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Joke for the Day…” It does not embarrass me…: !!!
| A man walked into a bar and ordered a glass of white wine. He took a sip of it, then tossed the remainder in the bartender’s face.
Before the bartender could recover from the surprise, the man began weeping. “I’m really sorry. I keep doing this to bartenders. I can’t tell you how embarrassing it is to have a compulsion like this.”
Far from being angry, the bartender was sympathetic. Before long, he was suggesting that the man see a psychoanalyst about his problem. “I happen to have the name of a psychoanalyst,” the bartender said. “My brother and my wife have both been treated by him, and they say he’s as good as they come.” The man wrote down the name of the doctor, thanked the bartender and left. The bartender smiled, knowing he’d done a good deed for a fellow human being. Six months later, the man was back. “Did you do what I suggested?” the bartender asked, serving the glass of white wine. “I certainly did,” the man said. “I’ve been seeing the psychoanalyst twice a week.” He took a sip of the wine. Then he threw the remainder into the bartender’s face. The flustered bartender wiped his face with a towel. “The doctor doesn’t seem to be doing you any good,” he spluttered. “On the contrary,” the man said,” he’s done me a world of good.” “But you just threw the wine in my face again!” the bartender exclaimed. “Yes,” the man said. “But it doesn’t embarrass me anymore!” Source…..www.ba-ba mail.com Natarajan |
A Government Programme in Kerala Is Turning Women into Agripreneurs…
Kudumbashree’s holistic approach towards financial empowerment has worked wonders in Kerala.
The ‘Naivedyam’, or food offering, made during different prayers and rituals for Lord Krishna at the world famous Guruvayur temple in Thrissur district of Kerala, includes about 1,200 bananas of a rare variety called ‘Pooja Kadali’. Earlier, to give this daily offering, the temple was dependent on supply from Tamil Nadu, as this special variety was on the verge of extinction in Kerala. However, now, women agriculturists are growing these bananas on 47 acres, under seven panchayats of Kodakara block, and supplying them to the temple, ensuring a taste of homegrown plantain for the revered deity.
“I am part of a five-member Joint Liability Group and we cultivate bananas, vegetables, and paddy on about 15 acres of land. We supply the fruit to the Labour Cooperative Society, which has a deal with the Guruvayur Devaswom Board, under the auspices of the State government’s ‘Kudumbashree’ programme. Around 750 women in 150 groups are cultivating bananas in our block,” says 54-year-old Shobhana Krishnamurthy of Muttathoor panchayat.
Kudumbashree, the Kerala government’s poverty alleviation programme launched in 1998, has brought about a green revolution in the state today.

Photo source: newseq.blogspot.com
It has done this solely by tapping into women’s potential for farming and entrepreneurship.
“The Guruvayur temple only accepts ‘Pooja Kadali’ of a stipulated size (7000 apex.), so those bunches that don’t meet the criteria are then utilised for making ‘Rasayanam’, an ayurvedic preparation, in collaboration with an Ayurvedic pharmaceutical company. About 20,000 bottles of ‘Rasayanam’ are being made in our block every month,” adds Krishnamurthy.
Farming has taken off in a big way among women under Kudumbashree’s collective farming and ‘Samagra’ projects, implemented with active participation from Panchayati Raj Institutions (PRIs) and supported by a farming subsidy. Not only has the project increased agricultural production, it has also brought considerable fallow land back under cultivation and financially empowered thousands of women.
Joint Liability Groups (JLGs), structured under the National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development (NABARD) guidelines, have been formed to ensure agricultural credit from banks for women cultivators. The JLGs come under the interest subsidy scheme of Kudumbashree, when they avail agricultural loans from banks – the state government provides a subsidy of five per cent on the seven per cent interest of agricultural loan. So far, around 10,543 JLGs have availed of loans amounting to over Rs. 123 crore under the project.
“In Muttathoor panchayat alone, 504.85 acres are being cultivated under Kudumbashree’s collective farming and Samagra projects,” shares Dhanya Vijayan, 30, Community Development Society Accountant, Muttathoor panchayat.
Data collected in 2013-14 indicates that 47,611 JLGs are cultivating on 40,218 hectares, growing paddy, fruits such as pineapple, bananas; vegetables like bitter gourd, amaranthus, snake gourd, cowpea, watermelon, bottle gourd, ginger, tapioca, ridge gourd, lady’s finger, brinjal, and chilli. Coconut and cashew are popular crops as well.
“We have debunked the theory that agriculture is not profitable. Our group ‘Aishwarya’ took a bank loan of Rs. 60,000 for cultivating the ‘Nendran’ variety of bananas on 75 cents of land, which had been lying bare. We paid off the loan in just six months. The subsidy was a big help. We made a profit of one lakh in one season,” says 39-year-old Bina Pradeep of Vallachira village.
As the women have discovered, the trick to making things work in their favour is by putting in their own labour.
“Hiring workers is expensive in Kerala as daily wages are Rs. 700-750. That is why big landlords don’t make profit. We have leased land from landowners and are still able to turn in a profit because we put in the labour ourselves,” elaborates 35-year-old Surabhi Sivan, whose five-member JLG ‘Jeeva’ leased a two-acre plot to cultivate bananas.
“We paid Rs. 54,000 for the lease, gave back the bank’s one lakh rupees loan in six months and still made a profit,” she says proudly.
Across Kerala, there are many such success stories.

