Posts Tagged ‘weather’

Safety In Foreign Taxis

Saturday, August 20th, 2011

The vast majority of taxi owners are not dangerous and the vast majority of taxi journeys pass without incident. However, there have been worries at home and abroad, so it is worth taking fundamental safety steps. The added problem when using a taxi abroad, naturally, is the language and cultural barrier.

The purpose of this piece is to make you aware of your safety whilst taking a taxi abroad, but these safety pointers should be applied equally in your own country. Safety, particularly personal safety, ought to become one of your paramount worries.

The first bit of advice is to take a taxi from a taxi rank. Do not take a taxi from a person who is touting his taxi service outside the airport or the train station. Most countries have a system of organized taxi ranks, but there are always rogue taxi drivers attempting to by-pass the certified system.

If there is no taxi rank enquire of one of the police, that can be seen standing in each public transport building. If that does not do any good, go into a hotel, restaurant or bar and request the proprietor to phone you a taxi. Before you get into the taxi, commit the registration number or number plate of the taxi to memory and write it down once you are inside the cab.

If you are arriving in the location from a long distance away, know the location of the building you want to visit. This is easily done by going to Google Earth, typing the location in and printing off the map. Then you know if you are being taken for a ride literally. Do not permit yourself to get taken anywhere you do not want to go. Sit in the back so that you have the upper hand if you require it.

Hold you precious belongings near you, then if you have to make a run for it, you will have your essentials and the details of the taxi that you wrote down earlier.

Does the car look like a taxi or does it look like someone’s personal car? You have more chance of being ripped off by a private hire car than a firm with a boss and a license to lose. Most genuine taxis will have the company’s phone number written on them, so ask for a card or write it down.

If you are travelling alone, try to share the taxi with another foreigner. Most foreigners are looking for a hotel to stay when they arrive, so this is not as hard as it may sound. Do not permit another local to share with you, because you do not know who they are - they could be a team.

Finally, do not be into a car that is in very bad condition. If the driver is on the level, the car will be clean and the windows and the door handles will work. Do not step into a car without internal door handles..

Owen Jones, the author of this article, writes on a number of topics, but is now concerned with RX Safety Glasses. If you would like to know more, go to our website at Safety Glasses Bifocal

Calendars And How To Appreciate Them

Monday, January 4th, 2010

The calendar is such a routine, ordinary item, but how much do you really know about the working of it. Why is it like that?

A DAY: The Earth rotates at a reasonably fixed pace about the imaginary line running between the North and South Poles named the Earth’s Axis. The time it takes to spin once is called a ‘rotation’ and this takes just under twenty-four hours. Nevertheless, because the Earth is constantly traveling around the Sun, the exact time from noon one day to noon the next is 3 minutes 56 seconds longer and this makes a day almost exactly twenty-four hours in length.

The actual time from noon to noon differs depending where the Earth is on its celestial course around the Sun, but if you average the days in a year out, it comes to exactly twenty-four hours.

A YEAR: All nine planets in our solar system travel around the Sun in almost perfectly circular routes called orbits. Each trip around the Sun is called a revolution and all the planets revolve around the Sun in the same direction. The direction the Earth takes can be verified by noting its location against the background stars.

In view of the fact that you cannot see the Sun and the stars at the same time, it is necessary to note the position of the Sun in the morning and the see which stars come out there in the night. You will see that the Sun seems to pass through the twelve constellations of the zodiac during a year.

Earth’s journey around the Sun, which seems like the Sun travelling through the zodiac takes about 365.25 days. This is different from year to year, so astronomers add or delete a second in some years to keep their time accurate with the Earth’s motion.

THE SEASONS: The seasons indicate the variation in the pattern of daylight over the course of a year. Because the Earth is tilted off centre, different parts of it get different amounts of sunlight on different stages of its path around the Sun, a path that we call a year. So, between about the 21st September and late March, the Earth’s Northern Hemisphere is tilted away from the Sun, which creates Autumn and Winter, giving less than twelve hours of daylight per day.

From April to the 20th September, the Northern Hemisphere enjoys more than twelve hours of daylight a day, producing Spring and Summer. The exact opposite occurs in the Southern Hemisphere.

The Equinoxes take place at the points in the year when there is exactly twelve hours of sunlight and darkness in the day. So, the vernal or Spring equinox is on or around the 21st March and the autumnal equinox is on or around the 21st September. Summer officially commences on the day with the greatest amount of daylight, the 21st June or summer solstice.

The winter solstice is on the shortest day, the 21st December. ‘Solstice’ is a combination of two words meaning ’sun standing still’ and the days are so named because they are the days when the apparent movement of the Sun reaches its limits and reverses direction again.

Owen Jones, the writer of this article, writes on many subjects, but is currently involved with researching Franklin planner pages. If you have an interest in calendars, organizers or promotional calendars, please go over to our web site now at Promotional Desk Calendars

categories: calendars,astronomy,time,hobbies,recreation,study,school,education,science,outdoors,other,uncategorized,astrology,weather