War

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
You pay too much for the Harley name and they are all foreign parts so not even made in the US any more so the hell with that. Those sure don't look like off-road tires on the bike either. The whole design is street racer style and doesn't look off-road at all to me.

I'm only 140lbs so don't need huge power and the Ural has more than enough. Cool looking rig too and about 1/3 the price and twice the mileage. Even a spare fuel can for getting back down off the mountains I'd be climbing with mine. Big trunk under that spare tire, can have two passengers or room for the groceries and/or fishing tackle with the sidecar. I'll want the enclosure for the sidecar with windshield for passenger comfort and keep the weather off my stuff. Manually engaged drive axle for the sidecar so should be able to go anywhere a horse can go. :)

Got the money sitting in the bank but it's kind of part of my inheritance and good old mom is still around and doing pretty good for being 95 this August. Probably going to outlive me but after losing one of two sisters 2 years ago she wants to go next.

View attachment 5103498 View attachment 5103500 View attachment 5103503

:peace:
https://www.harley-davidson.com/us/en/motorcycles/pan-america-1250-special.html#2022-pan-america-1250-special-010
click on the pic of one of the bikes, it goes to a video of them running on and off road...not the bike i would choose for a baja race, but it does look like it'll run off road
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Ukraine invasion: China braces for effects of global fertiliser shortage on food security

    • The war in Ukraine has fuelled a spike in fertiliser prices, which are pushing up planting costs and eating into farmers’ incomes in China, state media says

    • China, which has elevated food security to an economic priority, is largely self-sufficient in staple crops like wheat and rice, but depends on fertiliser imports
 
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printer

Well-Known Member
War in Ukraine inflates price of neon for chip-making, but it might be good for China

    • The average price of industrial-grade neon in China shot up to nearly nine times from three weeks ago

    • Before Russia’s invasion, Ukraine produced about 40 per cent of the world’s neon, while China accounted for 30 per cent
 
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Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
Ukraine invasion: China braces for effects of global fertiliser shortage on food security

    • The war in Ukraine has fuelled a spike in fertiliser prices, which are pushing up planting costs and eating into farmers’ incomes in China, state media says

    • China, which has elevated food security to an economic priority, is largely self-sufficient in staple crops like wheat and rice, but depends on fertiliser imports
A protracted war between Russia and Ukraine could damage the global fertiliser supply chain, putting pressure on grain prices and production in China during a key planting season.

The UN Food and Agriculture Organization has warned of a possible worldwide food crisis, as the war in Ukraine threatens production of key staple crops. Russia and Ukraine represent more than half of the world’s supply of sunflower oil and about 30 per cent of the world’s wheat.
China is largely self-sufficient in staple crops like wheat and rice, but the war is also driving up fertiliser prices.

More than a half of the potash – a key nutrient for major commodity crops – that China consumes each year is imported, while customs data show that nearly 53 per cent of potassium purchases last year came from Russia and Belarus, the largest and third largest suppliers to China, respectively.

Moscow earlier this month recommended suspending fertiliser exports, while Lithuania and Ukraine have already banned transit of Belarusian potash through their ports. Ukraine, a major producer of agricultural products, also banned exports of fertilisers on Saturday.

“This will definitely have some impact [on food security],” said Xu Hongcai, deputy director of the economic policy commission under the China Association of Policy Science.

“If the trade of fertilisers and grain is interrupted, how can we do spring fieldwork? How can we hold the rice bowls of our 1.4 billion population in our own hands? There will be a lot of trouble.”

The Farmers’ Daily, an official newspaper affiliated with the Chinese agriculture ministry, warned the war has fuelled a spike in fertiliser prices, which are pushing up planting costs and eating into farmers’ incomes.

“The global situation is complex, the supply of fertilisers is tight, and especially around the import of potash there is greater uncertainty,” the newspaper said in an article published on Wednesday.
The article said the war has fuelled a spike in fertiliser prices, which are pushing up planting costs and eating into farmers’ incomes.

The heightened concerns come as China’s leadership ramps up rhetoric around safeguarding food security, which has been put under pressure by the coronavirus pandemic and tensions with the West.

The importance of self-reliance in primary commodities, including grains and fertilisers, was again highlighted in the annual government work report this year.

Around 57.5 per cent of the country’s potash consumption relied on imports in 2021, a higher ratio than the 55.9 per cent figure a year earlier, but below the 59.8 per cent recorded in 2019, according to BAIINFO, a supplier of Chinese commodity market information.

