Mainly a tiny bit of posterity: Thanksgiving dinner
Oct. 17th, 2025 02:43 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
The rest of this is entirely about what we did for our little Thanksgiving dinner (with a bit of blood glucose talk), so it's going under a cut. ( cut! )
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Eel is a big deal in Commachio. With little arable land and situated right on the banks of the flood prone, brackish Po Delta, the town relied heavily on fishing for much of its history. Eels were, and still are, a particularly prodidgeous species, and are still fished in the delta to this day.
As eel season is only a few months long, the eel is marinated to preserve it for year-round use. Built in 1905 as a fish canning factory, the Manifattura dei Marinati processed the eels and other fish on a grand scale, shipping their products both domestically and as far away as North America. Eel would be sorted by size, roasted, and marinated before being packed into barrels, or, starting in the 1920's, canned.
The factory closed in 1992 but was reopened in 2004 after the Municipality of Comacchio and the Po Delta Park renovated several of the rooms and reopened the facility as a museum and a production facility on a smaller scale, to help preserve the traditional recipes and methods of marination.
Visitors can view the "Fire Room", where twelve large fireplaces roasted the eels, and the "Vinegar Room" where the eels would be marinated in massive vats. Also on display are several boats, specialized eel traps, and other traditional instruments used to catch and transport the eels. A short, black and white documentary film is available for viewing.
The eel is still packaged in the same colorful tins that debuted in 1927, and can be purchased in the museum gift shop, or in many of the stores in town.
The (ir)reality of the MingKwai typewriter
There's been a lot of hoopla about the famous Chinese author Lin Yutang's (1895-1976) purported MingKwai ("clear-quick") typewriter in the last few years. Fortunately, linguist Julesy popped the hallucinatory bubble about the proclaimed wonders of the MingKwai by grappling with the historical, theoretical, and practical aspects of the MingKwai: "The many myths about the Chinese typewriter" (9/7/25).
Now, in a new video that I just learned about two days ago, we get inside a replica of the MingKwai and can see how incredibly complex its innards are:
This video is fairly professionally filmed by the somewhat controversial HTX Studio. The content creator claims that it was first released in March 2023 and then goes on to say that, in January 2025 something incredible happened: the only MingKwai typewriter in existence was found in a basement in New York. It has now been acquired by the Stanford University library.
The title of this video is "We Built a Chinese Typewriter". Yes, they did, but it's not really viable. You'll never see it on the market. It's completely impractical, just a curiosity, at best a quirky documentation of a minor byway in the history of Chinese information technology. The video ends with a brief glimpse of the MingKwai accompanied by two unidentified individuals who are apparently its caretakers. HTX concludes: "We're eagerly awaiting their research findings."
When I first heard about the MingKwai typewriter half a century ago, I thought it was a sorrowful boondoggle. How could such a distinguished Chinese intellectual as Lin Yutang have such a poor understanding of the sinographic writing system that he could fantasize a Rube Goldberg typewriter like the MingKwai?
The HTX replica of the MingKwai, with its multiple extensions and extraneous electrification, makes it seem even more of a pipe dream than it really was.
Poor Lin Yutang! He bankrupted himself trying to make the morphosyllabic sinographic writing system behave like an alphabet.
David Moser, the author of A Billion Voices: China's Search for a Common Language (Penguin, 2016), who has as good a grasp of the quintessence of the Chinese writing system as anyone alive today, plus possesses a phenomenal sense of humor, is poised to anatomize the MingKwai. Should be fun, and extremely instructive.
Selected readings
Julesy videos
David Moser readings
[Thanks to Thomas Shaw]
Londo Mollari is an old, tired man, looking back at a life full of regrets as he waits to meet his end.
Words: 1023, Chapters: 1/1, Language: English
To eat 10,000 calories a day, you might try putting away a family-size box of Oreos, a box of packaged cakes, a pint of Ben & Jerry’s, takeout from Five Guys and McDonald’s, and many, many Reese’s cups—all between your regular three meals.
