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Local Ting än Ting

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Re: Local Ting än Ting

Postby TriP » November 8th, 2016, 9:36 pm

Local Stinging Nettle ~ Health Benefits


Fewer side effects than prescription medications

Decongestants, antihistamines, allergy shots and even prescription medications such as Allegra and Claritin treat only the symptoms of allergies and tend to lose effectiveness over a period of time. They can also cause drowsiness, dry sinuses, insomnia and high blood pressure. Nettle has none of these side effects. It can be used on a regular basis and has an impressive number of other benefits most notably as a treatment for prostate enlargement.

Potential for treating disease

Nettle has been studied extensively and has shown promise in treating Alzheimer's disease, arthritis, asthma, bladder infections, bronchitis, bursitis, gingivitis, gout, hives, kidney stones, laryngitis, multiple sclerosis, PMS, prostate enlargement, sciatica, and tendinitis. Externally it has been used to improve the appearance of the hair, and is said to be a remedy against oily hair and dandruff.

Healing properties

In Germany today stinging nettles are sold as an herbal drug for prostate diseases and as a diuretic. It is a common ingredient in other herbal drugs produced in Germany for rheumatic complaints and inflammatory conditions (especially for the lower urinary tract and prostate). In the United States many remarkable healing properties are attributed to nettle and the leaf is utilized for different problems than the root. The leaf is used here as a diuretic, for arthritis, prostatitis, rheumatism, rheumatoid arthritis, high blood pressure and allergic rhinitis. The root is recommended as a diuretic, for relief of benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) and other prostate problems, and as a natural remedy to treat or prevent baldness.

An infusion of the plant is very valuable in stemming internal bleeding. It is also used to treat anaemia, excessive menstruation, hemorrhoids, arthritis, rheumatism and skin complaints, especially eczema. Externally, the plant is used to treat skin complaints, arthritic pain, gout, sciatica, neuralgia, hemorrhoids and hair problems.

Reduces arthritis pain

Taken orally, products made from nettle's aerial parts may interfere with the body's production of prostaglandins and other inflammation-causing chemicals. Consequently, nettle may have an anti-inflammatory effect. It may also enhance responses of the immune system. Chemicals in nettle's aerial parts are also thought to reduce the feeling of pain or interfere with the way that nerves send pain signals. All of these effects may reduce the pain and stiffness of arthritis and other similar conditions.

Reduces allergy symptoms

In addition, nettle's aerial parts may reduce the amount of histamine that is produced by the body in response to an allergen. An allergen is a substance such as pollen that may provoke an exaggerated immune response in individuals who are sensitive to it. Through this potential action, the aerial parts of nettle may help to reduce allergy symptoms. Results from one human study are promising, but more research is needed to be conclusive.

Relieve skin irritation and muscle pain

A solution of the extract may be applied to the skin to relieve joint pain and muscle aches. Astringent properties of nettle aerial parts may also help to lessen the swelling of hemorrhoids and stop bleeding from minor skin injuries such as razor nicks. An astringent shrinks and tightens the top layers of skin or mucous membranes, thereby reducing secretions, relieving irritation, and improving tissue firmness. It may also be used topically for dandruff and overly oily hair and scalp.

This herb should be used for a minimum of 30 days for full effects.


http://www.herbwisdom.com/herb-nettle.html
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Re: Local Ting än Ting

Postby TriP » November 8th, 2016, 9:46 pm

Local Tucker Valley

The Secrets of Tucker Valley Part 2: The Enchanted Forest


After World War 2, in the 1950s, the Cold War began. This was a series of proxy wars between the World’s two Superpowers: The Soviet Union and the United States. The Soviets were spreading their influence over much of the East by force and despite the Monroe Doctrine, even into the Western Hemisphere, in Cuba.

The U.S. defense plan during this period was that of “Mutually Assured Destruction”. Mutually assured destruction (MAD) is a doctrine of military strategy and national security policy in which the full-scale use of nuclear weapons by two or more opposing sides would cause the complete annihilation of both the attacker and the defender. The United States thus developed a system to warn against an imminent attack, known as the Ballistic Missile Early Warning System (BMEWS). At the time, it was the most massive technological undertaking in history.

