Thursday, February 6, 2014

Let The Games Begin!

Let The Games Begin!

The Olympic torch has arrived  at Sochi after a long journey interrupted at times while the flame was reignited. While few of us read Russian, the signs say it all.

Athletes from approximately 200 nations will begin competing at the XXII Olympic Winter Games at Sochi, Russia with some events held at a resort settlement of Krasmaya Polyana  February 7- 23, 2014.
The famous five interlocking rings of the Olympic symbol represents the union of the five continents Africa, The Americas ( both North and South), Asia, Europe and Oceania.The ring colors represent colors of participating countries flags including blue, black, red yellow and green.
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As athletes arrive, they, naturally, are displaying their country’s colors. Some wintergear is becoming quite interesting. US athletes are wearing  red,white and blue, and all athletes are gaily attired in normal nationalistic winterwear, while attention seems to be centered on the unusual. Norway has decided to “break the mold”, becoming a focal point of individuality. While Norwegian athletes “wear the colors”, the clothing patterns have been setting records.
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One unusual Olympic sport has drawn viewers’ attention since 2010.Ten curling teams from around the world will assemble on the “curling sheet” at Sochi to match brooms in an effort to attain Olympic gold and one team has unveiled their new look for the Sochi Olympics.

The Norway Curling Team managed to make curling interesting at the 2010 Vancouver Olympics, thanks to their choice of uniform designed by a company called Loudmouth Golf. The Norwegians won the silver medal at those games, and will be donning four new versions of their famously flashy trousers when they compete in Sochi. The Olympics aren't the only event that calls for their signature look; the team has continued to put on patterned trousers at various games and tournaments through the years. Thomas Loevold, Torger Nergaard, Haavard Vad Petersson, Christoffer Svae, and Thomas Ulsrud of Norway posed with their silver medals and their Loudmouth pants, after the Vancouver Olympics' Curling Men's Gold medal game between Canada and Norway on February 27, 2010.
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The world curling president Kate Caithness has admitted she was initially shocked by the whole affair, but said she came to embrace the attention Norway received.“I am a traditionalist, I must be honest,” Caithness said. “But after I saw them in Vancouver, I actually liked them. They brought focus to our sport, these crazy pants.
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Thomas Ulsrud, born in Oslo is the “skip” of the five-man team. Ulsrud, 42, calls the shots for the team that began competition in 2007, earning silver, being narrowly defeated by a  Canadian team .They may have lost, but from that time forward, their uniforms became winners!  Team-member Christopher Svae changed the uniform style from the traditional white shirt-dark pant look to something “more striking” and the color-games began! Photos of the Norwegian Curling Team have created a following on their Facebook site entitled “The Norwegian Olympic Curling Team’s Pants” viewed by 539,900 followers at a recent count.
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While it is doubtful that followers are well-versed on the intricacies and dangers of the icy sport, it has become a popular winter sport,especially in Canada.Closely related to shuffleboard, skill is involved! Teams are comprised of four members: the skip, the lead, the second and the mate. Each member alternates "throwing" stones and sweeping the ice or "sheet" of pebbles( small frozen water droplets added to the surface to increase friction). The goal is to throw your stone as close to "the button"
as you can, and keep the opposing team from getting closer. Of course, one must pay attention to a stone's weight, turn and line while throwing, or he'll fall short of  “right on the button!”players slide their stones across  the ice  “sheet” towards the “house”, a circular target called “the button” which is the center of the target marked on the ice. Each team has eight stones. The purpose is to accumulate the highest score for a game; After each tries to knock opponent’s rocks away , points are scored for the stones resting closest to the center of the house at the conclusion of each “end”, which is completed after all the stones have been thrown. A game may consist of ten or eight ends.
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An important tool in the sport is a broom! The path of the rock can be influenced by two sweepers with brooms who accompany it as it slides down the sheet, using the brooms to alter the state of the ice in front of the stone. A key part of the preparation of the playing surface is the spraying of water droplets onto the ice, which form pebbles after freezing. The pebbled ice surface resembles an orange peel, and the stone moves over the pebbled ice.The sweeping creates friction  warming the ice, changing the path of the sliding rock. A great deal of strategy and teamwork goes into choosing the ideal path and placement of a stone for each situation.

