The Seasteading Institute is excited to announce the release of our first official engineering report! We’ve posted drafts before, but this is our first paper sanctioned by our Director of Engineering. This “assumptions and methodology” report covers topics such as concepts, materials, location, mobility, energy needs, ocean waves, comfort, costs, and much more.
Monthly Archives: February 2011
Playa Mujeres Welcomes New Resort in Cancun, Mexico
Ahhh, Playa Mujeres. This area, located about 25 minutes north of Cancun’s main strip of hotels and restaurants, is a year-round playground for families, couples and wedding celebrations. A gorgeous, brand new resort called Villa Del Palmar just welcomed its first guests in December.
According to this article from Dallasnews.com, the resort is offering a opening special: $159 per person per night, including all taxes and gratuities. You must end your stay by April 30, and if you book by February 28, you are eligible for a free upgrade to an ocean view room. Not bad!
The Isla Mujeres beach area, seen below, is where this new resort is located. Its known for its pristine beaches and crystal clear waters. Tired of this bitterly cold winter that seems to be hanging on for dear life? Take advantage of this new resort’s fantastic opening rates and escape to the stunning beaches of this region. You might want to book an open-ended return ticket!
Photos: Mike_Fleming, Sarunas B
Shag Score – What is your Shag-ability?
Ever wonder “how do I find the most romantic beach?” or perhaps, “if I were to meet someone at the beach and I asked them if they want to grab a drink right at that moment, where would I take them?” Well, the solution is here and some! Not only will you be able to figure out how close the most romantic restaurant is BUT you get the added benefit of seeing how, ahem, successful your umm, endeavors would be…Anyway, check it out, the site is called Shagscore.com, here is a quick video:
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Flaws Discovered in USF Study on Upham Beach Erosion Control
That erosion is a problem on Upham Beach is not in dispute. However, proposed solutions have created an extended debate. Upham Beach is located at the northern end of St. Pete Beach, which is on an island otherwise known as Long Key. A narrow pass, called “Blind Pass,” separates Upham Beach from Treasure Island to [...]
Space Coast Birding Festival: The Week in Review
I had a great time at the 2011 Space Coast Birding and Wildlife Festival. For those interested, I thought I’d do a quick recap of the activities I participated in: Wednesday 1/26/2011 Class: Wildflowers, Plants & Other Things (Class, then all-day field trip) Where: Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge Notes: Wildflowers absent due to recent [...]
Love Your Florida State Parks? Tell Your Florida Leaders Why.
We all know that Florida has to tighten its budget, and we’ve been threatened with having some of our state park access taken away. Let’s encourage our leaders here in Florida to to look for solutions to keeping state parks open that don’t involve closures. How can we do that? Start here: Go to http://www.lovemystateparks.org [...]
Fodor’s 7 Great Florida Beaches: Did They Get It Right?
Fodor’s travel web site editors have highlighted 7 Florida beaches that they consider “great” and ask “What type of beach is right for you?” I thought it would be fun to comment on their descriptions and perhaps see what my blog readers think as well. Here are my comments about Fodor’s picks for 7 great [...]
Julian Evans Transit of Venus
British author Julian Evans has just published a revised Kindle edition of his 1993 travel book Transit of Venus. It comes with a preface by novelist and ex-spy Norman Lewis, and at US$2.99 through Amazon.com, it’s a buy.
Fiji Resort Report
I just received an email from an Australian reader who used Moon Fiji on a resort hopping holiday. His impressions of Denarau Island, the Coral Coast, and in the Mamanuca Group are enlightening.
Moon Tahiti Explores Polynesia
Moon Tahiti covers the Austral, Gambier, Marquesas, Society, and Tuamotu archipelagoes. With historical summaries and feature essays on French Polynesia’s diverse cultures, this guidebook prepares visitors for an enriching travel experience.
Mind the Flash

