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Weather Cape Town

January 19, 2012 by · Comments Off on Weather Cape Town 

Weather Cape Town, A nurse working at a city of Cape Town Clinic in Du Noon Township collapsed on Tuesday while attending to patients in scorching temperatures.

The South African Weather Service’s Cape Town client liaison officer, Gail Linnow, said the temperature on Tuesday in the West C Coast area close to Du Noon had reached 39°C degrees.

The clinic, which has substandard ventilation, was built during the construction of RDP houses in the area and was previously used as a storage facility. A patient who had been waiting in the reception area from 8am to 12 noon, witnessed the nurse collapsing. She said that when the nurse collapsed patients had screamed for a doctor and other nurses for help.

A source working at the clinic, who opted not to be named for fear of dismissal for talking to the press media, said the clinic staff were working in “a very bad environment”. She said on Tuesday that when the nurse collapsed the waiting area was full of mothers with young children seeking medication.

She said the waiting area was a tight space with little room to move and that there were no windows, only entrance and exit doors which were kept open.

The clinic she said, served Du Noon residents as well as residents of Doornbach informal settlement.

“The building should be condemned. The roof is too low (it is a closed space). In the waiting area where patients wait there are no windows,” said the staff member.

Mayoral Committee Member for Health Lungiswa James confirmed that the Du Noon clinic building did not offer an operational environment for staff or patients.

James said when she visited the clinic in June last year and she had noticed that the clinic was very cramped and she wasn’t happy with the clinics general condition.

She said she had gone back and discussed it with the city’s executive director for health, Dr Ivan Bromfield, after which R1m was allocated from the city’s capital budget to revamp the clinic.

She said work was supposed to start last month but was delayed due to the buildings’ electrical circuitry.

She promised that the clinic would be revamped before winter this year.

“The building is not in good condition. We need to do something about it and we will sort it out,” she said

Clifton Beaches, Cape Town

January 19, 2012 by · Comments Off on Clifton Beaches, Cape Town 

Clifton Beaches, Cape Town, Clifton is an affluent suburb of Cape Town, South Africa. It is an exclusive residential area and is home to some of the most expensive real estate in South Africa, with dwellings nestled on cliffs that have sweeping views of the Atlantic Ocean.

The area has a set of 4 beaches which are frequently used destinations for both locals and tourists. The beaches, which are named from 1st to 4th, are separated by falls of granite boulders and have almost pure white granitic sand. The four beaches of Clifton are one of the few areas well protected from the notorious south-easterly wind, which has a great deal to do with its popularity with bathers. A fifth beach, before First Beach, called Moses Beach (so-called because of the papyrus plants that grow along it), appears and disappears as the sand is washed in and out with the seasons. The water, although chilly (12-16 °C), plays host to many watersports, mostly surfing, both board and body. The strongest surf is at First, diminishing to Fourth, where it is the weakest. Fourth beach (to the South), is the most populated and glamorous venue; attracting families. Yachts anchor off Fourth beach, especially on summer weekends. Third beach attracts gay men. Second beach is populated by students playing beach volleyball and beach bats. First beach, to the north, the smallest beach, draws a mixed crowd of locals and surfers (although Beach Bat tournaments have been held frequently here, with the current champions being team “PE to CT”, consisting of Galia D and Jason G). Clifton Beach was noted as one of Discovery.com’s best beaches by region.

Clifton’s 4th beach has also been awarded the Blue Flag award in recognition of its environmental, safety and tourist standards.

The small size of the properties on which bungalows are built between Fourth and Second beaches is attributable to the fact that the area was laid out by the City of Cape Town for returning soldiers who had fought in World War I. The original bungalows, now all but replaced by new structures, were built from the packing cases that conveyed imported motor cars during the 1920’s and ’30’s. Narrow flights of stairs run between Victoria Road and the various beaches. These houses now fetch very high prices on the housing market, despite being only able to be reached by stairs, and, in most cases, having no garaging.

