Lunar New Year 2022: Millions start celebrating

Chinese New Year.

Millions of people start celebrating the beginning of the Lunar New Year on 1 February. This year marks the change from the Year of the Ox to the Year of the Tiger.

A man makes an offering of joss sticks at a temple in Hong Kong
A man makes an offering of joss sticks at a temple in Hong Kong
Spring Festival lights in the city of Handan, China's northern Hebei province. Photo: 30 January 2022
Festive street lights have drawn crowds in China’s Handan city, in the northern Hebei province
A dragon dance troop visits a restaurant in Chinatown in Bangkok, Thailand
A dragon dance troop visits a restaurant in Chinatown in Bangkok, Thailand
A boy holding candles in Phnom Penh, Cambodia
A boy holds candles in Phnom Penh, Cambodia
A person cracks an egg on a tiger sculpture for blessings at a Chinese temple in Phnom Penh, Cambodia
A person cracks an egg on a tiger sculpture for blessings at a Chinese temple in Phnom Penh, Cambodia
Cai Shen Ye, the God of Fortune, walks around the Kapasan Chinese village in Surabaya, Indonesia
Cai Shen Ye, the God of Fortune, walks around the Kapasan Chinese village in Surabaya, Indonesia
Performers play instruments in Yokohama, Japan
Performers play instruments in Yokohama, Japan
A man prays in Palembang, Indonesia
A man prays in Palembang, Indonesia

BBC

Australian Road Trains make hauling Cattle very efficient  

A road train or land train is a trucking vehicle of a type used in remote areas of Argentina, Australia, Mexico, the United States, and Canada to move freight efficiently. The term road train is most often used in Australia. In the United States, the terms triplesturnpike doubles, and Rocky Mountain doubles are commonly used for longer combination vehicles (LCVs). A road train has a relatively normal tractor unit, but instead of towing one trailer or semi-trailer, it pulls two or more of them.

Australia has the largest and heaviest road-legal vehicles in the world, with some configurations topping out at close to 200 tonnes (197 long tons; 220 short tons). The majority are between 80 and 120 t (79 and 118 long tons; 88 and 132 short tons).

Double (two-trailer) road train combinations are allowed in most areas of Australia, and within the environs (albeit limited) of Adelaide, South Australia and Perth, Western Australia. A double road train should not be confused with a B-double, which is allowed access to most of the country and in all major cities.

Here is one rolling through a flooded road

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Triple (three-trailer) road trains operate in western New South Wales, western Queensland, South Australia, Western Australia and the Northern Territory, with the last three states also allowing AB-quads (B double with two additional trailers coupled behind). Darwin is the only capital city in the world where triples and quads are allowed to within 1 km (0.62 mi) of the central business district (CBD). Tasmania and Victoria do not allow the operation of road trains on any of their roads. Victoria had previously allowed double road trains to operate around Mildura for the vintage grape harvest.

Strict regulations regarding licensing, registration, weights, and experience apply to all operators of road trains throughout Australia.

Road trains are used for transporting all manner of materials: common examples are livestock, fuel, mineral ores, and general freight. Their cost-effective transport has played a significant part in the economic development of remote areas; some communities are totally reliant on regular service.

The multiple dog-trailers are unhooked, the dollys removed and then connected individually to multiple trucks at “assembly” yards when the road train gets close to populated areas.

When the flat-top trailers of a road train need to be transported empty, it is common practice to stack them. This is commonly referred to as “doubled-up” or “doubling-up”. See illustration. Sometimes, if many trailers are required to be moved at one time, they will be triple-stacked, or “tripled-up”.

Higher Mass Limits (HML) Schemes are now piloting in all jurisdictions in Australia, allowing trucks to carry additional weight.

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Road trains arrives at Helen Springs Cattle Station, north of Tennant Creek NT.

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The cattle are loaded onto the road train for their journey to Longreach QLD.

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The Road Train then leaves on its long trip.

Interesting statistics.    
*There are 17 trucks with 3 trailers and 2 decks per trailer; that’s 102 decks of cattle.

