Monday, October 18, 2010

Praises to HIM


Dear God,


I really thank you for everything that I have. The breath that I take, the strengths, your provisions and even the blissful daughter that I have now, so teach me more to be more of you, your righteousness, peace and joy will be here for me always. Even on my day to day life it is inevitable to have some trials that may came along, tough situations, hard decisions and even difficulties in life I thank you coz its YOU who give me strength to survive and live.


I love you Lord and without you my life is worthless. Glory are all yours!!
This song is all for YOU alone.
Awiton ko ang kaayo mo O Diyos
Sa kahangturan dalaygun ka
Kay ang gugma mo walay katapusan
Ug ang kaluoy mo way utlanan
Awiton ko ang mga pagdayeg mo
Sa tanang panahon ikaw simbahon ko
Bisan sa unos ug mga katalagman
Daygon ka Oh! Diyos kanako muuban
Matinumanon ka


Monday, October 11, 2010

My Father










A father is always making his baby into a little woman. And when she is a woman he turns her back again.


Thursday, September 30, 2010

The Holy Aphabet

A lthough things are not perfect
B ecause of trial or pain
C ontinue in thanksgiving
D o not begin to blame-
E ven when the times are hard
F ierce winds are bound to blow
G od is forever able
H old on to what you know
I magine life without His love
J oy would cease to be
K eep thanking Him for all the things
L ove imparts to thee
M ove out "Camp Complaining"
N o weapon that is known
O n earth can yield the power
P raise can do alone
Q uit looking at the future
R edeem the time at hand
S tart every day with worship
T o "thank" is a command
U ntil we see Him coming
V ictorious in the sky
W e'll run the race with gratitude
X alting God most high
Y es, there'll be good times and yes some will be bad, but....
Z ion waits in glory ... where none are ever sad!

Hell en' Heaven

I’m gonna share this interesting story knowing about heaven and hell:

A holy man was having a conversation with the Lord one day and said, ‘Lord, I would like to know what Heaven and Hell are like.The Lord led the holy man to two doors. He opened one of the doors and the holy man looked in. In the middle of the room was a large round table. In the middle of the table was a large pot of stew, which smelled delicious and made the holy man’s mouth water.

The people sitting around the table were thin and sickly. They appeared to be famished. They were holding spoons with very long handles that were strapped to their arms and each found it possible to reach into the pot of stew and take a spoonful. But because the handle was longer than their arms, they could not get the spoons back into their mouths.

The holy man shuddered at the sight of their misery and suffering.

The Lord said, ‘You have seen Hell.

They went to the next room and opened the door. It was exactly the same as the first one. There was the large round table with the large pot of stew which made the holy man’s mouth water. The people were equipped with the same long-handled spoons, but here the people were well nourished and ; plump, laughing and talking. The holy man said, ‘I don’t understand.’

It is simple,’ said the Lord. ‘It requires but one skill. You see they have learned to feed each other, while the greedy think only of themselves.When Jesus died on the cross, he was thinking of you. Its estimated 93% won’t forward this. If you are one of the 7% who will, forward this with the title 7%- I’m in the 7% !

Remember that I will always share my spoon with you…

Wednesday, September 29, 2010

Car Repairs

Reconditioning your vehicle with total care needed for our car that has a repair and maintenance services from the third largest city in Texas, Welcomes our business Center in Dallas. The Dallas auto repair http://repairpal.com/dallas-auto-repair has a Top Rated Auto Repair Shops and Mechanics. Since Dallas surprisingly, the city is among the windiest in the country and hot humid air during summer might affect your cars condition, it may affect the cooling system and decreased or uncontrollable airflow from vents, thus the engine may overheat.

2005 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 -series in regular-, extended-, and crew cab body styles is a great Vehicle, comes with a 4.3-liter V6 and offer 4.8- and 5.3-liter V8 options. Crew Cabs have the 5.3. A 310-hp 5.3 V8 is a new option for short-box extendeds above the normal 295-hp unit. Automatic transmission is standard except on regulars, where it's an option to manual with V6 and 4.8 V8. Traction control is available with rear-wheel drive. There are two 4WD systems, both with low-range gearing: GM's all-surface Autotrac and a basic 4WD that should not be left engaged on dry pavement. Owners should you write reviews to this http://repairpal.com/chevrolet-silverado_1500-2005 for the repairs and maintenance.