A modern stone
An older "Rock"
These “stones”, aka “rocks”weigh between 38 and 44 pounds with a circumference of 36 inches. Not something carelessly dropped on one’s toes while players slide their stones across  the ice  “sheet” towards the “house”, a circular target called “the button” which is the center of the target marked on the ice. Each team has eight stones. The purpose is to accumulate the highest score for a game; After each tries to knock
opponent’s rocks away , points are scored for the stones resting closest to the center of the house at the conclusion of each “end”, which is completed after all the stones have been thrown. A game may consist of ten or eight ends.
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Due to the  nature of the sport, spectators are normally quiet and the athletes are polite to their opponents. Trash-talk is not tolerated while compliments after a good effort is normal procedure. Due to this docile and arguably not-interesting facite of the sport, the Norwegians decided to add a bit of excitement to the sporting event. Their change of colorful uniforms brought new interest to the Olympic sport of curling and everyone looks forward to see what the Norwegian curling team will be wearing when they appear at the next Stone-Throwing event! They’re throwing for Olympic gold in 2014!

 Their colorful costumes are already " Number one" in the eyes of the world.

The Norwegian curlers, Christoffer Svae, Torgor Nergard, Havard Vad Petersson and their captain Thomas Ulsrud.

Thursday, January 23, 2014

" Fire!"

 At 22:56 (10:56 PM) on January 18 ,2014, local fire departments were alerted to a residential fire in a historic Norwegian settlement.   A fire fanned by strong winds swept through the village of Lærdalsøyri in Western Norway through the early hours of Sunday morning threatening many of the  historic frame houses in the heritage area.
The wind-borne fire quickly spread  fanning the flames towards the town center, and by 4 a.m over thirty houses were reported to be in flames. The fire then spread to a nearby forest, threatening the heritage area. The town was evacuated 30 minutes after midnight, with residents being evacuated to a hotel in Aurland, Norway.
 
More then 100 firefighters, from eight to ten neighboring fire departments were involved in putting out the fire.  Firefighters and equipment from Haukåsen airport in Sogndal were called out to assist in putting out the fire.The fire in Laerdalsoyri was aided by strong winds, and burned through homes that were built of wood  in the 18th and 19th centuries. It wasn't clear what caused the fire, but when it was over, at least 177 people were treated in nearby hospitals for fire-related injuries.
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When winter  cold causes temperatures to drop, heat sources become very important in the long winter nights. Structures of wood arranged in close proximity to one another become a danger zone. Fires spread rapidly with winter winds carrying burning ash to the neighboring buildings. Norway has experienced several disastrous fires. Historic stav churches made of wood have been tragic examples.
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The Grue Church Fire happened in Grue, Norway  in the Southeastern Hedmark county of Norway.
A typical Stavkirk
  This fire occurred on 26 May 1822, taking the lives of between 113 and 117 churchgoers .The oldest section of the church stemmed from the 13th century and was built using the stave method.Due to this construction style, entrance doors were designed to swing inwards and leaded glass windows that were placed high up on the wall were covered by an outside iron grid . The exterior of this church was covered with pine tar. Later calculations  estimated that 17 tons of tar had been applied between 1600 and 1822.On Pentecost, the church was filled to capacity on a bright and hot Sunday early in the summer. In the middle of the sermon, a fire broke out on the outer wall and soon the fire broke in. Within 10 to15 minutes the church was completely engulfed in flames. Parishioners rushing to the doors caused the inward-opening doors to close and few were able to exit the burning building. The cause of the fire might have been that of a spark from a fire container in which a church servant brought embers from the neighboring farm to light the altar candles .The wooden stav chuch soon burned to the ground.
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.Another historically disastrous fire occurred in Alesund, Norway  on January 23, 1904. This fire destroyed 850 homes, leaving 10,000 people homeless while destroying most of the city. That  fire was reported to be caused by a cow that kicked over a torch.
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This  latest fire in Laerdalsoyri was fanned by strong winds, and burned through
homes that were built of wood  in the 18th and 19th centuries. Police cordoned off an area in Lærdalsøyri because of the fear of  explosions of nearby gas cylinders belonging to a construction company. It wasn't clear what caused the fire, but at least 90 people were treated in nearby hospitals for fire-related injuries
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 Lærdal is on the UNESCO world heritage list. The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization is a specialized agency of the United Nations. Its purpose is to contribute to peace and security by promoting international collaboration through education, science, and culture in order to further universal respect for justice, the rule of law, and human rights along with fundamental freedom. Buildings constructed in the 18th century are being preserved and protected. Dolyce Johnson, one of our Vennskap members  was concerned due to her family connection to the famous village. Dolyce stated:“A story  mentioned damage
Typical Norse colors
to the community center, which, I believe, we visited to research our family’s geneaology records.  My maternal grandmother’s family (Prestegard) came from Laerdal, and my children and I visited the village in 2004.  It was quite unique.  Any changes inside or outside had to be approved and the outside colors had to be what the original colors were.  We took the ferry from there down the Sognefjord.  A tragedy, but fortunately no one died in the fire”.

