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Tuesday, January 31, 2006
Think organic/green, fair trade and.. do your part to make a change...
While organic food and 'green' products are gradually catching on among wealthier and educated people around the globe.. natural living has long been the norm across Europe's Nordic region. The Nordic countries tend to have a broader and more general consciousness of environmental issues than in other European countries, according to recent research.. studying Swedish attitudes to organic food and environmentally friendly products. While more educated classes are very conscious in places like the US, Britain and Germany.. less educated people do not tend to have the same understanding of environmental issues there, than in Scandinavia where almost everyone is aware of these issues.
Wandering through the average grocery store in Stockholm you pass shelf after shelf of organic dairy products, eggs, meat, vegetables, coffee, tea, honey, jam, rice and pasta.. all wrapped in bio-degradable packaging and usually sporting price tags only slightly higher than those on 'regular' products. The fact that organic produce and environmentally friendly household items are sold in mainstream grocery stores across the region has perhaps contributed to their widespread use. In other countries you often have to go to special stores for organic products and actively seek out these products. A researcher with the Federation of Swedish Farmers, thinks that accessibility had played an important part in spreading the nature-friendly bug in the north.
Despite the broad availability, only about 2.0 percent of all food and beverages sold in Sweden are organic, but this still places the country at the high end of the global average of one to two percent. A full 12.8 percent of all egg sales and 7.6 percent of milk sales in the country were organic in 2004, according to numbers from the national statistics agency.. while about 20 percent of all farmland in Sweden has been reserved for organic production. Sweden seams to be one of the countries that rank the highest in Europe when it comes to organic production. Sweden's neighbours too can boast widespread environmental awareness. Nearly 24 percent of Danes said in 2004 that they prioritized environmentally friendly products.. and the Coop supermarket chain there offers 1,289 organic products.
Organic produce has caught on more slowly in Norway, but the country has distinguished itself in other ways. At the beginning of this year, Oslo for instance implemented a new tax on each carton of milk and juice to help increase their recycling rate from today's 65 percent to 95 percent. But while the countries of the north have worked hard to maintain the image as socially and environmentally conscious.. interest among consumers has dwindled in recent years. In Denmark, the number of people who say they prefer buying organic produce slipped from 31.9 percent in 2000 to only 22.4 percent in 2004, according to numbers from the AIM Nielsen institute. Interest has also waned slightly in Sweden. Some might take it for granted now that we've done what we need to do and that they no longer need to think about it. Taking care of the environment is like cleaning your house. It's not something that you can do just once and get it over with. It's something that has to be maintained over a long range.. preferably changing ones lifestyle with active action and taking a stand for what is important not just for oneself, but as for all of us.
When it comes to buying fair trade products, which conform to rules aimed at protecting workers, the whole region is lagging behind. Fair trade is much, much bigger in Britain, Switzerland, the Netherlands and in Germany according to the purchasing manager for Sackeus.. Sweden's largest provider of fair trade products. One explanation could be that people raised in the social democratic welfare states of the north expect society to take responsibility for those who need help and are not as inclined to do something about it ourselves as in other countries where individuals' actions have been viewed as more important. Well, next time you go grocery shopping.. think organic/green, fair trade and do your part... it'll be a small step in the right direction to make a big change!
Posted at 7:19:54 am by Sophie Cecilie
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Monday, January 30, 2006
The Muffin cult.. a shrine for crazyness...
Did you know that it exist a cult called The Muffin Cult..? I didn't.. When I was surfing around to find me a yammie chocolate muffin recipe, I found more than a recipe. I entered a website dedicated to muffins. It contained the muffin's history, a description of the mad muffin disease, chocolate muffin recipe and also about a muffin cult.. which when I read it thought I must make an entry on. So here we go... 'The Muffin Cult is a kind of religion which is most popular in the remote provinces of China. The leader of this cult is Muffin the Mule and he rules over nearly 1500 people sharing his teaching and worshipping muffins worldwide. Although the leader is a chocolate muffin fanatic.. they also worship other muffin flavours such as blueberry and apple and cinnamon. Every morning and evening, the loyal followers of Muffin the Mule worship the nearest muffin factory. They have a special mat which they kneel on made out of muffin casings and at 6.00 am and 6.00 pm them say the special muffin prayer.. and thank the muffins for their leader and religion.