The disc brake (or rotor in U.S. English) or disk brake is a device for slowing or stopping the rotation of a wheel while it is in motion. A good quality of brake rotor can increase the safety of your car or truck, by making sure you are able to stop quickly, efficiently, and take full advantage of the brake system your car or truck came with from the factory. Repair pal the car care confidence talks about brake rotor/disc replacement, for the best practices and for their recommendation visit the site this for brake job http://repairpal.com/brake-rotor-replacement .

Monday, September 27, 2010

money matters

In our day to day life, money is so essential. It brings anxiety to a person especially on due dates of credit cards, light and water bills, day to day expenses and other unexpected payments and if you don't even have any single cents at the moment as in makaluya jud!!!...

That's really the problem of a minimum wage that only our basic needs we can buy, haaayyy nalang!!!

Well, that's life and life must go on!!! heheehe... pautang beh.....

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

The General Mills QueRicaVida is Back!

MIAMI, May 20 /PRNewswire/ -- General Mills Inc. today unveiled a re-designed version of its successful, Spanish-language, lifestyle web site for women, QueRicaVida.com, at a Miami gala event attended by more than 100 Hispanic editors, reporters and bloggers from around the country. Several Latina celebrities, including actress Adamari Lopez, Despierta America! morning show host Karla Martinez, and Univision Network health spokesperson, Dra. Aliza, were also present for the unveiling, along with several hundred invited guests.

Event attendees were provided with an exclusive preview of the re-vamped site, which seeks to become the #1 food and lifestyle online resource for Latina moms. Among the site's numerous enhanced offerings will be regular health tips by Dra. Aliza, advice on parenting provided by Johnson & Johnson's Baby Center, information on education-related issues and hundreds of Hispanic-inspired recipes and money-saving coupons for numerous General Mills brands. A partnership with other major platforms such as AOL Latino, Univision: Cocina, Yahoo! En Espanol and MSN/Telemundo will further extend QueRicaVida.com's reach among Latina consumers.

The re-designed website will also facilitate navigation of its enhanced content, making it easier to explore and providing users with a more interactive experience. The new format will allow Latina consumers to rate and post opinions about the articles, videos and recipes they find in the site, as well as upload their own recipes, which will become a part of QueRicaVida.com's ample listing of meals.

According to Ursula Mejia-Melgar, General Mills Hispanic Marketing Manager and editor of Que Rica Vida, the magazine, "QueRicaVida.com aims to empower Latina moms and make their lives easier by providing them with information that can help resolve four key tension points in their lives ? raising their children, tending to their illnesses and preventing them, making sure they don't fall behind at school and making the daily cooking experience easier and less stressful. I know, because I am a mother of two young children, myself."

"QueRicaVida.com has become indispensable for our Latina consumer," said Rodolfo Rodriguez, General Mills' Multicultural Marketing Director. "General Mills has invested resources to better understand and serve our Hispanic consumers, and the emotional link we have achieved with our audience has been an amazing result."

About General Mills

One of the world's leading food companies, General Mills operates in more than 100 countries and markets more than 100 consumer brands, including Cheerios, Haagen-Dazs, Nature Valley, Betty Crocker, Pillsbury, Green Giant, Old El Paso, Progresso, Cascadian Farm, Muir Glen, and more. Headquartered in Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA, General Mills had fiscal 2009 global net sales of US$15.9 billion, including the company's $1.2 billion proportionate share of joint venture net sales.

Monday, August 9, 2010

HONDA XR650 R





TECH STUFF YOU MIGHT WANT TO KNOW

This is the most powerful engine ever in a Honda XR; it's a liquid-cooled 649cc SOHC four- valve dry-sump engine. The single-backbone aluminum frame represents the next evolution in off-road aluminum chassis technology.

Kayaba suspension components replace the old Showa units. The package provides a combination of comfort and plushness, with excellent control and performance. A 46mm front fork is matched to the 44mm fully adjustable long-stroke piggyback rear shock absorber.

Optional competition parts increase horsepower and torque an incredible 27 percent!