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Smouldering remains
Sixteen private homes have burned to the ground, in addition to industrial buildings and infrastructure. Many other buildings are also damaged. A large number of families have lost all their possessions, and many are quartered in a nearby hotel for the time being. Several people were  treated in hospital for smoke inhalation, but there are no reports of serious injuries or fatalities.
The village Telecom center has been completely destroyed, however, an emergency mobile service has been established. Electricity is also back on in sections of the township, but schools and kindergartens remained closed Monday.
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As  residents struggle to  rebuild, and winter life resumes, tourists will continue to visit the historic village.The Old Lærdalsøyri village has 161 protected buildings.  The famous Filefjell Kongevegen road passes through Lærdal on its way to Valdres and later extended to Oslo.The Lærdalstunnelen was built through the 
mountains
The Lærdal River
dividing Aurland from Lærdal. This 15.2 mile tunnel is the worlds longest (as of 2008), construction began in 1995 and was completed in 2000.
The River Lærdalselvi was traditionally one of the most exclusive
salmon and sea trout rivers in Norway. Known by the Norwegian King Harald V as “his second Queen”, the river has established Lærdal as one of the meccas of salmon and sea trout fly fishing.

Meanwhile, the cleanup continues.

Saturday, January 11, 2014

What's Next!?

The Polar Express has left the area, taking along the infamous Polar Vortex.
  Most people are aware of the Christmas tale of the train carrying children to Santa’s work area, but  “polar  vortex” may be new to many. Remember, not too long ago when the thermometer seemed “stuck at  97° ” for an extended time of sticky summer heat and we looked forward to “normal weather”? Then, after a mild
Fall, things once again,began to change!
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A warm November day of 2013 ended with the temperature falling 40 degrees overnight to bring in “Winter”, unusually low for our area. Forecasters explained that Arctic low temperatures are usually confined to the Canadian region, but somehow arctic winds found the weather-door open to flow southerly this winter , causing problems as far south as Florida... A new term “Polar Vortex” came into our vocabulary.  Canadians were hearing earthquake sounds in the frigid -30-40° cold. We learned another new term  “Cryoseims”, a term used by weather forecasters explaining  the action of underground water freezing  and causing rocks to expand. Above-ground residents found pictures on their walls shaking and cracks several inches wide in the ground. A Frost-quake? Unusual weather can even expand our vocabulary!
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North Atlantic Gulf Stream
While U.S. residents seem to be experiencing severe and abrupt weather changes, Norway seems to be experiencing “business as usual”. Norway shares the same latitude as Alaska, Greenland and Siberia, but in comparison, Norway has a pleasant climate while the coastal areas have comparatively mild winters due to the Gulf Stream that moderates the area weather. Oslo experienced its warmest Christmas since records began in 1937, while in Helsinki and southern Finland, the second half of December was the mildest in 30 years. In Koege, outside Copenhagen, the mercury reached 11.6ºC (52.9ºF) on Christmas Eve..
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 In the late 1960s, University of California professor Jacob Bjerknes found an important piece of the oft-changeable weather-puzzle. As a young scientist in Norway, Bjerknes had gained fame by publishing the first  understandable description of the life cycle of storms in temperate latitudes. Now, fifty years later, he was the first to see a connection between unusually warm sea-surface temperatures and the weak easterly winds bringing  heavy rainfall

