View allAll Photos Tagged Verification

SAL chemist preparing dissolved uranium samples for measurement. Seibersdorf Analytical Laboratory, Seibersdorf, Austria. 1 June 2006

 

Photo Credit: Dean Calma/IAEA

IAEA Director General Yukiya Amano providing a media briefing at the Vienna International Airport (Austria), after his return from his mission to Tehran (Iran), 12 Nov 2013.

 

Far right: Mr. Cornel Feruta, IAEA Chief Coordinator.

 

Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA

DRC Kinshasa 28th of November 2011. Elections Day, Voting Day and Ballots counting. MONUSCO / Myriam Asmani

Gamma-dose rate measurement on the surface of the ISO-20 foot transport container. Read more here www.iaea.org/newscenter/news/2013/vietnamheu.html

 

Photo Credit: Sandor Tozser / IAEA

Cancer continues to be a major public health problem in Albania. The University Medical Centre “Mother Teresa” in Tirana, supported by the IAEA for the past decade, is the only public hospital that provides radiation therapy treatment in the country.

 

Verifying patient images for before radiotherapy treatment. Tirana, Albania. 17 July 2018

 

Photo Credit: Alejandra Silva / IAEA

Closing the TUK-145/C transport package. Read more here www.iaea.org/newscenter/news/2013/vietnamheu.html

 

Photo Credit: Sandor Tozser / IAEA

So, I'm running sync from Etsy to our "bear counter", using the fabulous Etsy API. Thing is that a single request can last only about 30 seconds, so in order to overcome that you have to come up with some smart chunking techniques for those busy days.

The ability to view logs online is also worth a million

Lifting the VPVR/M package onto transport truck. Read more here www.iaea.org/newscenter/news/2013/vietnamheu.html

 

Photo Credit: Sandor Tozser / IAEA

verifications scrutineering during the 2017 Le Mans 24 hours pesage, qualify and parade on June 11 to 16 at Le Mans circuit, France - Photo Francois Flamand / DPPI

 

www.michelinmotorsport.com

The IAEA Safeguards Inspector places the secondary seal. Read more here www.iaea.org/newscenter/news/2013/vietnamheu.html

 

Photo Credit: Sandor Tozser / IAEA

Verifying trigonometric identities worksheet Today we will learn how to verifying trigonometric identities in Differential Calculus. Here are some quantities that we will verify so we will go straight to the examples.Prove the given identity given as (cotx/cosecx )*secx= 1? Solution: (cotx/cosecx )*secx= 1.

  

verifications scrutineering atmosphere during the 2019 Le Mans 24 hours pesage, on June 9 to 10 at Le Mans circuit, France - Photo Francois Flamand / DPPI

This was used, back in the day, to examine the crystaline structure of metal. Technicians used it to verify the quality of purchases, and to do post-mortem analysis of failed parts.

A health worker verifies patient information before proceeding with the vaccination at the Ospital ng Maynila (Hospital of Manila).

 

IMF Photo/Lisa Marie David

9 March 2021

Manila, Philippines

Photo ref: Philippines-Vaccination-006.jpg

 

To assess the completeness of States’ declarations under the additional protocol, inspectors may perform complementary access visits with the complementary access kit, which includes a camera, a laser distance meter, a GPS tool, a voice recorder, a flashlight, a general purpose radiation measurement system such as the HM-5, and an environmental sampling kit.

 

Photo Credit : Vincent Fournier / IAEA

Chemist at the IAEA Clean Laboratory performing chemical separation of U and Pu. IAEA Seibersdorf, Austria

 

Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA

Print: society6.com/mattmarket/The-Problem-with-Online-Quotes_Print

 

"The problem with quotes on the Internet is that it is hard to verify their authenticity." - Abraham Lincoln

  

mattmarket.com //// facebook.com/Matt.Market

Gamma-dose rate measurement on the surface of the VPVR/M package. Read more here www.iaea.org/newscenter/news/2013/vietnamheu.html

 

Photo Credit: Sandor Tozser / IAEA

The IAEA Safeguards Inspector verifies the seal. Read more here www.iaea.org/newscenter/news/2013/vietnamheu.html

 

Photo Credit: Sandor Tozser / IAEA

This vehicle is a Verification Prototype for the 2014 L494 Range Rover Sport. These prototypes were the first vehicles that were representative of under body, upper body, powertrain and electrical architecture.

