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Dario Costa: Watch a Red Bull Zivko Edge 540 race plane fly through a tunnel — and set a Guinness World Record at the same time

(CNN) — Some pilots focus on flying high, but Dario Costa’s success at flying low has landed him in the Guinness Book of World Records.

The 41-year-old Italian stunt pilot on Saturday successfully maneuvered a custom-modified Zivko Edge 540 race plane through the twin Çatalca tunnels along the Northern Marmara Highway in Turkey.

In total, Costa set five records with his feat: longest tunnel flown through with an airplane, first airplane flight through a tunnel, longest flight under a solid obstacle, first airplane flight through two tunnels and first airplane takeoff from a tunnel. Only the first was officially recognized with a certificate from Guinness.

It took more than a year to prepare for the 43.44-second flight.

Costa and his mentor, Hungarian pilot Péter Besenyei, worked alongside 40 team members at Red Bull in order to pull off the flight.

Everything, from the time of day to the exact measurement of the wings, was carefully planned. On September 4, Costa took off at 6:43 a.m. in order to have the early-morning sunlight behind him for ideal visibility.

According to Guinness, the total distance covered by Costa was 2.26 km (1.4) miles.

“There was a big question mark in my head whether everything would go as we expected,” Costa said in a statement. “It was a big relief, of course, but big, big happiness was the main emotion. For me, it’s another dream come true.”

Costa was raised in Bologna and worked as a pool cleaner while pursuing his aviation dreams. He worked as a stunt performer for the upcoming film “Mission Impossible 7,” which was filmed in Italy.

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New Trump book from Bob Woodward and Robert Costa revealed

“Peril” is scheduled for release on September 21, and will closely examine the tumultuous time spanning the November 2020 election, the January 6 insurrection, and President Biden’s inauguration. According to details exclusively obtained by CNN, the book will reveal how the transition period was “far more than just a domestic political crisis” and “one of the most dangerous periods in American history.”

The book will be published by Simon & Schuster, which published Woodward’s first two bestselling books on Trump.

According to sources familiar with the book, Woodward and Costa interviewed more than 200 insiders for “Peril,” resulting in more than 6,000 pages of transcripts. CNN obtained the book’s jacket, which says it “takes readers deep inside the Trump White House, the Biden White House, the 2020 campaign, and the Pentagon and Congress, with eyewitness accounts of what really happened.”

Woodward and Costa obtained “never-before-seen material from secret orders, transcripts of confidential calls, diaries, emails, meeting notes and other personal and government records,” sources familiar with the book told CNN.

“Peril” also goes behind the scenes during the earliest days of the Biden administration, just weeks after the attack at the Capitol and as the coronavirus pandemic continued to rage throughout the country. The book’s title comes from a line in Biden’s inaugural address, according to sources familiar with the book.

“Over the centuries through storm and strife, in peace and in war, we have come so far. But we still have far to go. We will press forward with speed and urgency, for we have much to do in this winter of peril and possibility,” Biden said on the steps of the Capitol on January 20.

Woodward is known for his bombshell reporting, with explosive details in his 2020 book “Rage” that revealed Trump understood how contagious and deadly the Covid-19 virus was long before the American people were made aware.
Woodward’s first book on Trump, 2018’s “Fear,” detailed the extraordinary measures taken by top officials and White House aides to prevent what they saw as a president “unhinged” and unable to control his own impulses.

The book jacket for “Peril” also includes an intriguing quote about Trump’s presidential ambitions for 2024.

“He had an army. An army for Trump. He wants that back,” Brad Parscale, Trump’s former campaign manager, said privately in July 2021. “I don’t think he sees it as a comeback. He sees it as vengeance.”

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Where to rent treehouses in U.S., Japan, Australia and Costa Rica

Travelers looking for a vacation in the great outdoors are turning to a nostalgic source of comfort and solitude: treehouses.

But these aren’t the treehouses of their childhood. Like the travelers who are booking them, the treehouses have matured too.

Modern treehouses are more luxury homes than kid hangouts — with a price to match. Treehouses constructed by professionals can easily cost six figures to build.

“A fully appointed treehouse with kitchen, bathroom, heat and air conditioning … we’re building those around $200,000,” Pete Nelson, the star of Animal Planet’s TV show “Treehouse Masters,” told CNBC in 2014.

Treehouses that are built for people to live in now average around $240,000, according to HomeAdvisor, a website that connects homeowners with home services.

Since then, prices have risen along with demand, a situation further propelled by the global pandemic and a desire for offbeat, outdoor accommodations.

