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I'm raising my toddler on a desert island… he loves daily swims & crab hunting, but it's not easy when he's sick
I'm raising my toddler on a desert island… he loves daily swims & crab hunting, but it's not easy when he's sick

The Irish Sun

time3 days ago

  • The Irish Sun

I'm raising my toddler on a desert island… he loves daily swims & crab hunting, but it's not easy when he's sick

WALKING along the island's crystal-clear shoreline, my partner Heinrich and I smiled as our two year old excitedly pointed to a blue starfish. But we weren't on holiday – we were enjoying our morning walk, because we are the only residents of Advertisement 4 Ruby Holmes is raising her son Lukas on One Tree Island in Australia's Great Barrier Reef 4 Ruby and her partner Heinrich are station managers and the island's only residents In October 2019, Heinrich and I moved here after a friend sent us details of two job vacancies for research station managers to host visiting researchers. I'd grown up near the coast in Australia and had a degree in marine biology, while Heinrich had worked as a free diver on a remote island, so we were excited to learn we'd both been successful in our interviews. When we arrived, I was blown away by the beauty. Advertisement We had to go six weeks without a food delivery Surrounded by clear ocean, 100km from the mainland and 20km from the nearest island, it felt like our own paradise. We'd been working in Australia, New Zealand, Fiji and Tonga on boats, so it was great to have more space to explore nature and not feel so confined. But when the Covid pandemic struck a few months later, it felt very isolating. We had to go six weeks without a food delivery, and while we were prepared so didn't go hungry, I was craving texture after weeks of eating frozen fruit and veg. Then, in 2021, our island life was left in jeopardy when I became pregnant, as children weren't then allowed to live on One Tree. Advertisement UK's loneliest school on remote island offers free accommodation & £41k salary - but you have a long way to get there Luckily, The University of Sydney, which manages the station, put a child policy in place. So, we left the island to give birth and returned with our baby three months later. We questioned if we were doing the right thing, but Lukas adores his daily swims and kayaking with Heinrich. Of course, having a baby presented a whole new set of challenges. Our days start earlier, as Lukas loves a 5am wake-up, but the sunrises over the reef are so beautiful that we now adore going for an early morning family walk. Advertisement New challenges He enjoys looking for crabs and likes the porcupine rays. One night, I even found a mother green sea turtle in our front room! People assume our life is easy, but it's not always. Just before Lukas turned two, he caught scarlet fever from a researcher. Thankfully, we were able to talk to a doctor on the phone and use antibiotics we keep in our locked medical kit. Advertisement Work-wise, we are constantly on call, and because we both work full-time we have an au pair living with us to help with Lukas. 4 Ruby says Lukas adores his live on the island 4 One Tree Island is surrounded by clear ocean, 100km from the mainland and 20km from the nearest island Of course, Heinrich and I argue, but we have great communication skills, which is important when you live and work in close proximity. We also respect each other's space – I love to do workouts to blow off steam, while Heinrich has his workshop he can retreat to. Advertisement We can't always get deliveries, so we plan food, medical supplies, fuel, you name it. Unpredictable weather We order groceries fortnightly, which come by barge to Heron Island, which can be a two-hour boat trip for us, depending on the weather. There's no dash to the store for late-night snacks, which means we eat pretty healthily! The unpredictable weather can be stressful, and while we've not had a major cyclone, there are evacuation plans in place. We have satellite phones and internet, but we can't just pop over to visit family and friends, who we miss. Advertisement I don't worry about Lukas socialising, because researchers sometimes bring children with them and friends and family do visit. We also try to get off the island three times a year, and go on holidays. For now, we plan to have Lukas We feel so lucky to be bringing him up in a simple way without television or tablets. Hopefully, this experience stays with Lukas and he always remembers the remote paradise we were lucky enough to call home.' Advertisement

