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How the battle with Victoria’s bushfires was fought and lost

Monday, March 2nd, 2009

Having lived in Victoria for all our lives except for the last ten, we are very connected to these disastrous fires. Our last home was in the Yarra Valley.

How the battle with Victoria’s bushfires was fought and lost

INSIDE STORY: Cameron Stewart and Corrie Perkin | February 14, 2009
Article from: The Australian
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,,25051344-2702,00.html

BRUCE Esplin woke at 6am last Saturday with a gnawing
feeling in his gut. Victoria’s Emergency Services Commissioner knew the odds
were not good for the 3582 firefighters and emergency workers who had been
placed like toy soldiers across the breadth of his state.

"We were about to face weather beyond our experience, and I just had
this feeling of dread," Esplin says.

Across town, Ewan Waller, the Government’s chief fire officer, was also on
edge. By 7.30am he was already sitting in the Integrated Emergency Co-ordination
Centre in central Melbourne, otherwise known as the "war room", where he would
spend the next 15 hours alongside chief Country Fire Authority officer Russell
Rees. These two men would jointly manage the defence of Victoria against the
worst weather forecast in memory.

Barely 60km to the north, thousands of families scattered across the hillside
regions of Kinglake, St Andrews and Marysville were waking up to a lazy
Saturday. Many of these were tree changers: city commuters who had embraced the
lush forested hills for both lifestyle and financial reasons.

They were mostly young families with young kids, and with the temperature
tipped to hit 44C with strong, hot wind gusts, it was cooler to stay in their
hillside homes than travel.

In Marysville, 20-year-old Lucie O’Meara spent the morning making pancakes for her husband, Luke, and their seven-month-old daughter, Charlotte. She then sat down at her computer and wrote on her Facebook site: “I am so enjoying the viewfrom my desk, Marysville is beautiful.”

Just before 9.30am, Stuart Coombs arrived at the Victorian weather bureau’s headquarters in Melbourne’s Docklands to start his shift.

One of his jobs was to compile thunderstorm warnings. But when he scanned the charts he saw something that disturbed him even more than the “very dreadful” forecast of the previous night. “The thunderstorm conditions (meant) we knew there would be fire activity (from lightening strikes),” Coombs said.

Even so, for the next few hours, the war room was buoyed by what they saw. Although they were concerned by a fire that had jumped containment lines in the Bunyip State Forest, east of Melbourne, fire activity around the state was modest.

The day, which Premier John Brumby had warned on Friday might be the state’s worst, had started well.

“There was a sense of ‘well, we’ve got to lunchtime and so far so good’,” Esplin says. “But we knew the most dangerous part of the day would be late afternoon.”

None of the 60-odd officials from multiple agencies who had gathered in the war room were aware the spark that would set off the worst day in Victoria’s history had already been lit.

At 11.30am, Liz Jackson looked out the window of her house in Kilmore East, a township near the Hume Highway, 60km north of Melbourne, and saw smoke.

It came from the hill opposite her home where a single power pole stood. She called the CFA but the fire spread quickly, fanned by increasingly strong hot northerly wind gusts of up to 125km/h.

WANDONG

In the nearby community of Wandong, former CFA firefighter Chris Isbister says he witnessed the moment when this little fire grew fangs. “Me and my mate headed up the highway to check it out and we saw it go into the pine plantation and get really big.”

He returned home to prepare the house, while watching the fire come closer. Police advised residents to evacuate, but Isbister and two mates stayed and watched the fire’s progress.

“We watched the actual fire roll down one hill and up another,” Isbister says. “The wind was so unbelievably strong, we had to hold on to fences to stand upright.”

Only when the growing wall of flames got closer and jumped the Hume Highway with ease did Isbister realise his mistake in staying. “The fire got into the trees,” he says. “The trees would have been 45 foot high and the flames were twice the size of the trees. There was nothing we could do; we were surrounded by fire.”

He and his mates fled to an already-burnt paddock and sheltered under a wet hessian bag as the house caught fire. They lived; four of their neighbours did not.

The East Kilmore fire swept through Wandong, growing in size and in speed. It was being pushed by mighty wind gusts towards the communities of Kinglake and St Andrews.

* * *

BACK in the war room, no one knew what had happened in Wandong. They had been alerted to the existence of the fire at Kilmore East but it was one of many fires that had suddenly sprung up around the state and were demanding their attention.

There was a new one near Bendigo, one near Beechworth, one near Coleraine, another near Horsham and reports of one near the community of Churchill in Gippsland in the state’s east, near to where arsonists had lit several recent fires.

Even so, Waller, Rees and Esplin say they had a sense of dread early on about the Kilmore fire. “I knew that was a dangerous place for a fire,” Esplin says. ‘A lot of tree changers had moved into areas around there and it is difficult fire-fighting country. I had a feeling of ‘Here it comes’.”

Waller says: “As soon as we saw that Kilmore fire, in a very short time we knew we had a real problem. It was running towards populated areas. You could run a ruler along where it was going to run - you knew straight away.”

The ruler along the map showed the fire was heading directly for Kinglake.

What the war room did not yet fully understand was that this fire was behaving like none other they had experienced. It was much faster, much larger and was behaving more like a series of fireballs than a cohesive fire.

The combination of steep hills - which can double fire speed - with howling winds and a temperatures in the mid-40s were turning the Kilmore fire into a monster.

From this moment, and for the rest of what would become known as Black Saturday, the bulk of the CFA’s fire warnings being relayed on ABC radio trailed the reality on the ground. They came too late to alert many of the communities in its path.

no one was watching the progress of the East Kilmore fire more closely that Jason Lawrence, the 35-year-old CFA incident controller at Kangaroo Ground, who was responsible for shifting fire trucks and tankers around those communities near Kinglake.

Almost immediately, Lawrence knew he was powerless to do anything. “It moved through with such ferocity that there was nothing the local brigades could do,” Lawrence says.The size and speed of the blaze meant decisions about the deployment of fire trucks would have to be made on the ground by each individual CFA town chief. But with the growing confusion about the fire’s progress, they were given no clear warnings of its arrival.

This was not how the system was supposed to work.

KINGLAKE WEST

On the crest of a ridge near Kinglake West, Brian Naylor and his wife, Moiree, were at home on their property, which enjoyed commanding views over a distant Melbourne. Naylor, 78, was a household name in Melbourne having been the dominant newsreader of his era, anchoring Seven’s nightly news for 10 years and Nine’s for 20.

The Naylors had survived the 1983 Ash Wednesday fires in this home, but nothing could have prepared them for the Kilmore fire as it roared up the back of their property, away from their line of sight.

It ate the house in an instant. The bodies of Naylor and Moiree were found fused together in an embrace.