They pray for equality between man and muffin and for a time when they can live together in harmony with no hard feelings between each other. They pray for freedom to eat as many muffins as they want at any time without getting fat and believe that muffins are the main necessity in our diets. They have an idol in each room in their house made out of Chocolate muffins and are constantly praying to it. They do not see eating the muffins as a bad thing but simply each time you eat them you are freeing the muffins soul. They think that in the future the number of muffin worshippers will increase and world peace will be brought about by the calming agent found in chocolate muffins. They also believe that one day the number of chocolate muffins will become so large and dominant that one day muffins will take over the world. They say that this will be the end of the world for all humans except for the loyal followers of Muffin the Mule and muffins will become rulers of this earth!' To visit the shrine for some muffin crazyness.. click here.
Posted at 7:33:51 am by Sophie Cecilie
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Sunday, January 29, 2006
Horoscope.. another 'blogthing'...
There are lots of 'things' on the internet that bloggers can do and then put in their blogs.. I mean quizes and stuff like that. I don't do that very much.. but I was sent to this horoscope website that calculate ones numerology and Chinese Zodiac. I did it and then I thought why not make an entry with the result.. so here it is...
My numerology birth number is 9 which makes me 'The Performer'. 9's are natural entertainers. They are very caring and generous, giving away their last dollar to help. With their charm, they have no problem making friends and nobody is a stranger to them. They have so many different personalities that people around them have a hard time understanding them. They are like chameleons, ever changing and blending in. They have tremendous luck, but also can suffer from extremes in fortune and mood. To be successful, they need to build a loving foundation.
In the Chinese Zodiac, I'm born in the Year of the Dragon. People born in the Year of the Dragon are healthy, energetic, excitable, short-tempered, and stubborn. They are also honest, sensitive, brave, and they inspire confidence and trust. Dragon people are the most eccentric of any in the eastern zodiac. They neither borrow money nor make flowery speeches, but they tend to be soft-hearted which sometimes gives others an advantage over them.
Would you also like to know your numerology, western zodiac sign and chinese zodiac.. visit Hotlanta Horoscope... click here. 
Posted at 6:29:17 pm by Sophie Cecilie
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Saturday, January 28, 2006
Disappointing list.. with the hottest TV hunks...
Magazine Life & Style's list on the top ten Hottest hunks from different TV series has been made and if I may say the result is.. a bit disappointing with the group that made it on the list. Only Wentworth Miller is in my 'taste' and he didn't get better then a fifth place.. which I can't really believe, but then I guess there are others that thinks it's a great top ten. Here are all ten and Josh Holloway from 'Lost' caught the number one spot.. which I can't understand either, but again.. there must be lots of others that like his look and work. We all can't have the same favourites.. Two that I think should have been on the list are Hill Harper from 'CSI:NY' and Jensen Ackles from 'Supernatural'. The motivation for putting Holloway on the top of the list.. 'he's the one who opens doors, carry bags for women and makes everyone feel safe'... hard looking on the surface but being all soft and furry inside.

  Hill Harper and Jensen Ackles
Posted at 7:39:12 am by Sophie Cecilie
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Friday, January 27, 2006
World environment league...
Sweden has been ranked first in Europe for environmental performance, according to an index to be released at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, yesterday. Overall, New Zealand tops the 2006 Environmental Performance Index, which has been produced by environmental experts at Yale and Columbia Universities in the United States. The index ranked 133 countries on 16 key environmental issues covering environmental health, air quality, water resources, biodiversity and habitat, productive natural resources and sustainable energy. Sweden came second, followed by Finland, Czech Republic and the United Kingdom.
The report's authors said that a country's wealth is an important factor in its environmental performance. However, differences between countries with comparable economies such as Sweden and Belgium, which ranked 39th, show that 'policy choices matter'. 'Good governance emerges as a critical driver of environmental performance', said the Director of the Yale Center for Environmental Law and Policy.. who presented the findings in Davos. The United States was placed 28th.. a cause for concern, the report noted. 'The lagging performance of the United States on environmental issues.. particularly on energy and climate change.. signals trouble not only for the American people, but for the whole world', said the Dean of the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies.