I would assume by now you’re probably thinking what does any of this have to do with the Enchanted Forest. Well the Chaguaramas peninsula was leased to the Americans (by the British Government) in 1941 for 100 years. Though the World War was over, the American’s continued their occupation as it provided an excellent location to test the BMEWS prototype. It was used to gather data on test missiles being launched into the southern Atlantic from Air Force bases on the west coast of Florida.

BMEWS required two types of radars, fence antennae for initial detection, each 165 feet tall and 400 feet wide, and a fully steerable tracking dish, 85 feet in diameter. The dish still stands today but the fence antenna, however, is gone (although the concrete foundations are still visible.)

With the success of the prototype in Chaguaramas, the full BMEWS radar network became operational on February 4, 1959 with installations in Alaska, Greenland and England monitoring the DEW (Distant Early Warning) line that divided the Soviet Union from North America across the North Pole.

On 12 August 1960, US Air Force scientists transmitted radio signals from the Chaguaramas site to Floyd, New York, via the Echo I satellite. This was the first intercontinental voice message in history relayed via Earth satellite.

Finally in February 1962 the Radio Corporation of America (RCA) oversaw the operation of the Trinidadian Radar until its closure in 1971. During this period, the tracking station continued to be an important component of the Atlantic Missile Range, tracking projectiles launched downrange from the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station and Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

Who knew that all of that history belonged to the relatively unknown Enchanted Forest hidden within the hills of Tucker Valley Chaguaramus.

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Re: Local Ting än Ting

Postby TriP » November 8th, 2016, 9:48 pm

Local Sailing ~ Andrew Lewis

After the Rio 2016 Olympics Andrew Lewis has been mentoring many youths from all over T&T.

This video shows how he has been mentoring some of them though sailing and also showing them that you can create a life through sailing.



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Re: Local Ting än Ting

Postby TriP » November 8th, 2016, 9:51 pm

Local Carnival 2017 ~ Monday Wear - Vapzzbykai
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Re: Local Ting än Ting

Postby TriP » November 8th, 2016, 9:58 pm

People of Trinidad and Tobago ~ Shamla Maharaj

Shamla Maharaj 30, has cerebral palsy. She has a degree in Agribusiness Management, a Masters in Marketing and Agribusiness and has just started her PhD.

“My father left school at 9 to labour in the cane fields so he could help support his family. When he and my mother had me they knew nothing about disabilities or cerebral palsy. 30 years ago in rural Trinidad, you never saw anyone with disabilities.

My parents gave me so much love and support and did the best thing they could have done- which was to treat me like anyone else. My father would always say “my daughter has to get an education”.

When I was 4, he started taking me to the Princess Elizabeth Special School in POS. He would leave me there and I would return home every 2 weekends. I would cry and it was hard on all of us.

I remember on one of those long journeys, a bus driver took my dad and I off because he said I couldn’t sit on my father’s lap but it was the only option because if I sat on a seat I would have fallen.

My thinking, my understanding, my thoughts, my mind , are just like anyone else’s. My disability is purely physical.
I don’t have control of my left hand and my legs. I think I can do anything because that’s how my family treats me.

My two younger brothers tease me, rough play, like they would any sister. When I was younger and instigated mischief, my mother would say “Shamla you’re the eldest, you should know better”

We are a developing country and people with disabilities have a long way to go to be understood, to be treated with dignity. The more we are out and integrated in everyday life, the more society will empathise and treat us as any other.

For example, when I transitioned to Secondary School at 14, children were curious and asked questions because it was the first time interacting with someone like me and that was good because they understood that I was just like them mentally. I made friends, did well at school.

People ask if I will go abroad to live but I have no wish to. I want to live work and have full independence in my own country. I want to be part of that change here for all people with disabilities.

Two years ago, my father finally retired when he turned 60. He had an aneurism without any warning and died suddenly. He didn’t get time to enjoy his retirement. He worked so hard for us. We miss him all the time and each day we would bring in conversations while going through our daily lives.

