes into a fund he calls “Fair Crack”. The idea is that whenever enough money builds up, it is spent on projects which directly benefit small growers of specialty coffee.

It’s a way for coffee enthusiasts to give something back to the growers of the coffee, who only get a small cut of the final price and sometimes struggle to survive. CoffeeSnobs members have overwhelmingly embraced the idea.

Tanzanian coffee growers
One of the CoffeeSnobs pulpers will be used
in this building in Njari-Rononi, Tanzania.
Outside are some of the 68 coffee growers
who will use it. Photo: Bente Luther-Medoch.

The first project has recently been announced (full details here), and the beneficiaries are small coffee farmers near the southern slopes of Mt Kilimanjaro in Tanzania. Two villages will each be provided with a pulping machine - processing equipment they would probably not have been able to access otherwise. Shared by all the independant farmers in the area, these will enable them to take a superior grade of bean to market and receive a higher price. Scales and fermentation tanks are also being provided for communal use.

There are a number of things to like about this:

  • Farmers should get a higher price for their beans, making their businesses more viable.
  • 68 farmers will be helped by the pulper in one of the villages. This also benefits their families, and their communities.
  • It contributes to the growth of the specialty coffee industry in Tanzania.
  • Admin costs are zero: 100% of the funds hit the ground in Tanzania

Although the money comes from the purchases of CoffeeSnobs members, it is by no means a sacrifice:

  • The contributions per kilo of beans are small change for us, and hardly noticed.
  • Even with the contributions, buying green beans this way cost only about one quarter of the price of equivalent commercially roasted beans.
  • We get to enjoy superb coffee, roasted just how we like it, as fresh as you can get.

It almost sounds too good to be true, but it IS true. It’s great to know that win-win situations like this can really happen. I’m also encouraged that the business world contains people like Andy Freeman of CoffeeSnobs, who not only runs an excellent business, but uses it to do something good for others.

By a small coincidence, I happened to be drinking a Tanzanian coffee when I read about this project to assist Tanzanian growers. My coffee was from a different area, but who knows - some day I might get to drink coffee which passed through the pulper my purchases helped (very slightly) to fund. The thought adds an extra level of enjoyment to my coffee drinking habit … and makes me want to buy more coffee.

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