Bayram Cigerli Blog

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Crazy Days of Summer



We have been working (and sweating!) away on a project the last few weeks. I wasn't really planning on any big house projects this year, but things just worked out that way. So not so much "lazy" days around here, as "crazy" Summer days! I can't wait to show you all!

Nat King Cole singing "Lazy Hazy Crazy Days of Summer"

İzler ve Yansımalar Otomotiv Dünyasının Seçkin Dergisinde 5. Sayıda






Otomotiv Sektörünün seçkin dergisi 'YEDEK PARÇA USTASI' 5. Sayısında yine dopdolu. Sektörden güncel gelişmeleri bulabileceğiniz bu özel sayıda ise  'izler ve yansımalar' tarihin derinliklerinde biriken suyun hikayesi ile karşınızda  ;) 



Yollar 'Dünyanın Yedek Parça Ustası' HIDIRUSTA ile daha güvenli, yolculuklar ise 'izler ve yansımalar'ın gezi notlarıyla...  daha bir keyifli (mi!)dir

A Big Book and a Great Book


I like Otto Penzler’s The Big Book of Sherlock Holmes Stories so much I bought it twice.

The first copy was in paper, a very large book that fully justifies the title – 6 7/8 inches by 9 inches in size, and 789 pages long to accommodate a mammoth 83 stories. The printing is in double columns and the type is necessarily small.

In fact, the type too small for my aging eyes, so I bought the Kindle edition as well. I don’t regret having the physical book, though, because it’s a wonderful volume to page through. And it looks so nice on my shelves.

Of course, size isn’t everything. It’s the scope and quality that makes this book valuable. It includes parodies and pastiches from the earliest days of the Sherlock Holmes phenomenon to Neil Gaiman’s 2011 classic “The Case of Death and Honey.” 

Just to drop names, a few of the writers represented here are Leslie S. Klinger, Laurie R. King, Lyndsay Faye, Daniel Stashower, Anthony Boucher, Poul Anderson, Loren D. Estleman, P. G. Wodehouse, Dorothy B. Hughes, Kingsley Amis, David Stuart Davies, Robert L. Fish, Anne Perry, Stephen King, Colin Dexter, A. A. Milne, James M. Barrie, and O. Henry.

The book is divided into a number of categories. I’m particularly attracted to the category called “Holmesless.” These are neither parodies nor pastiches, but stories that in some way are inspired by the Canon. Holmes doesn’t actually appear in them, but his specter haunts them.

My favorite of these is “The Final Problem” by the great Sherlockian Bliss Austin. Written as an entry for an Ellery Queen’s Mystery Magazine contest, the characters include two real-life judges of the contest – Christopher Morley and Howard Haycraft – plus the fictional character Ellery Queen. And Queen is murdered!

The story won a special prize in the contest.

The Big Book of Sherlock Holmes Stories should win a special prize for not only collecting the most Sherlock Holmes and Holmes-related stories in one volume, but some of the best. 

1920 National Defense Act, Tank Developments, and World War II (Why U.S. WW II tanks kind of sucked)


One of the unusual stories from the interwar period (1919 - 1941 for the United States) is the passing of the National Defense Act of 1920.  Sponsored by Julius Kahn this piece of legislation reorganized the United States Army and modified the rules on procurement and acquisitions, aiming to decentralize the process.  The National Defense Act of 1920, to my eye, has its greatest impact in how it influenced the development of tanks in the United States between World War I and World War II, due to a key technical requirement of the bill, that tanks were to be subordinated to the needs of the Army.  During World War I the United States had played with the idea of a separate Tanks Corps but after the war decided to focus in on tanks serving in an infantry support roll.


This, frankly, annoyed two leading United States military figures, Patton and Eisenhower, because it would strip tanks of their mobility potential and instead put them on the path of being rolling infantry support vehicles.  Congress however was firm on this point and also reduced the available budget for tank development to a bare minimum, forcing the army to pour its development dollars in the 1920s into vehicles like the one pictured above, the M2, a slow, under armed, mobile gun platform with an emphasis on machine guns to cut down advancing infantry over heavy cannons to destroy other tanks.


However Douglas MacArthur was made Chief of Staff of the United States Army and MacArthur wanted the United States Army to focus on being a faster, more mobile, and more nimble force.  He also wanted to develop tanks that focused on mobility and anti-tank capacity over lumbering along behind the infantry with a wad of machine guns.  But Congress had forbidden any development of tanks except by the Army, so what was a newly appointed general to do?