Japanese people have mastered the camera pose. Crafted it into a fine art and bequeathed it unto their young in such a fashion that one might even begin to think it genetic, a biological imperative perhaps, an evolutionary tweak that has emerged along with the technology it is bonded to. Because in the mere instant one has to pose correctly for a photograph, the Japanese are already there, two fingers held aloft in a peace sign yelling, “cheezu!” Meanwhile, I’m blinking like a deer in headlights, stunned by the blast of camera flash.
One photographic incident in particular got me thinking. I was at Fuji Q Highland, an Amusement Park that resides at the base of; you’ve guessed it, Mt. Fuji. Inside are three particularly amazing rides: Eejyanaika (translated to, ‘isn’t it good?’ Ok, not everything translates in a cool way), FujiYama and the mind bogglingly fast Dodonpa.
Instinctively, during an experience otherwise dominated by the excitement and fear of the ride she had twisted, smiled and posed for the camera.
I was waiting to ride the incredibly fast Dodonpa with a friend whom, repeatedly terrified by announcements over the tannoy as to just how fast this machine is, responded with yelps of, ‘muri!’ or in English, ‘impossible, I can’t do it, argh!’ Once aboard the ride she continued to yell this phrase except for one brief moment that I realized had been the camera flash, only to continue on with her cries afterwards. Instinctively, during an experience otherwise dominated by the excitement and fear of the ride she had twisted, smiled and posed for the camera. I on the other hand was more concerned that my cheeks not tear from my face due to the g-force.
Photography is everywhere in Japan. From high quality camera phones to the ever-present purikura. Photography is incorporated into life here in a way that goes beyond any other nation. The stereotype of a Japanese travel group abroad, all wielding state of the art cameras, endlessly pointing and snapping photographs is a well earned and thoroughly deserved one. While the teenage love of purikura, essentially photo booths with a variety of special effects that can be applied to your group photos are so popular that they can be found with ease almost everywhere you go.

That photography is such a significant part of life here is at times hard to believe, particularly when one considers that the camera industry only began to emerge in Japan in the 1930’s. When of course it was beyond the reach of even the comparatively wealthy.
“In those days, the average starting salary of a graduate of an elite university in Japan who was hired by bank, the best-paying job, was around 70 yen per month. In contrast, the price of the Leica camera was 420 yen.” (Ref: Canon Camera Museum)
Yet, from those early days has sprung an enormous industry fuelled by a love of technology that is visible in all walks of life and among all ages in Japan. At arcades I have seen young people with staggering coordination in pursuit of the high score on a dance machine and a vast number of people with a mind numbing addiction to Pachinko (a low stakes gambling machine with a resemblance to pinball, without any of the skill). While undoubtedly gaming technologies such as these have had and will continue to have such an affect on us, I still believe that the camera and its simple yet beautiful power to capture a moment will continue to be of greater significance. At least until the day that Wii bowling is entered into the Olympics.
However, the truth is, I can’t help but feel that here in Japan is where technology and society meet first. Through computer games, mobile phones, 3D TVs the Japanese people engage with technology faster and with an aplomb that perhaps only South Korea can beat. You can’t help but feel that if technology and biology are going to crash into one another it’ll happen here long before reaching foreign shores.
While visiting home this summer I met a friend of a friend, a Japanese Doctor no less and I took the opportunity to pitch this very theory to him. Essentially I believe that the response to the camera has become so ingrained at a biological level, that just as one can tell the sex of a child from an ultrasound, that one could also tell the child’s ethnicity… well, in one particular case.

© Gretchen for TravelBlogs, 2011. |
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Follow My Trail
Kelly Austria does have a day job (or two) but mountaineering fills her free time. What fills her soul – helping the children who live in those mountains by supplying aid to them. If there is a mountain to be trekked, there will be children along the journey in need of help. You’ll find Kelly there, doing both.
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Post tags: activism, female travellers, Mountaineering, Round the world, volunteering
English Blog
Starting Now the blog will be in english with sometimes some traduction into french.
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