John Farrier's Blog Posts

Citing Medieval Law, Men of English Town Summoned to Longbow Practice

The vicar of Collingbourne Ducis, UK, discovered a law on the books that allowed her to summon the men of her village to archery practice. So she did:

Church warden Mike Cox said: "It seems she's still entitled to do that."

"I've been checking on the web and most archery experts and clergy seem to agree she is," Mr Cox added.

"Though a lot of the laws were repealed, that particular one still stands so she's entitled to call the men of the village, and presumably the women and children too, to archery practice.


Those who attended were rewarded with beer, barbeque, and live music to celebrate the completion of the church's new toilet.

Link via Ace of Spades HQ | Photo: BBC

Radially Expanding Table


(YouTube Link)


British custom furniture maker David Fletcher makes capstan tables -- tables that expand and contract radially. They're handy in confined spaces, such as yachts. When the transformation is complete, the surfaces look quite seamless.

Link via Make

Sculptures Made from Human Ash



The Dutcher designer Wieke Somers used 3D printers to turn ashen human remains into sculptures:

her project 'consumer or conserve' evaluates this notion of a second-life. she considers, how human ashes can be reused by means of rapid prototyping or 3D printing, so that we may afford someone a 'second life' as a rocking chair, vacuum cleaner, perhaps even a toaster? would we become more attached to these objects if this was the case?


Pictured above is "Dung Beetle with Vacuum Cleaner" made from John Steegman (1939 – 1985). This and other works are on display at the Grand-Hornu Images gallery in Belgium until September 12.

Link via Nerdcore | Designer's Website | Photo: Design Boom

LEGO Robot Chess


(YouTube Link)


A team led by Steve Hassenplug built programmable chess piece robots using LEGO's Mindstorms system. They used $30,000 worth of LEGO pieces to construct this chessboard, which appears to be about fifteen feet across. The robots are programmed to get out of each other's way and leave the board when they've been captured. The video above shows them as flat objects. But Hassenplug also built animatronic pieces, and you can see them at the link.

Link via Geekosystem | Previously: Star Wars Chess Made Made from LEGOs

Arctic Surfing



Filmmaker Yassine Ouhilal took four top professional surfers to the northern Norwegian and Russian coast to film them surfing in the extreme winter conditions of the Arctic Ocean:

While planning the trip, charts showed that waves would be better in the winter, but it was deemed suicide to try surfing during the coldest and darkest part of the year. Even the spring temperatures hovered between 20 and 45 degrees Fahrenheit; not exactly the most ideal surfing weather. As they traveled around they often found beautiful, calm beaches that taunted them with signs of large waves that came just days before.


At the link, you can view more photos of their expedition.

Link via The Presurfer | Photo: Yassine Ouhilal

Disney Photo Captured Married Couple on Film 15 Years Before They Met



When Alex and Donna Voutsinas were photographed together at Disney World, they didn't know each other. In fact, they didn't even live in the same country. But fifteen years later, they met and married:

That fateful realization came just one week before their wedding eight years ago. Alex and Donna had been going through old family snapshots. There, in the blurry background of a picture of 5-year-old Donna was 3-year-old Alex being pushed down Main Street at the same moment in 1980 by his father. The senior Voutsinas’s distinctive jet-black hair with its white tuft caught his eye.

“My mother pulled out albums from the same trip. My dad is wearing exactly the same outfit.”

Other pictures from that trip showed Alex on his dad’s shoulders. The boy in the background of Donna’s picture and the boy in those pictures were the same.


Link via Ace of Spades HQ | Photo: Voutsinas Family

Tarantula Cocktail

Hey, don't eat that tarantula just yet! Apparently, when mixed with rice wine, these spiders make a good cocktail:

The arachnophobe’s nightmare is made using rice wine, jack fruit and a tarantula – which many Cambodians believe can help your heart and work as an aphrodisiac.[...]

The trade for spiders as food has been in effect since the 1970's in Cambodia - but only very recently have tourists been finding a way to see where the spiders are hunted in the nearby countryside.


Link via Glenn Reynolds | Photo: Tom Whitby/Getty

Oil Recovery Ship Splits in Two



This unique German naval vessel is designed to recover spilled oil. The Bottsand-class ships, of which there are two, splits in order to scoop-contaminated water into its 790 cubic meter recovery tank:

The German Navy's Bottsand class oil recovery ship is built for handling seawater pollution control. The ship, with its twin hull, opens up by 65-degrees and captures seawater into a 790 cubic meter tank. There the vessel separates the oil from the water, processing 140 cubic meters of water every hour.