At nearby Pheasant Creek, policeman Roger Wood found 50 men, women and children cowering in a supermarket from the advancing fire. After checking the road was clear, he told them all to follow him to the Kinglake West CFA. They arrived just before the fire rolled over them. They survived. The supermarket was burned to the ground.

STRATHEWEN

The still-growing fire heaved southeast towards Strathewen, a small community nestled in rolling hills near Kinglake.

The town was defended by CFA captain and local farmer Dave McGahy, who was armed with three fire trucks and a tanker. His men were up behind the town on Eagles Nest Road when McGahy caught sight of the behemoth coming his way.

‘Realising the approaching fire would gobble up his team, McGahy withdrew them all.

“Even if I had 20 strike teams, all that would have happened is that we would have had 50 dead firefighters as well,” he says.

At least 30 people left in the town had no chance. They died, huddled together in their baths, in cellars, on the cricket oval and in their cars as the fire roared over them at 4.20pm.

The only safe refuge was the home of local resident and CFA member Barrie Tulley, who harboured 19 terrified residents. When they emerged from his house, Strathewen was no more.

ST ANDREWS

By the time the fire bore down on the 250-strong community of St Andrews, it was fully formed and racing. With flames reported to be up to 50m high, it now had the power to kill with radiant heat from 200m away.

The Australian’s reporter Gary Hughes and his wife, Janice, were frantically trying to escape the fire, which he says emerged from nowhere and without warning.

“The firestorm moves faster than you can think, let alone react,” Hughes says. ‘You are fighting for your home and then you are fighting for your life.”

Down the road in Yarra Glenn, Melanee Hermocilla, 23, her boyfriend, Greg Lloyd, 22, and her brother Jason Hermocilla, 21, were house-sitting someone else’s home when the fire engulfed them. They huddled together under wet towels and phoned their parents to say goodbye.

***

BY 4.30pm, it was clear inside the war room that things in the field were going wrong fast, although no one yet knew of any deaths.

“The map suddenly became like New Year’s Eve on Sydney Harbour, there were so many fires,” Esplin says.

A separate fire had emerged near a sawmill in Murrindindi to the north and was travelling parallel with the Kilmore fire towards the south of Marysville.

“We were sure that the fires were taking houses at that stage but we had no idea they were taking lives,” Esplin says.

“I remember speaking with (CFA chief) Russell (Rees) and he said to me, ‘This is not good’.”

Esplin called the Police and Emergency Services Minister Bob Cameron and advised him to come immediately from his Bendigo home to Melbourne.

“I told him we are going to experience losses and we need his leadership,” Esplin says.

The war room was struggling to maintain control of the situation.

A dense blanket of smoke from the fires was cutting off vital intelligence about the movement of the fire fronts.

“It became too dangerous for our planes to fly and to map the edge of the fires so for quite a while we could not get the intelligence we wanted,” Waller says. “We had to rely on bits and pieces - reports from the field and satellite information.”

The war room was also monitoring the local ABC which had arguably the most up-to-date information because people were calling in with instant information about the fires in their area and even in their street. ABC announcer Jon Faine, who took their calls and numerous SMS messages, says: “They were ordinary people in extraordinary distress, they were confused and in desperate straits. And they were listening to the radio. They hoped that by ringing us, they could get information, that we could give them answers.”

With power lost in most towns shortly before the fire came through, battery transistor radios provided the only link to the outside world.

KINGLAKE

About 4.30pm, the fire was bearing down on its most vulnerable victim, the mountain town of Kinglake with 3000 residents. Kinglake CFA chief captain Paul Hendrie had already sent both of his two tankers to fight the St Andrews fire in response to their frantic requests for help. He had no information suggesting they would be needed for Kinglake.

“There was nothing (no fire trucks) on the mountain (when the fire came),” Hendrie says, “(but) you fight the fire you’ve got - you can’t predict the predicament that will come.”

He was not alone. Almost no one in Kinglake had more than a few minutes to realise the fire was almost upon them. Locals say there were no warnings on radio or the CFA website and no sirens.
Nothing.

With a darkening sky and a thunderous roar signalling the approach of the fire, many panicked and took to the road in their cars. For most, this was a fatal decision. The smoke moved ahead of the fire, blinding drivers. Cars collided into each other.

In one of those cars were Alex and Anna Thomson, who were trying to escape with their three young children. With a black sky and flaming embers around them, they dragged their kids from their crumpled vehicle and waved for help.

“We tried to flag down some car - and I don’t blame the four or five that went past - but they just kept going,” Anna says. “Everyone was just doing what they could to survive. I thought we were going to die. I couldn’t look at the kids. I just kept thinking of them burning to death and I couldn’t stand imagining them dying that way.”

She had lost all hope when a car pulled over for her family. Two strangers - Karl and Jayne Amatneiks - bundled them in and took them to a nearby house. They lived.

Another man who tried to drive out, Benjamin Banks, says his car was hit by a wall of flame that almost tipped it over.

The heat melted his car window, causing molten glass to drip onto his hand and also his tyres, forcing him to drive on the screeching metal rims.

He then smashed head-on into another car, and limped out with a broken ankle into a nearby paddock. He also lived.

But many did not survive the dash out of Kinglake. They were incinerated in their cars or cut down as they fled their vehicles.

Arthur Enver died when he tried to drive out of town on his Harley Davidson bike. His wife, who was driving the family car a few metres in front of him, survived.

For those left in Kinglake, survival depended on nature’s lottery: whether the fire chose their house or bypassed it.

“All of a sudden there was this black, the column of fire came virtually over us,” Hendrie says. “We heard cars exploding, the service station went up.

It just got worse and there was blackness all over.”

Karen Rolands, who was in her house with her husband, Paul, and daughters Caitlin, 14, and Nicola, 12, told a family member on the phone, “It’s too late, we’re trapped”, shortly before the flames overwhelmed them.

One of her neighbours, Maryanne Mercuri, was also trapped in her house with her husband and three children. It was so dark she could not see her children to wrap them up properly in towels. They talked about heaven as the fires roared past them and, somehow, spared their house.

After the front passed, local resident Mike Flynn 64, was found by neighbours lying on the footpath, literally smouldering.

They dragged him into one of the few remaining houses and held him in a pool with only his head above water for the next 10 hours until help arrived.

STEELS CREEK

After swallowing Kinglake, the fire thundered down the valley towards the community of Steels Creek, home to 250 people.

Dorothy Barber, 63, lived 500m from her daughter Nicole and her two grandchildren, but the flames came through so fast that Nicole could not reach her mother before she was forced to flee with her own children.

With her house exploding around her and no prospect of rescue, Dorothy curled herself into a square metre cavity beneath her floor. It was six hours before she was found alive amid the ruins of her house.

Leigh and Charmin Ahern were not as lucky. Their neighbour, Dave Twentymen, survived but later found the Aherns’ remains inside the house.