As it turns out, engage in some legal trickery.  The top image, and the one just above, are of respectively the T7 Combat Car and the M1 Combat Car.  Nearly identical to tanks they were developed by the United States Cavalry and use of development dollars was permitted because MacArthur told the Congress, with a straight face, that these weren't tanks.  No, these were "combat cars" - use they had armor, they had treads, and they had guns, but they were "cars" not tanks.  In fact the T7 Combat Car pictured at the top was built so it could be converted from treads to rubber tires, so it could flexibly roll along paved roads and then switch to an off-road tracked configuration.


This focus by Congress on cost-savings, and pinching military development funds during the interwar period, did help reduce the federal budget but it also led to the United States entering World War II with some, speaking frankly, really shitty tanks.  What you see above is the M3 Medium Tank, the Grant, which was obsolete at the start of the war and featured the terrible design flaw of many western tanks of the period, putting the heavy armament in a fixed side turret because fully rotating top turrets were hard to make work well.  The problem with this design is if your enemy happens to have a tank with a moving turret they have a better chance of lining up your non-cannon side for a kill shot.  (Note the awesome side mounted machine guns though.)



The United States did eventually hammer the issues out, with the design of the M4 Sherman, but it was made under pressure of war.  The United States also never really got into the business of real heavy tanks until World War II was nearly over, leading to some very lopsided tank engagements in 1944 through 1945 with the German army.

But I remain convinced it all hinges on the 1920 National Defense Act and how Congress shifted the focus of the United States military towards a fun-sized cost-saving military plan.

Sources:  Wikipedia articles on U.S. Tank Development History, the 1920 National Defense Act, the T7 Combat Car, the M1 Combat Car, and U.S. Army Military history journal entry on the Birth of the Armored Forces

“Bizans’ın Öteki İmparatorluğu: Trabzon” ve Trabzon'daki AYASOFYA







Bu haftasonu yolumuz iyi ki Taksim’e düşmüş. Uzun zamandır
yaşamakta olduğumuz sıradışı ülke gündeminden bunalan bünyemiz,  sanki aylardır evlerde hapis kalmışız, güneşi
ve Taksim’i ilk kez görüyormuşçasına bir etki yarattı üzerimizde.



Meydanlara akın akın gelen coşkulu kalabalığın arasında Beyoğlu’na
doğru uzanıp bir dizi sergi ve etkinliğin yanısıra müze ziyaretlerimiz de oldu. Ayrıca

Guan Zhong Liu

Guan Zhong Liu
Competition Summer 2014








EGEMENLİK KAYITSIZ ŞARTSIZ MİLLETİNDİR









Milletimiz yine ayyıldızlı bayrağımız altında toplandı! 

direndi ve kazandı!









geçit yok emperyalizme! 

ve onun işbirlikçilerine!.







*****







*****







*****







*****





Atatürk Kültür Merkezi en güzel mesajı veriyor!



Laik Türkiye Cumhuriyeti ilelebet payidar kalacaktır.









*****







YAŞASIN TÜRKİYE CUMHURİYETİ!







NE MUTLU TÜRKÜM DİYENE!







DANGEROUS CONTAINERS POSE RISK IN TALA, RESIDENTS SAY


From Cyprus Mail 23 July - article by Bejay Browne

A TALA resident is appealing to local authorities to ensure the removal of a number of metal shipping containers found close to his home, which he says store petrol-driven equipment and pose a serious threat to life. He has even written to the president.



“I am particularly concerned as there was a fire in this field just last year which quickly got out of control and caused extensive damage. The containers then appeared on the field a couple of months later,” said Tala resident Jeffrey Judge.

Judge and wife Lyn said they are both worried that the summer heat coupled with the building up of petrol fumes inside the container could lead to an explosion. Lyn said that if a similar fire occurred now, the outcome could be fatal.  “When a fire spreads up to your house and burns your fence as this fire did last year with us, it really hits home. Now we have these containers full of equipment filled with petrol on the field in front, I am very concerned,” she said.

Judge said that he has now written an appeal to the president to take his complaint seriously, as after months of trying to get the large industrial containers moved, nothing has happened. He said he is very concerned that petrol fumes may be building up inside the containers which are exposed to intense sun and heat on a daily basis.

The villa owner said that as no action has yet been taken to remove the industrial containers, despite assurances by the district administration that the owner was given notice to remove them, he has now written to the president, the fire services and the local community board, the ministry of the interior, the mayor of Paphos and the CTO for help. He said that the situation could quite literally, blow up at any time.  “We were getting very concerned as the temperature is going up and the containers are in direct sunlight all day long, so we wrote to them all to express our concerns and also that out that under health and safety regulations they have the power to remove the containers without the involving the owner.”