ENGINE

  • The all-new liquid-cooled four-valve SOHC 649cc engine is compact, and weighs only 88 pounds.
  • Dry-sump oiling system includes an in-chassis oil tank.
  • The engine design separates the crankshaft and generator rotor from the engine oil that causes windage resistance, allowing for a freer-revving engine.
  • Nikasil cylinder lining is lightweight and provides cooler and quieter operation for extended engine life.
  • 37mm intake valves and 32mm exhaust valves provide increased engine efficiency.
  • An automatic decompression starting system, with handlebar-mounted compression- release, makes for relatively easy starts.
  • New 40mm carburetor delivered crisp response and excellent rideability.
  • Solid-state CD ignition with electronic advance.
  • Gear-driven counterbalancer for engine smoothness.
  • Maintenance-free XR400-type automatic cam-chain tensioner.
  • Dual aluminum radiators for optimum cooling and maximum performance.
  • Free-flowing two-into-one stainless steel headpipes.
  • Primary kickstarting allows start-up in any gear.
  • Extended kickstart lever and a new reduction ratio allow for a slow, strong kick to spin the engine quickly for starts.
  • Lightweight magnesium clutch cover provides easy access for maintenance.
  • Improved shifting five-speed transmission.

POWER

A huge part of the XR600R's appeal has been the quality and quantity of its power. Still, XR owners have always figured more is better when it comes to horsepower. So, when the XR650R design process began, more horsepower was at the top of Honda R & D's shopping list.

To meet power and durability goals, more displacement was a given. Testing various intermediary engine sizes revealed a 649cc single-overhead-cam four-valve single delivered the perfect balance of power, torque and toughness. Since more power means more heat, liquid cooling was a given as well, opening the door for all-new engine architecture from the cam cover down.

Gone is Honda's familiar Radial Four Valve Combustion (RFVC) system, with valves splayed radially around the bore axis. The XR650R uses a lighter, simpler, more effective overhead camshaft system, above a flat combustion chamber that's fired by a single spark plug.

Mixture from the 40mm Keihin carburetor enters via a pair of 37mm intake valves (up l mm from the 600), and exits through 32mm exhaust valves (also l mm over XR600R spec). These valves are controlled by a cam with more lift, overlap and duration than an XR600R's.

Just below, the 650's Nikasil-lined aluminum cylinder moves closer to vertical than the old bike, creating more space for the twin aluminum radiators. This more upright engine position also shifts the crankshaft center closer to the front wheel to help optimize weight distribution.

Both the l00mm bore and the 82.6mm stroke are enlarged from the XR600R specification. Despite a 3 millimeter increase in diameter, the XR650's three-ring piston is 10.6 grams lighter than an XR600 slug. An automatic XR400R-type adjuster makes sure there's never slack in the cam chain. A new closed-deck head construction creates a significantly stiffer cylinder and an improved head gasket seal, shaving 230 grams, by using four cylinder studs instead of the XR600's six. Cast from a new corrosion-resistant alloy that is 10 times stronger than previous alloys, a new CR-style magnesium cover provides easy access to the XR clutch.

The newest XR's bottom end is tougher and more efficient. A gear-driven counterbalancer squelches the big single's endemic shaking and drives the engine's water pump from the right end of its shaft. Like the previous XR, the 650 engine is dry-sump, carrying its engine oil inside the frame in a space at the juncture of the cast-aluminum steering head and extruded-aluminum main downtube.

Strategically placed partitions in the crankcases minimize power-robbing windage by keeping excess engine oil away from the crankshaft. Ignition componentry runs dry, rather than in an oil bath, as in the XR600 engine for the same reason. Also, the crankshaft cavity features a Honda first: a one-way reed valve that allows piston pressure to force excess oil into the transmission area.

Working with Honda's cam-actuated automatic decompression system, a new reduction ratio in the kick start gear makes lighting the big XR's fire easier, by spinning the engine faster with each stroke of the kick lever

Sunday, July 4, 2010

Eating Apples

Be Careful when eating apples

I know that apple is coated with wax especially apples came from outside the Philippines.

FYI on eating nutritious apples:

Please don’t eat the skin of the apple because it’s coated with wax.