* * *

BY 5.30pm in the war room, no one knew that Kinglake or Steels Creek had been lost and that at least 37 people lay dead in those townships.

Attention was focused on another drama that was unfolding. Shortly after 5.30pm the predicted southeasterly change hit the firefront.

Now the fires that were heading south were suddenly heading northwest, bringing new communities into their range.

“It really worried us because we knew the impact would be immense,” Waller says. “We knew the eastern flank of the fire would now become the front, just like in Ash Wednesday.”

The temperature, which had hit a record 46.4C in the city, fell sharply but the winds associated with the change were gusting at up to 125km/h — more than enough to keep the fires rolling at maximum strength.

By 6pm, massive chunks of the state were ablaze.

Towns such as Horsham and Coleraine were under threat. Also worrying Rees and Waller were reports of fire at Gully Road, Upper Ferntree Gully.

“You can only think what would have happened if we’d had that fire rip up the side of the Dandenongs, given the resource capability we had,” Rees says.

BENDIGO

In the goldfields town of Bendigo, mayor Kevin Gibbins was driving into town to buy some Chinese takeaway just after 6pm when he noticed some low smoke.

“It was very, very dark and I thought: ‘Where’s the fire? It must be very near’,” he says.

It turned out to be a grass fire at Eaglehawk, on the town’s northwest outskirts.

Thought to have been lit by a cigarette butt thrown from a passing car, the fire raced across a vacant block, then into adjoining bushland and along gullies surrounded by housing estates.

It randomly picked its victims, destroying one home but leaving those on either side unscathed.

Fire embers showered the suburb like confetti, setting the house of Kevin “Mick” Kane on fire. Kane, an elderly man with a walking stick, died in his driveway as he tried to escape.

No one said so at the time, but the Bendigo fire rattled the confidence of those in the war room.

If a fire like this could rage within 1.5km of the centre of a city of 95,000 people, was anywhere in Victoria safe?

The Premier had spent the day in Bendigo, having earlier prepared his own property for fire threat.

As the day wore on, Brumby became increasingly alarmed by the news from the fire fronts.

Bendigo was on fire, but Rees and Waller were more worried about events that were unfolding in Gippsland.

CALLIGNEE

In the east of the state the fire that started earlier that afternoon, dubbed the Churchill-Jeeralang fire, had burned without posing any direct threat to lives.

But the southeasterly wind change suddenly turned the firefront around and sent it racing towards the farming communities of Churchill, Koornalla, Traralgon South and Callignee.

At the same time, the communications tower on top of Mount Tassie was burnt out, meaning locals could no longer receive fire warning updates from ABC radio.

Those locals who remained in the ridgetops settlements of Callignee and Callignee North suffered possibly the quickest deaths of anyone on this day. The flames hurtled up the mountain in an instant, incinerating at least 11 people.

On Old Callignee Road, 97-year-old Charlie Richardson had stayed to defend his house. When it started to burn down, he dived into a horse trough wrapped in a blanket until the fire passed. He was found crawling towards the road waving a torch to attract attention.

FLOWERDALE

Back in the Kinglake area, the new wind direction was blowing the fire north across the ridges. In its way was the small settlement of Flowerdale.

The town was defenceless, its only tanker having been sent to fight another fire. Several dozen people sought refuge in the Flowerdale hotel but the flames hit with such speed and force that many did not make it.

A mother with her two young boys abandoned her ute at the height of the flames but was overcome. Rescuers found the body of her 10-year-old son lying on his back, his blue eyes staring at the sky.

Inside the hotel, locals used hoses, mops and buckets to save the building and their lives.

At the same time, Robert Harrop, was carried in after being badly burned trying to save his home. Locals took turns caring for the old man, covering his unconscious body in wet towels and removing his false teeth so they could place water on his lips. They held his hand and spoke to him, but he didn’t make it.

Nathan Sawyer, a volunteer firefighter from Flowerdale CFA, says they were deployed to another town to fight the fire before the inferno hit his home. He said the town’s tanker could not make it back to Flowerdale in time.

“The fire just swept through here like no tomorrow ” he says. “It was just flying. We called it the devil’s breath. It was breathing down our throats.”

* * *

INCREDIBLY, by 6pm, no one within the war room had yet received any confirmation that lives had been lost.

“You live in hope here,” Rees says. “I can remember thinking about six o’clock, if we can get out of here without any lives lost we’ll be very lucky indeed.”

Victoria Police Chief Commissioner Christine Nixon was in the war room.

“We started to watch the wind change and the lights on the board that indicated fire activity started glowing,” she says.

“I though this was going to be terrible, just terrible”.

By 6pm, the smoke plume was 15km high, 5km higher than a normal severe thunderstorm. “It looked more like a volcanic eruption than a thunderstorm,” Coombs says.

The bureau estimated this part of the fire complex was responsible for more than 1000 lightning strikes. No one knew how many fires this may have started.

“You get a sense of dread with something like this, you feel quite sick watching it unfold,” Coombs says.

Amid the dozens of fires being monitored in the war room at that moment, there was one that had slipped largely under the radar. The Murrindindi sawmill fire that had run parallel to the north of the Kilmore fire had also been turned north by the wind change.

It its direct path was the scenic tourist town of Marysville.

MARYSVILLE

Shortly before 6pm, Lucie O’Meara saw the smoke rising above the ridges to the south of Marysville, where she was spending the weekend with her husband and baby daughter.

“The volume of smoke was massive, it looked like a giant marshmallow,” she says.

Locals say that at this moment birds began to fall from the sky, stone dead.

Kay Menzies and Nora Spitzer of Cathedral View Natural Therapies were massaging a couple at Lyall Cottages in Marysville when they heard a tree crash on to a car. The masseurs ran out to see what had happened. They saw the wall of smoke coming towards them, jumped into their car and fled the town. The couple being massaged also escaped.

On the corner of Martin and Falls roads on the top of a hill, 72-year-old Elaine Postlethwaite and her 82-year-old husband Len were having an argument.

Elaine wanted to flee the fire; Len, a former champion axeman and the town’s longest resident, refused to leave.

“Come on, Len; come on, Len,” Elaine implored him as he sat stubbornly on the veranda. Len even turned his chair so his back was to the oncoming smoke. Elaine left him and was saved by neighbours. Len perished.

O’Meara says the fire descended on the township in an instant.

“The air felt like it had been sucked out of us, it was so hot,” she says. “I was screaming like a five-year-old girl.

“People in cars were doing burnouts to get out and I can still see the horror on people’s faces, people running up the street with the flames behind them.”

O’Meara ran to take refuge along with many others at the Cumberland Spa, a five-star spa brick resort with a swimming pool. But at the last minute she was persuaded to run to the local sports ground, Gallipoli Park, where about 60 locals had gathered.