The couple also pointed out that an explosion in a residential area would have far reaching consequences for both residents and holidaymakers, as there are the many rental properties in the area.  Judge said that he believes that the three large metal containers and metal shed all house equipment or metal drums, and at least one of the drums contains ‘hazardous material.’
He said: “One afternoon there was an awful smell of gasoline and my wife and I realised that someone had opened a container and it was evident that there was petrol-driven equipment being stored.  I am fully aware of the dangers and health and safety requirements of storing ‘flammable liquids’ their ventilation and the affect heat can have on them.  I called the fire brigade who attended, but as the containers were locked they were unable to access them.”

Following this, a meeting took place which was attended by the owner and the fire department, but no satisfactory action was taken, he said.  In December 2015, the couple received a letter from the Paphos district office which confirmed that the owner had been told to remove the containers within three months or legal action would be taken.  The containers were never moved, he said.
“I have now learnt that the district office extended the removal of the containers until September or October as the owner has a sick relative.  They seem more concerned with this than the safety of possibly 50-plus Tala residents in the surrounding area.”

Judge said that the couple has a real fear that the containers may explode, as this has happened in other countries in the past. A fire could easily take hold, he said, and debris could be catapulted in all directions causing injury and possibly death.  “I have advised all of the authorities of the risk involved and provided reports of previous incidents where containers holding petrol-driven equipment have exploded. In Canada a container was ventilated every day according to regulations, but when a fire broke out, the external heat from the fire caused the fumes from two handsaws holding very little fuel to explode.  The debris travelled 300 metres, a fireman was killed by the flying shrapnel.”

He said that this is not an isolated case and that more countries are introducing stricter regulations in regards to the use of old shipping containers and where and how they should be stored.
“It is only July, we still have August ahead of us with more searing heat and even drier ground conditions.  Is it going to take another major incident to make people realise that ignoring the facts does not make the problem go away.”

Tala councillor Cathi Delaney said that she supports the residents’ complaints and their concerns at having to live with a ‘potential fire bomb’ in front of their property.  “The district office is pursuing the owner as he doesn’t have planning permission for the containers, but there should be concerns from the fire department, and there aren’t,” she said.

Mad at Menopause and Finding Relief

I have been mad at menopause for awhile. Just thinking about it can bring on a hot flash. Turning 50 was an exciting time and I still enjoy being in the club. The ongoing hormonal changes my body is experiencing not so much. 

I will be talking very candidly about my experience with hormone changes and my body. This is not meant to offend anyone. Going through the change is a subject many are afraid to discuss out of embarrassment, fear, or the belief it should be hush-hushWe have come too far to continue this way of thinking. Health involves discussing all things relating to the human body and aging.

Hormone Challenges

I have been frantically researching hormone imbalance for a few years now. I have tried supplementation, herbals, transdermal creams, and natural moisturizers attempting to restore balance in my body. 

I am very aware of foods that help with hormone imbalance and eat my share of raw pumpkin seeds and watermelon. I also exercise consistently which is another way to help with the stresses of hormone imbalance.

Some women may sail right through without a hitch in the get along, but not this girl. Through research, I have discovered I'm not alone and there are plenty of women suffering from menopause symptoms. 

I began experiencing night sweats years ago, which I easily managed with a transdermal OTC progesterone cream. That seemed to be the biggest drag during my peri-menopausal time. However and for a few years, my periods took on a life of their own. Everything became unpredictable. I didn't know from one month to the next if I was in full menopause. 

According to my doctor, not having a cycle for one year would be the indicator of being in true menopause. I enjoy my gynecologist and have to say she is easy to talk to. I respect her opinion and am able to share my desire to go through this process as natural as possible. The thing about most western medicine doctors is the non-support of bio-identical hormones. Also, they're generally not covered by insurance. So be prepared for such roadblocks. Don't be afraid to be yourself and cover every concern with your doctor.

Let's Talk About Menopause

Menopause has been a thief of my womanhood. It has plagued me with sleepless nights, hot flashes, frequent urinary tract infections (UTIs), and the worst part - a broken ya-ya. My frustration has become a motivation to work very hard at making the best decisions for me and my body. 

I'm sure many women can relate to what I am sharing. Hopefully, this Blog will stimulate comments so we can all support and share what has worked or not worked. We can no longer hide our adverse menopause symptoms. As women, it's important to be brave, embrace who we are, what we're going through, and create a voice for answers. 

Menopause Sucks

The dreaded hot flash comes at all hours of the day and night. For some reason, I'm bothered most at night. It's so frustrating not to be able to get a full night's sleep. This alone can really put me on edge. I have discovered the best remedy is sleeping under a light sheet with one leg covered and one leg exposed. I also keep the ceiling fan going which seems to help. 

Enjoying a glass of wine in the evening will trigger a hot flash. It will continue to haunt me during sleep time with dreaded night sweats. I have found it's important to stay away from the triggers. 

