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Odd Planet

March 18th, 2007 at 3:30 am

Activists attack crew of ship that saved their lives

In February two anti-whaling activists created a plan to attack a Japanese whaling ship near Antarctica with a bottle of acid and a smoke bomb. One activist was from Australia and the other was from Los Angeles.

Unfortunately the pair got lost in the fog while in their small dinghy and ended up being rescued with the help of several boats. One of the boats was the Japanese Whaler that they had planned to attack.

Once the activists were safe they thanked the Japanese crew, but one said, “I guess we’re back on schedule, and we’ll be pursuing you again.”

A short time later, the activists approached the whaler and tossed the acid onto the deck. Two crew members were injured in the attack.

I’m against whaling but injuring people that just possibly saved your life is just cruel.





December 31st, 2006 at 5:26 am

Frost Smoke

Q: Have you ever experienced a “pogonip,” a.k.a. “frost smoke” and “white death?”

A: It’s tiny ice crystals suspended near the ground as a mist or fog, says Randy Cerveny in “Freaks of the Storm.” When warm air from a valley rises up into a cold wind blowing lengthwise, a freezing fog can descend and cover everything with minute frost crystals. A five-day pogonip - the term coined by Native Americans of Nevada - in January 1892 deposited a coating of ice 2 inches thick on trees, buildings, cattle and people! “I personally saw one in Antarctica in 1987. It appeared as a bright line of frosty white on the horizon and trekked across the flat ice sheet for several hours before reaching our camp. We were encased in a white featureless tomb.”

Observers in Greenland dubbed it “frost smoke,” noting it could cause blisters on the face or hands. Some Native Americans believed the “white death” could rupture the lungs. Indeed in the late 1800s, a group in Colorado reportedly took sick with violent coughs and fever after passing through a pogonip, causing one death.