Dru Borden subsisted on this diet throughout his 20s and 30s. As a competitive bodybuilder—fans know him as Big Dru—he needed the calories. Since the mid–20th century, one of the core tenets of bodybuilding has stipulated that gaining muscle requires putting on weight, regardless of how. In Big Dru’s case, it worked: In early-career photos, he appears to have been cobbled together from boulders.
Body-composition researchers have established that a surplus of calories, plus resistance training, is required to gain muscle. The basic idea is that repetitive exercise causes muscles to break down, so the body needs energy and additional nutrients to build them back bigger and stronger. But spending months “dirty” bulking, as the ice-cream-and-burgers method is sometimes called, can also generate huge amounts of fat. Bodybuilders traditionally starved that fat off in the subsequent cutting phase, a period of caloric restriction that can last just as long as the bulk.
But these days, Big Dru and his fellow muscle-maxxing enthusiasts are embracing a new approach: moderation. At a time when celebrities, wellness influencers, and the nation’s top health officials are proclaiming the evils of processed foods, many bodybuilders—professionals like Big Dru, but also young, shirtless amateurs documenting their gains online—are leaving the old way of bulking behind.
On gym-bro social media, the hashtag #leanbulk is ubiquitous. (So is #cleanbulk, used interchangeably.) The term broadly refers to working out while consuming only slightly more calories than the body needs to maintain itself, and getting those calories from healthy sources. A typical lean-bulking TikTok features a young man showing off a comically ripped six-pack and C-cup pecs while meticulously documenting the food that fueled them: cottage cheese and eggs, sweet potatoes and tuna, berries and almonds, but never Twinkies.
[Read: Brace yourself for watery mayo and spiky ice cream]
“The paradigm has definitely shifted,” Guillermo Escalante, a kinesiology professor at California State University at San Bernardino and a competitive bodybuilder, told me. The concept of clean bulking emerged in the past decade or so, but it took off only recently, he said. The trend partly reflects the bodybuilding community catching up to the science. A 2020 review found that, for all but the most elite athletes, the body needs roughly 10 percent more calories to gain muscle than it does to maintain itself—certainly not anywhere near 10,000 calories. Beyond that point, research suggests, any extra calories are stored as fat. That not only obscures your gains but can hinder their growth: Working off fat sacrifices some lean muscle, Escalante said. Muscle growth can also be inhibited by the downstream effects of excess fat, such as insulin resistance and the release of inflammatory molecules, Brad Schoenfeld, an exercise-science professor at Lehman College, told me.
Lean bulking tends to produce big muscles more slowly, but it’s more sustainable over time. The effect of too much salty, fatty, and sugary food is the same for bodybuilders as it is for the less ripped: It disrupts the microbiome and immune system and increases blood sugar, triglycerides, and LDL cholesterol. “That’s really going to wreak havoc on your cardiovascular system long-term,” Escalante said. Around 2021, Big Dru switched to clean bulking because his previous diet gave him digestive issues, headaches, hormonal imbalances, and heartburn. (Now in his early 40s, he still looks like he’s been hewn from a monolith.)
But the rise of lean bulking seems to be primarily a product of broader shifts in American culture, not health data. For competitive bodybuilders, all that matters is how you appear on the day of an event. These days, people want to look like a bodybuilder 365 days a year, Escalante said. That makes dirty bulking—and its attendant buildup of fat—a less attractive option. In recent years, America has more aggressively embraced a chiseled aesthetic and made heroes of the supremely jacked. They fill social-media feeds: punching each other in Ultimate Fighting Championship matches, hosting popular podcasts, hanging on Taylor Swift’s arm, leading the Department of Health and Human Services. More than 90 percent of boys see online messages about body image, and 75 percent see videos specifically about muscles, according to a new report from the nonprofit Common Sense Media. Meanwhile, Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s “Make America Healthy Again” movement has stoked Americans’ hunger for “natural,” “clean,” and minimally processed foods—all compatible with a clean bulk, but not a dirty one.