In July 2020, the Chinese government integrated the country’s fertiliser reserves system to ensure domestic potash supply and reduce the impact of disasters.
The country has begun to release over 3 million tonnes of reserved nitrogen, phosphorus and compound fertilisers to help spring ploughing, according to the National Development and Reform Commission on Monday.

Last year, it restricted exports of fertilisers and excluded fertiliser producers from the list of high energy-consuming companies.

Around 57.5 per cent of the country’s potash consumption relied on imports in 2021, a higher ratio than the 55.9 per cent figure a year earlier, but below the 59.8 per cent recorded in 2019, according to BAIINFO, a supplier of Chinese commodity market information.

In July 2020, the Chinese government integrated the country’s fertiliser reserves system to ensure domestic potash supply and reduce the impact of disasters.
The country has begun to release over 3 million tonnes of reserved nitrogen, phosphorus and compound fertilisers to help spring ploughing, according to the National Development and Reform Commission on Monday.

Last year, it restricted exports of fertilisers and excluded fertiliser producers from the list of high energy-consuming companies.
good, more incentive for China to lean on putin to end shit
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Ukraine invasion: China braces for effects of global fertiliser shortage on food security

    • The war in Ukraine has fuelled a spike in fertiliser prices, which are pushing up planting costs and eating into farmers’ incomes in China, state media says

    • China, which has elevated food security to an economic priority, is largely self-sufficient in staple crops like wheat and rice, but depends on fertiliser imports
A protracted war between Russia and Ukraine could damage the global fertiliser supply chain, putting pressure on grain prices and production in China during a key planting season.

The UN Food and Agriculture Organization has warned of a possible worldwide food crisis, as the war in Ukraine threatens production of key staple crops. Russia and Ukraine represent more than half of the world’s supply of sunflower oil and about 30 per cent of the world’s wheat.
China is largely self-sufficient in staple crops like wheat and rice, but the war is also driving up fertiliser prices.

More than a half of the potash – a key nutrient for major commodity crops – that China consumes each year is imported, while customs data show that nearly 53 per cent of potassium purchases last year came from Russia and Belarus, the largest and third largest suppliers to China, respectively.

Moscow earlier this month recommended suspending fertiliser exports, while Lithuania and Ukraine have already banned transit of Belarusian potash through their ports. Ukraine, a major producer of agricultural products, also banned exports of fertilisers on Saturday.

“This will definitely have some impact [on food security],” said Xu Hongcai, deputy director of the economic policy commission under the China Association of Policy Science.

“If the trade of fertilisers and grain is interrupted, how can we do spring fieldwork? How can we hold the rice bowls of our 1.4 billion population in our own hands? There will be a lot of trouble.”

The Farmers’ Daily, an official newspaper affiliated with the Chinese agriculture ministry, warned the war has fuelled a spike in fertiliser prices, which are pushing up planting costs and eating into farmers’ incomes.

“The global situation is complex, the supply of fertilisers is tight, and especially around the import of potash there is greater uncertainty,” the newspaper said in an article published on Wednesday.
The article said the war has fuelled a spike in fertiliser prices, which are pushing up planting costs and eating into farmers’ incomes.

The heightened concerns come as China’s leadership ramps up rhetoric around safeguarding food security, which has been put under pressure by the coronavirus pandemic and tensions with the West.

The importance of self-reliance in primary commodities, including grains and fertilisers, was again highlighted in the annual government work report this year.

Around 57.5 per cent of the country’s potash consumption relied on imports in 2021, a higher ratio than the 55.9 per cent figure a year earlier, but below the 59.8 per cent recorded in 2019, according to BAIINFO, a supplier of Chinese commodity market information.

In July 2020, the Chinese government integrated the country’s fertiliser reserves system to ensure domestic potash supply and reduce the impact of disasters.
The country has begun to release over 3 million tonnes of reserved nitrogen, phosphorus and compound fertilisers to help spring ploughing, according to the National Development and Reform Commission on Monday.

Last year, it restricted exports of fertilisers and excluded fertiliser producers from the list of high energy-consuming companies.

Around 57.5 per cent of the country’s potash consumption relied on imports in 2021, a higher ratio than the 55.9 per cent figure a year earlier, but below the 59.8 per cent recorded in 2019, according to BAIINFO, a supplier of Chinese commodity market information.

In July 2020, the Chinese government integrated the country’s fertiliser reserves system to ensure domestic potash supply and reduce the impact of disasters.
The country has begun to release over 3 million tonnes of reserved nitrogen, phosphorus and compound fertilisers to help spring ploughing, according to the National Development and Reform Commission on Monday.