Check before you eat many of the fruits.

WAX is being used for preservation purposes and cold storage.

You might be surprised especially apples from USA and other parts are more than one year old, though it would look fresh because it is coated, preventing bacteria to enter. So it does not get dry.

Please Eat Apples after removing the wax as demonstrated below. Please follow this and let know others.

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Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Money



When we speak about money, people spend time to work and starting to go for business just to earn money. If they are not satisfied working here in the Philippines, since working here can only earned a minimum wage and can’t support the family members, they try to find luck in abroad coz working abroad can double or even triple the income compared here. Well, we just want a satisfying and contended life for our family so we make our very best just to make it worthwhile.

People are really moving from the Philippines to the other country just to feel the difference and to experience the atmosphere living independently in other country but earning big income even they are away from their loveones instead of working here but earning only exact money but can’t help other family members.

Let’s face the reality that we are experiencing an economic crisis that is the reason why majority of our countrymen find luck in the other side of the country and will have a brighter future for their children.

Yes! money can buy what we want but being intact with our family, being close to our love ones is a thing that money cannot be bought.

Monday, June 21, 2010

RESPONSIBLE DIRT BIKING

1. Travel and recreate with minimum impact
2. Respect the environment and the rights of others
3. Educate yourself _ plan and prepare before you go
4. Allow for future use of the outdoors: leave it better than you found it
5. Discover the rewards of responsible recreation

"We did not inherit the Earth from our parents, We are borrowing it from our children".

1. Travel and recreate with minimum impact:

Travel responsibly on designated roads and trails or in permitted areas.

Travel only in areas open to dirt biking.

  • On slick trails, moderate the throttle and use the clutch to gain maximum traction with minimum tailspin.
  • On switchbacks, avoid roosting around the apex of the turn when climbing or brake-sliding during descent, both of which gouge the trail.
  • Drive over, not around obstacles to avoid widening the trail.
  • Cross streams only at designated fording points or where the trail crosses the stream.
  • Comply with all signs and barriers
  • Buddy up with two or three riders. Riding solo can leave you vulnerable if you have an accident or breakdown. Designate meeting areas in case of separation.


2. Respect the environment and the rights of others:

Respect the rights of others including private property owners and all recreational trail users, campers and others to allow them to enjoy their recreational activities undisturbed.

  • Be considerate of others on the road or trail.
  • Leave gates as you find them.
  • If crossing private property, be sure to ask permission from the landowner(s).
  • Yield the right of way to those passing you or traveling uphill. Yield to mountain bikers, hikers, and horses.
  • Do not idly ride around in camping, picnicking, trailhead and residential areas.
  • Keep speeds low around crowds and in camping areas.
  • Keep the noise and dust down.

3. Educate yourself - plan and prepare before you go:

Educate yourself by obtaining travel maps and regulations from public agencies, planning for your trip, taking recreation skills classes, and knowing how to use and operate your equipment safely.
  • Obtain a map of your destination and determine which areas are open to dirt bikes.
  • Make a realistic plan, and stick to it. Always tell someone of your travel plans.
  • Contact the land manager for area restrictions, closures, and permit requirements.
  • Check the weather forecast before you go.
  • Prepare for the unexpected by packing a small backpack full of emergency items.
  • Wear a helmet, eye protection, and other safety gear.
  • Buddy up with two or three riders. Riding solo can leave you vulnerable if you have an accident or breakdown. Designate meeting areas in case of separation.
  • Make sure your vehicle is mechanically up to task. Be prepared with tools, supplies, spares and a spill kit for trailside repairs.

4. Allow for future use of the outdoors: leave it better than you found it:

Avoid sensitive areas such as meadows, lakeshores, wetlands and streams, unless on designated routes.
  • Other sensitive habitats to avoid unless on designated routes include crypto-biotic soils of the desert, tundra, and seasonal nesting or breeding areas.
  • Avoid disturbing historical, archeological, and pale ontological sites.
  • Avoid “spooking” livestock and wildlife you encounter and keep your distance.
  • Motorized and mechanized vehicles are not allowed in areas designated as Wilderness.

