'So there you are!' Britain's rarest wildflower the ghost orchid returns from the dead after 23 years

September 4th,2010    by Apirl

It is the most mysterious wildflower in Britain, the strangest, the rarest, the hardest to see, and it was given up for lost. But like a wandering phantom, the ghost orchid has reappeared.

After an absence of 23 years, during which it was declared extinct, this pale, diminutive flower, the most enigmatic of all Britain's wild plants, rematerialised last autumn in an oak wood in Herefordshire.
Its sighting, initially kept a close secret, has electrified the British botanical community. Forget your black tulip. This has been British botany's holy grail, searched for annually and ardently by a small army of enthusiasts for more than two decades, but never found.
Its eventual rediscovery was due to the painstaking detective work of an amateur botanist, Mark Jannink, who identified 10 possible sites in the Welsh borders and visited them regularly throughout the summer, until on 20 September he found a single example of Epigogium aphyllum, bearing a single white flower on a white stem only five centimetres tall.

The plant was so unobtrusive that it was invisible from a few yards away. On spotting it, Mr Jannink exclaimed: "Hello you – so there you are!"

There had been no previous ghost orchid sighting in Britain since a single plant was found in Buckinghamshire in 1986. It was officially declared extinct in Britain's Red Data List in 2005.

Mr Jannink, 42, who runs a motorbike company in Malvern, Worcestershire, and has been a wildflower enthusiast since his childhood, said yesterday: "To be honest, I was ready to give up, and the feeling when I saw it was of relief more than anything. It was the following day I felt the euphoria."

The species is hard to find because it does not appear every year and behaves more like a fungus than a flower, according to the naturalist Peter Marren, author of Britain's Rare Flowers.

"It has no green leaves," Mr Marren said. "It doesn't depend on photosynthesis at all, and it doesn't manufacture its own food.

"Instead, the food is manufactured for it by a fungus on its roots. It lives largely underground; in fact it can live underground without flowering properly for years on end, and it only flowers when conditions are just right."

Mr Marren added that when it does bloom, the ghost orchid flowers in the thick leaf-mould in the darkest parts of the woodland, where there is no other vegetation.

"It's the hardest British flower to see," he said. "It looks extraordinary. It produces these flowers without chlorophyll which in the dim light look like ghosts, and if you shine a torch beam on them they appear to be translucent white in the pitch darkness, almost like a photographic negative."

He described the rediscovery as "terrific news", adding: "It's one of the most fascinating flowers."

A remarkable irony of the rediscovery is that last September, in the very month in which the plant was found – but before the finding was made public – the ghost orchid was chosen as the symbol of a new conservation campaign because of its presumed extinction.

Plantlife, the wild flower charity, called its new manifesto for preventing wild flowers from disappearing The Ghost Orchid Declaration.

"The rediscovery of a single ghost orchid is wonderful news," one of the declaration's authors, Dr Trevor Dines, said yesterday.

drive from www.independent.co.uk

While politicians' backs are turned, poachers target Nepal's rhinos

September 3rd,2010    by Apirl

Amid constitutional chaos and political uncertainty, officials in Nepal have been forced to turn their attention to the country's threatened wildlife, revealing that at least 28 rhinos have died in the last year. More than half of the endangered animals were killed by poachers, in a national park supposedly guarded by troops.

Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal, confronting intense pressure from Maoist political opponents, was forced to call an emergency meeting with wildlife officials and promise to launch an immediate inquiry into the deaths of the rhinos.

Indian rhinos – one of five species – are native to northern India and southern Nepal. Before stringent preservation laws were introduced in the middle of the 20th century, there were fewer than 200 still alive. Now there are an estimated 2,500 in the wild, many of them in India's Kaziranga National Park.

In the 1950s, Nepal claimed it had an estimated population of 800 rhinos, but that number has steadily fallen. With a decade-long civil war that ended in 2006 and persistent political uncertainty since then, experts say politicians have been distracted from areas such as wildlife preservation. The latest census of the animals was in 2008 when they were said to total 435.

Officials said the rhino deaths occurred in Chitwan National Park, in the Terai district of southern Nepal. The park is guarded by soldiers, who sometimes go on patrol on the backs of elephants, but some have reportedly been redeployed in recent weeks amid ongoing protests in many of Nepal's cities. Some reports said that a number of the rhinos had been killed close to army posts in the park.

Department of Forest and Wildlife Conservation official Megh Bahadur Pandey said: "Stopping the poaching is a major challenge for us. There is always an increase in poaching of wildlife in the conservation area when there are political problems."