CFA firefighter John Munday was in a fire truck which sped into Marysville only minutes before the fire hit. But when they saw the wall of flame he knew instantly that they could not defeat it.

“We had people banging on the sides of our tanker begging us to go back to houses where they knew there were people trapped but we couldn’t because if we had, we’d all be dead too,” Munday says.

“The whole town died around us as we bunkered down on the outside of the oval ringed by funeral pyres while all around us we had the screaming noise of gas cylinders exploding in homes.”

O’Meara huddled in the oval with her husband and baby and survived the firestorm. The Cumberland spa, where she was originally headed, was burnt to the ground. In an instant, Marysville had ceased to exist. Up to 100 people lay dead under its smouldering ruins.

“That fire was evil, it had a purpose,” O’Meara says. “It was hungry.”

* * *

NO one inside the war room knew about the losses at Marysville. In fact it was not until 8.57pm that Rees was told officially that lives had been lost in Victoria that day. He was told a small figure of “less than 14″.

Even so, with each passing hour it became clearer that the cost in lives was going to be substantially more than the initial figures were suggesting.

“You could see faces and shoulders drop as the news got progressively worse,” Esplin says. At 8.30pm, The Alfred hospital in Melbourne was contacted by the Victorian Health Emergency Co-ordination Centre asking it to prepare for a potentially large number of burns injuries.

The hospital’s director of operations, Andrew Stripp, was advised to prepare for at least 50 to 100 severely burned patients.

“We knew then that this was something in a completely different realm to what we’d ever experienced,” Stripp says.

At 10pm, the Government announced that 14 people had died.

Rees already knew that this was a serious understatement.

“In my heart of hearts I thought in the 30 to 50 range,” he says. ‘I still didn’t know about Marysville and I didn’t know about Gippsland and the extent of lives lost in those places.”

He did know that the fire had “ripped through Kinglake” but did not know the extent of the human cost.

At no stage during the day did he and Waller verbalise their private fears about the likely death toll. It was the elephant in the room.

By late Saturday night, news was spreading through the senior ranks of the Rudd Government about the severity of the crisis.

“It was about 10 o’clock when the phones started ringing and the PM’s office became involved almost immediately,” one official recalls.

At 10.30pm, Kevin Rudd, who had been receiving updates throughout the evening, arrived at his Parliament House office. At 11.30 he met National Security Adviser Duncan Lewis, Emergency Management Australia director general Tony Pearce and his advisers about what emergency measures needed to be taken.

Just after midnight, the Prime Minister talked with Brumby and told him he would fly to Melbourne the next morning.

“It (had) became clear that many, many more people were affected by these terrible fires,” Brumby says. “It was clear that we were dealing with something completely devastating.”

By this time, federal Attorney-General Robert McClelland had already activated the Commonwealth Disaster Plan.

Rudd’s team was also passing the information to his deputy Julia Gillard who had been sitting at her Altona home “glued” to Sky News and ABC radio.

“We were all on edge, and all nervous, and praying for the best but expecting there would be bad news,” Gillard recalls.

Back in Melbourne, it was after midnight when an exhausted Esplin finally left the war room.

“I got a phone call as I was driving home that Marysville had been basically razed,” he says.

“I felt the worst I have ever felt in my career. I was as flat as a shit-carter’s hat. We knew the death toll was substantial and that the fires were still burning. I went home with an absolute dread of what we would find in the morning.”

Esplin got home at 1.30am, and slumped down on the veranda.

He shook his head and turned to his wife Roz.

“The worst has happened,” he said. “The absolute worst that you can remotely imagine.”

He was wrong. The reality was beyond imagination.

As Esplin turned off the light, the official death toll for Black Saturday stood at 14.

In truth, more than 200 Australians lay dead, consumed by the most savage bushfire seen in this country.

Additional reporting: Milanda Rout, Lauren Wilson, Rick Wallace, Ewin Hannan

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HOPE defeating FIRE!

Monday, February 16th, 2009

Greetings and many thanks for taking an interest in our store and our business!

As a family who originates from Victoria, we were very touched by the recent horrific fires. Our last residence was in the Yarra Valley, relatively close to the areas hardest hit. We feel extremely grateful that our recent timeline has shifted us away from that area. We are fortunate enough not to have had any family or friends affected - unlike many! We have been too close to fire in the past - fire in a different context, in that our Gallery was burned down by the landlord - an arson event that hits far too close to the bone. As such, we can feel the pain of loss … but never can we come close to the tragedy, horror and fear these people went through!

In an attempt to do our part in assisting these people, even though it may only be from a financial point of view, we would very much love to raise what money possible and donate it to the VICTORIAN BUSHFIRE APPEAL.

Ilenora, who is not only one of our resident artists, but also one of my daughters, has put forth her artistic skills and done a drawing depicting the embodiment of Hope defeating Fire!

We are having these printed to order by an extremely professional Art Company based in the US. We personally own several pieces of art that have been printed by this company and the quality is of the highest calibre I have seen. We are offering a large range of items, from things as small as a Fridge Magnet or Greeting Card, to a wonderful Canvas Wall Print in many sizes (the range is listed below).

We have listed these items in 5 of our stores, so that hopefully you will have an account in one of them and would like to contribute to this important cause. Below is the artist’s description and the Range of Products (with Pricing) are listed at the foot of this page.

Please visit one of these pages to view and make your purchase:

Nature’s Wonderland, SerpentineMoon, Incense in Bulk, Club Serendipity, A Science of Getting Rich

From The Ashes, Hope will Rise

From the ashes of despair… Hope will rise
And shine

Brighter than ever

In support of those damaged by the terrible fires in Victoria, Australia, 100% of the profits from the sales of this image will be donated to the Victorian Bushfire Appeal!
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In the terrible fires spreading through Victoria, the very place I spent my childhood, thousands are losing everything they have. So many have lost their homes and everything they lived for - some have even lost their family and friends. So much is gone, and these people must now start again from the very bottom, trying to rebuild their life. The horror of the fire is indescribable.
But even in these darkest of times, there is hope. We can give them this hope.

By buying a product featuring this beautiful image, depicting the embodiment of Hope defeating Fire, you could help the lives of many people who are suffering! All of the profit from the sales of this image will be donated to the Victorian Bushfire Appeal, and hope will shine more brightly than ever.

An alternate version, without the writing, is also available, so you may choose whichever version you prefer.

Thanks very much for supporting the people of Victoria!


The product you buy has been beautifully and expertly created by Ilenora, one of our Resident Artists, and will be printed by DeviantART.com.

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Mousepad - Mouse Pads are 1/4th of an inch thick and made out of a high endurance polyester material. At 7.5 by 9 inches, with rounded corners it is the perfect size for any desk, while providing adequate space for ease of use. The surface is printed digitally to provide a beautiful reproduction of artwork.