Perhaps this ranking will serve as a wake up call to the American public and particularly to leaders in Washington.. but also other countries with low scores.. to do better for our environment. It's an important issue that concern or should concern everyone living on this planet. Sweden was ranked best in the world in the 'Environmental Health' category, with a score of 99.4 out of a possible 100. For air quality Sweden came 34th, the highest position for a European country. Sweden's water quality was ranked 26th. Norway came 4th and among the European nations, both Ireland and Switzerland were placed higher than Sweden.
Posted at 7:20:55 am by Sophie Cecilie
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Thursday, January 26, 2006
Greenpeace protest against.. illegally-caught cod...
The environmental organisation Greenpeace conducted a protest action targeting the head office of food company Findus in Malmö last week. Three activists from the organisation climbed up the facade of the building at about 6.30 am while their colleagues remained in the ground below. The stunt was intended to draw attention to the company's alleged use of illegally-caught cod, said the group's spokesman. The activists hung up a banner on the front of the building with the words 'Stolen fish - empty seas'. No arrests were made by the police, but they were there to keep an eye on things. The Greenpeace activists want to try to arrange a meeting with representatives from the company.
According to the investigative programme 'Kalla Fakta', shown on TV4 last Wednesday night, a large part of the cod sold in Sweden could come from illegal catches in the Barents Sea. It also revealed that Findus had bought Barents Sea cod from ships fishing over their legal quotas. This constitutes a huge threat to the cod stocks, and that is very serious in the Barents Sea, which has the last healthy cod stock in the world. I think it's really upsetting how we empty our seas.. yes, I write we.. because, because how many does take a stand against companies that sell illegally-caught fish. ;Norway's ministry of fishery and coastal affairs has estimated that some 100,000 tonnes of cod and haddock are illegally caught in the Barents Sea each year.
The company Findus has been asked to stop buying and selling illegally caught fish. There is plenty of legal cod out there. This is simply a question of will for such a big company as Findus. The Scandinavian company, which sells frozen foods across northern, eastern and central Europe, as well as in France and Thailand, insisted, the day after the protest had taken place, that it was strongly opposed to illegal fishing.. and stated 'on such short notice we have not had time to check the veracity of the claims (in the TV documentary), but the accusations are so severe that we have to take the information very seriously'. Sweden's fisheries minister told TV4 that she could not be held responsible for the unlawful catches. 'You can't put all the blame on me as the fisheries minister for certain boats in the Barents Sea fishing illegally'. Instead, she said that responsibility lies with the companies which deal in the fish and she demanded better control within the fishing industry
However, the fishing companies, believe that the increasing problem of illegal catches is an issue for the authorities. Within the EU theirs a system with better controls on boats and within our waters, but it's still difficult to catch all illegal fishing. When it comes to countries which are not in the EU, it's even more difficult, so it's harder to find a system which covers it. Maybe we have reached the point where we need international cooperation. 
Posted at 7:22:54 am by Sophie Cecilie
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Wednesday, January 25, 2006
Breathing with our ears...
A Swedish study of 370-million-year-old fossil fish has shown that ears probably first developed as respiratory organs. One of the researchers on the project said that the fossils 'show how the ear developed in detail as a complex process of steps ... and that the first development had to do with breathing'. Intrigued by how ears in the first land crawlers developed, the researchers have studied ear-like features in fossils of pre-historic fish called Panderichthys. The Panderichthys is the closest relation to early land crawlers of all the fish fossils we know.
While land crawlers have a middle ear, which is needed to amplify the relatively weak sound waves that travel through the air to the eardrum, sea creatures have no eardrums and only need an inner ear to hear the much stronger sound waves that travel through water. Where land animals have a middle ear, ancient fish had spiracle cavities resembling the blowholes in modern-day sharks and stingrays. In the Panderichthys, the bony structure around this cavity was wider than in previous species and closely resembled a middle ear cavity. However, it clearly had nothing to do with hearing. According to the study.. it is clear that this transformation had nothing to do with hearing since there is still no connection to the inner ear. So there must have been another reason why this transformation took place. A natural explanation is that this had to do with breathing. While previous research had indicated that the middle ear developed rapidly in land crawlers, which was published in the science journal Nature last week, shows a more gradual evolution of hearing.