Last year, it restricted exports of fertilisers and excluded fertiliser producers from the list of high energy-consuming companies.
No one will care if they sell them oil and minerals in exchange for fertilizer, groceries and even consumer electronics, it won't make a whole lot of difference to the war, and will drain them of money even faster. The Chinese can be dealt with and are good at negotiating for advantage, so give them some perks and let them eventually own Vlad, that might upset some Russians enough to get rid of him. "They is a take'n over!", works for Russians too.
 
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DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
Javelin, NLAW and Stinger Missiles: A Game Changer to The Ukrainians


Defense TV
Javelin, NLAW and Stinger Missiles: A Game Changer to The Ukrainians

The FGM-148 Javelin (AAWS-M) is an American-made portable anti-tank missile fielded since 1996 to replace the M47 Dragon anti-tank missile in US service. Its fire-and-forget design uses automatic infrared guidance that allows the user to seek cover immediately after launch, as opposed to wire-guided systems, like the Dragon, which require the user to guide the weapon throughout the engagement. The Javelin's HEAT warhead is capable of defeating modern tanks by hitting them from above, where their armor is thinnest (see top attack), and is also useful against fortifications in a direct attack flight.

As of 2019, the Javelin had been used in around 5,000 successful engagements. The weapon gained significant attention as a symbol of Ukrainian resistance to the Russian invasion of Ukraine in 2022.

The Next Generation Light Anti-tank Weapon (NLAW), also known as the Main Battle Tank and Light Anti-tank Weapon (MBT LAW), and in Sweden known as the Robot 57 (RB-57), is a single-shot, fire-and-forget, shoulder fired disposable missile system. The missile is guided by calculation based on PLOS (predicted line of sight). It has its origins in a joint British-Swedish project begun in 2002 to replace Cold War-era weapons and is designed for use by infantry. The NLAW is used by the armed forces of several nations, including the United Kingdom, Finland, Luxembourg, Ukraine, and Sweden.

The FIM-92 Stinger is a man-portable air-defense system (MANPADS) that operates as an infrared homing surface-to-air missile (SAM). It can be adapted to fire from a wide variety of ground vehicles and helicopters (Air to Air Stinger). Developed in the United States, it entered service in 1981 and is used by the militaries of the United States and 29 other countries. It is principally manufactured by Raytheon Missile Systems and is produced under license by Airbus Defence in Germany and by ROKETSAN in Turkey, with 70,000 missiles produced.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
'Russian forces have struggled greatly,' says former NATO commander

Retired U.S. Gen. Wesley Clark, the former supreme allied commander of NATO, shares his assessment of Russia and Ukraine's military forces and what the Western world needs to do.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
They can push them back, if special forces can cut them off and blow the many small bridges that you don't see on the maps unless you zoom in real close, only the main rivers are shown. Also if they concentrate increasing forces on him, they can defeat them one front at a time. They can rapidly move infantry soldiers around, they don't need tanks or a lot of hardware and locals can help a lot with things and so can drones.
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Ukraine’s counterattacks stall Russian forces

 

printer

Well-Known Member
No one will care if they sell them oil and minerals in exchange for fertilizer, groceries and even consumer electronics, it won't make a whole lot of difference to the war, and will drain them of money even faster. The Chinese can be dealt with and are good at negotiating for advantage, so give them some perks and let them eventually own Vlad, that might upset some Russians enough to get rid of him. "They is a take'n over!", works for Russians too.
Russia is a major exporter of fertilizer.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
So is Canada, lot's of potash out west and they will be expanding production! No one will sanction food production.
Russia is a major exporter of grain and fertilizer, going to contries like China, India and Egypt. Weapons to others. This gives Russia leverage against those countries. They are all sitting on the sidelines while the "West" is the ones putting pressure on Russia. If it were not for Russia's exports they would have more countries against them. Also I doubt Ukraine will be getting a crop in this year putting more pressure on the countries by Russia.
 

printer

Well-Known Member
So is Canada, lot's of potash out west and they will be expanding production! No one will sanction food production.
Yes, in Saskatchewan. Will it get out for the spring season?

Sask. fertilizer company ramping up potash production in response to Ukraine crisis
Nutrien says it will hire more workers for its network of potash mines in Sask.
Canadian fertilizer company Nutrien Ltd. says it is increasing potash production capability in 2022 by nearly 1 million tonnes compared to previous expectations.


 
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