 

The camouflage on this vehicle was used to protect all aspects of the new vehicle’s design and included hard panels bolted to the body to change the lines of the vehicle physically, as well as the vinyl camouflage to distort the visual appearance. Interior camouflage was also used during the VP build phase and all test engineers had to follow strict guidelines on where vehicles were driven and parked during testing to prevent close-up high resolution photographs being leaked to the media in advance of the launch.

 

The VP phase of vehicles are used to sign off all engineering aspects of a new Land Rover product, ranging from extreme events tests to assess durability to stability control development tests undertaken on the frozen lakes of Sweden, and high lateral μ work on the Nürburgring and in the sands of Dubai. (Don’t know what μ is? Neither did we! It is the Split Coefficient of Friction, often referred to as Mu, which is all to do with what happens to a vehicle when the road friction differs significantly between the left and the right wheelpath, caused by changes in road surface or things such as black ice).

 

The Dunsfold Collection

Alfold - Surrey

England - United Kingdom

June 2015

Danaus genutia/ Common Tiger

 

Danaus genutia, the common tiger, is one of the common butterflies of India. It belongs to the "crows and tigers", that is, the Danainae group of the brush-footed butterflies family. The butterfly is also called striped tiger in India to differentiate it from the equally common plain tiger, Danaus chrysippus.

 

The butterfly closely resembles the monarch butterfly (Danaus plexippus) of the Americas. The wingspan is 7 to 95 millimetres (0.28 to 3.74 in). Both sexes of the butterfly have tawny wings with veins marked with broad black bands. The female[verification needed] has a pouch on the hindwing. The margins of the wings are black with two rows of white spots. The underside of the wings resembles the upperside but is paler in colouration. The male common tiger has a prominent black-and-white spot on the underside of the hindwing. In drier regions the tawny part of the hindwing pales and approaches white in colour making it very similar to the white tiger (D. melanippus).

 

D. genutia is distributed throughout India, Sri Lanka, Myanmar and extending to South-East Asia and Australia (except New Guinea). At least in the South Asian part of its range it is fairly common, locally very common.

 

This butterfly occurs in scrub jungles, fallowland adjacent to habitation, dry and moist deciduous forests, preferring areas of moderate to heavy rainfall. Also occurs in degraded hill slopes and ridges, both, bare or denuded, and, those covered with secondary growth.

 

While it is a strong flier, it never flies rapidly or high. It has stronger and faster strokes than the plain tiger. The butterfly ranges forth in search of its host and nectar plants. It visits gardens where it nectars on the flowers of Adelocaryum, Cosmos, Celosia, Lantana, Zinnia, and similar flowers.

 

Members of this genus are leathery, tough to kill and fake death. Since they are unpleasant to smell and taste, they are soon released by the predators, recover and fly off soon thereafter. The butterfly sequesters toxins from its food plants of the family Asclepiadaceae. The butterflies also congregate with other danaiines to sip from the sap of Crotalaria, Heliotropium and other plants which provide the pyrrolizidine alkaloids which they sequester. A study in north-eastern India showed a preference to foraging on Crotalaria juncea compared to Bauhinia purpurea, Barleria cristata rosea and Nerium oleander. To advertise their unpalatability, the butterfly has prominent markings with a striking colour pattern. The striped tiger is mimicked by both sexes of the Indian Tamil lacewing (Cethosia nietneri mahratta) and the leopard lacewing (Cethosia cyane) and females of the common palmfly (Elymnias hypermnestra).

 

This butterfly lays its egg singly under the leaves of any of its host plants of family Asclepiadaceae. The caterpillar is black and marked with bluish-white and yellow spots and lines. It has three pairs of tentacles on its body. It first eats the eggshell and then proceeds to eat leaves and vegetative parts of the plant. The chrysalis (pupa) is green and marked with golden-yellow spots.

 

The caterpillar of the common tiger butterfly obtains a supply of poison by eating poisonous plants, which make the caterpillar and butterfly a distasteful morsel for predators. The most common food plants of the common tiger in peninsular India are small herbs, twiners and creepers from the family Asclepiadaceae.

 

It has some 16 subspecies; its evolutionary relationships are not completely resolved, but it appears to be closest to the Malay tiger (D. affinis) and white tiger.

verifications scrutineering atmosphere during the 2019 Le Mans 24 hours pesage, on June 9 to 10 at Le Mans circuit, France - Photo Francois Flamand / DPPI

A chemist at the IAEA's clean laboratory performing chemical separation of U and Pu. (Clean Laboratory, Seibersdorf, Austria, 12 March 2007)

 

Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA

Shipment in road ready status. Read more here www.iaea.org/newscenter/news/2013/vietnamheu.html

 

Photo Credit: Sandor Tozser / IAEA

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And I hate the fucked word verification at Blogspot.com grow up.. you are million light years from Flickr even Facebook for that matter .,,,I mean your robotic pea brained techno dudes dont know a positive blogger from a fucked positive spammer ,,

 

I have 159808 photo blogs at Flickr where all my blogs originate and I cross blog here because Blogspot is my old web presence as a blogger...

