Posts Tagged ‘water’

Homeopathic sleeping pills

Monday, January 17th, 2011

A couple of hours back, I took 10 pills of the homeopathic sleeping “medicine” called Viasedal, markeded in Norway by Norges NaturmedisinSentral AS (Norwegian Nature medicine sentral inc).

Viasedal

these 10 oddly tasting little things constitutes a 500% dose of sleeping pills, yet I’m unsurprisingly very much awake, and will of course stay that way until midnight or so.

What is homeopathy?

To sum it up, homeopathy is the belief that what makes you sick, also makes you well. But only if you take it in ridiculously tiny doses.
Example: You’re having trouble sleeping, and since caffeine makes you NOT sleep, quite logically a tiny amount of caffeine will make you sleep.

The way you make homeopathic “medicine” is to mix 1 part caffeine with 99 parts water. Then you take out 1 part of this new mixture and put that in 99 parts of water, then that part into another 99 parts of water, and so on, and so on..

This is when homeopathy gets really fun, the more dilute (less of the active ingredient) you have, the stronger the “medicine” is.. Yes that totally makes sense. The strongest homeopathic medicine is actually so dilute that it crosses the a limit in chemistry known as Avogadro’s number, which means that not even a single molecule of the original substance is present in the concoction you are making. So you eventually end up with very expensive water.

The homeopaths say this makes perfect sense because water has magical properties unknown to science, and that “remembers” the stuff it was in contact with. The inventor (Samuel Hahnemann) called this a spirit-like healing force. Hopefully the water won’t remember all the fish poop and pollution it came into contact with while in the ocean.

Samuel "numbnuts" Hahnemann

Of course this is all bullshit, it’s completely asinine, defies even the smallest  amount of common sense, contradicts hundreds of years of research into chemistry and physics, and have been tested by science countless times, showing that taking homeopathic medicine does in no way differ from drinking water (pun intended).

Viasedal

The vial of Viasedal i got contained 50 pills, each weighing aproximately 0.35 grams.

pill weight

And the contents of this so called medicine is:

Viasedal Content

  • Calcarea phosphorica (or as normal people call it: Calcium phosphate, the stuff you get from milk).
  • Ignatia Amara (the plant Strychnos ignatia) Believed by homeopaths to help with Hysteria.
  • Arnica montana (wow, I’ve actually seen this plant outside lots of time without knowing it was magical)
  • Nux vomica (better know as the Strychnine tree, highly poisonous, at least if taken in non-homeopathic doses).
  • Jalapa (plant to help with colic and diarrhea) not sure what they’re supposed to do for sleep though.
  • Kalium carbonicum (or what scientists might call Potassium carbonate, or old school baking powder)

Now all of these are present in extremely small amounts, lets’ start with the calcium one. which says “D5″. in homeopathy this means 10% 5 times.

So in a 0.35 gram pill there should be 3.5 microgram of calcium. which is 0.003% of the daily recommended calcium intake.

The other ingredients are listed at 4C, this means 1% 4 times (in other words, 1% of 1% of 1% of 1% of X)

In other words, each pill should have 3.5 nanograms* (1 nanogram is one billionth of a gram) of the ingredients listed above.

To put that in perspective, if you ate 857* of these pills, the ingredients would in mass equal a single grain of sand.

The pill also consists of 0.000000005%* active ingredients (the ingredients above).

UPDATE:
*I finally got the amount of active ingredients in each pill from the supplier/producer:
Even though each pill weigh 0.35 gram, less than 0.035 grams is actually the diluted calcium “medicine”, the rest is just mostly inert pill material. So all numbers above are 10 times as high as they should, which means you would need 8570 of these pills to make up a grain of sand in active ingredients. each pill has 0.35 nanograms of the ingredient.

Why??

Why am I wasting my time eating “medicine” that obviously does not work?
Just trying to do my part, showing people that it does not work!

The belief in homeopathy actually kills people by preventing them from getting real medicine. Luckily homeopathy is not very wide spread in Norway, but some pharmacies like “Apotek Løven” at Byhaven in Trondheim promotes this crap

Apotek Løven

I’ll be eating the rest of my 40 pills on February 5th, as part of the 10:23 campaign, a UK based initiative (where Homeopathy is widely used). So along with thousands of other skeptical, scientifically minded people all over the world, I’ll be eating a bunch of placebo pills.