[Read: The body-positivity movement is over]
Clean bulking may be a healthier option than slamming fast food, but that doesn’t mean it’s good for you. If social media is any indication, lean bulking still commonly involves extreme dieting, which can lead to nutrition deficiencies, hormonal changes, eating disorders, and loss of muscle and bone density. “For any kind of adolescent, growing human body, I don’t like it,” Nicole Lund, a nutritionist at NYU Langone Health’s Sports Performance Center, told me. Among the athletes she treats, Lund has seen calorie deficits precede fractures and disturbances in mood, hormones, and growth. Eating disorders, which Escalante said are already a major concern in the bodybuilding community, seem to be rising faster among men and boys than women and girls. A study published this year found that muscle dysmorphia, a pathological obsession with obtaining a jacked physique that is sometimes called “bigorexia,” is more common among young men than previously thought. In a 2021 study of more than 4,000 American teenage boys, 11 percent had used muscle-building supplements, including anabolic steroids, to bulk up.
The collision of wellness culture with the age-old pursuit of a Greek-god bod makes it tempting to believe that swoleness is akin to health. Sometimes that’s true. But for all that lean bulkers profess online that their physical changes serve their health, many of them are primarily motivated by aesthetics. Bill Campbell, an exercise-science professor and the director of the Performance & Physique Enhancement Laboratory at the University of South Florida, told me that most of the questions he gets about clean bulking come from young men, and they’re asking “for cosmetic, physique reasons,” such as wanting to fill out a tight shirt. The world of amateur bulkers seems to be mirroring that of competitive bodybuilders: In the end, the muscles are for show.
The rapper Curtis Jackson became 50 Cent a couple of decades ago, but the dollar is not what it used to be. Accounting for inflation, Brian Moore shows Jackson’s current value, which is 109 Cent, as of August 2025.
One might argue the other direction where 50 Cent stayed static name-wise, in which case he is currently 50 Cent and rewinding back to 1994, he would be 23 Cent.
These are the day’s tough decisions.
Tags: 50 Cent, Brian Moore, humor, inflation
Founded in 1894 by Henry Spiller in Cardiff's now-demolished Queens Arcade, Spillers Records initially sold phonographs, wax cylinders and shellac discs. Pre-dating the emergence of vinyl records by over half a century, the shop is said to be the world's oldest record store.
In the late 1940s, Spillers was relocated to its longest tenured location at The Hayes, becoming an integral part of the Welsh music scene, bringing together music lovers and inspiring future generations of South Welsh musicians. Noteworthy customers in their pre-fame era included members of the bands Catatonia, Super Furry Animals, and, most notably, Manic Street Preachers, who busked in front of the shop in their early days.
In the late 2000s, Spillers' survival was cast into serious doubt when the landlord increased the rent threefold, ahead of the planned redevelopment of The Hayes and the surrounding area. The business had already been struggling due to the advent of online music, which had caused a sharp decline in physical music sales. After a series of proposed takeover deals fell through, then-owner Nick Todd began making plans to shutter the business. It seemed inevitable that Spillers Records was finally approaching its swansong.
Unexpectedly, Nick's daughters, Ashli and Grace, took over the business. Having both worked part-time in Spillers while growing up, the sisters felt that closing the world's oldest record shop would be an awful sign about the state of physical music and independent music retailing. The shop was relocated to a stop-gap location in the nearby Victorian-era Morgan Arcade in 2010, before moving a few doors down to its present-day location at 27 Morgan Arcade in 2015.