   

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Ugo Mulas was one of the greatest italian photographers. This script is taken from Verifications from the website of his fundation

 

www.ugomulas.org/

"In 1970 I began taking photographs whose subject matter was photography itself, a sort of analysis of the operations of photography aimed at identifying its basic elements and their intrinsic significance. For instance, what is a sensitive surface? Why using a telephoto or wide-angle lens? Why do you choose a certain format? Why making enlargements? What relation exists between a photograph and its caption? And so on. All fundamental subjects of every photography manual but seen from the opposite side, that is by a seasoned professional with twenty years of experience, while manuals are usually addressed to and read by beginners.

 

My digressions may spring from the typical need of self-taught people who, darkness being their starting point, want to be clear-headed about what they do, remove any doubts and they still have a sort of naivety and a great enthusiasm as to their hard-won expertise.

 

I have called this series of photos Verifications because they were meant to clear the meaning of those operations I have been repeating for years, hundred of times a day, without never stopping to consider their inherent value and always seeing only their utilitarian side. I have dedicated the first of these photographs or verifications to Niepce. A single example of his photograph has survived, a picture shot from the window of his house at Le Gras. About a hundred and fifty years have passed from that time, but for a photographer that is an already mythical age when people talked about photos made by the sun, about self-delineating natural objects which do not need the artist's hand. An age when a particularly imaginative scientist, who had no faith in his drawing skills, became convinced that, apart from the pencil, there should be another, more efficient way to catch these fleeting images, and found it. And another scientist, presenting Daguerre's invention said that pictures created themselves in the dark room.

 

A mythical age that burns out in a few years together with the dream of having found the way to eliminate the inaccurate and tendentious hand of the artist. In a few years photography becomes a big business: factories sprout everywhere, new patents are licensed almost every day. Nadar already writes with painful irony: "Photography, this wonderful invention, product of the most extraordinary minds, which inspires the most imaginative minds, and whose practice is within the reach of the worst of imbeciles".

 

Long dreamed of by its inventors as evidence of truth, regarded as a way of freeing men from the responsibility of representing truth, in a short time it swiftly took the opposite direction. Because of the blind trust everyone had in its objectivity and its mechanical impartiality, photography ended up lending itself to the most ambiguous manipulations. Photography did not give man the certainty of being able to objectively reproduce himself and the world, as Niepce and Fox Talbot may have dreamed of. It ended up, instead, favouring the small élite of painters who relieved themselves of the burden of those servile operations that represented one of the constant but more frustrating aspects of their job and that became part of the photographer's profession. Indeed the worst of them turned photographers, often with success, because the new medium was more congenial to their interests and gifts while others used photography as a model for their painting. It can happen, as in Hill's case, that no trace is left of the paintings, while only the photographs remain as evidence of their value.

 

Nowadays photography and its by-products, television and cinema, are everywhere at any time. No longer our eyes, this magic meeting point between ourselves and the world, have to do with this world, reality, nature; we see more and more through other people's eyes.

 

It may be an advantage: to see through thousands of eyes instead of only two; the question, however, is not so simple. Only very few of these thousands of eyes work autonomously following their own quest, their own vision. These eyes are, even unconsciously, connected to few minds, to precise interests, to a single power. This way, unconsciously, even our eyes instead of transmitting us true information, maybe poor and scanty but authentic, submerge us with countless visual information which are twice as bewildering because their falsity is hidden behind a sort of splendour. In the end we renounce our own vision which seems so poor in comparison with the one worked out by the professionals of visual communication. Little by little the world is no longer sky, earth, fire, and water; it is printed paper, it is full of ghosts conjured up by ever more perfect and persuasive media.

 

I know reality is more complicated and ambiguous than that. But my remarks have only one aim: to reconstruct and understand the things I was reflecting upon some years ago when I started thinking to this photograph and non photograph which is my work dedicated to Niepce. The need to clear up to myself the reason of certain declarations and refusals such as the one concerning an idea, very popular in the 1950's when I started photographing. According to this theory a photograph is not important for its truthfulness, but for the effect, the impact it can have on the viewer's mind. I believe this idea originated from a misinterpretation of some of Cartier-Bresson's words and pictures exacerbated then by a certain kind of journalism.