Coaster - Coasters are cork backed and measure at 3.75 x 3.75 inches. The surface is printed using a high quality digital process to ensure a beautiful reproduction of artwork. Coasters have rounded corners.

Fridge Magnet - We offer two different sizes of magnets (2.375 x 3.375 and 3.375 x 4.875) with rounded corners. Each magnet makes use of the same material and printing technology as normal prints, meaning the quality is exceptional. The magnet material itself completely covers the back side and is flexible for maximum durability.

Postcard - Postcards are like your normal postcard and has available space for address, return address, stamp and a personal message. What is not normal is that this postcard makes use of the material and printing technology of our normal prints, therefore ensuring exceptional quality.


BECAUSE THE PRODUCTS ARE BEING PRINTED IN THE US, THE PRICING MAY ALTER SLIGHTLY AT THE TIME OF YOUR PURCHASE, DUE TO THE CURRENCY EXCHANGE RATE. WE WILL ADVISE YOU OF ANY CHANGE NEEDED IMMEDIATELY WE PLACE THE ORDER FOR YOUR PURCHASE. IN ADDITION, BECAUSE THE PRINTING IS BEING DONE IN THE US, THE SHIPPING, WHICH IS INCLUDED IN THE PRICE OF THE PRODUCT, IS FROM THE US TO SE QUEENSLAND. ADJUSTMENTS MAY BE NEEDED FOR OTHER ADDRESSES. IF THIS IS THE CASE, WE WILL EMAIL YOU STRAIGHT AFTER YOUR PURCHASE.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Greeting Cards
5 x 7 Inch - 25 Cards *AU$68.31 US $44.85
5 x 7 Inch - 10 Cards *AU$45.33 US $29.76

Magnets
Small (2.375 x 3.375 Inch) *AU$17.06 US $11.20
Large (3.375 x 4.875 Inch) *AU$20.10 US $13.20

Postcards
Glossy *AU$9.44 US $6.20
Matte *AU$9.44 US $6.20

Photo Prints
5 x 5 Inch - Glossy *AU$8.18 US $5.37
8 x 8 Inch - Glossy *AU$19.83 US $13.02
10 x 10 Inch - Glossy *AU$21.83 US $14.33
20 x 20 Inch - Glossy *AU$83.88 US $55.07
5 x 5 Inch - Matte *AU$8.18 US $5.37
8 x 8 Inch - Matte *AU$19.83 US $13.02
10 x 10 Inch - Matte *AU$21.83 US $14.33
20 x 20 Inch - Matte *AU$83.88 US $55.07
5 x 5 Inch - Lustre *AU$8.62 US $5.66
8 x 8 Inch - Lustre *AU$22.47 US $14.75
10 x 10 Inch - Lustre *AU$25.05 US $16.45
20 x 20 Inch - Lustre *AU$96.82 US $63.57

Coasters
Set of 4 (3.75 x 3.75 Inch) *AU$40.36 US $26.50

Mouse Pads
7.5 x 9 Inch *AU$24.67 US $16.20

Wrapped Canvas Prints
11 x 14 Inch *AU$152.37 US $100.04
16 x 20 Inch *AU$199.66 US $131.09
20 x 30 Inch *AU$292.25 US $191.88
24 x 36 Inch *AU$374.50 US $245.88
30 x 40 Inch *AU$489.57 US $321.43

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

Until next time ………..

Warmly,

SerpentineMoon, from the
Nature’s Wonderland Team


http://www.natureswonderland.com.au/shop/

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Our Gift to you for a Happy New Year

Sunday, January 4th, 2009

Greetings

HAPPY NEW YEAR!!

Another year is starting … what will unfold for us all?

This time of year can be very busy for lots of people, but I think we need to take a moment at some stage to sit back, relax, and reflect on the year just past, as well as the year ahead. I know I have been taking some time out for that over the last few days.

I want to thank you so much for being a part of my online family. Thank you to those who have supported me this year, allowing me to continue to do what I love.

I hope this new year brings you many great joys and that wonderful opportunities come your way … and, please stay safe over the holidays.

Did you make a New Year Resolution? Mine is to make sufficient money to pay off our mortgage!!Lots of Dollars!

I fully realise that is a massive task, but it is a goal on which I intend to focus the bulk of my energy - and of course a goal in which I intend to succeed!. I have been working towards this for all of 2008 and now I am in a position to concentrate my efforts in a much more definitive manner, as we have the shops in a far more satisfactory arrangement than we had previously, so I will now be able to lessen my workload in that area, enabling me to place my energies on different things.

I introduced you to our brand new lifestyle - Club Serendipity - late last year. If you missed that email, here is the link to our site, so you can catch up and understand what we are discussing. To précis our family intentions …. we intend to Live the *Good Life* as soon as possible, which is a goal towards which we have been working most of our lives! What is the *Good Life* you may ask?? - basically it is Health, Wealth and Happiness - all wrapped up in a blanket of self-sufficiency. Growing our own healthy food is our number one priority, as the food out there in the general supermarkets deteriorates daily and is, in my opinion, almost inedible now! Much of what we sell in Nature’s Wonderland has always been geared towards this end - plenty of delicious SPROUTS; Juicers, Dehydrators, Grain Mills and other equipment to make the food preparation easier and healthier.

This is the time of year when many start making New Year’s resolutions that frequently end up becoming a source of frustration, anxiety, and despair!

Instead of making resolutions, why not take a few moments to actually design the kind of life you want in the year ahead?
My free gift to you is in the form of a Life Designer for 2009 that you can easily download as an Adobe file and use in order
to begin planning the quality life you wish to enjoy in the year ahead. Simply email me and I will send you the link to a copy of this free planning tool.

2009 promises to be a very significant and challenging year for us here in Australia, as well as for people all across the world. Many will be addressing concerns in the areas of relationships, health and wellness, finances, education, business growth, spiritual development and more. The contemporary challenges we face as a society can often appear overwhelming, yet there is much we can do as individuals and groups to overcome many of the greatest difficulties we face. It all begins with the mindset we bring, and what systems we wish to implement in order to attain that which we desire in each arena of life and work.

I eagerly look forward to working with those of you who choose to become members of Club Serendipity, as we unravel the obstacles and start to understand how to work towards creating a better life! We would be very honoured to have you as a member in our new CLUB SERENDIPITY and to work alongside you as we reach for the freedom that we all deserve!

THE MAIN TARGETS OF THIS CLUB ARE FOR:

  • EACH MEMBER TO ATTAIN SUFFICIENT WEALTH TO AT LEAST PAY THEIR MORTGAGE OUT
  • EACH MEMBER TO UNDERSTAND A HEALTHY DIET IN THIS WORLD OF ‘GARBAGE’ AND TO ATTAIN THE LEVEL OF GROWING THE MAJORITY, IF NOT ALL, THEIR OWN FOOD SUPPLIES
  • EACH MEMBER TO HAVE A FULL UNDERSTANDING OF HOW SEVERELY THE CURRENT SOCIETY IS MANIPULATED, AND HOW TO LIVE SEPARATED FROM THAT CONTROL

DO YOU STRIVE FOR THAT WORLD THAT YOU KNOW IS BEYOND THIS ONE, SO THAT YOU CAN ACTUALLY LIVE LIFE AS IT WAS MEANT TO BE LIVED?