What has seemed to help my menopause symptoms is Maca Root, recommended by my gynecologist. Maca is an herbal I mix in a green shake each day. Before using maca root, I put in the necessary research of the pros and cons and decided to give it a go. 

What I'm sharing has worked and not worked for me. It's important for each woman to be your own health care advocate. You should not try any supplement without reviewing clinical research and solid evidence to support health claims. Don't take my word as gospel. My body is different than yours and may respond differently to herbs like maca root. My share is to inform and motivate you to start your own journey of research.  

Other Menopause Symptoms

Moving on to other adverse menopause symptoms: decreased sexual sensitivity, increased bladder discomfort, urinary tract infections (UTIs), and vaginal dryness (what I like to call the broken ya-ya).  Talk about the worst of the worst and are you kidding me?! This has got to be the most unfair situation ever as sex is a very important part of a healthy marital relationship. 

As women, it's important to feel confident about our bodies and our abilities. We shouldn't feel guarded about sex because our minds get so focused on things like: will I orgasm? am I too dry? will it hurt too much? what's he thinking? The list is really endless. How can we be in the moment when all that mental noise is going on? 

Personally, I refuse to be a woman on the edge with the inability to get over the fence and I'm referring to orgasm here. I enjoy this part of my married life and research focused on this topic has been very thorough. I have discovered a new vaginal suppository containing coconut oil and vitamin E. This magic stuff works better than most of the OTC products out there. I use ½ suppository daily which keeps me naturally moisturized for the day and into the evening. 

My goal is to prevent vaginal atrophy and yes this is what occurs during menopause. In laymen's terms, the vagina starts shrinking and drying up like a prune. The 'do not disturb' sign has clearly landed. I refuse to allow any such nonsense to happen and am fighting for my sexual right as a woman and wife.

Decreased sensitivity during sex can also occur as the body no longer carries adequate blood supply to the vaginal tissue and clitoris. Research sent me to L-arginine supplementation which is an amino acid naturally occurring in your body. Studies have shown L-arginine to help with blood supply and flow to the sex organs. Well, this turned out to be a huge waste of my time. I can be prone to cold sores and updated research lead me to discover L-arginine stimulates the virus causing cold sores. I tossed the bottle in the trash and never looked back. Thank goodness I also keep a supply of Lysine, an immunity boosting amino acid that works to prevent cold sores. I increased the dose to counteract the negative side effects of the L-arginine.   

Menopause and UTIs

Another unfortunate menopause-related problem that occurs with me has been severe bouts of urinary tract infection (UTI) symptoms. The discomfort can wake me in the middle of the night and cause me to curl up in a fetal position. I have a low-dose antibiotic on standby when these events occur, OTC Cystex, and cranberry supplements.

I found a heating pad also helps along with OTC pain reliever like Aleve. I also began a protocol of increased water and 100% cranberry juice to flush out my system. I also supplement with D-Mannose suggested by my primary care physician. It appears to be helping.

I'm very in tune with my body and can feel a UTI early onset. So, typically I do catch it early and am able to not lose too much time or days off work. The night may suck getting the symptoms calmed down, but once manageable, I can function pretty well at work and in general. 

Menopause and Hormone Replacement Therapy

I have also looked into HRT (hormone replacement therapy), and currently researching bio-identical hormones. Bio-identicals are hormone closely related to our own body production and administered transdermally. I have been using bio-identicals for quite some time now and have experienced significant relief.

I have decided not to take any systemic estrogen by mouth in order to minimize cancer risk. I don't want the hormone to metabolize directly through my liver and into my bloodstream. The incidence of cancer is greater with such therapy so this door is forever closed for me. 

I am also trying a vaginal insert pill of very low dose estrogen. This is localized to the vaginal tissues and helps plump up and restore natural vaginal lubrication and reduce the incidence of UTIs. I even had doubts and fears regarding cancer with the vaginal insert. After a discussion with both western medicine and natural path doctors, I felt confident to move forward with the less messy vaginal pill estrogen insert.  

Online research also reduced my fears, and I am willing to give it a try for a few months. I'm hoping for a positive outcome.  I will need to report back with my personal findings. I do welcome feedback from women, or husbands whose wives are currently using vaginal insert low estrogen and how it has been helpful or not. 



Menopause Support

I have had many discussions with women going through menopause which is helpful and supportive. It can feel like such a desperate and frustrating time not knowing the best course of action to take. It feels scary to possibly subject ourselves to cancer or other diseases in the process of discovery. 

It can seem unfair very little clinical studies on menopause and women’s dysfunction have been conducted. Further research would provide more options, and allow women to feel more confident in methods to improve menopause symptoms. 

I hope my personal share of the subject has been helpful. You are not alone in your struggle and frustration. Keep up the research and find what works best for you and your body.

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