The middle ear, of the earliest land crawlers, appears to have the same shape as in the Panderichthys and since they don't appear to have had eardrums.. it's probably that they too still breathed through their ears is the conclusion. Then the earliest land animals gradually begins to develop hearing function while the breathing function is still there. The Swedish researchers findings run counter to claims by proponents of creationism that sensory organs are so complex that they must have been designed by a higher power. All research revealing evolution is a slap in the face of creationism, but our results are especially interesting since evolution first is drawn in one direction ... and then in another. It's hard to believe that if God wanted to design an ear, this is the way He'd go about it, said the researchers.
Posted at 2:50:33 pm by Sophie Cecilie
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Monday, January 23, 2006
Disappearing garden gnomes.. and frog statue...
I read a funny article in the paper a couple of days ago and wanted to make a short entry about it.. so here is the story... Twelve garden gnomes kidnapped in western Sweden a month ago were found on Friday in a snowy forest, standing in a ring beside a lighted bonfire and a small hut. The gnomes mysteriously vanished from their gardens just before Christmas. A letter from the 'Garden Gnomes Liberation Army' later claimed responsibility for their disappearance, explaining that the dwarfish figures had pined for freedom. According to the police the gnomes had, however, declined to collaborate in the investigation. The police tried to squeeze them for information, but they're staying mum. The police station extended its opening hours on Friday so owners could come by and claim their property. I thought it was a fun article and it also reminds me about the disappearing fountain frog..

Infront of the university building there's a beautiful fountain and it has four frog statues. After one night a few years back one of the frogs disappeared and weren't found. About eight to nine months later.. a train conductor passed a seat where a frog statue was sitting and around it's neck was the ticket, from Uppsala to Lund, hanging in a string. It still remain unknown how the frog got to Uppsala, where it had stayed during the months there and how it bought the ticket and then gone on board the train. However, the conductor helped the frog off at the right station.. where the police were waiting to pick mr frog up... and return the statue to it's original home. To this story comes that there's a rival going on between the university of Lund and the university of Uppsala. The official version was that two guys from the university of Uppsala took mr frog on an excursion after being down here partying one weekend. I know those guys.. Gustaf and Pontus... they are always doing silly/crazy things when they get the opportunity. Gustaf hide mr frog in Pontus' father's garage in Uppsala and after a while he forgot about the snatched statue, when then spring came.. Pontus' father did some spring cleaning and found the frog. Not really knowing what they should do with mr frog.. they bought a train ticket and sent him home to be with the other three frogs at the fountain.
Posted at 6:49:22 pm by Sophie Cecilie
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Saturday, January 21, 2006
Pirates of the Caribbean.. sequels II and III...
Yesterday I watched Pirates of the Caribbean; The Curse of the Black Pearl (I).. produced by Jerry Bruckheimer. You know.. the same guy that do the CSI TV series among other things he have made so far. I never went and saw the movie when it came out 2003, even though both Johnny Depp and Orlando Bloom played the main characters.. they are two of my favourite actors. Well, since the Pirates of the Caribbean; Dead Man's Chest (II) and (III.. release 2007) are in production.. I thought it would be a good idea to have seen the first one, so I'll have the background before watching Dead Man's Chest. The plot outlines: PotC is a sweeping action/adventure story set in an era when villainous pirates scavenged the Caribbean seas. This roller coaster tale teams a young man, Will Turner, with an unlikely ally in rogue pirate Jack Sparrow. Together, they must battle a band of the world's most treacherous pirates, led by the cursed Captain Barbossa.. in order to save Elizabeth, the love of Will's life.. as well as recover the lost treasure that Jack seeks. Against improbable odds, they race towards a thrilling, climactic confrontation on the mysterious Isla de Muerta. Clashing their swords in mortal combat. Unfortunatley we're not able to see the sequel until the summer (end of July) here in Sweden. Are you curious, look at the trailer.. click here. A famous swedish actor, Stellan Skarsgård, is playing Will Turner's (Orlando Bloom) father.. 'Bootstrap' Bill Turner. The plot outlines for the sequel: This time around, Johnny returns as Captain Jack Sparrow and is caught in yet another tangled web of supernatural intrigue. It turns out, Captain Jack owes a blood debt to the legendary Davey Jones.. ruler of the ocean depths and captain of the ghostly Flying Dutchman. If Jack can't figure a crafty way out of this one, he'll be cursed to an afterlife of eternal servitude and damnation. And as if that weren't enough, Captain Jack's problems throw a huge wrench into the wedding plans of the blissful Will Turner and Elizabeth Swann, who quickly find themselves thrust into Jack's misadventures. The third sequel is shot back-to-back with Dead Man's Chest and will be about Elizabeth being captured by the oriental pirate Captain Sao-Feng (played by one of my favourite actors, Chow Yun-Fat, who also did Master Li Mu Bai in the movie 'Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon').. while more problems surface and other rescues must be staged.