*Approximately 28 cattle per deck; A total of 2,856 head of cattle. 
*The cattle will weigh approximately 500kg each (1102.3 lbs.) 
*The sale price for cattle at Longreach is approx. 165c/kg (75c/lb.) 
*Each animal will therefore be sold at $825. 
*Total revenue from this analysis is $2.356.200 
*TYRES; Each truck has 2 front and 8 rear tyres, first trailer has 12 tyres and is dollied to the truck.

*2nd & 3rd trailers have 8 tyres at the front and 12 at the rear, that’s 20 tyres each. 
*Each truck has 62 tyres, that’s a total of 1.054 on the road. A lot of tyres!!!

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Australian cattle at stockyards in Rockhampton, Queensland.

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Week in pictures: 15 – 21 January 2022

BBC

Ash blankets the Tongan island of Nomuka
Ash blankets the island of Nomuka after an underwater volcano erupted about 40 miles (64km) north of Tonga’s capital Nuku’alofa. The Hunga Tonga-Hunga Haʻapai volcano sent a tsunami towards the Pacific island nation and was heard as far away as the US.
Commuters on London's Jubilee Line
Commuters travel on the London Underground after government advice to work from home was ended in England. Prime Minister Boris Johnson also announced that face coverings in public places and Covid passports would no longer be compulsory in England from 27 January.
A man pours ice-cold water over himself in Tokyo
A man pours ice-cold water over himself during a purification ritual at Kanda Myojin shrine in Tokyo, Japan. The coming-of-age ceremony welcomes 20-year-olds into adulthood, and honours and pays homage to Daikoku, the deity of fortune.
A man tries to start the engine of a school bus in Scarborough, Canada
A man tries to start the engine of a school bus after heavy snowfall in Scarborough, Ontario, Canada.
A dog is blessed by a priest in Madrid
A dog is blessed by a priest at the Church of San Anton in Madrid, Spain. The annual tradition marks the feast day of San Anton, the patron saint of animals, and is celebrated throughout the country.
The Wolf Moon rises in Cheshire
The first full Moon of 2022 rises over Mow Cop Folly, in Cheshire. Often referred to as the “Wolf Moon”, it is thought that the name refers to the time of year when wolves are more vocal, ahead of the February breeding season.
People throw printed money in the air at a pop-up museum in Taipei
Visitors throw printed money in the air while getting their photos taken at the Gaki Hip exhibition in Taipei, Taiwan. Interactive installations featuring everyday objects – such as bubble tea, claw-machines and pineapples – aim to encourage visitors to reconsider the definition of Taiwanese culture.
People jump into at pool in Ethiopia
Ethiopian Orthodox worshippers jump into the pool at Fasilides Bath during the celebration of Timkat, the Ethiopian Epiphany, in the city of Gondar.
The Clavie, a burning barrel packed with tar-soaked sticks fixed on the top of a pole in Burghead, Scotland
The Burning of the Clavie ceremony takes place at Doorie Hill in Burghead, Scotland. The centuries-old local tradition, in which a burning barrel packed with tar-soaked sticks is set alight, is usually held on 11 January, but was rescheduled until after restrictions on outdoor events were lifted by the Scottish government.

Horse Filmed Running Between Two Trains in Egypt

A wild video out of Egypt shows a horse running along the narrow gap between two trains as one of the locomotives speeds beside it to the astonishment of passengers watching the surreal scene unfold. The hair-raising moment reportedly occurred near the village of Manqbad earlier this month and was captured on video by one of the amazed witnesses. The jaw-dropping footage begins people on the train leaning out their windows and trying to persuade the horse to move away from the tracks as they approach another train that is parked perilously beside them up ahead.

Their urgent cries turn panicked when the daring creature briefly disappears into the darkness between the two locomotives. Moments later, they are amazed to see that the horse is now furiously galloping within the narrow gap between the moving and stationary train. As the death-defying dash lasts for several worrisome seconds in which the slightest misstep could be a disaster for the animal and culminate with wild cheers from the passenger when they finally pass the other locomotive and the horse is free from the predicament seemingly unscathed.