John Farrier's Blog Posts

Vinegar Pie and 17 Other Old School Pie Flavors

This is a slice of vinegar pie prepared by food blogger Southern Bite. It's a type of pie sometimes called "desperation pies" associated with by not necessarily originating in the Great Depression, when hard economic times required creative substitutions in popular foods. In this case, when a pie requires a certain tartness but citrus juice isn't available, vinegar will do.

This pie is one of 18 old fashioned and largely forgotten pie flavors rounded up by The Takeout. Others include water pie (another desperation pie), mock apple pie, pineapple pie, and grasshopper pie, the last of which is named for the cocktail, not the insect.


Zurich Builds a Bikes-Only Tunnel

Zurich, Switzerland is historically a rather bike-friendly city. It's moved even further in that direction with the opening of tunnel made exclusively for the use of bicycles. Canadian Cycling Magazine reports that the city spent approximately $47 million USD to build this tunnel which is just over a quarter mile long and as wide as 20 feet.

There's clear signage, lighting, and video surveillance in the system. To facilitate its use, the tunnel is adjacent to a bicycle parking complex that can accommodate 1,240 bikes. City officials hope that this tunnel and its amenities will decrease road congestion during high-traffic times.

-via TYWKIWDBI


Jawlene the Alligator Has No Upper Jaw

Alligators are everywhere in Florida. In fact, I actually proposed to my wife next to an alligator pond when we lived there. That wasn't the plan; it's just that alligators are so prolific that we happened to be next to a pond of them at the time.

For the most controlled alligator experience (I'm not a fan of free-range alligators), go to Gatorland, the alligator-themed amusement park in Orlando.

Among the resident gators is Jawlene, a young lady who has no upper jaw. Gatorland posts on Facebook that she was rescued from the wild in 2023. Although she was severely malnourished at the time of rescue, she's recovered her proper weight and is a popular attraction.

-via Massimo


Pooping Dog Birthday Cake

How can I get my dog to poop promptly, ideally on command, accepting that one place is as good as another?

This birthday cake simulates what an ideal dog would be able to accomplish in the morning before we have to get to work. The woman uses a cigarette lighter to release of the cake/dog's digestive tract. Something that is technically edible releases into a pile. Good dog!

-via Born in Space


The Star Trek Astrotank

The Original Series prompted the creation of some very strange merchandise. Most notably, the notorious Spock helmet never appeared in the Original Series, although it did make an appearance in the more recent comedy Lower Decks.

Like the Spock helmet (officially "Space Fun Helmet"), the Astrotank was clearly created by a design team that had never watched Star Trek or did not care about product topicality at all. It had Star Trek written on the side and a sticker vaguely resembling the Starfleet logo. Tanks made only two appearances on Enterprise and none of them looked like this . . . thing.

Still, you can buy an Astrotank if you wish. They're occasionally listed on eBay, albeit for steep prices.

The Astrotank and Space Fun Helmets are only two bizarre items of Star Trek merchandise produced. You can see 7 others at Star Trek's official webpage, including a Star Trek V marshmallow dispenser.

-via @TheMekon_Venus


The Elephant in the Grocery Store

There's an issue that we need to talk about--something that we've all known about for a long time but have avoided addressing directly.

We're talking about the elephant in the room. Specifically, we're talking about this wild elephant that walked into a grocery store near the Khao Yai National Park in Thailand.

The elephant is named (by humans, we don't know what he calls himself) Plai Biang Lek. The Associated Press reports that shop owner Kamploy Kakaew recorded the elephant shoplifting rice crackers, dried bananas, and a sandwich.

As I said, Plai Biang Lek shoplifted these items; he made no attempt to pay for them. Although he left without attacking any humans, he did steal from them.

Shameful.


For Sale: The Original Home of Dungeons & Dragons

In 1973, Gary Gygax and Don Kaye founded the firm TSR -- Tactical Strategic Rules. The next year, this company created Dungeons & Dragons.

