Blogs

  • surferseyes's blog Concerns over planned Japanese Pro Surfing Tour contest close to Fukushima...

     

    It has come to the attention of many of us in the Japanese surfing industry that the Japanese Pro Surfing Association (JPSA) is planning to go ahead with its contest in Ibaraki prefecture at Hokota next month. The planned destination is as little as approximately 150km south from the troubled Fukushima Nuclear Power Plant, along the east coast of Japan.

     

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  • surferseyes's blog Science, female spins and a whole lot of water

    Peter Stevens has been known for creating rain for farmers in Australia during the drought…but he would never admit to it, not wanting to be held responsible for other incidents that arise from tampering with the weather.

    For some it might be hard to believe, but yet we are more than happy to believe and allow humans to create nuclear fuel, reactors and dangerous substances that have indeed caused trauma to the greater population of mankind.And what about the Americans playing with the weather…what, just because they are a big company means that what they’re doing is for real, but a smart man from Casino in NSW can’t make a few raindrops too?

    Regardless of what you think, Peter has a few other inventions up his sleeve, involving natural water purification. His tests on active nuclear waste in Australia came back with radioactive readings of zero. Think what you like, but it’s either guys like him or trusting in TEPCO and the Japanese government…I know which way my vote is heading.

     

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  • surferseyes's blog Keeping radiation-safe

    Since the nuclear situation has been slowly unfolding in Japan with no signs of a quick fix, it is now accepted by most Japanese that they are indeed consuming a certain percentage of radiation in their bodies. In past blogs I have mentioned about the increasing numbers of surfers getting back into the water here on the east coast, despite the fears that the contamination in the water is above the safety levels. Although I am not encouraging anyone to grab their kids and head down the beach everyday here in Chiba this summer, I understand that surfers just gotta surf, so I am dedicating this blog today to handy health supplements/foods related to reducing the amount of radiation in your body.

     

    Potassium Iodine

    As we know, the release of radioactive iodine is very dangerous to humans, particularly children and unborn foetuses. Radioactive iodine can accumulate around the thyroid gland and cause thyroid cancer. In 1982, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved potassium iodine to protect the thyroid glands from radioactive iodine involving accidents or fission emergencies*. It should only be taken if there is a general concern that large amounts of radioactive iodine have been consumed.

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  • Island Life To surf or not to surf?

    It has been one month now since Tokyo Electric Power Co (TEPCO) released their 6-9month cold shutdown plan for the Fukushima nuclear power plant, and not even the first stages of the plan have been put in motion. Perhaps the plan was only really published to the public for some peace of mind, but it seems since the start of this whole controversy TEPCO and the government have done nothing but feed the public false promises.

     

    Kuni went up to the Fukushima area last week and was able to meet with some of the nuclear power plant workers along with local surfers and hear the real stories, the real truths. It was said then that the shutdown plans were totally unreachable and should never have been promised to an already wary public. According to the workers interviewed last week, areas outside the 30km exclusion zone have detected radiation levels higher than the evacuated zone of Chernobyl, and only now in various international news sources is this kind of information being made public. To the majority of the Japanese public, such honest truths remain hidden. The workers interviewed expressed their concerns for the health of women, children and each other, in both the short term and long term, within the 30km radius and throughout the rest of the Kanto area.

     

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