Grand entrances

Aside from a worn-out patch of grass in the backyard, old-school treehouses didn’t typically incorporate much of an entrance. Modern ones do, some with gated walkways, stone staircases and ramps built for wheelchairs and pets.

The Chez’ Tree Rest treehouse is near New York’s Finger Lakes’ region.

Anthony Costello | Bluenose Studios

One such treehouse is the Chez’ Tree Rest Treehouse in upstate New York, which is accessible via a 60-foot footbridge that begins at a heart-shaped gate. Another 30-foot-long cable bridge connects the treehouse to a separate relaxation deck.

Owner Tom Wallace discusses the treehouse’s construction in a video tour of the treehouse where he also provides tips for a comfortable stay.

Rates start at $285 per night.

New heights

Treehouses for children should be between six and 12-feet tall with railings that are at least 36 inches high, according to Tree Top Builders, a custom builder based in Exton, Pennsylvania. Those heights also assume a mulch or wood chips are placed below the treehouse to soften a potential fall.  

Treehouses built for big people aren’t constrained by these standards, as evidenced by the three-story Punta Jaguar jungle treehouse in Matapalo, Costa Rica.

The Punta Jaguar treehouse has three open-design elevated levels, plus a ground-level bungalow.

Courtesy of Punta Jaguar

What the house lacks in walls, it makes up in style. Sinks and water faucets are made of seashells, and a separate ground-level bungalow comes with colorful swivel windows and electric drawbridge-style dropdown decks. It has a caretaker and private path to the beach, according to the website. Guests are encouraged to be 7 years old and above.

Rates start at $255 per night.

Guests at Peru’s Inkaterra Reserva Amazonica treehouse sleep 70 feet above the rainforest floor.

Courtesy of Inkaterra Hotels

Thrill-seekers can sleep in the Amazon rainforest at Peru’s Inkaterra Reserva Amazonica ecolodge. The lodge’s sole treehouse is located more than 70 feet above the rainforest floor at the end of a series of seven suspended bridges.

Programs start from $492 for a two-night stay, plus an additional $660 to sleep in the treehouse.

Fabulous views

Childhood treehouses may have granted views of neighbors’ backyards, but nothing as spectacular as Australia’s Blue Mountains.

In a twist on childhood clubhouse rules, this treehouse in Australia’s Blue Mountains can accommodate two adults, but no kids or pets.

Jochen Spenser

A tongue-in-cheek sign on the Secret Treehouse’s door may say that no grown-ups are allowed, but in reality, it’s the kids who can’t come along. This treehouse is built on tall stilts at a high elevation and has a combination bridge and ladder entrance.

Rates start at 1,095 Australian dollars ($804) for a one-night stay.

Sophisticated decor

Sports pennants and sticker-adorned walls have been sidelined for plush interiors that resemble modern homes.

The Aerohouse at the Treeful Treehouse Sustainable Resort in Okinawa, Japan.

Courtesy of the Treeful Treehouse Sustainable Resort

This is evident at the Treeful Treehouse Sustainable Resort in Okinawa, Japan. All bookings include two treehouses: the earthy Spiral Treehouse which comes with hammocks and yoga mats, and the luxurious Aerohouse, which has the look and feel of a five-star hotel suite. Its muted, sophisticated décor comes with creature comforts such as an espresso machine and wine cellar, according to the website.

The treehouse resort has been open for less than a month. Guests can currently book two-night stays — no more, no less — and all travelers must be 10 years old and above.

The interior of Okinawa’s Aerohouse.

Courtesy of Treeful Treehouse Sustainable Resort

Rates are 100,000 Japanese yen ($905) per night for up to three people; a fourth person is an extra $225 per night. Bookings are currently 33% off the regular rates. 

Kitted out kitchens

While cooking and treehouses once rarely meshed, treehouses now come with full kitchens outfitted with Nespresso coffee machines and kitchen islands.

The contemporary kitchen in Trinity Treehouse, outside of Atlanta, has a wine rack and bar area.

Courtesy of Dickersonarts.com

The two-bedroom Trinity Treehouse near Atlanta has a kitchen that travelers may envy for their homes, let alone their yards. Three sizable windows enlarge the space, which includes an L-shaped countertop, wine rack and breakfast counter for coffee or quick meals. A decorative backsplash sits above the kitchen cabinets, which were made in the host’s woodworking shop, according to the website listing.

Trinity Treehouse is next to the hiking and bike trails of Georgia’s 2,500-acre Davidson-Arabia Mountain Nature Preserve. 

