Diary & Notes ~ Air Cell Detatched SHIPPED Chicken Eggs for incubation and hatching

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The moment you begin looking at the sun, you start to develop a sunburn on your eyeball. Of the three types of light that the sun produces—visible, infrared, and ultraviolet—UV is the most damaging to structures within the eye, especially when reflected off sand, snow or water. The cells of the cornea, the transparent outer layer of the eye, will blister and crack when overexposed to UV light. It's a lot like a normal sunburn. Symptoms of this condition, known as photokeratitis, usually appear a few hours after the damage has occurred. They're identified by excessive tearing, tissue inflammation, and the feeling that you've rubbed your eyes with fine grit sandpaper. Luckily, the effect is almost always temporary, dissipating within 36 hours, and can be prevented by wearing UV-rated eye wear.

Look steadily at the sun for a little longer—like the girl on amphetamines who stared at a solar eclipse for a full half hour—and you can cause damage to the retina. This collection of light-sensitive cells located at the back of the eye transmits images to your brain. Solar retinopathy, as the damage is known, may not be painful like photokeratitis—but the results can be permanent.
When the light-sensing cells of the retina are overstimulated, they release a flood of signaling chemicals. In sufficient concentrations, like during a long look at the sun, these can damage surrounding tissue. This condition is typically reversible over time—from one month up to a year, depending on the amount of damage sustained. In some cases, healing progresses steadily over the course of 12 months. In others, it heals rapidly in the first month, then remains static for 18 months before improving again.

With enough damage to the retina, though, staring at the sun can leave you partially blind. Prolonged UV exposure can damage the macula, a tiny substructure of the retina responsible for the majority of your central detail vision. The pupil will naturally contract when exposed to bright light, but the amount of light still entering the eye is concentrated on the macula tissue. Damaging it can cause macular degeneration, eventually resulting in permanent blindness in the center of your field of vision. Basically, that black dot you see after a photo flash would just never go away.
Permanent, complete blindness can also occur from staring at the sun over the long term. The eye's lens can be damaged from too much UV light, typically resulting in cataracts and invasive tissue growth known as pterygium. As UV-induced cataracts advance, they can obscure a patient's vision. If left untreated, they can eventually cause blindness.

So, staring at the sun without proper eye protection is a clearly bad idea, but doing the same through a telescope or binoculars is just plain dumb. As a magnifying glasses fries an ant, these devices concentrate the suns rays into destructive points, causing immediate photochemical and thermal damage. The UV can literally cook your eyes out of your head, destroying rod-and-cone structures and potentially resulting in permanent blindness. The only safe way to look at the sun through binoculars or a telescope is to install a solar filter.
http://gizmodo.com/5926497/what-happens-when-you-stare-at-the-sun


SO WEAR THEM! Test tomorrow!

images
 
you know that is a very good analogy! And this is why I personally can take a breath and still help. OMG today was minor you should see a few of my messages! sometimes I repeated myself like 10 times, we all have to realize we are hanging with all sortsa people on here! And I swear I will help everyone I can no matter what, but that doesn't mean I cant make a BLEEP sometimes right?  sorta like the kid spilling milk all over the kitchen table and floor! move on, breath and help clean up!  


Amen sista!!!!
 


The moment you begin looking at the sun, you start to develop a sunburn on your eyeball. Of the three types of light that the sun produces—visible, infrared, and ultraviolet—UV is the most damaging to structures within the eye, especially when reflected off sand, snow or water. The cells of the cornea, the transparent outer layer of the eye, will blister and crack when overexposed to UV light. It's a lot like a normal sunburn. Symptoms of this condition, known as photokeratitis, usually appear a few hours after the damage has occurred. They're identified by excessive tearing, tissue inflammation, and the feeling that you've rubbed your eyes with fine grit sandpaper. Luckily, the effect is almost always temporary, dissipating within 36 hours, and can be prevented by wearing UV-rated eye wear.

Look steadily at the sun for a little longer—like the girl on amphetamines who stared at a solar eclipse for a full half hour—and you can cause damage to the retina. This collection of light-sensitive cells located at the back of the eye transmits images to your brain. Solar retinopathy, as the damage is known, may not be painful like photokeratitis—but the results can be permanent.
When the light-sensing cells of the retina are overstimulated, they release a flood of signaling chemicals. In sufficient concentrations, like during a long look at the sun, these can damage surrounding tissue. This condition is typically reversible over time—from one month up to a year, depending on the amount of damage sustained. In some cases, healing progresses steadily over the course of 12 months. In others, it heals rapidly in the first month, then remains static for 18 months before improving again.

With enough damage to the retina, though, staring at the sun can leave you partially blind. Prolonged UV exposure can damage the macula, a tiny substructure of the retina responsible for the majority of your central detail vision. The pupil will naturally contract when exposed to bright light, but the amount of light still entering the eye is concentrated on the macula tissue. Damaging it can cause macular degeneration, eventually resulting in permanent blindness in the center of your field of vision. Basically, that black dot you see after a photo flash would just never go away.
Permanent, complete blindness can also occur from staring at the sun over the long term. The eye's lens can be damaged from too much UV light, typically resulting in cataracts and invasive tissue growth known as pterygium. As UV-induced cataracts advance, they can obscure a patient's vision. If left untreated, they can eventually cause blindness.

So, staring at the sun without proper eye protection is a clearly bad idea, but doing the same through a telescope or binoculars is just plain dumb. As a magnifying glasses fries an ant, these devices concentrate the suns rays into destructive points, causing immediate photochemical and thermal damage. The UV can literally cook your eyes out of your head, destroying rod-and-cone structures and potentially resulting in permanent blindness. The only safe way to look at the sun through binoculars or a telescope is to install a solar filter.
http://gizmodo.com/5926497/what-happens-when-you-stare-at-the-sun


SO WEAR THEM! Test tomorrow!

images

HA! I read every word! Lord, you are thorough, aren't you??
tongue.png
 
so lesson of the day = don't be the girl on " amphetamines who stared at a solar eclipse for a full half hour"
 
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So its getting late on A friday night for the east coasters.

What a crazy week on BYC.

The incubators anon thread blew up with the little email. A wonderful bunch of stories is crazy addicts confessing made me laugh. Its good to know there are so many others. Then some of them came to visit here an we got a great injection of new blood in this thread. Its fantastic.

I really look forward to seeing the latest round of hatchings succeed.

Good luck fellow bycers.

My hatch in the Philippines is on day 12 as its Saturday there. No candling - just the sniff test for stinkers. 300+ eggs in the hands of Bernie, the Filipino Chicken Phenom.

it will be a great experiment in itself.

The only time the eggs will be handled will be taking them out of turners for lockdown.

I wish I could do the same here but I love candling and seeing eggs come to life.
 
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