Why not join with us, as we all make it a reality!
Feel free to ‘phone if you would like to discuss anything in depth - 1800 044 722

Until next time ……….. may you and your loved ones be blessed with health, happiness, and abundance in the New Year
ahead!

Warmly,

SerpentineMoon, from the
Nature’s Wonderland Team

http://www.natureswonderland.com

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What is going on in our world??

Saturday, December 27th, 2008

Greetings

That most special time of the year has once again passed and I feel sure that there are lots of full tummies and beaming smiles as treasured presents are contemplated. Here on our property, our family had a wonderfully peaceful time sharing each other’s company and love.

Now, as we leave the Christmas rush behind us for yet another year, perhaps it is time to shake ourselves free of the hustle and bustle that has taken us over for the past few weeks at least, as we led up to Christmas, and consider just where we are going to from here.

For many months now we have personally been working on an extremely important project, although we haven’t had the ability to devote full time to it due to our other commitments, but the year to follow, 2009, is going to be a powerful one for us as we unfold all of this concentration and bring our recent efforts to the forefront. We have written a great deal and set up a number of websites through which we are going to convey this information. Most of it is completed, but there are still finishing touches going into place. I feel it important not to dally any longer though in getting the details out to others - the need for action is fast becoming urgent and I invite you to read my article below as an introduction and forerunner to that upon which we have been working. We would be very honoured to have you as a member in our new CLUB SERENDIPITY and to work alongside you as we reach for the freedom that we all deserve!

What is going on in our world??

Everywhere you turn, you are confronted with comments, stories, news reports, and so on about the doom and gloom of the world economy!

BUT, have you actually stopped to wonder why - what is going on and what will be the eventual outcome? - or instead, are you caught up in this spiral that is being created? Yes, that is correct - CREATED!!

We are not about to go into a huge dialogue about the conspiracies that exist in this crazy world in which we live, but suffice to say in brief that it is our strong opinion that *things are not always what they seem*!! (To quote the Phaedrus, written by Plato - Things are not always what they seem; the first appearance deceives many; the intelligence of a few perceives what has been carefully hidden.)

To expand upon the words of this great philosopher, taken from The Dialogues of Plato
Book V
* Until philosophers are kings, or the kings and princes of this world have the spirit and power of philosophy, and political greatness and wisdom meet in one, and those commoner natures who pursue either to the exclusion of the other are compelled to stand aside, cities will never have rest from their evils - no, nor the human race, as I believe - and then only will this our State have a possibility of life and behold the light of day.
o 473-BC

Birth c. 424–423 BC, Athens
Death c. 348–347 BC, Athens (aged 76 approx)

As you can very easily discern … life has not altered much in all those years!

So, what are YOU going to do about it?

We seem to be coming close to a major turning point - as more people awaken, and as technology increases, thus enabling the throngs to easily communicate - a vast awakening is starting to take place. Of course, there are a great many things that influence our lives, but the crux of all power is money! We live in a society totally dictated to by the need for money, without which we are just not able to exist! THIS is how we are ruled by the powers that be!

The money circulating in most countries on this planet is owned and totally controlled by the elite - the *overseers* or *controllers*, the bankers and their cronies and minions. We simply *rent* it from them - this rent being called *interest*. That ownership has been sealed with the blood of those who have set themselves up to *rule* our lands - Prime Ministers, Presidents, Queens, and so on. Make no mistake about it. These *Powers That Be* have to tell us nothing, and there is no one who will force them to tell us anything. Only the unbearable pain of total collapse will wake people up. LET US JOIN TOGETHER AND STEP ASIDE FROM THAT PATH!! - before it becomes too late!

With the impending implosion of the usury-based global money system, now is the time to seek a new way of ‘doing’ money - one not based on debt and controlled by a global monetary elite who are destroying our planet.

Conventional money is created as debt by private financial institutions for their own profit-making purposes, not as a social service. This is the root cause of the economic, social and environmental problems that beset us. The amount of debt determines the quantity of money, which has nothing to do with the amount of money we need to live decent lives.

Now, as the world economy is crumbling, look around you and see how you are being affected. Pick up the paper or turn on the TV and you see nothing but stories of financial Armageddon. The stock market is crashing, banks are failing, mortgage companies are failing, the motor industry is failing, the housing meltdown, unemployment is skyrocketing — and on it goes. If not for the bad news, there would be no news at all. One thing that all these recurring news stories do is cause an enormous amount of stress - stress that is both emotionally and physically devastating. Again, our opinion is that we are all being manipulated and this scenario is absolutely intended. What are the final intentions?? … well, we will leave that for another space, but we do earnestly suggest that you look more deeply at all that is going on around your ears, rather than be but a mere pawn in the meltdown of society!

What actions can you take to get out of this quicksand?

I am aware that many people have been working towards this turning point in our society for many years now, as have we personally done. About 11 years ago we started to move away from *the norm* of society and set ourselves up to live in a self-sufficient lifestyle. There have been steps along the way and the process has not been fast - almost always due to the monetary aspect. We are nearly there now and we feel the need to put out to others some assistance, if they are also wishing to break away from what will only be a dreadfully shocking downfall. This is the reason for CLUB SERENDIPITY.

THE MAIN TARGETS OF THIS CLUB ARE FOR:

  • EACH MEMBER TO ATTAIN SUFFICIENT WEALTH TO AT LEAST PAY THEIR MORTGAGE OUT
  • EACH MEMBER TO UNDERSTAND A HEALTHY DIET IN THIS WORLD OF ‘GARBAGE’ AND TO ATTAIN THE LEVEL OF GROWING THE MAJORITY, IF NOT ALL, THEIR OWN FOOD SUPPLIES
  • EACH MEMBER TO HAVE A FULL UNDERSTANDING OF HOW SEVERELY THE CURRENT SOCIETY IS MANIPULATED, AND HOW TO LIVE SEPARATED FROM THAT CONTROL

DO YOU STRIVE FOR THAT WORLD THAT YOU KNOW IS BEYOND THIS ONE, SO THAT YOU CAN ACTUALLY LIVE LIFE AS IT WAS MEANT TO BE LIVED?

Why not join with us, as we all make it a reality!
Feel free to ‘phone if you would like to discuss anything in depth - 1800 044 722

Until next time ………..

