Friday, April 6, 2007

Calgary - freesmoke city


One of the most controversial topics in the city of Calgary is the smoke-free bylaw that took place on January the 1st , 2007. The new law bans smoking at public places with just few exceptions. Those who are excluded from the implementation of the law are some casino and bingo halls; still they have been given one year exception. In the end, according to the new regulation, no one would be able to smoke in public places from 2008 and on. Nowadays, bars and restaurants have small designated smoking areas. In addition, one can appreciate how people are smoking outside buildings. I can have a cigarette outside the Education Tower at the University. However, we do not know what would be the future. Apparently the trend is that you will not allow smoking in any public place. Perhaps the only place where you will be able to do it will be in your backyard, if you have a house, or in your apartment’s balcony. And I wonder how bad the decision made by the city council is. Let’s faced it, of course those who do not smoke might be completely agreed with the decision. But for those who smoke, like my case, what are the consequences of it. Well, definitively this is a good topic for a debate, so what I am going to present is a good fact to be considered. From the business perspective, to go smoke free is because of the costs associated with smoking. Imagine this, there is a study from the year 1997 showing that each smoking employee costs an employer up to $ 2565 (http://www.smokefreecalgary.com/). These costs are related to: an increase in absenteeism, a decrease in productivity, a decrease in life insurance premium, and the costs of building specific smoking areas. So I do not know you, but if I were the owner of a company, I will definitively take advantage of a law preventing employees from smoking. In conclusion, besides the healthy reasons attached to a non smoking policy, there are other points of view good to be awarded of while having under consideration the new banning law.

Thursday, April 5, 2007

Golf – how is it played!

Having acknowledged the basics of a golf course and the equipments used for golfing, it is time to explain how the game is played, a few rules, and other aspects that the reader may or may not find interesting. Golf is a sport where an individual hits a ball as many times as it is needed in order to complete a round of holes. The holes can be par 3, 4 or 5, which is the way each hole is classified. Par is the number of strokes that a skilled player should require to complete a hole. For example, in a par 4, one is supposed to complete the hole in four attempts. And I say “supposed” because even though it could be seen easy to do, is not. These kinds of holes are designed so a skilled golfer could reach the green with two strokes, and then roll the ball into the hole in two more. Either as singles or in groups of two, three, or four people, players walk or drive in motorized carts over the course. The player whose ball is the farthest from the flag (which stands on the hole) plays first until they all finish. Although being a game that depends on individual skills, golf could be performed in teams, and there is a variety of options for that. As we said before, hitting a golf ball could be seen as an easy task, but hitting it in a proper way requires a combination between physical and mental abilities. From the physical point of view the process depends on the swing that one makes. It should be a balance between your back swing and forward swing. The way a person stands, the distance from your feet to the ball, the amount of power you use while swinging are other physical factors involved. However, the mind plays an important role while golfing; moreover, you can say that is what makes the difference between amateurs and professional. A professional shows a level of mental focus with each stroke that sometimes even the hardest situation is turned into an easy one, but sometimes even the best golfer goes through very disappointed times because even the luck makes his touch in this game. I have had golfing since I was nine years old, and I can say without hesitation that is one of the most challenging sports I have ever played. But I can also state that is one of the most gratifying ones in which one learn and put in practice almost every mental skills. I encouraged the reader to practice it, you will not regret.

Wednesday, April 4, 2007

Golf - clubs




As per our previous blog, there is a specific club for each place of a hole. The woods are used usually for long shots from the tee or any other part where the ball stands and that requires achieving long distances. They are called “woods” because originally they were made from wood, but it is important to notice that nowadays the manufactures use special types of metal as building materials. Secondly, we can find the irons in a set of clubs. Even though they can also be used from the tee (depending on the distance between it and the green), they are basically designed for hitting the ball on the fairway, the rough, or the bunker. It is important to say that typically they are numbered from 3 to 9, then, the majority of the golf players have a PW (pitching wedge) and a SW (sand wedge). These last two irons are employed for very short distances, less than 100 yards. The SW is a special club very useful if someone has to play the ball from the sand. Generally speaking, for both woods and irons, the lowest the number marked on the club, the longest the distance someone could hit the ball. In other words, if you hit the ball with a 5 iron, you might probably hit the ball longer than if you hit the same ball with a 7 iron using the same force and having the same swing. The final component of a golf set is the putter. It is used on the green where precise shots are required. All the clubs have three parts: a grip, a shaft, and a head.