Leela C.K. and Omana C.C. with the tiller machine at their paddy field. The duo attended the panchayat’s training courses and can confidently work the machines. (Credit: Ajitha Menon\WFS)
Kudumbashree lists the collective farming venture at Kaipram under Perambra panchayat in Kozhikode district at the top. Here, 170 acres of fallow land was recovered and put under paddy cultivation with the efforts of 256 women belonging to 53 groups. While the seeds were procured from Krishi Bhavan, the manure was provided by the gram panchayat, which gave Rs. 1,80,000 for equipment. The women have turned an overall profit of Rs. 20 lakh.
In another case, 30,000 women banana cultivators belonging to 6,000 JLGs pushed up banana production in Thiruvananthapuram district from 8 to 20 metric tonnes per hectare. The phenomenal change was brought about under the guidance of the Kerala Agricultural University.
Additionally, facilitated by Kudumbashree, the women executed a buy back arrangement on the produce with a private company. The JLGs leased the farming land, conducted comprehensive soil surveys, set up demonstration plots and carried out integrated pest management practices, to make the venture a model project.
Ensuring a profit has been the underlining factor in Kudumbashree’s agriculture revolution.
Towards this, gram panchayats across the state train women in using farming equipment and machinery, creating Kudumbashree’s own ‘Vanitha Karma Sena’ or Green Army.
“Money is lost if you have to pay the coconut tree climber, the tiller machine operator or the sowing machine operator. We have trained the women to operate different agriculture related machines themselves and with loans and support available to buy equipment, most groups now own and operate their machines, saving considerable amount of money,” explains Bindu Shivdasan, 40, President, Muttathoor panchyat.
There are nine women coconut tree climbers in her panchayat and several women are operating tiller and sowing machines.
Leela C.K., 60, of Palliparam village under Paralam panchayat in Thrissur district, is a case in point.
Leela C.K. of Palliparam village may be 60 years old, but she tirelessly works on the land and even operates heavy machines with ease. (Credit: Ajitha Menon\WFS)
Her group cultivates paddy on her three-acre plot once a year. She operates her own agriculture machines. “I attended the panchayat’s training courses and can confidently work the machines, as does my friend Omana C.C., who is 60 as well. Age is no factor and this saves the group a lot of money in wages,” remarks Leela.
Apart from their regular production, the women nurture a kitchen garden on ten cents of land, producing different leafy vegetables, brinjal, lady’s finger, beans and chilli. “We share the produce and use the vegetables ourselves. This ensures a steady supply of cost-effective nutrition for our families as the labour is ours and seeds are available free from Krishi Bhavan,” says Omana.
Bad weather can ruin the crops sometimes, as experienced by Surabhi Shivan and her group ‘Jeeva’ last year.
However, Kudumbashree’s holistic approach towards financial empowerment worked wonders.
“The micro-credit facility available under Kudumbashree allowed us to take another loan to make up the loss and this year we are sure to make a good profit,” says Shivan.
Kudumbashree has provided the wherewithal, but it is the sheer hard work, entrepreneurship and sincerity towards commitments like repaying bank loans that has seen the women in Kerala surmount challenges and hurdles such as the lack of land and finances, natural calamities and labour issues to lead a green revolution in their state. This has made them the cornerstone of the food security movement – that too in a notoriously consumer state!
Written by Ajitha Menon for Women’s Feature Service (WFS) and republished here in arrangement with WFS.
Source…. Ajitha Menon… in http://www.the betterindia.com
Natarajan
These 11 Rare Paintings of India Were Recently Released by the New York Public Library…
The New York Public Library has digitized and released a collection of about 1,80,000 items, including pictures, manuscripts, posters, paintings, etc., and all of them are free for download and use by everyone.
From maps of Asia to amazing photographs of New York City, the collection has them all. Amongst these is a vast collection of 178 original coloured paintings of India, illustrating the trade, costumes, and culture of the country. The paintings were made between 1780 and 1858, and their digital versions look excellent. With camels and elephants, salt trade and temples – the amazing collection will take you way back in time.
Here is a look at 11 of these beautiful paintings:

Hunting scene – leopard attacking one of two elephants


Man ploughing field with two oxen


Two elephants pulling an elaborate carriage, with mahouts and attendants


A female spinner

Camel, an important mode of transportation

Snake charmers

Aristocrats standing on a dais with ornate rugs

Toddy gatherers in landscape with palm trees
All pictures: The New York Public Library
Story courtesy: Sharath Ahuja
Source……..Tanaya Singh in http://www.the betterindia.com
natarajan
The Stunning Beauty of Braided Rivers….!!!
Most rivers flow in one broad channel of water, but some rivers split into lots of small channels that continually split and join each other to give a braided appearance. These are called braided rivers.
Braided rivers are usually wide but shallow. They typically form on fairly steep slopes and carry large amount of coarse-grained sediments. When the river’s flow decreases, these sediments get deposited on the river bed leaving behind small temporary islands of sands that cause the river’s channel to split. Aside from a steep gradient and abundance of sediments, a variable water discharge rate is essential to their formation. Consequently, braided rivers exist near mountainous regions, especially those with glaciers. Braided channels are also found in environments that dramatically decrease channel depth, and hence channel velocity, such as river deltas, alluvial fans and peneplains.