5. Discover the rewards of responsible recreation:

Do your part properly disposing of waste, minimizing the use of fire, avoiding the spread of invasive species, restoring degraded areas, and joining a local enthusiast organization.
  • Carry a trash bag on your vehicle and pick up litter left by others.
  • Pack out what you pack in.
  • Practice minimum impact camping by using established sites and camping 200 feet from water resources and trails.
  • Observe proper sanitary waste disposal or pack your waste out.
  • Protect the sound escape by preventing unnecessary noise created by a poorly tuned vehicle or revving your engine without need.
  • Following a ride, wash your dirt bike and support vehicle to reduce the spread of invasive species.
  • Don’t mix riding with alcohol or drugs.



Trip Planning Checklist

All safe and enjoyable activities start with proper planning. Always provide someone with a ride plan. This should include where and when you are riding, as well as a return time and date. Make sure you and your machine are in top operating condition. Call ahead to see whether site conditions are conducive to riding.

Using the following checklist will help ensure that that your experience is an enjoyable one:

Protective gear: helmet, goggles, boots, gloves, body protection, long pants and shirt

Plenty of food and water

Extra fuel and oil

Tool kit

First aid kit

Extra spark plugs

Flashlight

Tow strap or rope

Waterproof matches

Duct tape and electrical tape

Tire repair kit

A good map of the area, a compass and GPS

Cell phone or 2-way radio

Camera



Courtesy, Ethics and the Environment


• Share the trail- give non-motorized trail users the right of way.

• Stay on the trail- riding off the trail damages wildlife habitat and contributes to erosion.

• Keep the noise down. Remember- less sound means more ground.

• Do not litter. If you packed it in, pack it out. Stay on designated trails.

• Keep out of closed areas and off private property.


Off-road Bike Tips

What we’re talking about is reaction time, not top speed. Think of an Enduro bike with a real heavy flywheel, a bike that just pulls you out of the turns, not fast, just grinds you out into the next corner. You can sit down and ride a bike like this all day, just cruising around. What do you have to do if you want to go fast, much faster? Racing speed. Well, on this slow-revving bike you’d have to train yourself to ride at a higher engine rpm, you’d have to spin it faster. If you can’t get enough out of it stock, maybe you’d have to lower the flywheel weight and make the bike physically rev faster. In the old days, cutting down the flywheel— shaving weight from it on a lathe—was a popular thing to do to the old, heavy flywheels on our bikes. It was especially handy on four-strokes.

Doesn’t that make the bike harder to ride? The answer is yes and no. For a rank beginner, it would turn any mellow enduro bike into a handful, a real nasty little beast to ride. But for an experienced rider it would make the bike much easier to ride, and this is why: if you’re trying to go fast, the bike has to react immediately to input; and the faster it reacts, the faster you can go.

Now, in spite of what we just said, don’t blame your slowrevving bike on the flywheel weight. A lot of time and engineering goes into modern bikes, and chances are if you have a bike that’s just a few years old that never seemed to bust out of the hole, it is usually a tuning issue slowing it down. Improper carb jetting down low is a common problem. Having a faulty ignition is an uncommon problem (usually they either work or they don’t), but it does happen occasionally. Recently Randy Hawkins had a severe problem with reaction time on his race bike and it turned out to be a plugged spark arrestor.

When you open the throttle on a bike with a problem, the carb moans as the air velocity increases and you can feel the engine labor to overcome the initial weight of the ignition and other internal engine parts. When or if the engine develops enough inertia to overcome all this resistance to spinning, the revs climb rapidly and everything happens real quickly, just like you want it. The problem comes during that rev lag, while you’re waiting for it to “hit.”

What can happen? Well, think about this: when you come flying around a blind turn and there’s a tree splitting the trail, what do you do? You aim for the “best” side of the tree and hit the throttle. When the rear wheel reacts, the bike zaps forward, reacting to the turn input, and you shoot past the tree. Neat and clean; and then you go off to solve the next problem that comes up.

Now, what happens if you hit the throttle and nothing happens? You were expecting a surge forward, but all you got was a dull moan out of the carb. Chances are, you’ll either hit the tree or just manage to wallow around it, and then, at some point past the tree, the bike will come on the pipe and finally hook up. If you’re lucky.