While Spillers diversified into selling CDs and merchandise long ago, vinyl remains its specialty, and its recent revival has given the shop a second wind. The thoughtfully curated collection spans an expansive range of genres, with an affinity towards Welsh artists. The staff will gladly make recommendations based on customers' tastes and are also very willing to listen to feedback on what to order and stock. Music lovers passing through Cardiff should not pass up the opportunity to visit and support this living piece of music history.
The incredibly talented Spanish cover band Broken Peach performed a clever mashup that features the unlikely pair of the sublime Metallica song “Enter Sandman” with the iconic Talking Heads song “Psycho Killer” while dressed as ghouls in their annual Halloween video for 2025. The coordinated dance moves and the driving bass line really drove home the spooky theme.
Broken Peach – Enter Sandman (Halloween Special)
via Neatorama
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Jetson ONE, the incredibly innovative, lightweight personal eVTOL aerial vehicle that looks like a Speeder Bike from Star Wars, was showcased in the new “Jetson Air Games” during the UP Summit 2025 in Bentonville, Arkansas. The game uses pylons and formation to demonstrate the skill of the pilots.
For the first time ever, Jetson executed a 4-ship formation flight, followed by a high-speed pylon race, culminating in a solo aerial display
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The post Jetson Personal Electric Aerial Vehicles Race Against Each Other in an ‘Air Games’ Summit Demonstration was originally published on Laughing Squid.
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What Happened: The ranking member of a key House subcommittee demanded answers this week from the Environmental Protection Agency about why it has yet to make public a report documenting the health risks posed by a forever chemical found in the water of millions of Americans.
In a letter sent to the EPA on Thursday, Rep. Chellie Pingree, D-Maine, cited a ProPublica story from last week that quoted government scientists saying the report had been ready for publishing in April but had yet to be released. Pingree — the top Democrat on the Appropriations Committee’s Subcommittee on the Interior, Environment and Related Agencies — asked EPA Administrator Lee Zeldin for “clear answers” about why the report had not been made public, who directed its delay and when Zeldin would commit to releasing it.
What They Said: Pingree referred to the delay in publishing the report as part of “a growing pattern of interference with the Agency’s scientific work” and pointed to the Integrated Risk Information System, the EPA program that wrote it. IRIS, which was created during Ronald Reagan’s presidency, analyzes the health harm chemicals can cause. “The Trump Administration, Republicans in Congress, and industry have been hostile to the IRIS program,” she wrote, asking whether scientists had been removed or reassigned from the program and, if so, why.
Her letter also noted that the “delay in issuing the PFNA report coincided with EPA’s decision, in May of this year, to rescind” drinking water limits for PFNA and several other forever chemicals, also known as PFAS. “This seems to be more than coincidence given that there has been strong industry pushback on regulating PFAS,” Pingree wrote.
Pingree noted that the delay appears to contradict Zeldin’s repeated public statements about protecting the public from PFAS compounds, which contaminate soil and water in Maine and throughout the country. “Our state is really hoping for help from the federal government. And when you see the federal government turn their back on you and decide to withhold the data … that’s really discouraging,” she told ProPublica. “Reading that piece made my blood boil.”
Background: PFNA is in drinking water systems serving some 26 million people. The report in question found that the chemical interferes with human development by causing lower birth weights and, based on animal evidence, likely causes damage to the liver and to male reproductive systems, including reductions in testosterone levels, sperm production and the size of reproductive organs.
PFNA was a component of firefighting foam and a processing aid to make a kind of plastic used in circuit boards, valves and pipes. Although it was subject to a voluntary phaseout almost two decades ago, the chemical is now widespread in the environment.
ProPublica’s reporting found that IRIS has been drastically reduced under the Trump administration. The program, which calculates values that can be used to set limits for pollutants in drinking water and cleanup levels for toxic sites, has been a frequent target of industry. Project 2025, the conservative blueprint that has set the direction for President Donald Trump’s second administration, called for IRIS to be eliminated. Earlier this year, Republicans in Congress introduced legislation called the “No IRIS Act.” Of 55 EPA scientists Publica identified as having worked on recent IRIS assessments, only eight remain in the office, according to a source familiar with the program.