I'm raising my toddler on a desert island… he loves daily swims & crab hunting, but it's not easy when he's sick
I'm raising my toddler on a desert island… he loves daily swims & crab hunting, but it's not easy when he's sick

Scottish Sun

time3 days ago

  • Scottish Sun

I'm raising my toddler on a desert island… he loves daily swims & crab hunting, but it's not easy when he's sick

Ruby Holmes, 32, and her partner found a unique job on a stunning paradise island MY CASTAWAY LIFE I'm raising my toddler on a desert island… he loves daily swims & crab hunting, but it's not easy when he's sick WALKING along the island's crystal-clear shoreline, my partner Heinrich and I smiled as our two year old excitedly pointed to a blue starfish. But we weren't on holiday – we were enjoying our morning walk, because we are the only residents of One Tree Island in the Pacific Ocean, where we're raising our son Lukas. 4 Ruby Holmes is raising her son Lukas on One Tree Island in Australia's Great Barrier Reef 4 Ruby and her partner Heinrich are station managers and the island's only residents In October 2019, Heinrich and I moved here after a friend sent us details of two job vacancies for research station managers to host visiting researchers. I'd grown up near the coast in Australia and had a degree in marine biology, while Heinrich had worked as a free diver on a remote island, so we were excited to learn we'd both been successful in our interviews. When we arrived, I was blown away by the beauty. We had to go six weeks without a food delivery Surrounded by clear ocean, 100km from the mainland and 20km from the nearest island, it felt like our own paradise. We'd been working in Australia, New Zealand, Fiji and Tonga on boats, so it was great to have more space to explore nature and not feel so confined. But when the Covid pandemic struck a few months later, it felt very isolating. We had to go six weeks without a food delivery, and while we were prepared so didn't go hungry, I was craving texture after weeks of eating frozen fruit and veg. Then, in 2021, our island life was left in jeopardy when I became pregnant, as children weren't then allowed to live on One Tree. UK's loneliest school on remote island offers free accommodation & £41k salary - but you have a long way to get there Luckily, The University of Sydney, which manages the station, put a child policy in place. So, we left the island to give birth and returned with our baby three months later. We questioned if we were doing the right thing, but Lukas adores his daily swims and kayaking with Heinrich. Of course, having a baby presented a whole new set of challenges. Our days start earlier, as Lukas loves a 5am wake-up, but the sunrises over the reef are so beautiful that we now adore going for an early morning family walk. New challenges He enjoys looking for crabs and likes the porcupine rays. One night, I even found a mother green sea turtle in our front room! People assume our life is easy, but it's not always. Just before Lukas turned two, he caught scarlet fever from a researcher. Thankfully, we were able to talk to a doctor on the phone and use antibiotics we keep in our locked medical kit. Work-wise, we are constantly on call, and because we both work full-time we have an au pair living with us to help with Lukas. 4 Ruby says Lukas adores his live on the island 4 One Tree Island is surrounded by clear ocean, 100km from the mainland and 20km from the nearest island Of course, Heinrich and I argue, but we have great communication skills, which is important when you live and work in close proximity. We also respect each other's space – I love to do workouts to blow off steam, while Heinrich has his workshop he can retreat to. We can't always get deliveries, so we plan food, medical supplies, fuel, you name it. Unpredictable weather We order groceries fortnightly, which come by barge to Heron Island, which can be a two-hour boat trip for us, depending on the weather. There's no dash to the store for late-night snacks, which means we eat pretty healthily! The unpredictable weather can be stressful, and while we've not had a major cyclone, there are evacuation plans in place. We have satellite phones and internet, but we can't just pop over to visit family and friends, who we miss. I don't worry about Lukas socialising, because researchers sometimes bring children with them and friends and family do visit. We also try to get off the island three times a year, and go on holidays. For now, we plan to have Lukas home-schooled on the island, but we don't yet know what the future holds. We feel so lucky to be bringing him up in a simple way without television or tablets. Hopefully, this experience stays with Lukas and he always remembers the remote paradise we were lucky enough to call home.'