And it’s all because of that momentary lag before the power develops. It could happen on any bike—a four-stroke with a “hitch” in the carburetion, a bike that’s jetted all wrong, or even a sticking throttle. The reason it’s so important is because of the speed you’re going and the limits of your reaction time. I read one time that the most alert, jazzed-up, wound-up, in-tune person in the world can only react as fast as one-thirtieth of a second to any sort of stimulation. That’s it; and that’s with training! You see the tree, for example, and the fastest you can crank on the bars and throttle is a thirtieth of a second later.

Okay. An Enduro is a real intense situation, and if you’re trying to win your class, it’s feasible that your reaction time could be close to the limit. But, for the sake of argument, let’s say that we’re as slow as slugs, and we’re only going to react to seeing that tree in a fifteenth of a second; twice as long as a thirtieth.

How fast are you going in the woods? The Enduro is a 24 mph, but maybe in that turn you’re going slower, maybe 20, or 18, but let’s say you’re going as slow as 15 mph. In the fifteenth of a second that it takes you to react, you’ve moved a foot and a half forward, because 15 mph is 22 feet per second, and a fifteenth of that is 1.5 feet. If cranking the throttle makes the bike react instantly, you’re all right, you got past the tree. But, if it takes, oh, say a half a second to get the back wheel spinning, you’ve just traveled 11 feet, and somewhere in there you either hit a tree or got wildly out of shape trying to avoid it!

Let’s try another speed. What about all those times when the trail opens up in a turn, and you’re 90 percent sure that there’s nothing around the corner, so you wick it on hard in third gear. How fast are you going? It’s hard to tell in a quick burst of horsepower, but how about we say that for a few seconds there you’re doing 30 mph. If you have to get on the brakes right away because there’s a deep stream right in front of you, or a fallen rider, if it takes 1/15 of a second you’re going to go three feet before you can even get off the gas. A half-second would equal the vast distance of 22 feet, and if it took you that long you either rammed a guy or are going swimming!

Man, it gets scary! Think about 40 mph, on a piece of two-track. No! Better yet, think about the time that your enduro computer recorded a top speed of 70 mph in a race. There’s only a few powerlines that you can do that on, or the sand roads down in South Jersey, but if you’re at the top of your form, your bike will go 3.4 feet in the 1/30 of a second reaction time. At a 1/15 of a second you’ll have gone 6.8 feet, and in half a second, which is not an awful long period of time, your bike travels 51.3 feet!

The moral of the story is that a mellow bike is great to learn on, but the faster you get the more you’re going to need a bike that reacts fast as well. Like the hermit crab, who won’t grow unless he gets a bigger shell, you won’t get faster unless you ride a faster bike.

Buying a Motorcycle






I recommend that, before you buy the Honda XR 250 Baja motorcycle inspect first the technical data and check out the reliability, repair costs, etc.

Sunday, June 20, 2010

TRAIL RIDING

Trail Riding is riding outdoors on natural trails and roads as opposed to riding in an enclosed area such as a riding arena. The term may encompass those who travel on horses, on mountain bikes, or on motorcycles and other motorized all-terrain vehicle. Trail rides may be informal activities of an individual or small group of people, or may be larger events organized by a club. Some trail rides may even be directed by professional guides or outfitters, particularly at guest ranches.

There are competitive events available, which test the motorcycle and rider's ability to navigate obstacles commonly found on the trail, such as opening and closing gates, crossing streams, etc. The level of difficulty of a competitive ride will vary by trail or terrain, and riders are well advised to know the general difficulty of a trail before starting the ride. In recreational trail riding, speed and form are not the goals, but rather having fun and enjoying time spent with one's horse in nature.

Trail riding is often a group activity

Trail riding may encompass other activities, such as camping, hunting or fishing, orienteering, or even games.

There is some criticism of trail riding when excess or improper use of trails may lead to erosion, introduction of noxious weed seeds, conflict with hikers, or harassment of wildlife. However, many responsible equestians, mountain bikers, and off-road motorcyclists, especially those who get involved in these sports by joining an organized club, perform hours of trail maintenance every year. Many organizations also sponsor educational events to teach newcomers about safety, responsible land stewardship and how to improve riding techniques.


Thanks

thanks for welcoming me as a new member of your blog.