Experts say that many efforts have been made to protect the rhinos, whose horn is highly valued as a sexual stimulant in traditional medicine in East Asia. Local communities have been included in protecting the animals and helping warn about incursions by poachers. However, sometimes things go wrong; three Dalit women were recently shot by soldiers who suspected them of being poachers, triggering a massive outcry.

"The trouble is that there are insufficient resources for the park," said Diwakar Chapagain, a wildlife protection officer with the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) in Nepal who took part in Sunday's emergency meeting that was attended by police and army commanders. "It is a big area and there are not enough security personnel to cover it all. It is also very hard during the monsoon season – there is a lot of mud."

Mr Chapagain said it was unclear precisely where the demand for the rhino products was coming from. "When we catch poachers they don't know anything," he said. "We only ever get the middle man – no one knows who the top man is."

The challenge of dealing with the threat to the rhino comes as Nepal struggles with intense political uncertainty. A special assembly elected to draw up a new constitution has failed to produce one within the deadline and there is pressure from all sides on Mr Nepal to resign. He has said he will stand down, but only once there is an agreement about the formation of a national coalition government.

drive from www.independent.co.uk

Can four guys take on Facebook – and win?

September 2nd,2010    by Apirl

I just tried to make a list of the things that Facebook knows about me. I started with mundane stuff that anyone reading the printed version of this column would already know – my name, my gender, the fact that I'm an unwilling sufferer of male-pattern baldness. It knows I'm currently obsessed with a band called Everything Everything, because I persist in sharing their videos on Facebook despite one friend thinking that they represent some kind of punk rock betrayal. It knows where I was on Friday, because I mentioned it, and it knew where I was going to be last Tuesday about two weeks in advance. It also knows the precise pattern of the ebbs and flows of my real-life crushes, because I click through to those people's pages more often than others and comment casually on things they've said or done. Basically, it knows more about my day-to-day life than an overprotective mother – which mine isn't, I hasten to add.

We occasionally have these surges of realisation; the last collective one was back in May, when Facebook once again made "simplifying" alterations to its privacy settings that were actually as confusing as British train ticket pricing policy. The moment was seized upon by four New York college kids who, referring to themselves as "Team Diaspora" in a video shot in a classroom, outlined their utopian vision of social networking: you remain in control of all your data, you own it and look after it, share whatever you like with whoever you like, and at no point hand it over to a central hub that can log that information. They aimed to raise $10,000 to complete Diaspora as a summer project, but timed their announcement to such perfection that $200,000 came rolling in – including, strangely, a donation from Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, who described it as a "cool idea". Now, all eyes are on these unassuming individuals as they prepare, in the next few days, to release the initial code for what's seen as the driving force of "antisocial networking".

"Facebook killer" is a headline-grabbing phrase, but the chances of Diaspora becoming anything more than a prompt for further discussion of privacy issues seem slim. Firstly, there's a limit to what four young men with no track record can achieve in the first three months out of university. (I wouldn't for a moment offer myself up as a benchmark, but over a similar period in 1992 I mainly sat in a van and got drunk.) But more importantly, Facebook feels unassailable. It's colossal. It has made it easy and free to establish and maintain social connections; Diaspora, by contrast, will require us to find a chunk of webspace to install it, and maintain it once we have. Can we be bothered? Many Facebook users understand that with convenience comes a privacy trade off – in essence, free web hosting in return for spying. Many others don't know, or simply don't care. None of these people, who make up the vast majority of Facebook's users, will use Diaspora. Its user base will be a relative handful of tech-savvy people who are either keen to escape Facebook, or have already.

drive from www.independent.co.uk

Around the world in 80 dishes No.21: Greece

September 1st,2010    by Apirl

Lamb burgers with feta by Lotte Duncan

Ingredients to make 6 burgers

For the burgers:

900g minced lamb

4 garlic cloves, crushed

3 tablespoons chopped fresh mint

1 teaspoon dried thyme

75g pitted black olives, chopped

2 tablespoons tomato purée

50g feta cheese, cut into 6 pieces

Salt and freshly ground black pepper

For the salad:

1 cucumber, peeled and thinly sliced

4 tomatoes, diced

1 red onion, chopped

110g pitted black olives

Half a teaspoon dried thyme

3 tablespoons olive oil

1 tablespoon cider vinegar

1 teaspoon clear honey

To serve:

1 garlic clove, halved

6 thick slices of rustic bread

Olive oil, for drizzling and cooking

2 heaped tablespoons mayonnaise

Method

Put all the ingredients for the burgers, apart from the feta, in a mixing bowl and bring together. Mix well.