Rates start at $289 per night.

Features to stoke the imagination

Luxury treehouses needn’t be too serious — that’s what log cabins are for. What distinguishes a treehouse from an elevated house in the woods can be the latter’s dedication to whimsy and childlike fun.

To enter one tropical treehouse on Hawaii’s Big Island, guests climb a ladder to a trapdoor that opens to the second story. Bags and suitcases take a different route; they’re hoisted up via a pulley system.

Though it doesn’t allow kids, the Wanderlust Treehouse incorporates imaginative features into its design.

Levi Kelly

The Wanderlust Treehouse in Crane Hill, Alabama, doesn’t allow kids, but that didn’t stop its owner from installing a playground-style suspension bridge to connect two parts of the house. The treehouse, which has received perfect scores in all of its 85 Airbnb reviews, has outdoor side-by-side showers, a swinging bed and a fire pit.

Rates start at $350 per night.

Want to build your own modern treehouse?

Item Cost
Vacation rental treehouse From $30,000
Bathroom $4,500
Zipline $2,200
Spiral staircase $5,900
Suspended bridge $2,900
Trapdoor $500
Classic slide $1,200
Fireman’s pole $575
Source: Treehouse Experts

Gourmet food

Guest who stay at the Loire Valley Lodges have daily breakfast baskets delivered to their doors. They also have access to an onsite restaurant and room service.

Loire Valley Lodges leans heavily upon local produce and grows herbs and fruit on-site, according to its website.

Courtesy of Loire Valley Lodges

The French treehouse hotel opened in July 2020, with the interiors of each of its 18 structures designed by a different contemporary artist.

Rates start at 395 euros ($428) per night.

*Rates are accurate as of publication date.

 

 

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Wildfire in Spain’s Costa Brava forces hundreds from their homes

BARCELONA, July 17 (Reuters) – Firefighters used water-carrying planes on Saturday as they battled to control a wildfire in Spain’s Costa Brava region that has forced 350 people to be evacuated from their homes, the regional fire service said.

The blaze, which police think was caused by a discarded cigarette, tore through more than 400 hectares (about 1,000 acres) of forest and scrubland on the edge of the Cap de Creus natural park, a popular tourist area.

“We’re trying to bring the fire under control at the moment using six aircraft, which are pouring water onto the flames and 90 fire crews on the ground,” said Sergi Palacios from the Catalan regional government’s fire service.

Police officers look at a wildfire burning in Spain’s Costa Brava region, in Llanca July 17, 2021. REUTERS/Lorena Sopena

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Video images shot by firefighters showed them clambering across the rocky terrain as they worked in the darkness to tackle the fire, which started on Friday.

More than 231 people had to seek shelter overnight in temporary accommodation offered by the local council in El Port de la Selva district.

Police said anyone found responsible for causing the fire by throwing away a smouldering cigarette could face criminal charges.

“One negligent cigarette butt is 50 years of reforestation,” Jordi Puignero, vice president of the Catalan regional government, told reporters.

Reporting by Graham Keeley and Silvio Castellanos
Editing by Helen Popper

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Megan Fox on Machine Gun Kelly’s Outfits, Doing Ayahuasca with Him in Costa Rica & New Thriller – Jimmy Kimmel Live

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Contra Costa County may offer vaccination to all 16 and up this week

Contra Costa County is expecting to offer coronavirus vaccinations this week to everyone 16 and older who lives or works in the county as it anticipates a surge in supply from the state and federal government, the county health department announced Sunday.

The move would make Contra Costa County the first in the Bay Area to offer such sweeping eligibility for the lifesaving shots. Contra Costa Health Services in a news release on its website Sunday stated: “CCHS expects to open eligibility to those 16 years or older later this week. Timing for that decision will depend on how quickly available appointments fill in the coming days.”

Spokesman Karl Fischer clarified that the decision was not yet final and that health officials later in the week would make that call on expanding the pool of people who qualify, based on whether anticipated vaccine supply actually arrives and how fast the appointments get snapped up.

The county has thousands of appointments at its community clinics for the week, the news release said. County Supervisor John Gioia told The Chronicle that if they don’t fill up, the county then will consider eligibility for those as young as 16.

“We want to use the vaccine to get it into arms as quickly as possible, because ultimately we want as many people vaccinated as quickly as possible, especially with the spread of the variants,” he said, referring to the coronavirus mutations that are quickly emerging and spreading.