“Homeopathy, there’s nothing in it”

The Infrared Thermometer

Monday, May 17th, 2010

I just got this neat gadget from ebay:

It can measure almost anything from -32 to 350c at a distance using a infrared sensor.

So far I’ve made some amazing scientific discoveries for mankind:

  • The surface temperature of hands and arms varies between 33-36 c
  • The perfect frying pan temperature for making veggie burgers is 220 c
  • 65-70c is the optimal temperature a slice of pizza
  • A sleeping ferret only has a temperature of 28c, thanks to good insulating fur
  • The thermometer can be used to detect sleeping ferrets (there are lots of blankets in the living room)
  • The mean temperature difference between the floor and ceiling in my apartment is 2.2c
  • Driving at 80 km/h on a motorcycle a cold spring night gives your legs a surface temperature of 16 c (full riding gear).
  • The paint from a can of spray paint (the kind used for cars/motorcycles) is quite cold: 0-1 c
  • When using quick epoxy, the chemical reaction from mixing the base and primer makes the epoxy 35 c (in a 14 c ambient temperature).

The tapwater temperature

In an effort to prevent Stacy from using to hot water while making lemonade, I measured the temperature in 100 ml increments, showing that the water will at first have the room temperature of the kitchen, followed by the room temperature of the basement before reaching the optimal 4-5 c temperature. This took around 8 liters (or 15 seconds), but will of course vary from building to building.

Watering the ferrets

Wednesday, July 1st, 2009

Since it’s so hot outside, I set up the ferrets little swimming pool in the kitchen.

And as well all know ferrets go completely insane when they get to play with water, which resulted in some pretty interesting pictures of Pinky looking retarded:

pinky_retard2
Running around with her tongue hanging out

pinky_retard1
Rolling around grabbing her own feet while showing off all teeths :)

Sailing in Croatia

Sunday, October 12th, 2008

I got back from Croatia over a month ago just haven’t gotten around to completing this post until now :)

Me, Stacy and 2 other couples we know went to Croatia the 15th of August, and stayed there for a week.

We rented a Bavaria 36 sailboat that we lived on and used to sail around the Adriatic coast.

day 1

We started in Trogir, and after a pretty long and boring checkout from Ecos Yachting, / Nautilus Yachting,  we where on the way at around 17-18 o’clock. We had 2-3 hours of sun and made it to outside  maslinca before night came. Luckily we decided to not stop there, but sail straight for the island of Vis. There was actually a full moon when we started, but during our 7-8 hour trip there was actually a lunar eclipse :)


And while in the middle of the ocean in them middle between Maslinca and Vis, we saw the most spectacular clear sky with thousands of stars incredibly bright. None of us had ever seen the stars so clear and bright before, and it was quite the sight :)

We arrived sometime after midnight, and anchored up in a cove, right outside the small town of Komiza.

day 2
We started pretty early and headed out to the island of Bisevo, which is around 1 hour away from where we spent the night. There we anchored up outside ‘the blue cave’ where we all went inside with the dinghy to see the cave light up with blue light, reflected from the bottom of the cave trough a submarine opening in the mountain.


We then sailed to Vela Luca, where we anchored up inside the harbor, and went into town in the dinghy (special thanks to our dinghy-pilot Andreas) :)

While in Vela Luca the dingy once ran out of fuel, and once got a plastic bag stuck in the propeller, and waves made sure nobody got ashore dry :D

day 3
We started out pretty late (which in retrospect we should not have done), and set sail for Hvar..
“The sea was angry that day”, 24 m/s wind, and some waves. This of course led to the dingy tearing away (damn you, cheap Croatian rope!!). Anyway, we got a hold of it after a while and could sail onwards to Hvar.

When we got to Hvar the damn harbor was filled up, so we had to anchor up somewhere. We tried one place but had to move to a better place, it was extremely dark, so judging distance was really hard.
Also the navigation lights where out (the light bulb was toast, as water seemed to have found it’s way into the lamp), but we finally found a place to anchor up.

