Thursday, 20 February 2020

Weeks 6. 7 Stormy Weekends


Stormy Weekends


In a word...WET

First Ciara, then Dennis and an early forecast of Ellen (which may not eventuate).

As you'd expect, I only see that the spoutings and drains are blocked when it rains.

The old Drizabone gets a good workout.






Storm Ciara washed this piece of a shipwreck ashore...


The piece is 8 metres long and estimated to be 250 years old. Unfortunatley, beachcombers have already removed many pieces. It was hoped that it could be lifted in one piece.


Still, we live in hope of better weather...(as we find work to do indoors).

Our prototype of a "groentebak", a raised vegetable garden bed, at a height easier for the clients.










And work continues for "de Swingel", the multi-purpose community centre in the village.

Painting the cupboard doors - for behind the bar.











and the pièce de résistance...

a large photo on the folding door





The photo was taken locally by a chap who is now living in Nevada. Janny knew him from school days and still keeps in touch. Needless to say, he is very pleased that his photo was chosen.

The photo (stickers) are computer generated and each strip is numbered and can be easily replaced if need be.





The ceilings are just about finished - painted and replaced as required.


The curtains are to be replaced... the table on the left is a billiard table...but with no pockets. We always had a billiard table when we were kids - it was later restored for my 21st birthday...so the no pockets thing is very strange for me, although I do remember storys about Walter Lindrum - I think he did amazing things on the tables with no pockets.

Anyway, I was also surprised to learn that this particular table is heated! It is someone's job to arrive early and "turn the heating on" - so that the early players don't suffer any disadvantage. Must be a cold climate thing...

The Bar


and completed...


In the news...

A North Sea Dam




The map above shows a Dutch proposal to build a series dams around the North Sea to protect Northern Europe from the threat of rising sea levels. The project has an estimated cost of €250-€500B – “merely 0.1% of the gross national product, annually over 20 years, of all the countries that would be protected by such a dam.” Although it’s somewhat questionable how accurate that is.



On the map, 3 dams would be built:
A 161 km long one between Brittany and Cornwall
A 145 km long one between the North of Scotland and the Shetland Islands
A massive 331 km long one between the Shetland Islands and Norway

A total distance of 637km, which would work out to less than €1B per km.

One reason for the potential lower cost is that the North Sea is not all that deep, while it has an average depth of 95 meters it is much shallower in certain sections.

The project could in theory help to protect 25 million people who may be impacted by rising sea levels over the coming decade. The project is the brainchild of Dr Sjoerd Groeskamp, oceanographer at the Royal Netherlands Institute for Sea Research, together with his Swedish colleague Joakim Kjellson at GEOMAR in Kiel, Germany.

Bad Drivers...

About 2000 drivers each year are sent to "Driver Re-education" classes - under threat of losing their licences if they don't attend.

A recent investigation has revealed that the classes are "practically USELESS" as far as changing poor driving habits.


This one affects us - ie in the Care Sector

Health minister Hugo de Jonge is lobbying for a change in EU regulations which require large local authority healthcare contracts to be put out to European tender. De Jonge was in Strasbourg earlier this week to talk to MEPs about the issue, which he says should not be considered suitable for the free market. ‘Care is not a market, let alone a European market,’ De Jonge said on Twitter. Local authorities in the Netherlands are currently responsible for youth care, services for the elderly and home nursing but under EU rules must open the contracts to companies from all over the EU. ‘We’ve never had a Polish or a Portuguese youth care service supplier tendering for a Dutch contract,’ he said. ‘It takes a tremendous amount of red tape and it does not help either the quality or the continuity of care services.’ De Jonge said the issue is a particularly Dutch one, because of the way care services are organised in the Netherlands. And he admitted that getting support for change would be a long process. De Jonge said he hoped that MEPs would call for a review of the way the current rules are working and that this would be the first step towards changing the system. De Jonge, a minister on behalf of the Christian Democrats, said just under a year ago that the use of market forces in the domestic healthcare system had gone too far and needed to be limited.

Housing shortage...