The ship first entered service during the 80's and are used to contain spills from German ships in the area.


Link via DVICE | Photo: gCaptain

Popular Hobby in China: Gooming Dogs into Other Animals

That's not a tiger in the picture, but a dog dyed to look like a tiger. It's an example of what The Daily Mail reports is a growing hobby in China: dying and trimming dogs' hair so that they look like different animals.

Recent figures show money spent on pets across the nation has seen nearly a 500 per cent increase between 1999 and 2008 - but, arguably, at the cost of their pets' dignity.

Quite what the animals might think about it is another matter.


At the link, you can see what I think are keeshonds costumed as panda bears.

Link via Geekologie | Photo: China Foto Press/Barcroft Media

Bird Attacks RC Airplane


(YouTube Link)


YouTube user andrewid1976 was flying his remote controlled airplane when it was attacked by a bird. After several attempts, the bird, which Andrew identifies as a raven, was able to take down its prey.

via The Presurfer

Scientists Take Pictures of Antarctic Mountain Range for the First Time

The Gamburtsev Mountains in Antarctica, named after Soviet geophysicist Grigoriy Gamburtsev, lie beneath a mile of solid ice. Scientists have known about their general location for a while, but only recently were able to take pictures of them:

The images are the result of radar technology, and reveal a dramatic landscape of rocky summits, deep river valleys, and liquid, not frozen, lakes, all hidden beneath the ice. The range itself rivals the Alps in size and cover an area that is roughly the size of New York State.

“What we’d shown before was an estimate based on gravity data — a little bit of a coarse resolution tool,” said Robin Bell, a senior research scientist at Columbia’s Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory in New York. “What we showed at this meeting was the radar data. It’s like going from using a big, fat sharpie to using a fine-tipped pencil.”

Link via TigerHawk | Image: NewsDesk

The Man Who Sold Everything He Owned to Buy a Lamborghini and Drive Across the Country

Richard Jordan had the American Dream unfolding before him: cars, a nice house, and a fiance. Then she left him suddenly, and Jordan didn't know what to make of his life. So he used all of his life savings to buy a Lamborghini Gallardo and drive across America in search of himself. Jalopnik has his story:

It wasn't actually as easy as that. No one wanted to buy his new house so he was stuck with it. It took him months to sell the rest of his possessions. That, combined with the majority of his life savings, he used to afford a $90,000 down payment on a Lamborghini Gallardo — one of the most expensive vehicles on the market.[...]

After locating the right model and arranging the financing he picked up his black Lamborghini Gallardo Coupe from Lamborghini of Ohio. The date? July 4th, 2006.

Independence Day was an almost intentionally ironic choice, as he picked that day to separate from everything he'd created but now no longer wanted, including the house.

"I'd become a prisoner to my house, to everything, to my fantasy of an American Dream or anything I could remotely call home."


Link via Glenn Reynolds | Photo (unrelated): Chrises Cars

Time-Lapse Pen Drawing


(YouTube Link)


This time-lapse video shows artist Paul Alexander Thornton drawing a detailed human skull with bic pens. The four and a half minute video represents two days of work.

via Nerdcore | Artist's Website (warning: music)

Chicken Lays Record-Breaking Egg

A hen in Eastwood, UK, lay an egg that was 9.1 inches in diameter, exceeding the standing record of 8.6 inches:

Hens' eggs typically have a circumference of 5.5 inches and are 2.3 inches long.

Mr Barbouti, a 64-year-old taxi driver from Eastwood, near Southend in Essex, said yesterday: 'My hens have laid big eggs before but when I saw this one I was gobsmacked.

'Harriet is only a young hen, she's about six months old, and has only just started laying eggs.

'She was limping a bit but she was all right. I'm really proud of her. She doesn't seem to have been putting off laying as she's still producing eggs.'


Link via Ace of Spades HQ | Photo: Peter Lawson/Eastnews Press Agency

Crocheted Gold Furniture



This is "Bon Bon Gold" by Dutch designer Marcel Wanders. It's a hollow chair made of crocheted rope that holds its form due to heavy coatings of resin and gold. At his website, you can view similar pieces of furniture made from woven rope -- just without the expensive gold.

Link via DudeCraft | Artist's Website | Photo: Sotheby's

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