 

From then on, it has further degenerated not only in photo-journalism but in every field where photography has become a commercial business. An example is cinema which has turned day by day more vulgar and aggressive to meet the tastes of an audience that, like a drug addict, needs always one more dose. Some films regarded as dramatic twenty years ago, today make us almost smile. A rather different case is that of photography which, after all, works with reality as Cartier-Bresson stated presenting Images à la sauvette in 1952. "A travers nos appareils, nous acceptons la vie dans toute sa réalité" (Through our cameras, we accept life in its entirety), which is an epitome of what can be said or written about photography. He is less clear when writes that you should get closer to your subject furtively and that the photographer has always to do with fleeting moments. These sentences, read out of their context and referred to certain extreme pictures by Cartier-Bresson, may have contributed to the spread of the taste for a predatory photography. The photographer, in this case, is always in search of the most unusual and unpredictable image like a predator always in ambush and ready to snatch whatever fleeting moment, as long as it is exceptional, possibly unique and unrepeatable.

This theory certainly presents some true and attracting aspects, but I could not accept the idea of a whole life spent behind a camera waiting for this rare event to happen. Or the idea of these few dozen or hundreds of privileged moments to collect in an album or book, like a hunter putting his most important trophies on the walls of his house. I refuse this theory of the fleeting moment, because I believe that all moments are equally fleeting and the one is as good as the other. Actually I think that the less significant moment may be indeed the exceptional one. Similarly I have never liked photographing far off, exotic countries, I have seen neither China, nor India, nor Japan, nor South America, nor Lapland, nor Oceania, even if my profession has sometimes forced me to set out on some long and boring journeys. I do not want to deny the usefulness of travelling both for pleasure and on business, as long as you do not stay all the time with your eye glued to the camera. For I think that a photographer can live equally exciting and interesting adventures by merely walking between Porta Romana and Porta Ticinese, maybe exploring the flats of his own neighbours of whom we often ignore even the names. The really important thing is not the privileged moment, but to determine one' s own reality; afterwards all moments have more or less equal value. Once chosen one's own territory we could again witness the miracle of the "pictures creating themselves", because at that moment the photographer has to turn into a mere operator. This means that his intervention should be limited to the instrumental operations: framing, focusing, choosing exposure time in relation to aperture, and taking the photo at last. Here, "through our cameras, we accept life in its entirety", so even in any of its "fleeting moments", and thus we come back to that mythical time I mentioned before, a time of "self-delineating natural objects which do not need the artist's hand".

 

The photographer's task is to identify his own reality, that of the machine to record it in its entirety. Two closely connected but also different actions which remind me of certain operations typical of some 1920's artists. I think of Marcel Duchamp's ready made, of some of Man Ray's objects. In these cases the artist's intervention was altogether insignificant from the operational point of view. It consisted in fact in a conceptual identification of a reality already materialized whose mere indication was sufficient to allow it to live in 'another' dimension. Thus the object, until that time identical to thousand of others, became part of an ideal sphere forever detached from the inert world of things.

 

I think it proper now to cite some words from an article Marcel Duchamp wrote in The Blind after that, in 1917, the organisers of the first New York Salon des Indépendants refused to show the Fountain, the famous urinal by Richard Mutt (a manufacturer of medical products) sent by Duchamp. "Whether Mr Mutt made the fountain with his own hands or not has no importance; he chose it; he took an ordinary object and placed it so that its useful significance disappears under a new title and point of view; he created a new thought for that object". And what is my object dedicated to Niepce if not a ready made, with all its peculiarities? It is, as Marcel Jan writes in his book on Surrealism, "a banality which is the starting point of a series of complex developments". The unused, unexposed roll which has been only developed, fixed and printed, loses its utilitarian meaning and produces a series of reactions whose outcome is the group of photographs I gathered under the title of Verifications.

 

VERIFICATIONS

OMAGE TO NIEPCE

THE PROCESS OF PHOTOGRAPHY

THE TIME OF PHOTOGRAPHY

THE USE OF PHOTOGRAPHY

THE ENLARGEMENT

THE ENLARGEMENT

THE LABORATORY

LENSES

SUN, APERTURE AND EXPOSURE TIME

LENSES AND SPACE

CAPTION

SELF-PORTRAIT WITH NINI

END OF VERIFICATION"

'Analogue grain' On Black

This vehicle was built in January 2014 as part of the Verification Prototype (VP) Build. VP is the third phase of prototype and the first one to look like the finished product.

