Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Posting By The Palace


 Whether you parlez vous Francais ou no, you might be able to put a make on this Mercure sign. Yep, that's a hotel. And that's me striking a not-so-medieval French pose in the 14th-Century town of Avignon.
 
 This is Day Two for us on a special-access tour of French nuclear facilities, all of them run by one of the world leaders in nuclear energy AREVA. In fact, the French company bills itself as the only fully-integrated nuclear company in the entire world. 

 Rare air, indeed.  And CO2-free air as well, so to speak, since nuclear power generates electricity without producing significant CO2 emissions. That's the major selling point for proponents in the U.S right now, including some very big names in Congress (John McCain, among them). 

 If The President gets his way and we implement a cap-&-trade system to limit our carbon emissions, the nuclear option for power generation could become more attractive than ever. Especially interesting, given that last month was the 30th anniversary of the partial core meltdown at Three Mile Island.

 Photojournalist Ian McAllister and I visited nuclear sites in five French towns last week, sites that represent various stages in the nuclear energy production process. Stick around, and I'll show you what we saw. Unusual sights inside plants, impressive scale of reactor components, and occasional unsettling proximity to potentially dangerous material.

 As for our stay at The Mercure in Avignon? Well, you're looking at my final few minutes there. I'm standing/working about 50 yards from Les Palais de Papes, the 14th Century home of the Avignon Papacy as an alternate to Rome.

 Want more details? Try this site: http://www.palais-des-papes.com/anglais/index.html. We arrived in town after the palace closed for the day and left before it opened the following morning, so I have little to reference about the Les Palais. Other than Le Mutardier across the square has some creative dishes.

Monday, April 6, 2009

A Tiger and His Tale

 This is the tale of Samuel, an up-and-coming Northern Virginia Tiger Cub clawing for his next badge. That's him between me and Susan, the only one of us not wearing eye concealer.

 Well, Samuel needed to meet his scouting communication requirement. And since his dad Tim and I have an Oklahoma connection, Samuel tapped us. So the whole family, Samuel's three younger siblings included, spent an afternoon at the Clean Skies TV studios watching our team in action. Personally, I think Samuel's mom deserves a merit badge of her own for keeping all the youngsters entertained and occupied during the newscast.

 He's only six, but I get the feeling Samuel has "Eagle Scout" written all over him. No pressure there, huh, Tim?