I'm raising my toddler on a desert island… he loves daily swims & crab hunting, but it's not easy when he's sick
I'm raising my toddler on a desert island… he loves daily swims & crab hunting, but it's not easy when he's sick

The Sun

time3 days ago

  • The Sun

I'm raising my toddler on a desert island… he loves daily swims & crab hunting, but it's not easy when he's sick

WALKING along the island's crystal-clear shoreline, my partner Heinrich and I smiled as our two year old excitedly pointed to a blue starfish. But we weren't on holiday – we were enjoying our morning walk, because we are the only residents of One Tree Island in the Pacific Ocean, where we're raising our son Lukas. 4 In October 2019, Heinrich and I moved here after a friend sent us details of two job vacancies for research station managers to host visiting researchers. I'd grown up near the coast in Australia and had a degree in marine biology, while Heinrich had worked as a free diver on a remote island, so we were excited to learn we'd both been successful in our interviews. When we arrived, I was blown away by the beauty. Surrounded by clear ocean, 100km from the mainland and 20km from the nearest island, it felt like our own paradise. We'd been working in Australia, New Zealand, Fiji and Tonga on boats, so it was great to have more space to explore nature and not feel so confined. But when the Covid pandemic struck a few months later, it felt very isolating. We had to go six weeks without a food delivery, and while we were prepared so didn't go hungry, I was craving texture after weeks of eating frozen fruit and veg. Then, in 2021, our island life was left in jeopardy when I became pregnant, as children weren't then allowed to live on One Tree. UK's loneliest school on remote island offers free accommodation & £41k salary - but you have a long way to get there Luckily, The University of Sydney, which manages the station, put a child policy in place. So, we left the island to give birth and returned with our baby three months later. We questioned if we were doing the right thing, but Lukas adores his daily swims and kayaking with Heinrich. Of course, having a baby presented a whole new set of challenges. Our days start earlier, as Lukas loves a 5am wake-up, but the sunrises over the reef are so beautiful that we now adore going for an early morning family walk. New challenges He enjoys looking for crabs and likes the porcupine rays. One night, I even found a mother green sea turtle in our front room! People assume our life is easy, but it's not always. Just before Lukas turned two, he caught scarlet fever from a researcher. Thankfully, we were able to talk to a doctor on the phone and use antibiotics we keep in our locked medical kit. Work-wise, we are constantly on call, and because we both work full-time we have an au pair living with us to help with Lukas. 4 4 Of course, Heinrich and I argue, but we have great communication skills, which is important when you live and work in close proximity. We also respect each other's space – I love to do workouts to blow off steam, while Heinrich has his workshop he can retreat to. We can't always get deliveries, so we plan food, medical supplies, fuel, you name it. Unpredictable weather We order groceries fortnightly, which come by barge to Heron Island, which can be a two-hour boat trip for us, depending on the weather. There's no dash to the store for late-night snacks, which means we eat pretty healthily! The unpredictable weather can be stressful, and while we've not had a major cyclone, there are evacuation plans in place. We have satellite phones and internet, but we can't just pop over to visit family and friends, who we miss. I don't worry about Lukas socialising, because researchers sometimes bring children with them and friends and family do visit. We also try to get off the island three times a year, and go on holidays. For now, we plan to have Lukas home-schooled on the island, but we don't yet know what the future holds. We feel so lucky to be bringing him up in a simple way without television or tablets. Hopefully, this experience stays with Lukas and he always remembers the remote paradise we were lucky enough to call home.'