 

This vehicle was built as a DW12 diesel manual and was an Engine Management System calibration vehicle which was sent to Bosch, Germany for calibration of the management systems that were the responsibility of Bosch, calibration container tests for production build as well as software development activities.

 

The Dunsfold Collection

Alfold - Surrey

England - United Kingdom

June 2015

IAEA inspectors return to the DPRK after a period of absence of more than four years. Metal seals like these will be used by Agency inspectors in the country's nuclear facilities. They can show evidence of any unauthorised attempt to gain access to secured material or equipment. The IAEA returns to the North Korea to monitor and verify the shutdown of the country's nuclear facility in Yongbyon. (Vienna, Austria, 6 July 2007)

 

Photo Credit: Dean Calma/IAEA

Video cameras in their secure housings used for remote monitoring of nuclear sites. The cameras are one of several technological tools used by IAEA inspectors to carry out safeguards and verification checks around the world. (Vienna, Austria, 23 Sept 2002).

 

Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA

The roses in the People's Garden

Plan

Rosarium History - Classification

Floribunda - new color range - Casting

Tree roses - new plantings - Pests - Winter Care

Rambling Roses - fertilizing, finishes

Shrub Roses - Rose Renner - Sponsorship - variety name

The history of roses in the People's Garden

The People's Garden, located between the Imperial Palace and the ring road is famous for its beautiful roses:

1000 standard roses

4000 Floribunda,

300 rambling roses,

(Also called Rose Park) 200 shrub roses.

Noteworthy is the diversity: there are about 400 varieties, including very old plants:

1859 - Rubens

1913 - Pearl of the Vienna Woods

1919 - Jean C.N. Forestier

The above amounts are from the Federal Gardens. My own count has brought other results:

730 tree roses

2300 Floribunda

132 rambling roses

100 shrub roses

That's about 3300 roses in total. Approx. 270 species I was able to verify. Approx. 50 rose bushes were not labeled. Some varieties come very often, others only once or twice.

Molineux 1994

Rubens 1859

Medialis 1993

Swan lake 1968

Once flourished here Lilac and Rhododendron bushes

1823 People's Garden was opened with the Temple of Theseus. Then made ​​multiple extensions.

The part of today's "Rosarium" along the Ring Road was built in 1862. (Picture fence 1874)

What is so obvious to today's Vienna, was not always so: most of the beds in the People's Garden originally were planted with lilac and rhododendron.

Only after the second World War II it was converted to the present generous rose jewelry.

Since then grow along the ring side creepers, high stem and floribunda roses. On the side of Heroes Square, with the outputs, shrub roses were placed, among which there are also some wild roses.

1889 emerged the Grillparzer Monument.

(All the pictures you can see by clicking the link at the end of the side!)

Rhododendrons, output Sisi Avenue, 1930

Classifications of roses

(Wild roses have 7 sheets - prize roses 5 sheets)

English Rose

Florybunda

Hybrid Tea Rose

Rambling Rose

At the Roses in the People´s Garden are hanging labels (if they do not fall victim to vandals or for souvenirs) with the year indication of breeding, the name of breeding and botanical description:

Hybrid Tea Rose (TB): 1 master, 1 flower;

Florybunda (Flb): 1 strain, many flowers;

English Rose (Engl): mixture of old and modern varieties Tb and Flb.

Called Schlingrose, also climbing rose

Florybunda: 1 strain, many flowers (Donauprinzessin)

Shrub Roses - Floribunda - Tree roses - Climbing Roses

Even as a child, we hear the tale of Sleeping Beauty, but roses have no thorns, but spines. Thorns are fused directly to the root and can not be easily removed as spines (upper wooden containers called).

All roses belong to the bush family (in contrast to perennials that "disappear" in the winter). Nevertheless, there is the term Shrub Rose: It's a chronological classification of roses that were on the market before 1867. They are very often planted as a soloist in a garden, which them has brought the name "Rose Park".

Hybrid Tea Rose: 1 master, 1 flower (rose Gaujard )

Other classifications are:

(High) standard roses: roses are not grafted near the ground, but at a certain strain level. With that, the rose gardener sets the height of the crown.

Floribunda roses : the compact and low bushy roses are ideal for group planting on beds

Crambling roses: They have neither roots nor can they stick up squirm. Their only auxiliary tool are their spines with which they are entangled in their ascent into each other

English Rose: mixture of old varieties, hybrid tea and Florybunda (Tradescanth)

4000 Floribunda

Floribunda roses are hardy, grow compact, knee-high and bushy, are durable and sturdy

There are few smelling varieties

Polyantha classification: a tribe, many small flowers; Florybunda: a tribe, many big blossoms

New concept of color: from red to light yellow

The thousands Floribunda opposite of Grillparzer Monument shimmer (still) in many colors. From historical records, however, is indicated that there was originally a different color scheme for the Floribunda than today: At the entrance of the Burgtheater side the roses were dark and were up to Grillparzer monument ever brighter - there they were then already white.