Divide the mixture into 6 equal portions. Take one portion into your hand and roll it into a ball. Flatten it out, put a piece of the feta in the middle and then draw the meat up around it. Make sure the cheese is secure within the meat. Repeat with the other 5 burgers and then place in the fridge for 10 minutes.

In the meantime, make the salad by mixing the cucumber, tomatoes, red onion, olives and dried thyme together in a large bowl and season with black pepper. Blend the olive oil, vinegar and honey together and pour over the salad.

Rub the halved garlic cloves over each slice of bread and sprinkle with a little olive oil. Heat a griddle pan over a medium heat and cook the bread on both sides until brown.

Add 1 teaspoon of oil to the griddle pan and cook the burgers, for about 8–10 minutes on each side. Stick a knife in the middle and if it comes out hot, they are cooked through. If not, continue to cook until they are.

To serve, spread the mayonnaise on the toasted bread, top with a burger and then spoon over some of the salad – serve the rest on the side.

drive from www.independent.co.uk

Paris Hilton is arrested for cocaine possession

August 31st,2010    by Apirl

Paris Hilton was released from jail yesterday after an arrest on cocaine possession in Las Vegas. The socialite was picked up late on Friday night after police noticed marijuana smoke coming from the car she was in.

Police spokesman Marcus Martin said: "Officers noticed a vehicle leaving smoke trail of a controlled substance [and] made a stop based on that." He also confirmed the heiress was found to be in possession of cocaine but did not know how much.

The man driving the car was arrested on charges of driving under the influence of drugs but cannot be named.

Following the arrest, Hilton was booked into the Clark County Detention Centre and held there before being released in the early hours of yesterday morning. As yet, there are no details about a possible court date.

Just hours after her release, she posted a message on Twitter saying: "Going to bed. Sweet dreams everyone."

The arrest capped a difficult few weeks for the heiress. Yesterday, law enforcement sources established that Hilton's boyfriend, Las Vegas nightclub owner Cy Waits, had pulled a gun on an intruder in her LA home.

Earlier in the month, the hair extension company Hairtech International filed a £22m lawsuit against her, claiming Hilton breached a contract to promote their hair extensions after wearing those by a rival company. According to the claim filed at Los Angeles Superior Court, Hilton's "public debauchery" was also contrary to the agreement. The claim went on to state that Hilton was responsible for company losses of £4m after a 2007 jail term for driving offences prevented her from attending a launch party for the brand.

When charged with alcohol-related reckless driving in 2007, Hilton pleaded no contest, and was given a sentence of 45 days in jail. Of that sentence, she served only 23 days and was held in a special block reserved for high-profile inmates. After the experience Hilton told the US television host Larry King that she had been forced to re-evaluate her life. A seemingly reformed Hilton vowed to give up her partying lifestyle and instead "help raise money for kids and for breast cancer and multiple sclerosis".

But in July this year, she was again arrested after the Brazil-Netherlands World Cup match in Port Elizabeth, South Africa, on suspicion of possession of marijuana. After appearing at a special midnight court hearing where she was referred to only as "accused number one", the charges against her were dropped. Instead, a friend with her at the stadium was found guilty and sentenced to pay a fine or spend 30 days in jail. Following the arrest, Hilton claimed she had merely been "assisting the police with the investigation and answering their questions". A week later, she was detained and released after being caught in possession of cannabis at an airport in Corsica.

Hilton's lifestyle has backfired on her on a number of occasions. In 2007, it was reported that after a 2003 sex tape scandal and numerous arrests, she had been disowned by her grandfather Barron Hilton II. He is said to have felt sufficiently provoked to leave 97 per cent of his £1.2bn fortune to the Conrad N Hilton fund for underprivileged and disabled children.

Two months before the report of a family rift, the news channel CNN had discussed footage from the ParisExposed website that featured Hilton using the ethnic slurs "nigger", "chink" and "jappy", and the derogatory term "faggot". She denied accusations of racism, but former friends claimed she had commonly used such terms in private.

Hilton initially appeared in the public eye after starring in the reality television series The Simple Life. She has since had minor film roles and a short-lived career as a recording artist.

No one was available yesterday to comment on the arrest.

drive from www.independent.co.uk

Pentagon demands on Chinese military impossible, warn scholars

August 30th,2010    by Apirl

China's military cannot meet Washington's expectations of transparency, scholars in Beijing warned today, after a report from the US defence department said the secrecy of the People's Liberation Army was increasing the potential for "misunderstanding and miscalculation".