Why It Matters: The report calculated the amount of PFNA that people can be exposed to without being harmed — a critical measurement that can be used to set limits for cleaning up PFNA in contaminated areas called Superfund sites and for removing the chemical from drinking water. This calculation will prove critical to communities around the country as they battle polluters over who will pay to remove PFNA and other forever chemicals from the environment.
Response: Last week, an EPA spokesperson told ProPublica that the report on PFNA would be published when it was finalized but did not answer questions about what still needed to be done or when that would likely happen. The agency’s press office did not respond to questions about Pingree’s letter.
Pick the next theme of fancake:
Mystery & Suspense
6 (50.0%)
Protest & Revolt
5 (41.7%)
Whump
1 (8.3%)
The early morning sun glowed faintly through the windows. Inside, soft buzzing noises broke the calm—the source being Emu’s phone, vibrating wildly on the bedside table. The device, encased in a ridiculously large taiyaki-shaped cover, buzzed again and again until Emu, still half-asleep and tangled in her blanket beside Mizuki, reached for it.
Her eyes fluttered open. She blinked at the glowing reminder on her lock screen—“Event Reminder with Onee-chan!”—before quickly turning the screen off. For a moment, she stared at the blank wall, her bright fuchsia hair messy and her usual sparkle slightly more dimmed. Then, with a breath, she sat up and put on the biggest smile she could.
—
Season 2 Episode 14 of The Owl House but Project Sekai
Words: 8095, Chapters: 1/1, Language: English
Air travel demand in Canada plummeted as a result of the COVID pandemic. But with the virus in the rearview mirror, has demand for air travel returned to pre-pandemic levels?
This graphic, in partnership with Transport Canada, shows annual passengers moving through major Canadian international airports from 2019 to 2024, using data from the Government of Canada.
Here is a table that shows annual passengers by major Canadian international airports from 2019 to 2024.
Airport | 2019 | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 | 2023 | 2024 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Toronto / Lester B. Pearson | 49.2M | 13.0M | 12.4M | 35.0M | 43.8M | 45.7M |
Vancouver | 25.7M | 7.2M | 7.0M | 18.6M | 24.4M | 25.3M |
Montreal / Pierre Elliott Trudeau | 19.6M | 5.2M | 5.0M | 15.5M | 20.4M | 21.6M |
Calgary | 17.2M | 5.3M | 5.9M | 14.1M | 18.0M | 18.5M |
Edmonton International Airport | 7.9M | 2.5M | 2.6M | 5.7M | 7.2M | 7.5M |
Ottawa / MacDonald-Cartier | 5.0M | 1.3M | 1.1M | 2.9M | 4.0M | 4.5M |
Winnipeg James Armstrong Richardson | 4.4M | 1.2M | 1.2M | 3.0M | 4.0M | 4.2M |
Halifax Stanfield | 4.1M | 1.0M | 1.0M | 3.1M | 3.5M | 3.9M |
Total | 133.1M | 36.7M | 36.2M | 97.9M | 125.3M | 131.2M |
In total, these airports handled 131 million passengers in 2024 versus 133 million in 2019. The recovery was broad-based across hubs as travel normalized.
Toronto Pearson led the country with 45.7 million passengers in 2024. Vancouver and Montréal followed at 25.3 million and 21.6 million, respectively.
Meanwhile, Calgary reached 18.5 million, while Edmonton, Ottawa, Winnipeg, and Halifax each continued steady gains. Together, these patterns underline how Canadian air hubs have restored connectivity.
These facilities represent roughly 82%–84% of overall air traffic, counting travelers who enplaned or deplaned.
Are you interested in learning more about Canada’s transportation and trade data?
Drawing directly from the most authoritative sources, including the Government of Canada and Statistics Canada, the Transport Data and Information Hub (TDIH) provides information on Canada’s roads, rail networks, air traffic, port activity, trade, and more.