The county urged anyone who is eligible now to book an appointment as soon as possible to beat the coming rush. Currently, those eligible for the shots are people over the age of 50 who live or work in the county, those over 16 who have a high-risk health condition, disability or illness, and certain essential workers.

If the county goes ahead with the step this week, the expansion would precede by some two weeks the same broadening of statewide eligibility guidelines that Gov. Gavin Newsom announced on Thursday. The state is recommending counties offer shots to everyone as young as 16 beginning April 15, and to those 50 and up as of Thursday this week.

Expanding vaccine eligibility usually leads to long delays in getting appointments and limited availability, Contra Costa Health Services warned.

People who are currently eligible are strongly encouraged to beat the rush by requesting appointments as soon as possible, either by using the county’s online request form at cchealth.org/coronavirus or by calling 1-833-829-2626.

Contra Costa County has been ahead of many counties in vaccinating residents, and opened appointments to people 50 and older last week.

Gioia said that in addition to receiving vaccine supply from the state, the county has benefited from having 11 federally qualified health centers, focused on underserved populations, such as the West County Health Center’s mass vaccination site in San Pablo, that receive vaccine allocated directly from the federal government. Some other counties have said their supplies are so tight, and unpredictable, that they are worried about being able to meet demand very quickly just from the population 50 and older.

Contra Costa County got more than 75,000 doses last week, but doesn’t yet know how much it will get this week, Fischer said.

As of Sunday, 97% of its population over 75 was vaccinated, according to county data, and a quarter of those over 16. Debbie Toth, president of the nonprofit Choice in Aging in Contra Costa, said nearly all older adults she serves are vaccinated, save for a “handful that are afraid of it.”

“I’m not super stressed that people who need it aren’t going to get it,” Toth said.

Mallory Moench is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: mallory.moench@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @mallorymoench



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Contra Costa becomes second Bay Area county to expand vaccine eligibility to people 50 and over

Contra Costa County on Monday announced it is expanding coronavirus vaccine eligibility to people 50 and older who live or work in the county, becoming the second Bay Area county after Solano to do so.

California has not expanded eligibility to people 50 and older, but does plan to open up vaccinations to people 16 and older by the last week of April, Gov. Gavin Newsom said Friday. The California Department of Public Health on Monday declined to say whether it will first expand eligibility to those 50 and older before opening it up to everyone else.

If California goes the same route as New York and a number of other states, it could take the incremental step of adding those 50 and older to the priority list soon. California is currently giving vaccine priority to people 65 and older, essential workers in certain sectors, homeless and incarcerated residents, and people between 16 and 64 with disabilities or underlying health conditions.

It’s been about two months since the state opened up eligibility to people 65 and over. Older adults are at greater risk of becoming severely ill or dying from COVID-19, so basing eligibility on age was an effort by policymakers to lessen the burden on hospitals.

Contra Costa’s announcement means that people between 50 and 64 do not need to have a disability or underlying medical condition, or work in a qualifying sector, to get vaccinated. The move comes as many states are similarly loosening their age or other requirements for vaccinations. New York on Tuesday will make residents 50 and older eligible for vaccines, and Arizona on Wednesday will open up eligibility for residents 16 and older at state-run vaccination sites in three counties, state officials said Monday.

Two states, Alaska and Mississippi, have opened up vaccinations for everyone 16 and older. And at least 20 states have announced plans to do so in March or April, according to the New York Times.

In Contra Costa County, about 235,000 residents between 50 and 64 are now newly eligible, according to the county. The expansion comes as the county has begun receiving additional vaccine from the federal government for its federally qualified health centers.

“We look forward to the coming months when we can do away with vaccine eligibility, when anyone and everyone is eligible,” Contra Costa County Board of Supervisors Chair Diane Burgis said in a statement. “More and more doses of vaccine are coming into the county each week and we expect that trend to continue.”

Other Bay Area counties reached Monday said they are not yet expanding eligibility to those 50 and older, and are monitoring the state’s next steps for guidance. They would like to make vaccines available to more people, they said, but supply constraints make it difficult to predict exactly when that will happen.

“At this point, we are sticking with the state’s current eligibility groups,” said Marin County spokeswoman Laine Hendricks. “We estimate about 160,000 Marin residents are eligible under those definitions and still have a number of people to reach until we deem those groups as saturated. That being said, if the state were to signal a change and open that group, we would align with the state and begin vaccinating those individuals.”

Expanding eligibility does not necessary mean everyone who is eligible will be able to get their shots immediately because vaccine supply remains unpredictable. Last week, as the state opened up eligibility to people 16 and older with disabilities and underlying medical conditions, some were not able to book appointments right away.