Usually, sea-surface readings off South America's west coast range from the 60s to 70s°F. When the easterly trade winds strengthens, colder water is driven along the equator and the west coast of South America. Only the Pacific Ocean has this phenemona. This doesn’t happen in the Atlantic, so Norway does not experience these changes.Currently, the tropical Pacific is now expected to warm throughout 2014 according to scientists from NOAAs Climate Prediction Center .
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This might produce a massive source of energy that would be strong enough to drive up global weather temperatures, creating the  first official “hot period” since 2010, the  world’s hottest year ever recorded .Are we are in an official “La Niña” cycle, or will it be a time of  El Niño and who are they?
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The original definition of El Niño goes back to the eighteenth or nineteenth century when Peruvian sailors
 coined the term to describe a warm southward current that appeared annually around Christmas off the Peruvian coast. Hence the name El Niño, Spanish for "the Child," referring to the Christ Child.The term "El Niño" (or warm episode) is  not a local warm current, but warming of the tropical Pacific surface waters occurring every two to seven years and associated with changes in the atmospheric circulation worldwide.These equatorial waves are not the familiar surf seen on the surface, but very large-scale motions that carry changes in currents and temperatures over thousands of miles. The period of these waves is measured in months, and they take typically three months to more than a year to cross the Pacific. 
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Warm water spreads from the west Pacific and the Indian Ocean to the east Pacific. It takes the rain with it, causing extensive drought in the western Pacific and rainfall in the normally dry eastern Pacific. This easterly wind flow and possible blasts from the north area can make our weather interesting.if the winds are warm and the jet stream stays to the north, we might have a mild winter! 
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   However, we may experience the effect of “The Little Girl”. In Spanish, she is “ La Niña”,  the little girl.
The results of La Niña are mostly the opposite of those of El Niño; for example, during the winter, La Niña would cause a wet period in the Midwestern U.S., while El Niño would typically cause a dry period in that area. La Niña causes above-average precipitation across the northern Midwest, and eastern regions. Meanwhile, precipitation in the southwestern and southeastern states is below average.This also allows way above average hurricanes in the Atlantic and less in the Pacific.
In Canada, La Niña will, generally, cause a cooler, snowier winter, such as the near-record-breaking amounts of snow recorded in the La Niña winter of 2007/2008 in Eastern Canada.”The Little Girl”is expected to bring a cooling period. Is this "The winter of 2014" in Wisconsin?!
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 Due to oceanic temperatures and the direction of the winds, our weather system can swing an average of every three to five years. Critics of global warming believe this is only the rhythm of nature, and the only
" Looking ahead to tomorrow..."
predictable thing about weather is that it is unpredictable. Winter temperature swinging from -10° to 35° with rain within twenty-four hours seem to be the new norm. What’s going on? We’ve experienced a variety of conditions already in this early 2014.
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Now, if only we can keep our polar vortexes trapped up north, we may be spared future cryoseims!

What’s next? Stay tuned..

Wednesday, December 25, 2013

Just A Little Bit!

                                              A Little Bit Can Pile Up!

The Christmas "Holiday" is over and time to pay the bills. A little bit here and a little bit there..It’s amazing how it grows! We shop with credit cards, debit cards, checks and even “on-line”. Some people even use cash! There are several ways to pay the bills. Times are changing.