The housing crisis in the Netherlands has turned into a housing emergency, the head of the Dutch real estate agents’ association said on Thursday. New figures show that house prices soared a further 8% in the final quarter of 2019, boosting the average price of a home to €326,000, NVM chairman Onno Hoes said. The lack of supply and continuing demand is leading to continuing pressure in the market nationwide, Hoes said. ‘I keep reading about a housing crisis, but I now dare to talk about a housing emergency.’ Not only is there a shortage of existing buildings – the number offered for sale fell by 4% in the final three months of the year – but few new homes are coming on the market. Little change is expected in the near future. The national statistics agency CBS said at the end of last year that the number of permits for new homes fell by 25% in 2019, despite government pledges to boost supply. This ‘vicious circle’ means first-time buyers will find it even more difficult to buy a home in 2020, Hoes said.


The travels of Ben...

Luckily, he seems to be getting planty of work, enough at least to pay for his Travelling Habit.

He has a very nice shared apartment in Cape Town - the windows are fitted with bars - but thieves tried to "fish" his belongings through the bars...




He had all his important stuff with him....but they did manage to snag a bag of dirty clothes!











Ben was the "driver" for this photo shoot






A day off...


In another photo shoot, Ben was in a 6 storey house on the side of a mountain. They had just finished the photos - of him wearing different clothes - when he stepped backwards into the swimming pool! Laughs all round....

The line in the lower middle of this photo is the edge of the pool!

...and the view from the pool...







Sunday, 2 February 2020

Weeks 4 & 5 A Mixed Bag


Weeks 4 & 5

A mixed bag


Work experience
Cooking Club
Work at de Swingel
More firewood!
Ben
New kid - kids weekend
Bird Nesting Boxes
Clearing the forest
Rudie's "hokje" - after 4 years...
Boat Preparations
Boat Registration
January Birthdays
Janny's Birthday
het water komt
changing carers
 10 years with us
Shady camp

Our work experience lad of 12 weeks shouted the cake on his last day. His parents and caregivers are at the stage when they have to find something suitable for his future. It is not with us. They are now going to look at something in the hospitality industry - something like "Brownies and Downies" - one of which we have in Drachten. Sadly, there is a waiting list...but, again I can't help but admire the system.





The local Country Women's Association Cooking Club again cooked for us (including Janny's Mum) - A 4 Course Meal that we hardly need, but enjoyed nonetheless.

Janny has become the main organiser of the work at de Swingel - or so it seems with the amount of time she has been there - but the results are now to be seen...








More Firewood!

We found some previously considered "too hard" blocks in the hayshed and tackled some other trees that had been felled but not cut for about 12 months...



With the electric chainsaw



Which gave another 3 cubic metres of (useable) firewood...
...and yet another temporary roof!



Coming and going...

We had a new boy for the kids' weekend, but we are going to lose one because he is being taken out of his home to be put in care. I only ever have limited time with the kids and have rarely had any that I can't handle...but apparently he is too difficult for the mother at home - our place is obviously good for him but it's not enough...







Bird Nesting Boxes...

We have finally settled on a particular style and have received an order from a Bird Watchers Club in Heerenveen (via our fishing enthusiast client).

Older variations...


Our new style - with various jigs made so that they all end up the same...





Clearing the forest...
"our" forest just over the road,,,





At about 0800hrs...


...and the end result



Het Water Komt (The Water is Coming)

A young Dutch historian has written an open letter to every Dutch citizen - in the form of a printed pamphlet... expressing his concern (after research and discussions with many "experts"...)

A bit of a read (from Google Translate)



Dear countryman,

Let me describe the threat more clearly.

The survival of the Netherlands is at stake.

There is a chance that our children will have to say goodbye to cities such as The Hague and Delft, Rotterdam and Amsterdam, Leiden and Haarlem. I don't say that, (it is what) so many Dutch scientists say. I spoke to seven last summer and was stunned at how frankly they speak about the scenario in which we have to give up large parts of the Netherlands.

