Archive for March, 2008

Dr. Navtej Kohli New Interest - Flying

Wednesday, March 26th, 2008

On this sunday I decided to again try something new and post the experience on my Navtej Kohli blog. I joined a flying class for a decent amount. The feeling of flying in the air, feels amazing. You can just forget all your wordly worries and fly away…. 

To start with there are several different flying experiences you can undertake. First is formal flight training for becoming an Airline Carrier Pilot, Second is casual training for learning to fly smaller and more agile planes, Third is a guided combat adventure in which you are able to take the flight stick without any previous training.

All three are great experiences and depend on your level of interest, from a career to a weekend experience. There are different experiences for every budget starting from $49 introductory flying courses to $1000 fighter jet training lessons. I recommend flight highly as it is very exciting and miles apart from commercial airplane flight. Have Fun!

Some Medical Humor by Navtej Kohli

Wednesday, March 12th, 2008

On this Navtej Kohli  blog I bring for you the humorous disadvantage of using fertility drugs……Hope you have a lol.

“The good news, folks, is that you are pregnant with twin daughters. The bad news is that your twins are pregnant too.”

Problems with Fertility Drugs.

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Enjoy!!!!

The Great Woodpecker Hunt - Navtej Kohli

Tuesday, March 11th, 2008

Navtej Kohli personal blog writes on the passion of Navtej Kohli for Ornithology. The search for the Woodpecker continues in America….. Away down in the swampy bottomlands of Dixie in Arkansas, the most intensive search ever for a bird is gearing up for a make-or-break season. Big reputations are riding on the controversial quest for the ivory-billed woodpecker, the most magnificent and most elusive of America’s tree-knockers.

Here in the vast White River National Wildlife Refuge, naturalists across the globe are trying to confirm the most prolonged debate over the sightings of a bird written off as extinct until four years ago.

The camouflage-clad scientists, venturing into what one described as the “most woodpeckeriest” woods to be found from South Carolina to East Texas, have an array of high-tech tools, from GPS coordinate monitors to satellite imagery. Automatic cameras catch digital images, their infrared flash strobes blinking near rotted trees and other likely roosting sites. Sensitive audio recorders strain “ivory-billed-like” sound from the constant clamor of other birds.

This month, for the first time, US Fish and Wildlife Service helicopters were enlisted in the chase, flying low-level “flush” missions meant to spook birds into breaking from the treetops. The idea is that airborne scientists might catch a glimpse of an ivory-billed and supply coordinates to help ground teams hone searches ongoing across hundreds of thousands of wilderness acres.

The last ivory-billed sighting claimed by a bird scientist occurred on Valentine’s Day 2005, in Arkansas, when a researcher from Cornell’s famed Laboratory of Ornithology, Casey Taylor, spied what she is convinced was one of the huge woodpeckers being harried by a mob of crows.

But skeptics scoff at that sighting almost as loudly as they jeer at a fuzzy 2004 videotape purporting to show an ivory-billed. Such critics say the woodpecker has almost certainly been extinct since the 1940s and that the search is a colossal waste of money and scientific energy. They maintain ivory-billed scientists, however expert, are simply fooled by glimpses of similar-looking - but commonplace - pileated woodpeckers.

The rancorous dispute has shaken the usually-collegial bird community, with mud-slinging between prominent biologists. Doubters last year used a professional journal to accuse the ivory-billed scientists of practicing “faith-based ornithology.”

Meanwhile, in the real muck of the bottomlands, the search continues.

I have some Good News and Some Bad News - Cool Joke by Navtej Kohli

Monday, March 10th, 2008

Navtej Kohli a Doctor himself gives the laughter pill for the day

Patient: I’m in a hospital! Why am I in here?

Doctor: You’ve had an accident involving a bus.

Patient: What happened?

Doctor: Well, I’ve got some good news and some bad news. Which would you like to hear first?

Patient: Give me the bad news first.

Doctor: Your legs were injured so badly that we had to amputate both of them.

Patient: That’s terrible! What’s the good news?

Doctor: There’s a guy in the next ward who made a very good offer on your slippers.

Navtej Kohli: Books on Indian Birds

Friday, March 7th, 2008

Navtej Kohli shares a few good reading resources on the Indian Birds.

Common Birds of India
Asad R. Rahmani

A Photographic Guide to the Birds of India
Amano Samarpan

Birds of Himalaya and Kashmir
Douglas Dewar

Birds of Prey of the Indian Subcontinent
Rishad Naoroji

Navtej Kohli: 19th Century Books

Wednesday, March 5th, 2008

Dr. Navtej Kohli’s List of reading resources features books from the 19th Century:

Austen, Pride and Prejudice
Balzac, Eugènie Grande
Browning (Robert), Poems
Byron, Poems
Chekhov, Plays
Darwin, The Origin of Species
Dickens, David Copperfield
Dickinson, Poems
Dostoevski, The Brothers Karamazov
Eliot, Middlemarch
Emerson, Essays
Flaubert, Madame Bovary
Goethe, Faust
Hardy, Tess of the D’Urbervilles
Hawthorne, The Scarlet Letter
Hugo, Les Misèrables
Ibsen, Dramas
Keats, Poems
Marx, Capital
Melville, Moby Dick
Nietzsche, The Will to Power
Poe, Stories
Shelley, Poems
Stendhal, The Red and the Black
Thackeray, Vanity Fair
Thoreau, Walden
Tolstoi, War and Peace
Twain, Huckleberry Finn
Whitman, Leaves of Grass
Wordsworth, Poems
Zola, Germinal

Navtej Kohli - Recommended Biography for All docs

Monday, March 3rd, 2008

Dr’s Mayo - The legendary Biography of Dr. William and James Mayo, the Mayo Brothers who had changed the history of medical practice in America. I recommend this book to all the doctors and medical students for atleast one read.

Dr. Navtej Kohli: Butterfly Gardening

Saturday, March 1st, 2008

“Dr. Navtej Kohli has taken up a new hobby”- that is what my neighbors feel. But for me it is more than just a hobby, my winged friends have taught me a thing or two about life.I personally feel butterfly gardening has become one of the most interesting hobbies today. Nothing can match up the pleasure that a beautiful butterfly can bring to your garden. To make your garden butterfly-friendly, you can follow some basic tips:

First and foremost, you should know which butterflies are in your area. This can be achieved by spending some time outdoors to get a clearer idea about the species. Reading good books can also help. I’ll try to post some good reading resources.

The butterfly garden should be placed in a sunny location for a few hours, as butterflies like to bask in the sun but they need to be sheltered from the winds. Butterflies need the sun to warm themselves, but they won’t want to feed in an area where they are constantly fighting the wind to stay on the plants. Placing a few flat stones in your garden is a good idea as the butterflies can take a break while warming up.

Butterflies require water just like we do. Keep a water resource handy and have great fun with the most beautiful creation of God!