This color range they want again, somewhat modified, resume with new plantings: No white roses in front of the monument, but bright yellow, so that Grillparzer monument can better stand out. It has already begun, there was heavy frost damage during the winter 2011/12.

Colorful roses

2011: white and pink roses

2012: after winter damage new plantings in shades of yellow .

Because the domestic rose production is not large enough, the new, yellow roses were ordered in Germany (Castor).

Goldelse, candlelight, Hanseatic city of Rostock.

Watering

Waterinr of the Floribunda in the morning at 11 clock

What roses do not like at all, and what attracts pests really magically, the foliage is wet. Therefore, the Floribunda roses are in the People's Garde poured in the morning at 11 clock, so that the leaves can dry thoroughly.

Ground sprinklers pouring only the root crown, can not be used because the associated hoses should be buried in the earth, and that in turn collide with the Erdanhäufung (amassing of earth) that is made for winter protection. Choosing the right time to do it, it requires a lot of sense. Is it too early, so still too warm, the bed roses begin to drive again, but this young shoots freeze later, inevitably, because they are too thin.

1000 Tree roses

Most standard roses are found in the rose garden.

During the renovation of the Temple of Theseus the asphalt was renewed in 2011, which was partially only a few centimeters thick, and so was the danger that trucks with heavy transports break into. Due to this construction site the entire flower bed in front had to be replaced.

Now the high-stem Rose Maria Theresia is a nice contrast to the white temple, at her feet sits the self-cleaning floribunda aspirin. Self-cleaning means that withered flowers fall off and rarely maintenance care is needed.

Pink 'Maria Theresa' and white 'aspirin' before the temple of Theseus

Standard tree rose Maria Theresa

Floribunda aspirin

The concept of the (high) standard roses refers to a special type of rose decoration. Suitable varieties of roses are not grafted near the ground, but at a certain height of the trunk. With that the rose gardener sets the height of the crown fixed (60 cm, 90 cm, 140 cm)

Plantings - Pests - Winter Care

Normally about 50 roses in the People's Garden annually have to be replaced because of winter damages and senility. Till a high standard rose goes on sale, it is at least 4 years old. With replantings the soil to 50 cm depth is completely replaced (2/3 basic soil, 1/3 compost and some peat ).

Roses have enemies, such as aphids. Against them the Pirimor is used, against the Buchsbaumzünsler (Box Tree Moth, Cydalima perspectalis) Calypso (yet - a resistance is expected).

In popular garden roses are sprayed with poison, not only when needed, but also as a precaution, since mildew and fire rose (both are types of fungi) also overwinter.

Therefore it is also removed as far as possible with the standard roses before packing in winter the foliage.

Pest Control with Poison

The "Winter Package " first is made with paper bags, jute bags, then it will be pulled (eg cocoa or coffee sacks - the commercially available yard goods has not proven).

They are stored in the vault of the gardener deposit in the Burggarten (below the Palm House). There namely also run the heating pipes. Put above them, the bags after the winter can be properly dried.

Are during the winter the mice nesting into the packaged roses, has this consequences for the crows want to approach the small rodents and are getting the packaging tatty. It alreay has happened that 500 standard roses had to be re-wrapped.

"Winter Package" with paper and jute bags

300 ambling roses

The Schlingrosen (Climbing Roses) sit "as a framing" behind the standard roses.

Schlingrose pearl from the Vienna Woods

Schlingrose Danube

Schlingrose tenor

Although climbing roses are the fastest growing roses, they get along with very little garden space.

They have no rootlets as the evergreen ivy, nor can they wind up like a honeysuckle. Their only auxiliary tool are their spines with which they are entangled in their ascent mesh.

Climbing roses can reach stature heights of 2 to 3 meters.

4 x/year fertilizing

4 times a year, the soil is fertilized. From August, but no more, because everything then still new drives would freeze to death in winter. Well-rotted horse manure as fertilizer was used (straw mixed with horse manure, 4 years old). It smelled terrible, but only for 2 days.

Since the City of Vienna may only invest more plant compost heap (the EU Directive prohibits animal compost heap on public property), this type of fertilization is no longer possible to the chagrin of gardeners, and roses.