New Mexico US Senators Heinrich, Luján back legislation to protect dreamers' data
New Mexico US Senators Heinrich, Luján back legislation to protect dreamers' data

Yahoo

time5 days ago

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

New Mexico US Senators Heinrich, Luján back legislation to protect dreamers' data

Supporters of the DACA program rally outside the U.S. Supreme Court. (Photo by Robin Bravender / States Newsroom) New Mexico's senators in Congress have joined two dozen others in an effort to protect the private information submitted by undocumented people who came to the U.S. as children in order to receive protection from deportation. U.S. Sen. Martin Heinrich on Thursday announced that he and U.S. Sen. Ben Ray Luján, along with 24 other senators, have introduced the Protect DREAMer Confidentiality Act, which would prohibit the U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security from divulging to immigration authorities information disclosed in someone's Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) application. 'I call on Congress to quickly take up and pass my legislation to make sure Dreamers are able to stay in school, keep working and contribute to our economy, and remain in their homes and neighborhoods,' Heinrich said in a statement. The bill would also block DHS from referring anyone with deferred enforcement protections under DACA to any law enforcement. Under the legislation, DHS could still share the information with national security and police agencies in order to identify or prevent fraud, and to investigate felony crimes, as long as they aren't related to the applicant's immigration status or for 'particularized national security purposes.' Approximately 825,000 people have received protection from deportation under DACA since 2021, according to Heinrich's office. 'We need to ensure that Dreamers' private information is not weaponized against them and is protected — full stop,' Heinrich said. In a news release, Heinrich's office noted that DACA recipients have contributed an estimated $140 billion to the U.S. economy and $40 billion in federal, state and local taxes. The bill's introduction comes as the federal Internal Revenue Service is building a database of taxpayer records, including home addresses, to help ICE find and deport people, ProPublica reports. The Trump administration has also provided immigration authorities with Medicaid enrollees' personal data. Earlier this year, New Mexico enacted a new state law that prohibits the state Motor Vehicle Division employees from disclosing driver's license data to any entity that would use it to enforce federal civil immigration laws, among other data protections. 'Dreamers in New Mexico and across the country are frontline health care workers, teachers, firefighters, police officers and scientists,' Heinrich said. 'These inspiring young people are Americans in every sense of the word except on paper, and they want nothing more than to be productive members of their communities. Unfortunately, the Trump Administration doesn't care about any of that and is indiscriminately sharing the private information of Dreamers.' SUBSCRIBE: GET THE MORNING HEADLINES DELIVERED TO YOUR INBOX Solve the daily Crossword

Two Fox reporters got engaged to congressmen. How do you balance love and objectivity?
Two Fox reporters got engaged to congressmen. How do you balance love and objectivity?

Boston Globe

time7 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Boston Globe

Two Fox reporters got engaged to congressmen. How do you balance love and objectivity?

