Ieu aya kintunan artikel ti rerencangan kuring anu mukim di Oklen, Selandia 
Baru, sabada kuring ngintunkeun seratan Komaruddin Hidayat di Kompap-s 5 
November, anu netelakeun Selandia baru nomor hiji dina perkara ngamalkeun 
ajaran Islam.

baktos,

mrachmatrawyani



________________________________
From: Sony Ambudi <[email protected]>
To: MRachmat Rawyani <[email protected]>
Sent: Thursday, November 10, 2011 1:55 AM
Subject: Rahasia NZ (1), Barkabung karena Bekicot

Assalamu'alaykum wr wb.
Pakde Mamat,
ini saya kirim jawabannya. Silakan kalau mau diforward ke Kisunda.
Tadinya mau saya pake pengantar basa sunda tapi takut salah....hahaha.
Tapi kalau saya mau didaftarin ke Kisunda boleh juga. Biar nggak lupa
sama bahasa ibu.
Barakallah.
SW


---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: sony wreksono <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, Nov 10, 2011 at 9:55 PM
Subject: Rahasia NZ (1), Barkabung karena Bekicot
To: ang79-sman3bdg <[email protected]>


FYI.
Sekedar bagi-bagi info supaya bisa menjawab gossip tentang Selandia Baru.
NZ, sebuah desa modern di pojok selatan dunya punya banyak karakter
aneh, dari ukuran Indonesia tentunya.
Di bawah ini contoh paling kiwari dan juga paling sering terjadi disini.
Pemerentahnya sibuk ngurusin bekicot. Ribuan bekicot diselamatkan
dengan biaya mencapai 56 juta rupiah per-ekornya.
Baru2 ini mereka berduka cita karena 800 ekor dari keong racun itu
mati karena kulkasnya terlalu dingin. Satu negeri nangis.
Gendheng pisan!
Makanya dia bisa dapat rangking nomor wahid dalam risetnya George
Washington Uni.

Mirip kan sama SW?
=======================================================================================


Quoted from NZ Herald, National
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/article.cfm?c_id=1&objectid=10765048

"DoC staff 'upset' mishap killed rare snails"

By Westport News and Greymouth Star
12:41 PM Thursday Nov 10, 2011

About 800 rare giant snails have been frozen to death after a
technical glitch in a Department of Conservation cool room in
Hokitika.

The snails were some of 6000 taken from the Stockton Plateau several
years ago to make way for coal mining.

About 4000 snails have already been relocated to new habitats.

DOC public awareness officer Jose Watson said a temperature probe in
one cool room, where the snails were being kept, failed at Labour
Weekend.

The probe sent the incorrect temperature to the cooler unit, and the
cooler unit "went into overdrive'', she said.

"The first thing that was noticed was that the unit was going over-time.''

Ms Watson said DOC staff were unsure how long the snails had been
exposed to the freezing temperatures - which they can withstand for
short periods in the wild - in the cool room.

DOC had not announced the snail deaths sooner because it had had to
assess how many had died.

"When we first looked we couldn't tell. We had to wait a couple of
weeks before we could start assessing what was going on.''

Only a few snails in the cool room had survived, she said.

However, the relocation programme would not be too adversely affected
because snail numbers would recover in a few years.

The snail captive programme costs about $125,000 a year, paid by
state-owned coal producer Solid Energy.

Sadly for the snails, it is not the first time some of their number
have died while in storage.

In 2006 one snail died while being kept in an icecream container in a fridge.

The death fuelled the long-running and bitter battle over relocation
of the giant rare powelliphanta augustus snails to allow Solid Energy
to access $400 million worth of high-quality coal at its West Coast
Stockton mine near Westport.

DOC's West Coast conservancy technical support manager John Lyall said
the snail deaths were very upsetting as staff were committed to their
care.

Before the loss they had been proud to be celebrating a "great captive
breeding result''.

The faulty temperature probe had been repaired and a new alert system
would reduce the chance of recurrence. However, there was no guarantee
other probes would not fail, Mr Lyall said.

"Fortunately we've already managed to relocate more than 60 per cent
of the original population into new habitats and we still have more
than 800 unaffected snails in the other cool rooms and environmental
chambers.

"The remaining snails are breeding well, producing good numbers of
eggs, and we expect the captive population to recover the loss within
a few years.''
By Westport News and Greymouth Star

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