When the English colonists arrived in America, they naturally continued to use the pound, shilling and pence which they used back in England . Later, these colonists had to use wampum and even tobacco as mediums of exchange. Spanish “visitors” used the Spanish silver dollar to pay for their needs.Massachusetts began
Indian waumpam
minting silver coins in 1652 to add to silver coins that were in circulation used by immigrants from Spain, the Netherlands, the German States, France and other foreign countries. Every ethnic group had their own currency. In December,1690, Massachusetts authorized the issuing of £7,000 in public paper currency  to satisfy the soldiers and creditors of the otherwise bankrupt colony. At the time, no one realized this was the first public paper money issued in the history of Western civilization.
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European countries are attempting to unify their monetary standard with the “Euro”. Most European countries have joined the European Union and the Euro is the common currency. Norway is not a member state of the European Union and won’t use the Euro. Norway has been under the control of several countries in it’s history and since gaining their own identity, Norway likes  independence! Norway continues to use the krone, or in plural, kroner with  bank notes of 50, to 1000 kr. At this time, a krone is worth about sixteen cents U.S.
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While serving as a 1950’s GI in the Army and stationed in Germany, I was paid monthly in paper “scrip” or
Ten-dollar US  scrip money
MPC that looked the same as Monopoly money! The purpose was to keep “The Greenback” from going to the blackmarket  ( or out of US circulation). No European merchant, bar, restaurant, whatever, would accept scrip, so we were forced to exchange our “scrip” for German “marks”at the local exchanges. When we were free to travel to
French coin currency
places   such as Paris, we had to exchange our German marks for French francs. Because it was so easy to drive through small countries in one day, every stop needed a different coin or paper to pay. When we returned to our base, we found our pockets jangling with useless coins of many types.
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Time to standardize? Today’s method is to direct deposit and use plastic cards or one of the latest electronic smart-phones, I-pods or even the computer. Things are changing ..a bit! With all the new uses of our electronic gadgets,  money can now be stored in your computer.. as bits!! Somehow, I have never seen a “bit”. Apparently, it has been around since 2009. What is a “bit" besides being a portion of time?
If "Bits" were really coins..
Something called a  bitcoin is the newest “currency” established in 2009. 
It’s an electronic means of monetary exchange, only done using computers. It’s a “cryptographic monetary exchange” using computer zeros and 111s code! They call it “bitcoin!” controlled by passwords and electronic signature guarantees sent and stored on everyone’s computer. It's becoming quite a thing!
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A Norwegian, Kristoffer Koch invested 150 kroner ($26.60) in 5,000 bitcoins in 2009 He  forgot about them until  media coverage of the anonymous peer-to-peer digital currency in April 2013 jogged his memory. The value of a  bitcoin had wildly gone up within the space of four years. He discovered that his $27 investment when “cashed in” was then worth  $886,000.00. What an investment return!
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However, this new method of electronic exchange has acquired a poor reputation due to  actions such as that of a group known as a  black-market ring entitled “The Silk-Road”, a drug-ring  that requires all illicit drug buyers and sellers to use bitcoins in their transactions due to the difficulty of tracing the monetary exchange.
Bitcoins can be stored in your computer as encrypted wallets secured with a private key ( a password). In April, 2013, the value of a bitcoin was $266 before crashing to $50.00 due to rapid flucations such as the seizure of online drug marketpace transactions such as “The Silk Road” that caught government attention.
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Bitcoin has been endorsed by a Wall Street currency analyst who has claimed it shows “clear potential for growth”, but national banks are cynical. The Bank of France has released a report calling the currency “highly speculative” and saying it poses a “certain financial risk” for owners.
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For bitcoin users, there is  GLIP, an “app” that provides the use of  back and forth secure texts while utilizing money transfers to friends. Here is a “GLIP” in action....
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Customers are lining up to use the world’s  first-ever permanent bitcoin ATM at a coffeeshop in Vancouver, British Columbia..Times ARE changing!
Currently,  bitcoins can be used in various businesses.They are quick and free from fees and may be the future of all our transactions. The price of a bitcoin rose above $1,000.00 last month for the first time (a 400 percent surge in less than a month, as of Dec 13..Friday the 13th!!).  But again, bitcoin currency is not backed by any central bank or government, or by physical assets. It’s value depends on people’s confidence in the currency.
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If this is for you, Virgin Galactic  Aviation has more that 600 “wannabe astronauts” who have already signed up to board the aircraft if all goes well in  Richard Branson’s latest venture into space. The price of the flight will be approximately $250,000.00 and bitcoin payments are being  accepted to purchase your seat in the next trip into space. Get your bit-coin wallet out and be ready for your historic trip to the moon.
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But first, don't forget those Christmas bills! Hopefully, those "Big-Box stores" will accept bitcoin payments.
Just start saving...A little bit at a time!


Thursday, December 5, 2013

Are You Ready?

Are you ready?

Norway's King Haakon, in the tenth century, determined that  the  midwinter festival “jol”, (December 25th ) would coincide with the birth of the Christ Child and passed a law  that every peasant had to obey!
King Haakon " The Good"  being entertained by dancers