In the people garden in addition is foliar fertilizer used (it is sprayed directly on the leaves and absorbed about this from the plant).

Finishes in the Augarten

Old rose varieties are no longer commercially available. Maybe because they are more sensitive, vulnerable. Thus, the bud of Dr. F. Debat already not open anymore, if it has rained twice.

 

Roses need to be replaced in the People's Garden, this is sometimes done through an exchange with the Augarten Palace or the nursery, where the finishes are made. Previously there were roses in Hirschstetten and the Danube Park, but the City of Vienna has abandoned its local rose population (not to say destroyed), no exchange with these institutions is possible anymore.

Was formerly in breeding the trend to large flowers, one tends to smell roses again today. Most varieties show their resplendent, lush flowers only once, early in the rose-year, but modern varieties are more often blooming.

200 shrub roses

Some shrub roses bloom in the rose garden next to the Grillparzer Monument

Most of the shrub or park roses can be found along the fence to Heroes' Square. These types are so old, and there are now so many variations that even a species of rose connoisseurs assignment is no longer possible in many cases.

The showy, white, instensiv fragrant wild rose with its large umbels near des Triton Fountain is called Snow White.

Shrub roses are actually "Old Garden Roses" or "old roses", what a time

classification of roses is that were on the market before 1867.

Shrub roses are also called park roses because they are often planted as a soloist in a park/garden.

They grow shrubby, reaching heights up to 2 meters and usually bloom only 1 x per year.

The Renner- Rose

The most famous bush rose sits at the exit to Ballhausplatz before the presidential office.

It is named after the former Austrian President Dr. Karl Renner

When you enter, coming from the Ballhausplatz, the Viennese folk garden of particular note is a large rose bush, which is in full bloom in June.

Before that, there is a panel that indicates that the rose is named after Karl Renner, founder of the First and Second Republic. The history of the rose is a bit of an adventure. President Dr. Karl Renner was born on 14 in December 1870 in the Czech village of Untertannowitz as the last of 18 children of a poor family.

Renner output rose at Ballhausplatz

He grew up there in a small house, in the garden, a rose bush was planted.

In summer 1999, the then Director of the Austrian Federal Gardens, Peter Fischer Colbrie was noted that Karl Renner's birthplace in Untertannowitz - Dolni Dunajovice today - and probably would be demolished and the old rosebush as well fall victim to the demolition.

High haste was needed, as has already been started with the removal of the house.

Misleading inscription " reconstruction"?

The Federal Gardens director immediately went to a Rose Experts on the way to Dolni Dunajovice and discovered "as only bright spot in this dismal property the at the back entrance of the house situated, large and healthy, then already more than 80 year old rose bush".

After consultation with the local authorities Peter Fischer Colbrie received approval, to let the magnificent rose bush dig-out and transport to Vienna.

Renner Rose is almost 100 years old

A place had been found in the Viennese People´s Garden, diagonal vis-à-vis the office where the president Renner one resided. On the same day, the 17th August 1999 the rosebush was there planted and in the following spring it sprouted already with flowers.

In June 2000, by the then Minister of Agriculture Molterer and by the then Mayor Zilk was a plaque unveiled that describes the origin of the rose in a few words. Meanwhile, the "Renner-Rose" is far more than a hundred years old and is enjoying good health.

Memorial Dr. Karl Renner : The Registrar in the bird cage

Georg Markus , Courier , 2012

Sponsorships

For around 300 euros, it is possible to assume a Rose sponsorship for 5 years. A tree-sponsorship costs 300 euros for 1 year. Currently, there are about 60 plates. Behind this beautiful and tragic memories.

If you are interested in sponsoring people garden, please contact:

Master gardener Michaela Rathbauer, Castle Garden, People's Garden

M: 0664/819 83 27 volksgarten@bundesgaerten.at

Varieties

Abraham Darby

1985

English Rose

Alec 's Red

1970

Hybrid Tea Rose

Anni Däneke

1974

Hybrid Tea Rose

aspirin

Florybunda

floribunda

Bella Rosa

1982

Florybunda

floribunda

Candlelight

Dagmar Kreizer

Danube

1913

Schlingrose

Donauprinzessin

Doris Thystermann

1975

Hybrid Tea Rose

Dr. Waldheim

1975

Hybrid Tea Rose

Duftwolke

1963

Eiffel Tower

1963

English Garden

Hybrid Tea Rose

Gloria Dei

1945

Hybrid Tea Rose

Goldelse

gold crown

1960

Hybrid Tea Rose

Goldstar

1966

deglutition

Greeting to Heidelberg

1959

Schlingrose

Hanseatic City of Rostock

Harlequin

1985

Schlingrose

Jean C.N. Forestier

1919

Hybrid Tea Rose

John F. Kennedy

1965

Hybrid Tea Rose

Landora

1970

Las Vegas

1956

Hybrid Tea Rose

Mainzer Fastnacht

1964

Hybrid Tea Rose

Maria Theresa

medial

Moulineux

1994

English Rose

national pride

1970

Hybrid Tea Rose

Nicole

1985

Florybunda

Olympia 84

1984

Hybrid Tea Rose

Pearl of the Vienna Woods

1913

Schlingrose

Piccadilly

1960

Hybrid Tea Rose

Rio Grande

1973

Hybrid Tea Rose

Rose Gaujard

1957

Hybrid Tea Rose

Rubens

1859

English Rose

Rumba

snowflake

1991

Florybunda

snow white

shrub Rose

Swan

1968

Schlingrose

Sharifa Asma

1989

English Rose

city ​​of Vienna

1963

Florybunda

Tenor

Schlingrose

The Queen Elizabeth Rose

1954

Florybunda

Tradescanth

1993

English Rose

Trumpeter

1980

Florybunda

floribunda

Virgo

1947

Hybrid Tea Rose

Winchester Cathedral

1988

English Rose

Source: Federal leadership Gardens 2012

Historic Gardens of Austria, Vienna, Volume 3 , Eva Berger, Bohlau Verlag, 2004 (Library Vienna)

Index Volksgartenstraße

www.viennatouristguide.at/Altstadt/Volksgarten/volksgarte....

Safeguards Clean Laboratory, IAEA Seibersdorf, Austria

 

Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA

Domestic Violence Advocates Throughout America should be outraged by this. As well as any decent human being should be also. much to the horror of the photographer these photographs as a factual documentation and demonstration / example of the brutality and violence against women are a firsthand account of what should not happen in the year 2010 or at any other time in the future. We are not in the dark ages anymore. We are in the new millennium. This brutal assault at the fists of Imed Trabelsi occured August 21, 2010 -- both the Suffolk County Long island New York District Attorney's office and the SCPD can verify this did occur and they are involved in bringing this to justice. Special thanks to SCPD Internal Affairs for their sensitivity and caring.

Verify out these precision engineering pictures:

300 SL

 

Image by andreas_krautwald

 

300 SL

 

Image by andreas_krautwald

  

Read more about 300 SL

(Source from Chinese Rapid Prototyping Blog)

Closing slide- Verify.

 

ZURB is a close-knit team of interaction designers and strategists that help companies design better (www.zurb.com).

Hoverfly at Toton Fields NR, Notts.

A chemist at the IAEA's clean laboratory performing chemical separation of U and Pu. (Clean Laboratory, Seibersdorf, Austria, 12 March 2007)

 

Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA

Smearing test on the surface of the VPVR/M package. Read more here www.iaea.org/newscenter/news/2013/vietnamheu.html

 

Photo Credit: Sandor Tozser / IAEA

Convoy on the way from Dalat Institute to a military airport outside of Ho Chi Minh City. Read more here www.iaea.org/newscenter/news/2013/vietnamheu.html

 

Photo Credit: Sandor Tozser / IAEA

Rally Raid - Dakar 2014 - Vérifications Techniques jour 01 - 02/01/2014 - Rosario, Argentine

 

www.motoracinglive.com

Tension is just right. Thickness is as it should be. Yeah, it's ready. I can let go of this blade and get onto the thread. It should support my weight.

Fixing the bottom shock absorber on the VPVR/M package. Read more here www.iaea.org/newscenter/news/2013/vietnamheu.html

 

Photo Credit: Sandor Tozser / IAEA

Plutonium Laboratory at Seibersdorf Analytical Laboratory.

 

Photo Credit: Dean Calma/IAEA

Rafael Mariano Grossi, IAEA Director General briefs the international press and media after his arrival at the Vienna International Airport. He met with Iranian officials Ali Akbar Salehi, Head of the Atomic Energy Organization of Iran and Javad Zarif, Iranian Foreign Minister during his two day official visit to the Islamic Republic of Iran. DG Grossi is accompanied by his Senior Advisor, Edgard Perez Alvan, Mark Bassett, Special Assistant to the DG for Nuclear Safety and Security and Safeguards and Massimo Aparo, IAEA Deputy Director General and Head of the Department of Safeguards. Vienna International Airport, Schwechat, Austria. 21 February 2021

 

Photo Credit: Dean Calma / IAEA

 

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