hiroya.uga has added a photo to the pool:
A lone cherry tree in Ushinshiro, Shizuoka, illuminated by the first light of the day.
This is Mizumezakura, a single cherry tree standing quietly in the countryside.
I came here on my first photography trip, invited by a friend who taught me how to shoot.
We arrived before sunrise and waited quietly for this light.
CHARLOTTESVILLE (ANP) - De Amerikaanse president Donald Trump heeft de astronauten van de Artemis II-ruimtemissie gefeliciteerd in een bericht op Truth Social. Daarin zegt hij dat hij als president niet trotser had kunnen zijn.
"De hele reis was spectaculair en de landing was perfect", aldus Trump, die meldde ernaar uit te kijken de "geweldige en zeer getalenteerde" astronauten binnenkort in het Witte Huis te ontvangen. "We zullen dit nog een keer doen en dan, de volgende stap, Mars!"
De bemanning van ruimteschip Orion bestond uit drie Amerikanen, Reid Wiseman, Victor Glover en Christina Koch, en Canadees Jeremy Hansen. Ook de premier van Canada Mark Carney feliciteerde de crew. "De Artemis II-bemanning is terug op aarde. Felicitaties aan kolonel Hansen en het team voor deze historische prestatie. Welkom thuis", aldus Carney.
SAN DIEGO (ANP) - De vier astronauten van de Artemis II-missie zijn na tien dagen teruggekeerd van hun ruimtereis. Het Orion-ruimtevaartuig waarmee zij achter de maan vlogen, landde om 02.07 uur Nederlandse tijd voor de kust van de Californische stad San Diego in de Stille Oceaan.
Zodra de astronauten met boten zijn opgehaald, worden ze medisch onderzocht om te evalueren welke impact de reis op hun lichaam heeft gehad. Missiecommandant Reid Wiseman meldde volgens NASA vlak na de landing dat hij en zijn crew het "uitstekend" maken.
Amerikanen Wiseman (50), Victor Glover (49) en Christina Koch (47) en de Canadees Jeremy Hansen (50) begonnen op 1 april aan hun vlucht. Het was de eerste keer sinds december 1972 dat mensen richting het hemellichaam vlogen.
More than a dozen survivors accuse first lady of ‘shifting the burden’ on to them after she called on Congress to hold public hearings – key US politics stories from Friday 10 April
More than a dozen survivors of Jeffrey Epstein’s abuse have accused Melania Trump of “shifting the burden” on to them after she called on Congress to hold public hearings with victims of Epstein’s abuse.
“Survivors of Jeffrey Epstein have already shown extraordinary courage by coming forward, filing reports, and giving testimony,” said a group of 13 people and the brother and sister of the late Virginia Giuffre, who was one of the most vocal Epstein accusers, in a statement. “Asking more of them now is a deflection of responsibility not justice.”
Continue reading...Kremlin orders temporary truce from Saturday afternoon until Sunday, a 32-hour period during which Russia would stop fighting ‘in all directions’. What we know on day 1,508
Ukrainians on Friday were wary of Russia’s pledge to pause fighting for an Orthodox Easter ceasefire – first proposed by Kyiv – this weekend. The Kremlin said it had ordered a temporary truce to be in effect from Saturday afternoon until the end of Sunday, a 32-hour period during which Russia would stop fighting “in all directions”. Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy – who has repeatedly called for a ceasefire in the four-year war – said Kyiv was willing to reciprocate.
But in Kyiv there was scepticism over whether Moscow would keep to its promise. “No one believes in these fairytales anymore,” Yevgeniy Lamakh, an IT specialist, told AFP in central Kyiv. “The Russian military lie a lot, usually, as history shows. And in general, they say one thing, but in fact do something completely different,” the 29-year-old said. “Even today... Shaheds, missiles are flying at Ukraine. Well, come on then, start the ceasefire,” Dmytro Sova, a 42-year-old actor, told AFP in Kyiv on Friday.
Just hours before the Orthodox Easter truce, two night-time Russian attacks in Ukraine left one dead and 15 injured, authorities said. The fatal attacks included an “enemy drone attack” on a store and a cafe in the central town of Poltava, killing one person and injuring another, the regional head of the military administration, Vitalii Diakivnych, posted on Telegram. In the north-eastern region of Sumy, bordering Russia, drone strikes on residential areas wounded 14 people including a 14-year-old boy and an 87-year-old woman, according to Oleg Grygorov, head of the regional military administration there, via Telegram.
Moscow has rejected calls for a longer-term unconditional ceasefire, something that Kyiv has called for, saying it is instead pushing for a final peace settlement. Negotiations between the two sides, brokered by the United States, have stalled over the fate of Ukraine’s eastern regions, partly occupied by Russia and that Moscow wants Kyiv to cede. The two sides also held a ceasefire for the Orthodox Easter last year. But the respite comes amid deadlocked efforts to halt Russia’s invasion, with US attention now focused on the Middle East war.
US president Donald Trump’s administration is likely to extend as soon as Friday a waiver allowing countries to buy some sanctioned Russian oil and petroleum products, two sources familiar with the matter told Reuters. The US treasury department has allowed purchases of Russian oil and products at sea since mid-March with a 30-day waiver that expires on 11 April, part of efforts to control global energy prices during the US-Israeli war with Iran. The waivers have been criticised by politicians in the US and abroad as they could complicate the West’s efforts to deprive Russia of revenue for its war in Ukraine and put Washington at odds with its allies.
A Russian court on Friday placed a journalist from the independent Novaya Gazeta newspaper in pre-trial detention until 10 May, a day after police raided the paper’s Moscow headquarters. Oleg Roldugin was arrested on Thursday. He had reported on alleged corruption among top Russian officials including former president Dmitry Medvedev and Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov. Russia has waged a crackdown on independent news outlets since launching its offensive on Ukraine in February 2022.
Nato member Estonia will refrain from detaining Russia’s “shadow fleet” vessels in the Baltic Sea, worried that seizing oil tankers and other ships sanctioned by the West could lead Moscow to defend them militarily, a senior commander said on Friday. Britain and other European nations, including France, Belgium and Sweden, have stepped up efforts to detain ageing tankers used by Moscow to secure vital funding for its four-year war against Ukraine. But Estonia, the northernmost Baltic state located close to Russia’s main oil and fuel export facilities in the Gulf of Finland, is practicing restraint after an unsuccessful attempt to board a Russian vessel last year.
Continue reading...Read more of this story at Slashdot.