Clifton was rated as one of the Top Ten Beaches by the cable and satellite television network Discovery Travel Channel in 2003 and 2004 and has received Blue Flag status. In 2005 and 2006 it was rated by Forbes.com at number 8 in the Top 10 Topless beaches in the World.

An interesting feature of Clifton’s 4 beaches involves the water temperatures and annual denudation and re-deposit of the bay’s sugar-white sands, although for the most part protected in the ‘wind shadow’ of Lion’s Head mountain that stands behind Clifton (on its Eastern side).

The strong prevailing south-east wind of summer (October to April), being off-shore, moves the warmer top layer of water out of the bay – with the result that a compensating strong inflow of icy cold water is set up into the bay. This tends to make water temperatures in summer dip to their lowest levels – sometimes below 10 C. It also has the effect of re-depositing sand (stripped in winter) onto the beaches, so that by late summer, Clifton’s beaches are at their widest, allowing for easy pedestrian movement along the waterline, from beach to beach.

By contrast, winter’s howling north-west gales drive warm surface-water into the bay, setting up a compensating outflow of water along the bottom. This water movement tends to cause the bay (and most of the adjacent Atlantic Seaboard) to fill with relatively warm water (10 – 20°C) during winter – but also strips the sand from the beaches, causing temporary beach erosion that exposes the granite boulder headlands that define the beaches. This peculiarity often startles those unaccustomed to the regular cycle; during these periods, city officials have been known to petition to have sand dumped on the Clifton shore to rectify what they perceive as a defect. But, each summer, Clifton repairs itself with new sand.

Clifton has had at least two separate shark attacks:

1) During 1942, Johan Christian Bergh was attacked by a shark 30 meters off of 4th beach. Mr. Bergh’s body was never recovered. Witnesses report seeing a 6 meter great white shark swim along the surf’s backline and take Mr. Bergh in two rapid attacks. The attacks were so swift that Bergh did not have a chance to emit a sound – consequently, few witnessed the event.

2) On Saturday 27 November 1976, Jeff Spence, an 18-year old submariner in the S.A. Navy was attacked by a 3.5 meter great white while treading water 100m from 4th beach. Mr. Spence suffered significant trauma to the left side of his torso – with deep punctures and gouges back and front. Being an extremely hot day, no fewer than 6 doctors were on the beach at that time, and, together with the efforts of volunteer lifesavers from Clifton Lifesaving Club, Spence survived and was airlifted to hospital where he made a full recovery.

The attacks notwithstanding, shark sightings are extremely rare in Clifton and on the Atlantic coast in general. Most supposed sightings turn out to be seals or sunfish.

Duquesne Light

September 23, 2010 by · Comments Off on Duquesne Light 

Duquesne Light, A construction crew in Oakland hit an underground power line and caused a series of small explosions in the afternoon, leaving a swath of the area without electricity for several hours.

No one was injured. Officials closed the Fifth Avenue between vessels Avenue and Robinson Street near Carlow University as a precautionary measure while they secured a local line of natural gas had not been broken, and said fire Battalion Chief Robert Cieskolski Pittsburgh.

Duquesne Light spokesman Joseph Vallario said about 1,500 customers were without power in Oakland for nearly three hours.

A small backhoe contractor was finishing the preparations to demolish the old Three Rivers Health & Fitness Center, when it hit the 23,000-volt power line around 2:30 pm, causing three flashes explosives, according to crew Duquesne Light. A gas line owned by 6 inches Peoples Natural Gas was not affected.

Michael Oyler, 22, was in her second floor apartment on Robinson Street when he heard the first explosion. He looked out and saw the other two.

“It looked like a fireball or a big spark,” he said.

Carlow canceled a banquet for 4 pm at St. Agnes, through Fifth Avenue at the site of the explosion due to road closures and emergency vehicles. First year students had just finished a day of community service around the city, but were downloaded from the buses on Fifth Avenue and instructions to go home instead.

“With all this, unfortunately, I do not think we should bring everyone back here,” said spokeswoman Louise Sciannameo Carlow University.

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