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The Irrawaddy (Ayeyarwady)

We left Bagan by boat heading for Mandalay.  It took 14 hours against the current. 

The travel guide had described the boat as 'nice'.  It was certainly preferable to 12 hours in a bus. It was possible to roam about and there was a sort of tea room on board with a free breakfast. But to call it 'nice' suggests a vessel that is ship-shape and well maintained.  That it was not.  The consolation was that it hadn't far to sink.

The river is monotonous, the only excitement being the really shallow spots where two crew members went forward and poled for the bottom, calling the depth, often less than two metres.  Commercial traffic consists of barges and low draft tugs and these are led by a small boat checking the depth ahead in the shallow reaches.  Several times our boat took advantage of this path finding.

 

On the boat: above:  two views of the morning coastline
below: seeking the bottom; and why is there a bowl of
dead vegetable-matter on the binnacle, good luck charm?

 

The river fisher-folk use quite sophisticated long symmetrical boats, built of planks with a distinctive stern and brow post. They are traditionally poled or paddled but, in this modern world, a proportion have been fitted with a small petrol motor on the stern with a long propeller shaft that drives them along quite quickly.

 

Riverside encampments and fishing boats

 

There were occasional riverside encampments for fishers but the true banks are way off in the distance. It was reminiscent of the Nile.

A highlight was the Pakokku Bridge, an enormously long (3.5 km) combined road and rail bridge that was opened with great fanfare in January 2012.  It has a nominal clearance of 16 metres but the maximum river height is clearly evident on the concrete pylons which, I guess, reduces the clearance to around eleven metres, still ample for most river traffic.  It’s a conventional riveted steel truss bridge that might have been built in the 1930’s. Riveting is very labour intensive. 

Conventional and labour intensive or not, it is obviously of considerable future economic significance as it provides one of the few modern crossings of this river. The Irrawaddy together with its tributaries historically defined Burma, as a distinct from the communities of the other great river systems, the Ganges and Mekong, separated by mountainous regions to the West, North and East.

 

Pakokku Bridge - road and rail - the longest in Myanmar

 

 

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Travel

Cuba

 

 

 

What can I say about Cuba? 

In the late ‘70s I lived on the boundary of Paddington in Sydney and walked to and from work in the city.  Between my home and work there was an area of terrace housing in Darlinghurst that had been resumed by the State for the construction of a road tunnel and traffic interchanges.  Squatters had moved into some of the ‘DMR affected’ houses.  Most of these were young people, students, rock bands and radically unemployed alternative culture advocates; hippies. 

Those houses in this socially vibrant area that were not condemned by the road building were rented to people who were happy with these neighbours: artists; writers; musicians; even some younger professionals; and a number were brothels.  

Read more: Cuba

Fiction, Recollections & News

The McKie Family

 

 

 

 

Introduction

 

 

This is the story of the McKie family down a path through the gardens of the past that led to where I'm standing.  Other paths converged and merged as the McKies met and wed and bred.  Where possible I've glimpsed backwards up those paths as far as records would allow. 

The setting is Newcastle upon Tyne in northeast England and my path winds through a time when the gardens there flowered with exotic blooms and their seeds and nectar changed the entire world.  This was the blossoming of the late industrial and early scientific revolution and it flowered most brilliantly in Newcastle.

I've been to trace a couple of lines of ancestry back six generations to around the turn of the 19th century. Six generations ago, around the turn of the century, lived sixty-four individuals who each contributed a little less 1.6% of their genome to me, half of them on my mother's side and half on my father's.  Yet I can't name half a dozen of them.  But I do know one was called McKie.  So, this is about his descendants; and the path they took; and some things a few of them contributed to Newcastle's fortunes; and who they met on the way.

In six generations, unless there is duplication due to copulating cousins, we all have 126 ancestors.  Over half of mine remain obscure to me but I know the majority had one thing in common, they lived in or around Newcastle upon Tyne.  Thus, they contributed to the prosperity, fertility and skill of that blossoming town during the century and a half when the garden there was at its most fecund. So, it's also a tale of one city.

My mother's family is the subject of a separate article on this website. 

 

Read more: The McKie Family

Opinions and Philosophy

Population and Climate Change – An update

 

 

Climate

 

I originally wrote the paper, Issues Arising from the Greenhouse Hypothesis, in 1990 and do not see a need to revise it substantially.  Some of the science is better defined and there have been some minor changes in some of the projections; but otherwise little has changed.

In the Introduction to the 2006 update to that paper I wrote:

Climate change has wide ranging implications...  ranging from its impacts on agriculture (through drought, floods, water availability, land degradation and carbon credits) mining (by limiting markets for coal and minerals processing) manufacturing and transport (through energy costs) to property damage resulting from storms.

The issues are complex, ranging from disputes about the impact of human activities on global warming, to arguments about what should be done and the consequences of the various actions proposed.

Read more: Population and Climate Change – An update

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