Tuesday, April 3, 2007

Golf - Overview



Tonight, I have chosen this topic because one of the best golf tournaments in the world will be played this weekend, “The Master”. The tournament is one of the four majors played during a regular PGA season (Professional Golf Association), and could be considered a dream come true for those who won it. But let’s go back to our topic, an amazing game called golf. One can track the history of the sport back to the 1400’s when it is said that the first game took place at the Bruntsfield Links of Scotland. However, the exact date of its invention remains a mystery. What could be definitively assured is that the Scots are responsible for its creation, and the way we play it today is pretty much how it was played at least three centuries ago. Basically, golf is a sport in which an individual player hits a ball into a hole using a variety of clubs. Usually the target is to complete eighteen holes in a round with the fewer amounts of hits or strokes possible. A golf course, where the sport usually takes place, is a vast portion of land in which the holes are built according to a previous design. A tee, the fairway, the rough and a green are the main four components of each hole. Sometimes, in order to add more difficulties to a hole, sand traps or bunkers (as they are referred to in the golfer vocabulary) are placed in specific points of the hole being played. The tee is the place where each player hits the ball for the first time while playing a hole. The fairway is known as the portion of the hole where the ball is supposed to be after being hit the first time. The rough on the contrary, is any place surrounding the fairway. Finally, the green is a small part where the hole itself is. The game is played with a set of clubs (special made sticks), and there is a specific club for any occasion. In my next blog I will chat more about how the clubs are used and I will detail a bit better how golf is played.

Wednesday, March 28, 2007

A convenient truth!

Today, I am going to blog about one topic that caught my attention last night while I was watching the news on the BBC channel. It is a story that made me think about how unfair or undemocratic a so called great democracy could be. But before doing so, I apologize if I hurt anyone’s feelings because what I am going to mention in the lines beneath could be seen as an attack on a particular country. On the contrary, it is not my intention; it is only my reflection of the program I have seen.
Yesterday night, a documentary on a new Arabic TV show was presented. As the majority of the news channels, they broadcast daily news. This specific channel covers information from the hectic Middle East region. However, unlike its western counterparts, it offers the things from another point of view. A point of view that perhaps does not match the ways things are shown by the programs we, western people, traditionally watch. Still, what makes this channel unique is that it presents a different perspective in a language now being understood by more and more people all over the world, English. According to the documentary, the main goal of this program is to show a distinct opinion to the world, or at least to those who can deal with the language spoken.
What raised concerns in me was the fact that according to the program, a certain democratic government is encouraging the private companies within its boundaries to avoid transmitting the aforementioned channel signal. Apparently, they are doing so by manipulating the situation telling the TV companies that it is a patriotic behavior. And I wonder what could be the consequences for the TV chains if they do not pay attention to the advice of the government. Does not that attend to the concept of democracy? Where everyone is supposed to have the right to choose and structure its own opinion about a specific topic even knowing that journalists could also manipulate a fact. In my opinion that is one of the advantages of democracy, and it should be respected by everyone.

Friday, March 23, 2007

Unemployed!

This time I will not blog about any scientific topic. I will not even blog about the beauties of my country. Perhaps what I am going to talk about you will find it improper or uninteresting, yet it is something related to my personal life. Since the beginning of the semester, I started working at the Dino’s athlete department as an event staff. Even though the experience did not fulfill me with any professional knowledge since it was completely unlinked to what I used to do for living, it did allow me to live an interesting new experience.
Working in a Canadian environment surrounded by English native speakers, definitively has made me improve not only my listening skills, but it has helped me getting more confidence regarding my speaking. I have to recognize that sometimes is very challenging to do so because at times people speak so fast that it is very difficult to catch up with some dialogues. Additionally, this experience has also helped me with my finances. Although I just worked on weekends, it was enough to earn a few hundreds. But as any part time job, everything comes to an end. Unfortunately this end arrived before I was expecting it and as the Dinos season finished, the event staff become unemployed. So, if anyone knows about any weekend opportunity, please do not hesitate to contacting me.

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Natural Gas: environmental effetcs.


As we have previously indicated in the last blog, there are important advantages that make natural gas a better option among the fossil fuels currently used. The most important one is the way it affects the environment. Nowadays, natural gas is considered by many people as the less harmful and most friendly of the hydrocarbon resources. In the lines beneath, this text will cover some of those environmental issues related to the use of natural gas.
Among all the fossil fuels, natural gas is the cleanest one. In almost every combustion process, such as the one that takes place while burning gas, carbon dioxide (CO2), water vapor, sulfur dioxide (H2S), and nitrogen oxides (Nox) are the primary products release to the into the environment. However, the amounts of each one of these products is far smaller than the amounts released by the combustion of heavier fossils like coal and fuel oil. The reason is linked to the fact that natural gas is mainly composed of methane (CH4), whose molecules contain lighter chain of carbons. Additionally, contrary to other hydrocarbons, natural gas does not release considerable quantities of ash particles which are another important pollutant usually invisible or imperceptible to the human eye.
Green house emissions, smog, air quality, industrial and electric generation emissions, and pollution form the transportation vehicles are some of the problems our society is facing right now. As human population continues to grow, we begun to use more and more resources and fossil fuels are our fist choice. A simple example is represented by the use of cars and other common methods of transportation, but cars or any other transportation vehicle are a necessity. Thus, the emissions released into the atmosphere keep increasing with the time. The rate of emissions stands side by side the consumption of fuels. Natural gas, even though does not eliminate the problem, it minimize the effect. For example, vehicles operating with compressed gas have reductions in carbon monoxide (CO2) emissions of 25% in comparison to those emitted by traditional gasoline or diesel cars.