A braided river in Iceland. Photo credit: Andre Ermolaev/500px
The pattern of the braided channels will change over time as the sediment islands get eroded away and deposited in new islands as the speed and amount of water in the river changes.
Rivers with braided channels look stunningly beautiful in satellite images or from airplanes. Here are some of the most beautiful examples of braided rivers.

The Rakaia River in the Canterbury Plains in New Zealand’s South Island is a beautiful example of a braided river. It is one of the largest braided rivers in New Zealand. Photo credit: Andrew Cooper/Wikimedia

Rakaia River. Photo credit: www.digitalglobeblog.com

Rakaia River. Photo credit: Geoff Leeming/Flickr

The Brahmaputra River in Tibet, India and Bangladesh is another classic example. The river originates in Tibet and enters India through the state of Arunachal Pradesh. The river gets intricately braided once it enters the state of Assam where it acquires its common name Brahmaputra. For the next 700 km of its braided course through the valley, it gets mighty big even in the dry season. During rains, its banks are more than 8 km apart. Photo credit:Google Earth/patternsofnatureblog.com

Brahmaputra River. Photo credit: Google Earth/patternsofnatureblog.com

The Waitaki River is another large braided river in the South Island of New Zealand. It drains the Mackenzie Basin and runs some 110 kilometers south-east to enter the Pacific Ocean between Timaru and Oamaru. Photo credit: Google Earth

The Tagliamento River in north-east Italy is braided as it flows from the Alps to the Adriatic Sea. Photo credit:www.udine20.it

The Waimakariri River in the South Island of New Zealand, is a braided river, about a kilometer wide with many changing channels cutting through the shingle. Photo credit: unknown/spacebattles.com

The Waimakariri River. Photo credit: Philip Capper/Flickr

A Landsat image of a braided section of the Congo River. Photo credit: Wired

The Congo River. Photo credit: Google Earth/patternsofnatureblog.com

The Ob River in western Siberia, Russia, is the world’s seventh longest river. Photo credit: Google Earth/patternsofnatureblog.com

The Paraná River in South America. This photograph shows a 29-kilometer stretch of the Paraná, downstream of the small city of Goya, Argentina. Photo credit: NASA

A braided river in Iceland. Photo credit: Andre Ermolaev/500px

A braided river in Iceland. Photo credit: Andre Ermolaev/500px
Source….www.amusingplanet.com
Natarajan
These 7 Photos by Indians Just Got Shortlisted in the World’s Biggest Photography Contest…
Six Indian photographers have been shortlisted for the Sony World Photography Awards, 2016. Their photographs made it to the top 115 from about 2,30,103 entries that came from 186 countries around the world.
The Sony World Photography Awards competition began in 2007 and has emerged as the biggest photography competition in the world. , and the winners will share the prize money of $30,000. Their photographs will also be displayed at the World Photography Awards exhibition (April–May), other than being featured in the 2016 edition of the Awards book.
Here is a look at the work of six shortlisted photographers:
1. Prakash Singh, Professional Landscape Category


Prakash, who currently lives in Dubai, took up photography as a profession in 2012. Two of his photographs have been shortlisted under the Landscape Category.
2. Nikunj Rathod, Open People Category

Nikunj is a 28-year-old film director and photographer from Mumbai, and his picture, Bird Hunter, has been shortlisted. He is interested in capturing life on streets.
3. Jaydip Bhattacharya, Open Smile Category

A high school teacher in Kolkata, Jaydip loves to take pictures of faces, people, etc. His shortlisted picture is named Joys of learning.
4. Abhijeet Banerjee, Open Travel Category

Abhijeet Banerjee’s picture Gangasagar Fair shows India’s second largest fair which takes place every year in January.
5. Anasuya Mandal, Open Travel Category

Anasuya Mandal, who is pursuing her PhD at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, began travel photography three years ago. The image captures the Bryce Amphitheater in Utah.
6. Sanghamitra Sarkar, Open Low Light Category
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An amateur photographer from Kalyani, West Bengal, Sanghamitra Sarkar, likes to document different festivals in India and abroad. This image – All souls day, was shot in Puruliya village.
All pictures: Sony World Photography Awards
Source…….Tanaya Singh in http://www.the betterindia.com
Natarajan