Warmly,

SerpentineMoon, from the
Nature’s Wonderland Team

http://natureswonderland.com.au/shop

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Once-in-a-Lifetime OFFER!

Thursday, December 11th, 2008

Greetings and many thanks for taking an interest in our store and our business!

We have a Once-in-a-Lifetime OFFER to present to you!

We know that we have had many of you as faithful clients now for a great many years. As our business has expanded, we have worked harder to expand everything along with it. We are very proud to be in the position of having increased what was originally a tiny little business selling a few crystals, books and metaphysical items, to what it has now become. After having left behind the world of bricks-and-mortar retailing, we decided to shift into a rural location and keep our hand in retailing by moving into the online world. Back in 2003, when we first opened up online, things were a lot different - goodness how everything has boomed!

This growth of our business has been wonderful from that point of view, but our dream to live the self-sufficient *Good Life* has always been our top priority. Our business has enabled us to purchase our property, build our Studio and Dojo and to gather together our collection of animals - but the down side of it is that we just don’t have the time to concentrate on living on the land! In addition, we have a separate business that is now gathering speed and we just cannot manage to handle it all!!

For those of you who have followed us along, you will remember that initially we were going to sell the complete Nature’s Wonderland business, but after consideration, we realised that it really had become far too big as the store was carrying around 2,500 items. We put lots of thought into the best way to move and hence we made the decision to divide the large store up into three smaller and more manageable stores, which would be easier to control and far better for the clients to find their way around the items. So was born INCENSE IN BULK and SERPENTINEMOON.

The irony of all I am telling you is that we have now created an even greater workload for ourselves, as we are running not one, but three online stores, each coupled with an eBay store and a Blog, plus we also have an OZtion store. As a small family business, this is just far too great a workload for us, so we are now putting out this amazing offer, that we must do to save ourselves from being swamped by all this work!

OK … what are we offering?

We invite those of you who are interested in taking over from us to get in touch and SUBMIT TO US YOUR OFFER for our brand new -

SerpentineMoon Store
Specialising in all types of Metaphysical items - Spirituality, Wicca, Pagan, Shamanism

and Incense in Bulk Store
For all of your Incense, Fragrant and Aromatherapy needs

NATURALLY WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO ONLY ACCEPT REALISTIC OFFERS, BUT BASICALLY WE ARE VERY WILLING TO NEGOTIATE WITH WHAT YOU PUT TO US!!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

We have split Nature’s Wonderland
into three individual stores,
offering each separate section FOR SALE!

Introducing our new shops!!

SERPENTINEMOON

SerpentineMoon Shop

INCENSE IN BULK

Incense in Bulk Shop

In today’s economy, you are wise if you get out and commence your own HOME BASED BUSINESS. Work from the comfort of your own home, save huge dollars by no longer needing petrol, clothes, lunches and everything else associated with employment, as well as the most important aspect of avoiding all the stress and hassle that goes with the rat race!!

EACH OF THESE FULLY OPERATIVE STORES
IS FOR SALE
- SO CONTACT US ASAP!

‘phone us on 1800 044 722

CLICK HERE FOR MORE DETAIL ON WHAT THE STORE PURCHASE ENTAILS.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Until next time ………..

Warmly,

SerpentineMoon, from the
NATURE’S WONDERLAND Team


http://www.natureswonderland.com.au/shop/

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Eternity Dreams Commission Form

Thursday, November 20th, 2008

Here is the form to fill out to complete your commission.

Please enter all the required fields to efficiently describe your character and image.

Warmly,
Ilenora

  1. Required fields are marked with an asterisk (*)
  2. If you ordered multiple characters in your commission, please fill out the form once for each character.
Contact & Personal Details
  1. (required)
  2. (valid email required)
Character Specifications
  1. (required)
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  10. (required)
Image Specifications
  1. When describing the background for your image, keep in mind that you may be limited depending on what option you chose - Simple/decorative, Semi-detailed, or Full. Generally, a simple or decorative backgrounds will not include any scenery, but will usually be made up of patterns, textures, and colours. A semi-detailed background may include scenery, but it will not be prominant nor greatly detailed. A full background may include any manner or objects, buildings or scenery.
  2. *Are you agreeable with the artist submitting the finished commission to her online gallery?
 

cforms contact form by delicious:days

President-Elect Barack Obama: His acceptance speech

Thursday, November 6th, 2008

President-Elect Barack Obama: His acceptance speech

If there is anyone out there who still doubts that America is a place where all things are possible; who still wonders if the dream of our founders is alive in our time; who still questions the power of our democracy, tonight is your answer.

It’s the answer told by lines that stretched around schools and churches in numbers this nation has never seen; by people who waited three hours and four hours, many for the very first time in their lives, because they believed that this time must be different; that their voice could be that difference.

It’s the answer spoken by young and old, rich and poor, Democrat and Republican, black, white, Latino, Asian, Native American, gay, straight, disabled and not disabled … Americans who sent a message to the world that we have never been a collection of Red States and Blue States: we are, and always will be, the United States of America.

It’s the answer that led those who have been told for so long by so many to be cynical, and fearful, and doubtful of what we can achieve to put their hands on the arc of history and bend it once more toward the hope of a better day.

It’s been a long time coming, but tonight, because of what we did on this day, in this election, at this defining moment, change has come to America.

I just received a very gracious call from Senator McCain. He fought long and hard in this campaign, and he’s fought even longer and harder for the country he loves. He has endured sacrifices for America that most of us cannot begin to imagine, and we are better off for the service rendered by this brave and selfless leader. I congratulate him and Governor Palin for all they have achieved, and I look forward to working with them to renew this nation’s promise in the months ahead.

I want to thank my partner in this journey, a man who campaigned from his heart and spoke for the men and women he grew up with on the streets of Scranton and rode with on that train home to Delaware, the Vice President-elect of the United States, Joe Biden.

I would not be standing here tonight without the unyielding support of my best friend for the last sixteen years, the rock of our family and the love of my life, our nation’s next First Lady, Michelle Obama. Sasha and Malia, I love you both so much, and you have earned the new puppy that’s coming with us to the White House. And while she’s no longer with us, I know my grandmother is watching, along with the family that made me who I am. I miss them tonight, and know that my debt to them is beyond measure.

To my campaign manager David Plouffe, my chief strategist David Axelrod, and the best campaign team ever assembled in the history of politics you made this happen, and I am forever grateful for what you’ve sacrificed to get it done.

But above all, I will never forget who this victory truly belongs to it belongs to you.

I was never the likeliest candidate for this office. We didn’t start with much money or many endorsements. Our campaign was not hatched in the halls of Washington it began in the backyards of Des Moines and the living rooms of Concord and the front porches of Charleston.

