Saturday, 17 December 2016

Madrid police find lunchbox full of giant cockroaches in local park



Police in Madrid, Spain made a rather surprising – and definitely creepy – discovery in a park in Carabanchel recently. 

 




On opening a plastic lunch box left in the park in the suburb of Carabanchel, police discovered 54 living, giant hissing cockroaches inside. The insects are native to Madagascar and are known to grow to between 5 and 7.6 cm. Possibly even more scary, the cockroaches can live for up to five years.

They are one of 20 known species of giant cockroaches and emit a hissing sound, which is produced by forcibly expelling air through specially-adapted respiratory openings on the fourth segment of their bodies. The insects have no wings and live in rotting tree trunks when in the wild. 

The Local notes that some people find the cockroaches make good, if rather bizarre, pets. However, the owner of this bunch of insects had obviously had enough. 



A police spokesman told Europa Press that they have no idea how the giant cockroaches ended up in the park, adding, “Somebody must have dumped them.” 

The cockroaches were collected by officers from the environmental unit of Madrid’s Municipal Police force and have been taken to a wildlife centre in the capital.

Wednesday, 14 December 2016

Spain may put the clocks back to GMT to aid productivity

At the moment, Spain runs one hour ahead of the U.K. in winter and two hours ahead in summer, but that could all change.

Photo by Muffingg / CC BY-SA 3.0

Discussions are afoot to make Spain go back in time –  without the aid of a time machine –  as the government considers changing back to the original GMT time zone.

The country does officially lie in the same time zone and both Portugal and the U.K., but the dictator Francisco Franco decided to change it in 1942 to keep in line with Germany, under his then great pal Adolf Hitler. With the exception of the Canary Islands, that time zone change has stayed in place ever since.That is until now.



The writer reported back in 2013 that talks were ongoing to change the time zone, to keep it in line with GMT. Now things appear to be firming up.

According to labour minister, Fatima Ibañez, the current time zone has led to Spaniards working longer days than workers in other European countries. Now the Spanish government is saying that changing to Greenwich Mean Time would reduce the length of the working day and improve productivity in the country, by allowing workers to strike a better work/life balance. 

According to a statement by Ibañez on Monday, December 12, the government will seek agreement with representatives of companies and trade unions to allow the reform of the time zone. The plan was reportedly approved in August this year by the Partido Popular and Ciudadanos parties.

Will Spain changing to GMT improve workers' hours?


When reading comments on a report by Euro Weekly News on the subject, some people do rightly point out that people's working hours will remain the same. They will simply move back one or two hours –  depending on the season at the time –  so it is debatable whether this will actually help.

No doubt those of us here in Spain who suffer whenever there is a daylight savings change will feel it even more, should the country definitely decide to change to GMT. However, we will, at least, gain an hour or two that day.