'If you have children now,' says Maarten Kleinhans, professor of physical geography at Utrecht University, 'you are talking about people who may be losing their country. Who will soon no longer be Dutch, because there is no longer any Netherlands. We are talking about that. "

Geographer Kim Cohen, a colleague of Kleinhans, fears the same. 'I think we can handle a 2-meter rise in sea level in the Netherlands. But if it becomes 3, 4 or 5 meters, then I wonder. The measures that we should then take are draconian. I think we will then start giving up cities. "


For a long time, a sea level rise of up to 85 centimeters was expected for the year 2100. But in recent years the predictions have come up higher and higher. Even if we are able to limit global warming to 2 degrees, then according to the KNMI we run the risk of a 2 meter higher sea level in 2100.

If the earth warms up more strongly (to 4 degrees in 2100) then we almost certainly reach that 2 meters, and in 2200 we can reach 5 to 8 meters.

To give you an idea: the Delta Works are calculated on an increase of 40 centimeters.

The flood

Almost seventy years ago things went wrong. In the night of February 1, 1953, the dikes broke in more than five hundred places in the Netherlands and 1,836 Dutch people drowned.

But then we built the Delta Works, one of the seven modern wonders of the world that have protected us ever since.

When the law for the Delta Works was adopted by the Lower House on November 5, 1957, construction had already begun. Foreign journalists were surprised at the Dutch decisiveness. "What those crazy engineers now represent," wrote The Saturday Evening Post, "is a Maginot line of three new dams [...]. This concept has been around for a while. But, as one Dutchman said, "We first had to get angry to forget that it was impossible."

Unfortunately, the Dutch are forgetful. Today, foreigners in particular are impressed by the Oosterscheldekering with its 65 pillars, each the size of a cathedral, and the Maeslantkering with its two moving Eiffel towers and the largest ball joints in the world.

We Dutch are less interested. The information signs at the Haringvlietdam are worn, the letters have fallen off. On Neeltje Jans, the working island in the Oosterscheldekering, there is an amusement park that has been sold to a Spanish multinational.

A new Delta Plan

And meanwhile the sea level is rising.

"The models now assume that it will really start around 2050," says Marjolijn Haasnoot, water management researcher. 'My children will then be the same age as I am now. It is not as far away as we think. "

In short, it is time for a new Delta Plan. And this time it's not just about dams and dikes, bridges and islands. The Delta Plan of our time is also about solar panels and wind turbines, flash trains and mega batteries.

This realization seems to have finally penetrated The Hague. On 28 May 2019, the Climate Act was passed by the Senate. In 2030, as we have agreed, we will emit 49 percent fewer greenhouse gases than in 1990. In 2050, at least 95 percent. Is that a lot? Is that fast?

Let me make the challenge more concrete.

Eight million buildings have to get rid of gas, nine million cars have to be powered by electricity or hydrogen, the electricity grid must be at least three times as heavy, a quarter of the North Sea must be filled with wind turbines, 75 million solar panels must be connected, 100,000 hectares of forest must be planted, and we need fifty technologies that are not even  yet invented.

This will be the largest renovation in our country. Ever.

The future of our country


Among the dike graves of Holland there is an old saying: "Give us this day our daily bread, and occasionally a flood." And yes, in the past a disaster was always needed to wake us up. In 1916, the Northern Netherlands first had to flood before we started building the Afsluitdijk. In 1953, the southern part of the Netherlands first had to drown before we started building the Delta Works.

So should it go wrong again? Should the water advance to the Veluwe before we stop crying about expensive heat pumps and ugly windmills? Will we then realize that we must go through a revolution, transform the total economy and be a guide country for the rest of the world?


One thing is certain: if we want to keep our country, we have to fight. Fight against the water and fight against ourselves. Against our own apathy. Against our own frugality. Of course, on the one hand, we are a people of complainers and whalers, naggers and grumbles. A people who can remain blind, even if the truth is rubbed under our noses for years.

Yet we are also a people who can rise above themselves. That is capable of incredible things, and can be a guide country for the rest of the world. Yes, it will take a lot of time, money and energy - but it has always been that way. We have been fighting the water for a thousand years. And we can, because we are polderers. Because we are turning water into land. Because our future, even now, is in our own hands.













After some weeks of to-ing and fro-ing, he has finally landed a job for Samsung...we think he is going to be dressed up in this suit - which had to be specially made to fit him...



Janny's Birthday...






And meanwhile, the madness continues. Brexit is upon us and the other farce continues...I have had to force myself to stop listening...