It was built by working men and women who dug into what little savings they had to give five dollars and ten dollars and twenty dollars to this cause. It grew strength from the young people who rejected the myth of their generation’s apathy; who left their homes and their families for
jobs that offered little pay and less sleep; from the not-so-young people who braved the bitter cold and scorching heat to knock on the doors of perfect strangers; from the millions of Americans who volunteered, and organized, and proved that more than two centuries later, a government of the people, by the people and for the people has not perished from this Earth. This is your victory.

I know you didn’t do this just to win an election and I know you didn’t do it for me. You did it because you understand the enormity of the task that lies ahead. For even as we celebrate tonight, we know the challenges that tomorrow will bring are the greatest of our lifetime two wars, a planet in peril, the worst financial crisis in a century. Even as we stand here tonight, we know there are brave Americans waking up in the deserts of Iraq and the mountains of Afghanistan to risk their lives for us. There are mothers and fathers who will lie awake after their children fall asleep and wonder how they’ll make the mortgage, or pay their doctor’s
bills, or save enough for college. There is new energy to harness and new jobs to be created; new schools to build and threats to meet and alliances to repair.

The road ahead will be long. Our climb will be steep. We may not get there in one year or even one term, but America I have never been more hopeful than I am tonight that we will get there. I promise you we as a people will get there.

There will be setbacks and false starts. There are many who won’t agree with every decision or policy I make as President, and we know that government can’t solve every problem. But I will always be honest with you about the challenges we face. I will listen to you, especially when we
disagree. And above all, I will ask you join in the work of remaking this nation the only way it’s been done in America for two-hundred and twenty-one years block by block, brick by brick, calloused hand by calloused hand.

What began twenty-one months ago in the depths of winter must not end on this autumn night. This victory alone is not the change we seek it is only the chance for us to make that change. And that cannot happen if we go back to the way things were. It cannot happen without you.

So let us summon a new spirit of patriotism; of service and responsibility where each of us resolves to pitch in and work harder and look after not only ourselves, but each other. Let us remember that if this financial crisis taught us anything, it’s that we cannot have a thriving Wall Street while Main Street suffers in this country, we rise or fall as one nation; as one people.

Let us resist the temptation to fall back on the same partisanship and pettiness and immaturity that has poisoned our politics for so long. Let us remember that it was a man from this state who first carried the banner of the Republican Party to the White House a party founded on the values of self-reliance, individual liberty, and national unity. Those are values we all share, and while the Democratic Party has won a great victory tonight, we do so with a measure of humility and determination to heal the divides that have held back our progress. As Lincoln said to a nation far more divided than ours, “We are not enemies, but friends, though passion may have strained it must not break our bonds of affection.” And to those Americans whose support I have yet to earn I may not have won your vote, but I hear your voices, I need your help, and I will be your President too.

And to all those watching tonight from beyond our shores, from parliaments and palaces to those who are huddled around radios in the forgotten corners of our world … our stories are singular, but our destiny is shared, and a new dawn of American leadership is at hand. To those who would tear this world down … we will defeat you. To those who seek peace and security we support you. And to all those who have wondered if America’s beacon still burns as bright tonight we proved once more that the true strength of our nation comes not from our the might of our arms or the scale of our wealth, but from the enduring power of our ideals: democracy, liberty, opportunity, and unyielding hope.

For that is the true genius of America … that America can change. Our union can be perfected. And what we have already achieved gives us hope for what we can and must achieve tomorrow.

This election had many firsts and many stories that will be told for generations. But one that’s on my mind tonight is about a woman who cast her ballot in Atlanta. She’s a lot like the millions of others who stood in line to make their voice heard in this election except for one thing
… Ann Nixon Cooper is 106 years old.

She was born just a generation past slavery; a time when there were no cars on the road or planes in the sky; when someone like her couldn’t vote for two reasons … because she was a woman and because of the color of her skin.

And tonight, I think about all that she’s seen throughout her century in America, the heartache and the hope; the struggle and the progress; the times we were told that we can’t, and the people who pressed on with that American creed: Yes we can.

At a time when women’s voices were silenced and their hopes dismissed, she lived to see them stand up and speak out and reach for the ballot. Yes we can.

When there was despair in the dust bowl and depression across the land, she saw a nation conquer fear itself with a New Deal, new jobs and a new sense of common purpose. Yes we can.

When the bombs fell on our harbor and tyranny threatened the world, she was there to witness a generation rise to greatness and a democracy was saved. Yes we can.

She was there for the buses in Montgomery, the hoses in Birmingham, a bridge in Selma, and a preacher from Atlanta who told a people that “We Shall Overcome.” Yes we can.

A man touched down on the moon, a wall came down in Berlin, a world was connected by our own science and imagination. And this year, in this election, she touched her finger to a screen, and cast her vote, because after 106 years in America, through the best of times and the darkest of
hours, she knows how America can change. Yes we can.

America, we have come so far. We have seen so much. But there is so much more to do. So tonight, let us ask ourselves - ” if our children should live to see the next century; if my daughters should be so lucky to live as long as Ann Nixon Cooper, what change will they see? What progress will we have made?

This is our chance to answer that call. This is our moment. This is our time, to put our people back to work and open doors of opportunity for our kids; to restore prosperity and promote the cause of peace; to reclaim the American Dream and reaffirm that fundamental truth, that out of many, we are one; that while we breathe, we hope, and where we are met with cynicism, and doubt, and those who tell us that we can’t, we will respond with that timeless creed that sums up the spirit of a people:

Yes We Can. Thank you, God bless you, and may God Bless the United States of America.

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Giant Crystal Cave Comes to Light

Friday, October 31st, 2008

What an absolutely magnificent discovery ….

crystal-cave-1

More photos

Buried a thousand feet (300 meters) below Naica mountain in the Chihuahuan Desert, Mexico, the cave was discovered by two miners excavating a new tunnel for the Industrias Peñoles company in 2000. Geologist Juan Manuel García-Ruiz calls it “the Sistine Chapel of Crystals,” but Superman could call it home.

A sort of south-of-the-border Fortress of Solitude, Mexico’s Cueva de los Cristales (Cave of Crystals) contains some of the world’s largest known natural crystals—translucent beams of gypsum as long as 36 feet (11 meters).

How did the crystals reach such super heroic proportions?

In the new issue of the journal Geology, García-Ruiz reports that for millennia the crystals thrived in the cave’s extremely rare and stable natural environment. Temperatures hovered consistently around a steamy 136 degrees Fahrenheit (58 degrees Celsius), and the cave was filled with mineral-rich water that drove the crystals’ growth.

Modern-day mining operations exposed the natural wonder by pumping water out of the 30-by-90-foot (10-by-30-meter) cave, which was found in 2000 near the town of Delicias (Chihuahua state map). Now García-Ruiz is advising the mining company to preserve the caves.

“There is no other place on the planet,” García-Ruiz said, “where the mineral world reveals itself in such beauty.”

Read the full story of the new discovery.

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