View of Yeppoon Main Beach from Meikleville Hill

Monthly Archives: October 2007

Welcome to the New People!

I’d just like to welcome the new people that have come to this blog as a result of the letterboxing that I did. On here you’ll find information about my local area (Woodbury, Adelaide Park, Cap Coast), as well as news of what I’m up to with my web design business.

My name is Jylan Wynne and you can find out more about me by going to my about page. As you can see on that page, I also run a photoblog called Contrasting Sharply.

Anyway, have a look around and if you like what you see, consider staying up to date via an email subscription or the rss feed.

How A Bobcat with Treads like a Tank Came to be at Our Place

As you can see I’m starting to experiment with weird, interesting headings in order to draw people in :) . Do you think I’m succeeding?

Dad hired this bobcat to spread out a few of the piles of dirt that had been delivered to our place (I never told you that we had heaps of dirt delivered for free, did I?), as well as doing a few other jobs as well. He chose this type over the normal ones with four wheels because the tracks does less damage to grass and doesn’t compact the ground as much. Photos below as always.

Bobcat #1
Coming off the truck.

Bobcat #5
This is the future pad for a shed (a bit smaller than the current one) that dad wants to build some time.

Bobcat #2
About 4 months ago we moved the chookpen to a temporary spot while we built another chookpen further down from its old location. Because of this, we wanted to get rid of the concrete that had been used for the corner posts. Dad was annoyed because he spent days pouring the concrete and putting up the corner posts, but the bobcat just came along and took them all out within 10 minutes!

Bobcat #4
Here he is spreading dirt our around the place that the next chookpen will go. The dirt was spread out so that water can’t run across the dirt but instead goes around it.

Bobcat #3
Dad also wanted to make the slope on one area of the pad more gentle. Some of the dirt used to do this came from a mound (there are mounds about 60m behind the bobcat that were put in to provide a border for the house pad), and the rest came from some dirt mounds that are behind and to the left of where this photo was taken.

[tags]local, yeppoon, hire, bobcat, dirt[/tags]

Latest Update on the Roadworks : 25 October

There have been quite a few things going on over the last week or so with the roadworks. The photos below show the major things that have happened, but in addition they have been continuing on digging their trenches and then filling them in with pipes, rocks, a type of fabric and dirt (in that order). They have also been building up upon the section of the old road that starts from our corner. I estimate they have put about 40cm of dirt on top of the tar in some places.

But anyway, onto the photos.

Roadworks #1
They have dug away this large section in order to provide drainage for all the water still coming out. They have now extended it away to the left so that it connects up to the small creek that runs there. You could probably find a picture of the creek in previous posts.

Roadworks #2
The bridge has been the most interesting thing to watch. This photo, taken on the 23rd, shows how they have been putting rocks and fabric down.

Roadworks #3
A closeup of the rocks that have been put down.

Roadworks #4
This is the interesting part. Today (Thursday) when I went down to see what they’d done I found that they had laid concrete all over the fabric that had been laid. See the zoomed-out shot below.

Roadworks #5
A wider view of the concrete that has been laid down in preparation for the new bridge.

[tags]roadworks, adelaide park, woodbury, road[/tags]

Knife Wounds, Impalings and 3rd Degree Burns

Like my sensational headline? On Thursday night (18th Oct) at SES Cadets we started out first-aid course, and in the manual that we were given they had pictures of the above injuries that can be seen by going here (be warned: these images may offend some people as they are very graphic).

First-Aid Book Cover
The cover of my first-aid manual

We will be doing the first-aid every week for about 4 weeks. This week we learnt how to do CPR, which is actually quite easy once you know what to do. First of all you need to ensure safety for yourself, bystanders and the injured person. You then need to do the COWS check. COWS stands for Can you hear me, Open your eyes, What’s your name, Squeeze my hands.

After you’ve done that, the person’s airway needs to be cleaned it it has anything blocking it. After clearing the airway, normal breathing needs to be checked for by looking, feeling and listening. If the person is not breathing or moving, an ambulance needs to be called.

Once all that is done, the actual CPR needs to be started. The head is tilted back and you give the person two full breaths, while blocking their nose so the air can’t escape. The compressions then need to be started. The old way required you to give 2 breaths and 15 compressions, but it has been changed to 2 breaths and 30 compressions.

That process (2 breaths and 30 compressions) needs to be continued until an ambulance arrives, the person regains consciousness or you just can’t do it any longer. If the person starts showing signs of recovery you need to roll them on their side and check for breathing. They then need to be reassured.

The process that I described above is for adults, but for children and infants the process is a little bit different.

[tags]ses, cadets, first aid, course, yeppoon[/tags]

How to Make Your Camera Batteries Last Longer

I’ve just realised why my camera batteries are lasting so much longer than usual. The reason is that I recently turned off my flash so I could get a low light photo without the flash. I then continued to leave it off and discovered that because the battery didn’t have to charge the flash up every time the camera was turned on, the batteries (rechargeable NIMHs) are lasting for a lot longer than they used to.

I am using an older Olympus camera, the Camedia D-540 Zoom. It has 3.2 MP of resolution and a 3 times optical zoom. This method of preserving batteries should work on just about every camera with a flash, however. Just remember to check if the flash is turned off if you start to think that it is broken, however!

My Camera

The button for turning the flash off is located on the front of most cameras, not inside a menu. To turn the flash off, you should be able to just keep pressing the button with the flash icon until it goes onto an icon with a line through a tiny flash graphic. Check your camera’s manual if this doesn’t work for you.

[tags]camera, photography, batteries, preservation[/tags]