See Canada’s busiest ports by container volume, highlighting Vancouver’s lead and a decade of growth, using government data.
This graphic, created in partnership with Transport Canada, explores Canada’s trade and its 10 most traded goods.
Era Bulă la scoala si avea o inspectie. Inspectorul spune ca a fost foarte buna inspectia dar spune ca Bulă (baiatul din colt de langa fereastra) nu prea a raspuns. El intreaba daca poate sa se duca sa puna cateva intrebari.Profesoara raspunde ca da.Se duce el si intreaba: - Bulă ce faci daca esti singur intr-o padure si deodata apare langa tine un urs? Bulă: - Fug! Inspectorul spune: - Fuge si ursul dupa tine! - Fug mai tare! - Sa presupunem ca fuge si ursul mai tare - Fug si mai tare! - Sa presupunem ca fuge si ursul si mai tare - Ma urc intr-un copac ! - Sa presupunem ca se urca si ursul dupa tine! - Ma urc si mai sus! - Sa presupunem ca se urca si el mai sus! - Eee mai du-te in rasa matii, ca tu tii cu ursul… | Bulă was in school and there was an inspection. The inspector said that the inspection was very good but also said that Bulă (the boy in the corner by the window) didn't really answer. He asks if he can ask him a few questions. The teacher says sure. So, the inspector asks: - Bulă, what do you do if you are alone in a forest and suddenly a bear shows up close to you? Bulă: - I run! The inspector says: - The bear runs after you too! - I run faster! - Let's assume that the bear runs faster too. - I run even faster! - Let's assume that the bear runs even faster too. - I climb a tree! - Let's assume that the bear climbs after you too! - I climb even higher! - Let's assume that he climbs higher too! - Hmmm. Just go fuck yourself. You're rooting for the bear. |
The Aqaba Flagpole, located in the coastal city of Aqaba at the southern tip of Jordan, reaches an impressive height of 430 ft (130 m). Built and inaugurated in 2004, this structure stands as the tallest free-standing flagpole in the country and ranks among the tallest in the world.
The 197 ft (60 m) by 99 ft (30 m) polyester flag at the top of the pole may closely resemble the official Jordanian flag but lacks the white star in the red chevron. Instead, it serves as a commemoration of the Great Arab Revolt against the Ottomans, which began in this square in 1917. The banner's colors bear noteworthy meanings: red for martyrs' sacrifices, green for peace and sustainability, black for oppression, and white for a brighter future.
Perched by the Red Sea coast, the flagpole's towering stature and strategic position have made it an important landmark, visible from three nearby countries: Israel, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia. It stands as a powerful symbol of the region's history and significance.
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Although not especially tall by Tibetan standards, picturesque Mount Kailash is notable as the source of four major Asian rivers: the Indus, Sutlej, Brahmaputra, and Karnali. Countless stories surround it, each shaped by different religious traditions.
Hindus and Buddhists often identify it as Mount Meru, the center of the universe and abode of the gods. Hindus revere the mountain as the home of the god Shiva. Jains believe it to be where the first Tirthankara ("saint"), Rishabhadeva, attained moksha, or "enlightenment". Bön practitioners, the traditional religion of Tibet, identify Mount Kailash with the sky god Sipaimen and believe it to be the spiritual center of the universe, where heaven and earth are linked.
Some unsuccessful attempts to climb the mountain were made in the 1920s and '30s. Although it is not considered especially difficult by today's standards, the mountain is off-limits due to its immense religious importance and remains a virgin peak to this day. World-renowned mountaineer Reinhold Messner was offered permission to climb it in the 1980s. He famously declined, saying: "If we conquer this mountain, then we conquer something in people's souls."