I work full time at Saudia Holdings Ltd in Barrackpore where I get full support from my boss and colleagues. I remember being asked if I was quitting work while I did my Doctorate. Really?

Then who would pay for my education? I have to be independent and support myself. Having a disability does not mean dependence.

Day by day, I am trying to become as financially and physically independent as I can because one day my mother won’t be here and I will have to take care of myself (even though my brothers do).

I don’t want to live on a disability grant.

Disability is all about the mind, and severity is determined by external forces. If people treat you like you have a disability, you act like you have one.

If they treat you normally, you act like you are normal…. that’s who I am.”
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Re: Local Ting än Ting

Postby TriP » November 8th, 2016, 10:03 pm

1. Local Fishing ~ Northern Coast of Trinidad



2. Local Trip


Nice Scenes ~ Nice Sounds ~ I aint see No Fish :D

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Re: Local Ting än Ting

Postby TriP » November 8th, 2016, 10:13 pm

Local Cycling


On the Avenue


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Re: Local Ting än Ting

Postby TriP » November 8th, 2016, 10:25 pm

Local Tableland ~ Fox Trace

Forty years of talk - Nothing changed - Fox Trace is the Same.

Tableland Pineapple Farmers and Fishermen say a year later, not much has changed.

Rehabilitation of Access Roads remains an agenda item for discussion
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Re: Local Ting än Ting

Postby TriP » November 8th, 2016, 10:43 pm

Local Brasso Seco ~ Indigenous Cook Fest - 1

Held on Sunday6thNovember2016

Wildmeat, Parang and just Fresh Rainforest Air - Country Life.

Brasso Seco Village secluded deep in the Northern Range was so refreshing today that I often forget the wonderful places right here in Trinidad & Tobago

The experience, especially the new tastes Breadfruit Pholourie, Avocado Ice Cream that was the bomb.


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Re: Local Ting än Ting

Postby TriP » November 8th, 2016, 10:55 pm

Local Brasso Seco ~ Indigenous Cook Fest - 2



Parang


Drums
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Geera Chicken
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Roucoo
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Smoked Chicken.
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Smoked Chicken.

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Re: Local Ting än Ting

Postby TriP » November 8th, 2016, 11:11 pm

Local Parang 2016


Various artist on the Holiday Riddim

Jaron Nurse - Still Happy
Tiffany Cummings - Celebrate The Savior.
Corey Romain - Favorite Time
Kwesi - Bigging up Christ
Jah Kiley - Remember Jesus.
Nkomo - Come let us.
Bevil Joseph ft Tabita Joseph - Hallelujah


FCB - IndependenceSquare


Clifton Hill Beach Resort - Point Fortin


Upcoming Dates and Venues 2016

November 18th - NPATT Senior Parang Competition 2016: Semis (In Memory Of Phillip Salazar)
Fri 9 pm · Palo Seco Velodrome · Siparia

November 19th - NPATT Junior Parang Competition 2016: Primary Schools
Sat 9 am · Bishops Anstey Trinity College East Auditorium · Trincity

November 20th - NPATT Junior Parang Competition 2016: Primary Schools
Sat 9 am · Bishops Anstey Trinity College East Auditorium · Trincity

November 26th - NPATT Brings Parang Festivities to SAN RAPHAEL (In Memory of Farouk Khan)
Sat 8 pm · San Rafael Village

December 10th - NPATT Senior Parang Competition 2016: Finals
Sat 8 PM · Town Of Arima

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Re: Local Ting än Ting

Postby TriP » November 8th, 2016, 11:41 pm

Local Trinidad & Tobago Kayak Federation

Held on Sunday23rdOctober2016 ~ Ortoire River

Start of the Race


Sherlon Pierre and Matthew Robinson at the end of the first lap (completing 7K of the 14K long course)

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Re: Local Ting än Ting

Postby TriP » November 8th, 2016, 11:52 pm

Local Vids


Hott 93 & Coors Light Polar Plunge 2016 ~ Brrrrrrrrrrrrrrr


True Unity in Trinidad


Workers Wilding Out 8-) :lol:

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Re: Local Ting än Ting

Postby TriP » November 8th, 2016, 11:58 pm

Local Carnival 2017 ~ Monday Wear - Neil Young
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Re: Local Ting än Ting

Postby TriP » November 9th, 2016, 12:05 am

Local Cocoa ~ Tobago

On our way to the cocoa estate, guide Monica Greig gave the tour-bus riders an animated crash course on cocoa and its traditions on the island of Tobago. After the beans were aged and dried, plantation workers "danced the cocoa." — That is, trod barefoot upon it until the beans shone. "You must have clean feet!" she cries. "No stinky toes!" Cocoa was especially popular as a drink at funerals and Christmastime, she says.

Armed with this information, we got off the bus at the Tobago Cocoa Estate. Established in 2005 by sommelier Duane Dove, this is both a working 48-acre cocoa plantation, and a place for tourists to learn about Tobago's chocolate-producing heritage.

A BRIEF HISTORY OF CHOCOLATE IN TOBAGO

From the 1780s until the 1920s, both Trinidad and Tobago (T&T) grew a lot of cocoa for export. The Trinitario variety, grown exclusively in these two islands, was more valuable than sugar. However, the crop was susceptible to diseases and hungry insects. By the end of the 1920s, witches broom disease, the Great Depression, and rising labour costs all made growing cocoa unprofitable.

Some small-scale operations hung on. But in 1963, the year after T&T gained independence from Great Britain, Hurricane Flora hit. The island nation is outside the main Caribbean hurricane belt, but Flora didn't care. She slammed Tobago with 193 kilometre/hour winds, damaging or destroying 6,250 out of 7,500 houses on the island, and doing $30 million worth of crop and property damage. The island's agriculture was mostly destroyed. But Duane Dove's family saved its small holding. In the late '70s and '80s, Dove worked with his uncle John harvesting, fermenting, sun drying, grading, and selling cocoa to the local buyer.

TAKING THE TOUR

The Tobago Chocolate Estate gets 1,000 to 3,000 visitors per year, mostly during high season from December to April. I was there in September, during the hot and rainy season, when things were quiet.

Manager Harry Sookdeo led us through the parts of the estate that are set up for visitors. He's been at the estate since it opened 10 years ago. Serious and intense looking, Sookdeo didn't crack a smile the whole time. He pointed out the cocoa and the coffee plants. "Every cocoa estate you go to, you find coffee," he says. "Coffee and chocolate go together."

Harvesting doesn't begin until November. I caught berry season, when the cacao pods turn bright red. It's a beautiful plantation, with ginger, jackfruit and other tropical trees and plants. Some were labelled for the tourists.

Sookdeo led us to a gazebo, where he cut open a fresh cacao pod and revealed an alien-looking mass of white goo. As he offered it around, trepidation showed on the faces of my fellow visitors. Slimy? Sure. But also sweet.

One surprising problem for cocoa growers: Parrots. "Are the parrots trying to eat the cocoa pods?" I ask, not sure I heard him right.

"They're not trying. They eat them," Sookdeo answers sternly. Trained hawks discourage the parrots from eating the cocoa. I refrained from asking about the permanence of this discouragement.

Next on the tour, the wooden shacks for drying and fermenting. Sookdeo explained the process: Dry the pods for eight days in the hot sun. Break them open, stick the pods in a box to ferment, cover with banana leaves. Over the next six days, the white goo turns to liquid and drips out of a hole in the box, leaving the workers with brown, fermented beans. These go in a shack with a retractable roof. Workers open the roof for five hours a day, turning the beans every 15 minutes. After five hours, they close the roof. They do this for eight days in a row before the beans are ready.

I was amazed to learn that only four people work on the estate, producing two to three tons of cocoa per year. But despite the small-scale nature of this operation, the awards displayed on the wall of the tasting room say it all. Dove and his crew have put Tobago back on the chocolate map.

