Wednesday, November 30, 2005

Douglas Adams

Many will remember Douglas Adams as the prodigious (is this the correct way to use the word?) author of the "Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy".

I loved that series; found it amusing and extremely ticklish, a good laugh at humankind and our idiosyncrasies. What I admire more about Adams is his love for science and nature. For his is also the author (together with Mark Cawardine) of this amazing book on conservation, Last Chance to See.

To have a grasp of how beautiful he writes about nature, perhaps this passage from a compilation of his short writings (Salmon of Doubt), after he passed away, will give us a better picture.


From "Riding in Ray" in Salmon of Doubt by Douglas Adams

.... The valley floor was wide and dark and flat. Ian was directing my attention toward it. I didn't know why. There seemed to be just an absense of interesting coral. And then, as I looked, the whole black floor of the vally slowly lifted upwards and started to gently waft its way away from us. As it moved, its edges were rippling softly and I could see that underneath it was pure white. I was transfixed by the realisation that what I was looking at was a eight-foot-wide giant manta ray.
It banked away in a wide, sweeping turn in the deeper water. It seemed to be moving breathtakingly slowly, and I was desperate to keep up with it. I came down the side of the reef to follow it.... As it moved, shimmering and undulating its giant wings, folding itself through the water, I felt I was looking at the single most beautiful and unearthly thing I had ever seen in my life...

Paya beach


Paya beach
Originally uploaded by _Cheng Puay.
Paya beach. Longing for the nice salty sea breeze on the cheeks, longing for the soft warmth of the sun on the face, longing for the crash of the waves to lull me to sleep and wake me up again.

Tuesday, November 29, 2005

Bronchocela cristatella, Green Crested Lizard


Saw this beautiful elegant lizard whilst waiting for some students in Pulau Ubin, it was perched on a low branch, showing off its rich and luxuriant green skin. This elegant native of Singapore should have been more common in our secondary forests. Sadly, they are being displaced by the exotic changeable lizard, Chalotes versicolor. (More information on C. versicolor click here)
At the same website by Nick Baker, you can find more information on the Green Crested Lizard

Saturday, November 19, 2005

LEDs - a 30 million old technology


In 2001, Alexei Erchak and colleagues at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) demonstrated a method for building a more efficient LED. Now, Pete Vukusic and Ian Hooper at Exeter have shown that swallowtail butterflies evolved an identical method for signalling to each other in the wild, a method has been around for about 30 million years.

Well, you either use the latest technology and brains available and create something wondrous in the lab or you can get your inspirations from a lab that has been around for millions of years, Nature.

BBC News: Butterfly wings work like LEDs

If someone were to ask a question, what is more to learn from a simple organism such as a butterfly? Haven't we understood its life cycle already? Is there a need to study butterflies, or birds or even a humble fly for the matter? I hope the report above provides part of the answer. We have millions of species out there which we only gave a name to, we have not even scratched the surface of the wealth of knowledge they have to offer.

Will Nature ever cease to amaze? I think not. Just hope that we have enough left to admire her beauty for years to come.

Monday, November 14, 2005

sunset


sunset
Originally uploaded by _Cheng Puay.
I don't mind going home to such a superb view each day from work.

Sunday, November 13, 2005

Retreat

Back from retreat. It was nice just having time to interact with colleagues and having time for oneself to think and reflect on one's priorities. Made new friends and got to know familiar faces better. The best part is definitely the impromptu soccer and frisbee game where we played our hearts (sometimes risking breaking a limb) out. Wish there can be more of these in the future.

One question from the retreat - what will you do knowing you have only 3 days to live?

Wednesday, November 09, 2005

Before I go

A quick entry before I go for camp and then staff retreat (now where am I going to find time to finish writing I wonder). Well anyway, saw this hilarious music video from Neil Gaiman's blog. It's a piece from Mitch Benn; who, I gather from the music video, writes parodies (just like Weird Al). Interesting.
Link to the site Everything Sounds Like Coldplay Now



Mirrormask is coming to Singapore! Finally. 7th December. Got to catch it before I leave for Thailand. Wonder if only Neil Gaiman Fans are excited. Tried telling my students about Mirrormask. A typical thread runs like this -
CP:"Oh you must watch Mirrormask!"
S:"What's that"
CP:"Erm it's a movie done by Neil Gaiman and Dave McKean, both brilliant writers and artists. Neil Gaiman wrote the famous Sandman series"
S:"What's Sandman?"
CP:"Ok nevermind that, erm you watched JIm Henson's productions, "Willow" long time back? Its the same genre"
S:"What's Willow?"
CP:"Trust me, just go watch the movie"
.........
Generation gap man, generation gap. Anyway, I'll be going to catch the movie. One of the highlights of the year.

Ok got to go for camp now.

Sunday, November 06, 2005

sea star flipping over


sea star flipping over
Originally uploaded by _Cheng Puay.
Went to Kusu Island for a overnight reef walk. Caught this sequence. Sea stars, amazing animals who have mastered the science of hydraulics.

Friday, November 04, 2005

Plumeria rubra Apocynaceae


Plumeria rubra Apocynaceae
Originally uploaded by _Cheng Puay.
Beautiful frangipani flower.

This poem came to mind when I took this picture


rose
Originally uploaded by _Cheng Puay.
William Shakespeare - Sonnet #18

Shall I compare thee to a Summer's day?
Thou art more lovely and more temperate:
Rough winds do shake the darling buds of May,
And Summer's lease hath all too short a date:
Sometime too hot the eye of heaven shines,
And oft' is his gold complexion dimm'd;
And every fair from fair sometime declines,
By chance or nature's changing course untrimm'd:
But thy eternal Summer shall not fade
Nor lose possession of that fair thou owest;
Nor shall Death brag thou wanderest in his shade,
When in eternal lines to time thou growest:

So long as men can breathe, or eyes can see,
So long lives this, and this gives life to thee.