Seeing that we’re in a 150’000$ boat and sharp rocks where around 50 meters away. We found it best to play safe and have someone on guard in the night. I remember being a bit tired, playing Mahjong on the Nintendo DS and bats where flying around the boat… (It turns out they were actually swallows, but they sounded like bats! I should have asked about their unladen airspeed velocity)

day 4

We went into the ACI marina outside Hvar pretty early, We did some bathing on a exceptional clear beach on the same island, and got some snorkeling done. We took the taxiboat in to Hvar town and I have absolutely no recollection of what we did there. I do remember that a bunch of noisy swedes had a hell of a party in the marina that night.

day 5

We went to Split, and having learned from previous mistakes we hit the harbor pretty early and got a nice spot. We went bathing and then went into Split for some shopping.

day 6
We sailed from Split and went back to Trogir where we started the trip.

day 7

We sailed out from trogir and anchored up, on the northern shore about 30 minutes out from Trogir. Here we did lots of bathing, played miniature golf (I won :D ) drove water jets and a banana boat (warning climbing up on a banana boat after you’ve been swimming alot and got tired arms sucks).

We then filled up the boat with disel, went back to the harbour for checkout. And took a cab to the airport for the flight back to Trondheim.

The water cooled ferret bed

Wednesday, July 30th, 2008

Seeing that my homemade air conditioner was not powerful enough to cool down the living room (it only had 2000 of the 14’000 required BTU/H), I took the copper coil off the fan, and turned it into a water cooled bed for the ferrets :)

The bed holds a comfortable 16-18 degrees Celsius.

This is nice for the little weasels, seeing they can’t sweat to get cooler.

Homemade airconditioner

Monday, July 28th, 2008

I made a sort of Homemade air conditioner today.

It’s based of a powerful fan (150 w, sounds like a large aircraft) and 5 meters of copper tubing in a coil mounted on the fan. Cold water (around 10 degrees Celsius) goes trough the copper tube at around 2 liters per minute.

I also added strips of 0,2 mm thick copper plating to help disperse the heat.

I measured it’s cooling capacity today at around 2000 BTU/H, but I’m going to reserve judgment until tomorrow (it will be around 30 degrees Celsius, just like today).

It’s super ultra weasel happy summer bading time!!

Saturday, July 5th, 2008

Holy crap, it’s like 30 degrees outside.. And we all know what that means?
Well at least I do.. It means the apartment will smell like wet weasels.

For those of you who have never experienced the smell of a soaking wet Mustelidae or other small carnivorous mammal, it smells GREAT! It’s like a party in your nose, and everyone is invited.

We bought this sandbox/mini pool from Toys’R'Us last year, and have been using it as a sandbox for the ferrets for a while, however the last months it’s been filled with blankets, tubes, toys and stuff.

We had a plastic pool before, however we we’re afraid to use it at our new place as it is not hard plastic like the new one..
Even at our old place using the pool was not for the faint of heart, seeing that at any second the pool could have a IMMINENT STRUCTURAL FAILURE which would result in about 100 liters of water exploring every square cm of our relatively small apartment. But now that we actually own the apartment and have hardwood floors, it’s better to stay on the safe side.

Even Buffy, who never even tried bathing before jumped right in and had a great time :)

Summer time

Thursday, June 21st, 2007

It’s officially summer. Me, Stacy and two friends went ocean kayaking today, just for an hour or so by the docks. And it was pretty nifty, I might join the kayak club to get free access to a ocean kayak, but the security course I have to take first probably wont be held again until Autumn :(

In other news:

  • Hopefully Nemi will be getting a new friend in 44 days (+ 6-8 weeks).
  • I started to play WOW again (lvl62 priest FTW)
  • I’ve not eaten any meat for 5 months
  • I got a new sweeet monitor (Syncmaster 22″ widescreen)
  • I won 2 out of 4 dungeons & dragons miniatures games in one sitting (new record :) )
  • I watched all of Stargate (just waiting for season 4 of atlantis to start now)
  • Almost done watching Battlestar Galactica Season 3 (Damn the end of season 2 and start of season 3 was totally insane)
  • I started watching Dexter, which is pretty good so far