Heinrich is the senior White House correspondent for Fox News and a rising star at the network. She and Fitzpatrick have been dating for four years — but before their first date, she consulted her bosses and got the go-ahead, with the proviso that she steer clear of any stories that involve him in any way. Singman covers the White House for Fox News Digital and makes occasional on-air appearances. She met Reschenthaler last year while covering the 2024 presidential election, and the two began dating shortly after his divorce: In January, what she thought was an interview turned out to be their first date. The company requires that she recuse herself from covering the House of Representatives. Advertisement 'FOX News has policies in place to ensure there are no conflicts of interest between our journalists and the stories or subjects they cover,' the network said in a statement to The Washington Post. Advertisement Senior White House Correspondent for Fox News Jacqui Heinrich at a White House press briefing in March. MANDEL NGAN/AFP via Getty Images Journalists and politicians have been falling in love for decades. The journalists are usually (but not always) women who meet their future spouses while covering campaigns and politics and find they have common interests, friends and ambition. Jacqueline Bouvier was a newspaper photographer in Washington when she met John F. Kennedy, in 1952. Maria Shriver married Arnold Schwarzenegger when she was a broadcast journalist and he was a Hollywood star. Andrea Mitchell wed Federal Reserve Chair Alan Greenspan, and Claire Shipman reported for ABC News while her husband, Jay Carney, served as President Barack Obama's White House press secretary. A few prominent male journalists have married political figures: Chuck Todd, of NBC fame, and Democratic political consultant Kristian Denny Todd; Matthew Cooper, known for his work with Time magazine, and Mandy Grunwald, a close adviser to Hillary Clinton; and political correspondent Todd Purdum and Dee Dee Myers, a former White House press secretary for Bill Clinton. They were A-list Washington power couples but also faced allegations that politicians inevitably share sensitive information at home, or that journalists used their influence to support and advance their spouse. 'Dee Dee and I only started dating after she had left the White House, and I don't believe our relationship ever posed a substantive conflict of interest,' Purdum said this week. 'But there were certainly media critics who believed it created a perception problem — something that I think we were both sensitive to and respectful of, and worked hard to avoid.' Former CNN reporter Campbell Brown had a similar experience. 'The degree to which my husband and I agree-or influence one another-is really less the issue than the disclosure,' she wrote in Slate. At the time, her husband, Dan Senor, was an adviser to Mitt Romney. 'Failing to disclose gives your intellectual opponents a means of distraction, a way to create a diversion so that your arguments go unheard.' Advertisement Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Connie Schultz took a leave from Cleveland's Plain Dealer when husband Sherrod Brown ran for Senate in 2006. 'I still want to write about what's on my mind, but that is becoming increasingly difficult,' she wrote at the time. 'Each passing week brings more limitations in my choice of topics because there is a concern that some will accuse me of using my column to stump for my husband.' President John F. Kennedy with first lady Jacqueline Kennedy, leaving a Newport, R.I., church after their wedding in September 1953. Jacqueline was a newspaper photographer in Washington when she met the late president in 1952. ASSOCIATED PRESS/Associated Press On election night, Hillary Clinton called the senator-elect and told him: 'Tell Connie not to let anyone tell her she can't have her career.' Schultz returned to the paper but resigned in 2011 — citing conflict of interest — when her husband launched his reelection campaign. 'In recent weeks, it has become painfully clear that my independence, professionally and personally, is possible only if I'm no longer writing for the newspaper that covers my husband's Senate race on a daily basis,' she wrote. Mitchell had a celebrated career at NBC as a foreign affairs and political correspondent long before she started dating Greenspan. When he was named Fed chair, in 1987, she knew she had to set boundaries. She 'immediately, of course, went to my bureau chief and said, 'We have to figure out the rules of the road and put up the fire walls.' And I stopped covering anything in the economic arena,' she told 'Fresh Air' in 2019. The couple married in 1997, and his term ended in 2006, but things got complicated during the 2008 economic crisis. Every political story had an economic angle; Mitchell was accused of downplaying her husband's role in the resulting instability. Advertisement Mitchell is still working for the network. Shriver, famously a member of the Kennedy dynasty, is back at NBC after years of putting her career on hold. In her new memoir, 'I Am Maria,' Shriver writes: 'Fast-forward to 2003 and kapow! My movie-star husband abruptly decided he wanted to run for governor of California. And then before I knew what hit me, my network news bosses called to ask me for my resignation, because they said my having a politician for a husband gave the appearance of a conflict of interest.' Some things have changed over the past two decades. The journalists are now often bigger stars than their political spouses and make more money. The career of NPR's Nina Totenberg eclipsed that of her first husband, one-term U.S. senator Floyd Haskell. Totenberg was already an established court reporter and married Haskell just after he left the Senate, so the ethical conflicts were minimal. Another change: the accession of President Donald Trump, the distrust of legacy media, and the blurred lines between traditional journalists and media cheerleaders, some of whom have joined his administration. His daughter-in-law, Lara Trump, interviewed the president Saturday on her weekly Fox News show. Heinrich and Singman are both part of the news division at Fox News, which is separate from the more partisan opinion lineup, so they are restricted from airing their political views. And while their relationships prompted limits to what they write about, the White House beat can inevitably overlap with covering Congress. Advertisement What happens next? Two weddings — and then another Washington experiment in love, success and objectivity.

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