DUANE DOVE'S VISION

Duane Dove is based in Sweden. I later asked him via email why he decided to revive this dormant industry. "I have cocoa in my blood," he tells me. After he finished sommelier training, his cocoa roots called him back. He supplemented his basic cocoa knowledge with courses at the University of the West Indies and through T&T's Ministry of Agriculture. He also trained extensively in Europe.

The Tobago Cocoa Estate ships its beans to France, where master chocolate maker Francois Pralus turns them into smooth, delicious bars. Together they've won several international chocolate awards. Dove is especially interested in pairing cocoa and rum.

"I guess I love my little island, and see the huge potential with one-bean, one-source cocoa aligned with direct working partnerships with high-end chocolate makers," Dove says.



http://www.piquenewsmagazine.com/whistl ... id=2807161
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Re: Local Ting än Ting

Postby TriP » November 9th, 2016, 12:09 am

Local West People

:D
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Re: Local Ting än Ting

Postby TriP » November 20th, 2016, 11:28 pm

Local Faces
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Re: Local Ting än Ting

Postby TriP » November 20th, 2016, 11:37 pm

Local Tobago ~ Tura Homemade

Tura Homemade is an artisanal agro-processing business owned and operated by husband and wife team Adrian and Avisha.

Based in Tobago, we emphasize local seasonal fresh fruits in our products while using as little sugar as possible. Our products do not contain any artificial colours, preservatives or pectin.

The majority of produce we grow ourselves using our seaweed fertilizer and homemade compost.

Our labels are made by hand and can be easily untied if you choose to reuse the jars.
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Re: Local Ting än Ting

Postby TriP » November 20th, 2016, 11:42 pm

Local Aerial Drone ~ Port of Spain




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Re: Local Ting än Ting

Postby TriP » November 20th, 2016, 11:49 pm

1. Local Boas Snakes


Release of 3 different Boas in the Northern Range

A Boa Constrictor, named Fred
An invading Rainbow Boa
And another Boa Constrictor from a Rabbit Farm in Penal





2. Local Cascabel Snake

Las Lomas to remove a snake that was stuck inside of a concrete block of a wall. Upon arrival we were met with a snake large than we expected.

The snake which was a Corallus Ruschenbergerii also known as Cascabel went into the brick to shed her skin and found herself into a bit of a tight squeeze.

After a 22-minute ordeal between Taariq and the snake we were finally able to get her out from the block safely
.
The Cascabel which was later named rosemary measured in and 4 ½ feet long and was also identified to be a female



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Re: Local Ting än Ting

Postby TriP » November 20th, 2016, 11:53 pm

Local Paria Bay and Waterfall



Nice Host in Vid :wink:

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Re: Local Ting än Ting

Postby TriP » November 20th, 2016, 11:56 pm

Local Fishing ~ Down De Islands


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Re: Local Ting än Ting

Postby TriP » November 20th, 2016, 11:58 pm

Local Turtle ~ Chacachacare Island


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Re: Local Ting än Ting

Postby TriP » November 26th, 2016, 6:47 pm

Local Faces
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Re: Local Ting än Ting

Postby TriP » November 26th, 2016, 6:57 pm

Local Aerial Drones



Maracas ~ Tyrico


Tobago Nylon Pool


Tucker Real Estate ~ Glencoe

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Re: Local Ting än Ting

Postby TriP » November 26th, 2016, 7:02 pm

Local Aerial Drones ~ Timelapse


Chaguanas


San Fernando

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Re: Local Ting än Ting

Postby TriP » November 26th, 2016, 7:09 pm

Local Aerial Drone ~ Port of Spain


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Re: Local Ting än Ting

Postby TriP » November 26th, 2016, 7:12 pm

Local Down De Islands ~ Party Cruise


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Re: Local Ting än Ting

Postby TriP » November 26th, 2016, 7:24 pm

:arrow: :arrow: :arrow: :arrow: :arrow: :arrow: :arrow: :arrow: :arrow: :arrow:

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Re: Local Ting än Ting

Postby TriP » November 26th, 2016, 7:26 pm

Tobago
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