Posted at 7:16:20 am by Sophie Cecilie
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Friday, January 20, 2006
A Golden Globe Award to.. the best director...
Yes, Ang Lee did it again.. he won the Golden Globe Award for the best director, earlier in this week.. with the movie 'Brokeback Mountain', which I haven't seen yet. Ang Lee was born and raised in Taiwan. He moved to the United States in 1978. After receiving a Bachelor of Fine Arts in theater from the University of Illinois, he went on to New York University to complete a Masters of Fine Arts Degree in film production. At NYU, his short film 'Fine Line' won Best Director and Best Film awards at the NYU Film Festival. Lee's first feature film 'Pushing Hands' was screened at the 1992 Berlin Film Festival and won Best Film at the Asian-Pacific Film Festival. The film was nominated for nine Golden Horse Awards (the Taiwanese equivalent to the Oscar). It was also the first film in Lee's 'Father Knows Best' trilogy. His next film 'The Wedding Banquet' premiered at the 1993 Berlin Festival, where it scored the festival's top prize and went on to international acclaim. The film received Best Foreign Language Film nominations from the Academy Awards and the Golden Globe Awards. The film also received six Independent Spirit Awards. It was the second film in Lee's 'Father Knows Best' trilogy. Lee's third feature film was the final entry in his trilogy.. 'Eat Drink Man Woman'. The film was selected as the opening night feature for the Directors Fortnight series at the 1994 Cannes Film Festival and it was awarded Best Foreign Language Film by the National Board of Review.

After that Lee directed movies like 'Sense and Sensibility', 'The Ice Storm' adapted by James Schamus from Rick Moody's novel and then the powerful Civil War drama 'Ride with the Devil'. I think Ang's best movie is the critically acclaimed 'Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon' which premiered at the Cannes Film Festival 2000 and won Best Picture at the Toronto Film Festival. Ang received a Golden Globe Award and a Directors Guild Award for Best Director. The film also received awards for Best Original Score by Tan Dun and Best Foreign Language Film. 'Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon' won four Academy Awards, including Best Foreign Film. A few years later Ang Lee did 'House of the Flying Daggers' with another amazing director Yimou Zhang.. known for many movies, but especially for 'Hero', which I like the most. No one uses color like Chinese director Zhang Yimou, though different in tone and subject matter, his films are drenched in rich, luscious shades of red, blue, yellow, and green. House of Flying Daggers is no exception.
Just like 'Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon' and 'Hero', 'House of Flying Daggers' delights the audience in beautiful styllish martial arts action blended in with vivid colors. The main story takes place all over a wide landscape. From the inside of buildings, to the open fields of grass chest high, to a dense forest filled with tall, round tree trunks, this is really a movie to see just for the colors alone. When the movie begins it's spring and then the audience follow through the other seasons.. ending up with the emotional fight scene in the snowstorm scenery. The marial arts stlye is simply amazingly done and when they come to the dense jungle.. the audience is treated with breathtaking aero-dynamics fighting scenes as they crawl up and down the trees like spiders, crossing swords all the while they run and fight. There are many twists to the movie as well, this isn't just about spectacular fight scenes. It's an excellent film and I really recommend you to watch films made by these two directors. 
Posted at 7:01:33 pm by Sophie Cecilie
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Blog Owner » Sophie Cecilie
Yogini » Suryananda
Location » Sweden
Hobbies » Yoga, music, litterature, TV/Movies, blogging...
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All other love is like the moon,
Which grows and shrinks like flower on plain;
Like bud that blooms and withers soon;
Like passing day that ends in rain.
All other love begins in bliss,
And ends in tears and suffering:
No love can salve us all but this,
The love that rests in heaven's King.
For ever green, renewed again,
For ever full, it never pales.
It ever sweetens, free from pain,
Continues always, never fails.
'You can close your eyes to the things you don't wanna see, but you can't close your heart to the things you don't wanna feel...'
Sophie Cecilie © 2006
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