The annual Pentagon report was published amid frictions between the countries over US arms sales to Taiwan, US naval drills with South Korea and China's growing confidence in the South China Seas. It argues that despite modest improvements in the PLA's openness, "the limited transparency in China's military and security affairs enhances uncertainty and increases the potential for misunderstanding and miscalculation."

The PLA has issued reports on its work and attempted to improve links with other militaries in recent years, engaging in more joint exercises and taking part in peacekeeping missions. But Shi Yinhong, an expert on Sino-US relations at Renmin University, said: "Although China has steadily increased its military transparency over the past few years, it's currently impossible for China to reach the level that the US demands."

This year China announced that the military budget would rise by 7.5% to 532.11bn yuan (£51.7bn), after two decades of double-digit annual increases. Experts suggested the slowdown reflected Chinese concerns about the way it was perceived, as well as financial constraints. China argues that spending remains well below US levels and that US capabilities remain far superior.

The Pentagon believes that China's actual military spending is roughly double the stated level. Its report says China has the most active land-based ballistic and cruise missile programme in the world and that it is developing an anti-ship ballistic missile with a range of more than 1,500km, capable of attacking aircraft carriers in the western Pacific.

It adds that analysts believe China will not have a domestically produced aircraft carrier and associated ships for another five years, although foreign assistance could speed that process up. It also predicts: "It is unlikely ... that China will be able to project and sustain large forces in high-intensity combat operations far from China until well into the following decade."

Beijing suspended military-to-military ties between the countries in January, in retaliation for US arms sales to Taiwan. The report notes that while Beijing has improved economic and cultural ties with Taiwan, it has continued the build-up of missiles opposite the island and expanded its military advantage.

Last month Beiing reacted angrily when the US secretary of state waded into the territorial dispute over the South China Sea between China and several regional powers including Vietnam and the Philippines. Hillary Clinton said resolving the row was a diplomatic priority and was in the national interest of the US.

Other countries complain that China is taking a tougher line on the dispute. It recently began describing rights over the strategic waterway – which is also potentially rich in natural resources – as a "core interest".

China has also complained about US plans to hold joint drills with South Korea in the Yellow Sea, between China and the Korean peninsula. "The United States appears to want to declare to the world: 'The Asia-Pacific and the oceans remain under the United States'," said a commentary in the Communist party's official People's Daily newspaper.

drive from www.guardian.co.uk

forgotten granary of Europe

August 28th,2010    by Apirl

In a few years' time Ukraine could regain its position as a global breadbasket, realising the huge agricultural potential of its famous chernozem (black earth), one of the most fertile soils in the world. Agriculture is one of the prime assets of this former Soviet republic, much as in Russia and Kazakhstan, with which it forms an eastern corn belt. Farming is all the more important as Ukraine lacks its neighbours' gas and mineral resources.

Ukraine is already the world's top producer of barley, ranking second for sunflower and rapeseed. It produces about 50m tonnes of grain, just under half of which is exported. "But over the next 10 to 15 years the country aims to triple its export capacity, to become one of the major suppliers, perhaps even the top supplier, for the main importing countries around the Mediterranean," says Jean-Jacques Hervé, a former adviser to the Ukrainian ministry of agriculture. Now he is at Index Bank, the local subsidiary of France's Crédit Agricole. "This country has the potential to produce 100m tonnes."

Ukraine is far from making the most of its assets. A third of its 42m hectares of arable land lies fallow and another third is badly exploited. Privatisation of land ownership started in 1992, allocating two- to five-hectare units to former collective-farm workers. To prevent further splintering of property it was subsequently decided to place a ban on the sale of farmland. Many Ukrainians now prefer to lease their land rather than working it themselves.

Some of them have joined forces to form small farms but they lack the resources to develop, particularly as it is difficult to obtain credit, as the banks have yet to recover from the financial crunch. Of the 50,000 or so existing farms, only about 8,500 have the means to modernise production and compete on the open market. Most of them cover at least 500 hectares and are operated by Ukrainian farming companies or foreign investors, mainly from Scandinavia and the English-speaking world.

Foreign investors who moved here in 2006-07 when world grain prices rocketed must now rethink their strategy. Landkom International, based in the Isle of Man, started operations in western Ukraine in 2007 but reported losses of $56m the following year, illustrating the limitations of a strictly speculative approach.