Norse goddess holding a drinking cup
This law  later decreed  that each peasant and his wife would hold a Christmas “gilde”( festive gathering) that included a special feature.   Failure to do so would result in a fine paid to the bishop, and possibly confiscation of their property if they skipped the law three years in a row! This unusual feature was that they must have a portion of beer to celebrate the occasion! While this may seem very unusual, beer has been an important ingredient in human life for centuries! The Norwegian word for Christmas is actually a pre-Christian Viking drinking-vessel named a  "Jul".
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Historically, a beer called Doppelbock  was first brewed in Munich, Germany by  a Franciscan order founded by St. Francis of Paula.    Munich means “the home of monks”.  These vegetarian monks from   
Italy observed two fasts each year – one during Lent and one for the month leading up to Christmas. It has often been told that European monks of this time relied on dark beers to sustain them through their long fasts. They developed a particularly dark beer with a lot of protein and carbohydrates carried over from the mash that served them well during the times when solid foods were prohibited. Doppelbock was high in alcohol and sweet, thus serving as “liquid bread” for the Friars during times of fasting, when solid food was not permitted.  Bock is historically associated with special occasions, often religious festivals such as Christmas, Easter or Lent (the latter as Lentenbock).
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Water accounts for up to 95 percent of beer’s content  and grain  needed as well as fermentation. With the
Ancient Babylonians drinking beer through straws.
quality of water in earlier times, it might have been difficult to keep "water" from turning into a form of beer. Beer was recorded to be the major beverage of the Babylonians, and as early as 2700 BC, they worshiped a wine goddess and regularly used both beer and wine as offerings to their gods.Historians speculate that prehistoric nomads may have made beer from grain and  water before learning to make bread.Straws were used to avoid the grain husks.
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In 1620, the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth Rock, because their beer supply was running low, as the story goes! Water would have lost its purity, becoming unhealthy if it had been the main beverage for all those
ship-bound travellers months on voyages! Drinking wine and beer at that time was safer than water - which was usually taken from sources used to dispose of sewage and garbage.
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 Colonists improvised a beer made from red and black spruce twigs boiled in water, as well as a  wide variety of wine from fruits. They additionally made wine from such products as flowers, herbs, and even oak leaves. Early on, French vine-growers were brought to the New World to teach settlers how to cultivate grapes.For hundreds of years their English ancestors had consumed beer and ale. Both in England and in the New World, people of both sexes and all ages typically drank beer with their meals. Because importing a continuing supply of beer was expensive, the early settlers brewed their own.
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English sailors receive their portion.
Spirit drinking was still largely for medicinal purposes throughout most of the 16th century. It has been said of distilled alcohol that “the sixteenth century created it; the seventeenth century consolidated it; the eighteenth popularized it.”
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In Scandinavia,Swedish beer consumption may have been forty times higher than in modern Sweden. English sailors received a ration of a gallon of beer per day, while soldiers received two-thirds of a gallon. In Denmark, the usual consumption of beer appears to have been a gallon per day for adult laborers and sailors. It is important to remember that modern beer is much stronger than the beers of the past.
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Norwegians are said to consume ten million liters of beer during December. It’s a celebration drink and  Juleøl ( Christmas beer) accounts for half of the amount. Early time peasant in Norway used beer to celebrate many occasions from barnøl ( Child-baptismal beer),festerøl ( engagement beer) and gravøl  (funeral beer).      
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St. Thomas
Finished beer was to age eight to ten days and had to be ready December 21st.This day became known from the Middle ages as  "Brewer's Day", for St. Thomas. While connecting "beer-brewing" with St. Thomas seems very strange, history has played a role in the story. December 21 is known as St. Thomas Day.
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In December, long before Christianity, Mayan Indians in Guatemala honored their Sun God in a dangerous ritual  of a "Flying Pole Dance". Three or more men climbed a fifty-foot pole to the top.
While one played a flute and another beat a drum , the "flyers" wound ropes around the pole, tied the ends to their ankles and jumped to circle to the  ground. If they landed on their feet, the gods would be pleased and make the coming days  longer. (No word on how the musicians descended). Coincidentally, December 21st is the Winter Solstice! This day is in remembrance of the Doubting Thomas apostle, who was instructed to evangelize in the Persian area and was there revered by Malabar Christians  and Angelicans. St. Thomas was born in the first century and his death was reported to be..the 21st of  December 72.
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With the approach of Jul and the need for the required beer portion, December 21st became known in Scandinavian countries as "Thomas, the Brewer's Day". So, while we might be very concerned with Christmas shopping, early Scandinavians had to be concerned with the beer supply, or else! Rules have changed, but the importance of beer in the festivities remains.  This celebratory beer is a bit stronger than usual and known as Juleøl. The beer better be ready!
Knut Albert's Brew

 Timing is everything!