While they can’t climb the mountain, visitors can follow in the footsteps of pilgrims on a 32-mile pilgrimage (known as yatra in Hinduism and kora in Buddhism) that circles the peak’s base. Starting and ending in Darchen, Hindus and Buddhists make the typically three-day journey clockwise, while Bön practitioners move counterclockwise. Jains follow specific meditation points and ritual stations along the trail rather than a set direction.
The route passes numerous monasteries and four chaktsal gangs, viewpoints where Buddhists prostrate before the mountain. The most devout pilgrims continuously prostrate themselves and crawl throughout the entire journey, a process that can last up to three weeks.
In addition to the increasingly popular Outer Kora around the mountain's base, there is also the Inner Kora, which goes up close to Gyangdrak and Selung monasteries. This more difficult route is only open to pilgrims who have completed the Outer Kora 13 times.
A walk along the towpath of Basingstoke Canal isn’t frightening at first, as you pass the peaceful ruins of Odiham Castle, peer at mallard ducks and coots on the water, and a mute swan on an enormous nest. However, at the end of the canal, beware the Greywell Tunnel, a place where men in the 19th century had to fight claustrophobia (fear of small places), nyctophobia (fear of the dark), thalassophobia (fear of drowning) and chiroptophobia (fear of bats) just to do their jobs.
It's perfectly safe today, and the most thrilling thing about the site is the wildlife, because in the winter months it is the home of thousands of bats. Signs along the current path indicate that it is a site of special scientific interest. This site has more roosting bats than any other site in all of Britain. At least eight species of bats have been identified at this tunnel, with Natterer’s and Daubenton bats most common. The high count of 484 Natterer’s bats in 2015 was the second largest in the world.
The brick tunnel must have been infamous when boats used it for commerce. It was built without a towpath, which meant cargo boats were moved by legging. This is when two people lie on their backs in the boat and use their feet against the tunnel walls to push the boat along. Because of the length of the tunnel, it could take up to 6 hours to leg it through in the dark.
More dangerous than working in the tunnel was building it. The original tunnel was built by hand, first by digging a shaft 130 feet down from the top of Greywell Hill, then by tunneling out in both directions by candlelight, till the tunnel was over 1,100 meters long. It took years to construct and officially opened in 1794.
The tunnel roof partially collapsed in 1932. Commerce needs had changed by then, so the roof fall was not repaired. Another collapse in the early 1950s blocked it for any kind of boats. That portion filled with clay, making it more like a cave than a tunnel.
There is no public access to the tunnel, and that portion of the canal is visited by bat scientists, who can only travel 600 feet inside because if they go any farther, there are no more places to turn around and come back out.
Today there is nothing to fear, and a lot to love about this bridge over multiple freshwater springs, that are a main water source for the Basingstoke Canal. From the path beside the water, you can look down into the crystal clear waters and see the waving fronds of ferns and mosses beneath the surface. The beautiful and imposing Greywell Tunnel eastern portal is Grade II listed, and was restored in 1975.
When a woman named Kari bought a house in Maine, she found out that she also inherited a spiky little resident who left tracks in the snow of her yard. One day, Kari met the porcupine, whom she named Albert, and saw that he was limping. She reached out to a wildlife rescue organization who told her to monitor Albert and feed fresh fruits. Alfred was more than happy to oblige, getting closer to her and letting her know that apples were his favorite.
The mission was simple. Monitor his condition regularly and feed him tons of fresh fruits until he’s strong enough to climb trees again. She started feeding Alfred a variety of citrines and apples. Alfred loves apples.
When Brielle Randeiro, an Associate Video Editor/Producer for The Dodo learned about Alfred’s diet, she sent over a beautiful fruit basket for him to enjoy.
He visited every day for his daily snack, and he appeared to grow stronger. At this point, I wanted in on the action.I decided to pull some Dodo strings and send Alfred a very special gift to celebrate his fast approaching recovery.
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Hovertext:
It needs more leaves, but otherwise this is a perfect proof of concept.