Solano County last week expanded eligibility to people 50 and older. On Monday, county officials said they have seen a steep 60% drop in vaccine supply in the last two weeks, and must put off scheduling many first-dose appointments as mass vaccination clinics.

Vaccine supply coming to California, which is currently around 1.6 million to 1.7 million doses a week, is expected to double by the end of April if projections from the Biden administration and vaccine manufacturers hold true, said Blue Shield of California, which manages vaccine distribution for the state. That increase will mostly be driven by the expected influx of more Johnson & Johnson vaccine starting in early April, Blue Shield chief executive Paul Markovich said in an interview Friday.

The addition of the vaccine made by AstraZeneca, which on Monday released promising results from a large U.S. trial showing a 79% efficacy rate at preventing COVID-19 symptoms, could also bode well for speeding up vaccinations. AstraZeneca plans to apply for emergency use authorization in the United States “in the coming weeks” and has already been approved in dozens of other countries including much of Europe. Concerns over a small number of blood clots in people who were recently vaccinated temporary halted the administration of the vaccine in some countries earlier this month, but many have resumed the shots after European regulators deemed it safe.

It’s unlikely the AstraZeneca vaccine would gain FDA authorization before May, and by then the U.S. may not need it because there will be more Pfizer, Moderna and Johnson & Johnson vaccines available.

As of Monday, nearly 10 million Californians, about 30% of the state’s 16-and-older population, are at least partially vaccinated. Of that group, 5.2 million, or 16%, are fully vaccinated, according to state data.

Staff writer Erin Allday contributed to this report.

Catherine Ho is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: cho@sfchronicle.com Twitter: @Cat_Ho



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A Physicist Has Worked Out The Math That Makes ‘Paradox-Free’ Time Travel Plausible

No one has yet managed to travel through time – at least to our knowledge – but the question of whether or not such a feat would be theoretically possible continues to fascinate scientists.

 

As movies such as The Terminator, Donnie Darko, Back to the Future and many others show, moving around in time creates a lot of problems for the fundamental rules of the Universe: if you go back in time and stop your parents from meeting, for instance, how can you possibly exist in order to go back in time in the first place?

It’s a monumental head-scratcher known as the ‘grandfather paradox’, but in September last year a physics student Germain Tobar, from the University of Queensland in Australia, said he has worked out how to “square the numbers” to make time travel viable without the paradoxes.

“Classical dynamics says if you know the state of a system at a particular time, this can tell us the entire history of the system,” said Tobar back in September 2020.

“However, Einstein’s theory of general relativity predicts the existence of time loops or time travel – where an event can be both in the past and future of itself – theoretically turning the study of dynamics on its head.”

What the calculations show is that space-time can potentially adapt itself to avoid paradoxes.

 

To use a topical example, imagine a time traveller journeying into the past to stop a disease from spreading – if the mission was successful, the time traveller would have no disease to go back in time to defeat.

Tobar’s work suggests that the disease would still escape some other way, through a different route or by a different method, removing the paradox. Whatever the time traveller did, the disease wouldn’t be stopped.

Tobar’s work isn’t easy for non-mathematicians to dig into, but it looks at the influence of deterministic processes (without any randomness) on an arbitrary number of regions in the space-time continuum, and demonstrates how both closed timelike curves (as predicted by Einstein) can fit in with the rules of free will and classical physics.

“The maths checks out – and the results are the stuff of science fiction,” said physicist Fabio Costa from the University of Queensland, who supervised the research.

Fabio Costa (left) and Germain Tobar (right). (Ho Vu)

The new research smooths out the problem with another hypothesis, that time travel is possible but that time travellers would be restricted in what they did, to stop them creating a paradox. In this model, time travellers have the freedom to do whatever they want, but paradoxes are not possible.

While the numbers might work out, actually bending space and time to get into the past remains elusive – the time machines that scientists have devised so far are so high-concept that for they currently only exist as calculations on a page.

 

We might get there one day – Stephen Hawking certainly thought it was possible – and if we do then this new research suggests we would be free to do whatever we wanted to the world in the past: it would readjust itself accordingly.

“Try as you might to create a paradox, the events will always adjust themselves, to avoid any inconsistency,” says Costa. “The range of mathematical processes we discovered show that time travel with free will is logically possible in our universe without any paradox.”

The research has been published in Classical and Quantum Gravity.

A version of this article was first published in September 2020.

 

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