The country is nevertheless still attractive to investors. A French holding company, Agro Generation, owned by entrepreneur Charles Beigbeder, operates six farms, covering more than 45,000 hectares and producing 150,000 tonnes of wheat, barley, maize, rape- and sunflower seed, a third of which is sold locally. By the end of 2012, Beigbeder plans to more than double the area of land under cultivation.

drive from www.guardian.co.uk

Mark Hix gets creative with rice

August 26th,2010    by Apirl

I keep all sorts of different types of rice in my larder, as I'm never sure when I might need a quick handful of red camargue or vialone nano to create a dish. There are countless types of rice available in the shops these days – and each has its own uses and needs to be cooked in a certain way. For example, basmati is far too delicate a rice for making a risotto; don't even try it, or you'll end up with a right old bowl of mush...

Chorizo, broad bean and asparagus rice

Serves 4-6
This is more or less a paella and it can be made with seasonal vegetables such as peas or beans. Slowly cooking the chopped-up chorizo with the onions at the beginning releases all of the oils and spices, which the rice absorbs during cooking.

2 large onions, peeled, halved and finely chopped
6 cloves of garlic, peeled and crushed
200g cooking chorizo, halved and chopped into small pieces
1tsp fresh thyme leaves
4tbsp olive oil
120g paella rice
1.5-2ltrs chicken stock
250g asparagus, woody ends removed
100-120g podded weight of broad beans
Salt and freshly ground black pepper

In a wide-based pan, gently cook the onion, garlic, chorizo and thyme in the olive oil for 5-6 minutes, stirring every so often. Add the rice and stir on a low heat for a minute or so and season well. Gradually add half of the stock, stirring every so often. Meanwhile, cook the broad beans and asparagus separately in boiling salted water until just tender, then drain and leave to cool a little. Slice the asparagus on the angle into 5 or 6 pieces, then add to the rice with the broad beans and continue adding the stock until the rice is tender. Re-season if necessary and serve immediately.

drive from www.independent.co.uk

The 50 best bikes

August 25th,2010    by Apirl

From whippet-fast commuter rides to sturdy kings of the mountain, Simon Usborne presents the experts’ guide to getting around on two wheels

This week’s panel

Tony Farrelly is the former editor of ‘Cycling Plus’ magazine and now runs Road.cc, home to news and reviews for road-bound riders;

Jeff Jones is editor of Bikeradar.com , whose cycle-mad staff helped him pick great mountain bikes for all budgets.

drive from www.independent.co.uk

The greatest internet sports games of all time

August 24th,2010    by Apirl

You get bored at work, we get bored at work; the difference is, we don't get sacked for playing these games. Not yet, anyway.

Collected below are some of our favourite games on t'internet, so get stuck in and putt, kick, or skate your way to the JobCentre.

If you know something we don't, send a link to your favourite online (sports) game headlined The greatest games ever ... to sports.editor@guardianunlimited.co.uk (with a few lines telling us why it's so good) and we'll add them to our list - vigorous quality control guaranteed, reader.

Soccer Star: If you're looking for a footie game ridden with pure drama, emotion and unpredictability look no further. No danger of goal droughts here – the goal to shot ratio is outrageously high. And the celebrations aren't bad either. Just don't rely on your goalkeeper and you'll go far. P45 Rating ***

Quick hit football: This American football game is just so simple, fun and addictive that you will actually beginning to understand and take an interest in the sport. P45 rating ****

Ice racer: It's got some great old school "Track & Field" keyboard bashing to start each race, followed by what at first appears to be a reasonably straightforward bobsleigh run – except your fingers have to do the opposite to what your brain instinctively thinks it should do; ie a left turn means you press the right arrow key (and vice versa of course!). First few runs – easy, then the competition hots up and you realise after adding your name to the online leaderboard that your proud score places you 68,534 – meaning you're actually quite rubbish. The only way to improve? Spend even more time playing the game. Highly addictive. P45 rating *****

Celebrity table tennis: Rallying a host of celebrities is appealing at first, but quickly loses its glamour as Mr T fails to return even the softest of backhands. After cruising through the early rounds, pop-stars Lady Gaga and JayZ prove a challenge, but the initial enthusiasm has already deteriorated. I pity the fool that plays this. P45 rating ***

Formula G1: Enough to satisfy any petrol head's need for speed while stuck in the office. Accelerate around courses, bounce off the sides, and hit boost arrows to beat your best time. Unlock new tracks and hovermobiles as you advance through the game. P45 rating ***

drive from www.independent.co.uk

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