This cultural phenomenon had humble origins. Those origins include a hobby shop named the Dungeon Hobby Shop which Gygax established in 1976 at 723 Williams Street in Lake Geneva, Wisconsin. TSR went through varied fortunes before Wizards of the Coast purchased the company in 1997. So did the hobby shop, which eventually became a museum about Dungeons & Dragons. It closed several months ago.

Now the building is for sale. You can see more photos of this magnificent historical landmark at the realtor's website.

-via @DungeonNoir


How Much Will the Average Person Poop and Pee During a Lifetime?

I'm glad you asked!

Cutter Wood has a new book out titled Earthly Materials: Journeys through Our Bodies' Emissions, Excretions, and Disintegrations. It examines the science of our excretory systems. An exerpt available at Harper's Magazine summarizes the numbers.

3,500 kilograms of feces will pass out of your body, assuming that you live 75 years. That would overflow a 20-foot long shipping container. These deposited feces will be matched with 38,000 liters of urine.

Wood also provides numbers for total amounts of hair, semen, menses, tears, and energy measured in joules. This is all information that you will need for future conversation starters.

-via TYWKIWDBI | Photo: Jason Unbound


Puddles Pity Party Sings the Theme to Pee-wee's Playhouse

Singer Michael Geier, better known as his clownish persona Puddles Pity Party, was a friend of the late Paul Reubens--now gone from us nearly two years. In his latest music video, Puddles offers a melancholy version of the theme song to Reubens's iconic show Pee-wee's Playhouse.

The original theme had Cindi Lauper's sped-up voice cheerfully welcoming audiences to Saturday morning joy with Pee-wee Herman. Puddles, though, mourns the passing of Reubens. He offers slow lamentations, then uses an enormous balloon to make fart noises.

-via Laughing Squid


The Hillbilly Thomists--Friars Who Play Bluegrass

These Dominican friars take their name from a line by Southern writer Flannery O'Connor, who described herself as a "hillbilly Thomist" -- a woman of the Deep South steeped in the thought of theologian Thomas Aquinas.

Based out of a Dominican center in Washington, D.C., the men began recreationally playing together in 2014. They then used their music a means to evangelize their faith while connecting with secular audiences who appreciate traditional bluegrasss music.

The Hillbilly Thomists have released four albums from 2017 to 2024. Much of their music is available on the YouTube channel of an official Dominican publication.

-via J.R.R. TolKee


Semicolons Are at Risk of Dying Out

Punctuation marks, like all other aspects of language, change over time. A personal example: I routinely teach college students what a colon (:) is; they rarely, if ever, have used one before and are unfamiliar with it.

The Daily Mail reports that Venetian printer and publisher Aldus Manutius invented the semicolon in 1494. It proliferated in English. In Nineteenth Century English literature, semicolons typically appeared approximately once every 205 words; a number that is now down to every 309 words. A survey of British students revealed that only 11% use it it regularly and 69% use it rarely.

Although some authors, such as Virginia Woolf, have been fond of it, other writers, notably Kurt Vonnegut, have expressed loathing for this punctuation mark; opinions range into extremes for the semicolon.

-via Dave Barry | Photo: kencf0618


Japan Bans Weird Baby Names

The subreddit /r/Tragedeigh is devoted to highlighting the most bizarre and outlandish names that people create for their children. Some are normal names that are deliberately misspelled (e.g. Jaxshuyn), some place unrealistic demands upon a child (e.g. Messiah), and others are fictional characters that do not serve as good role models for children (e.g. Daeneyrs).

The Guardian reports that the Japanese government has banned names that it deems are kirakika, which means shiny or glittery. In English, we could call such names Tragedeighs. Parents must tell government officials how names are pronounced in order to prevent weird pronunciations. Parents with eccentric pronunciations must justify those renderings in writing.

Photo: Flickr user alexxis used under Creative Commons license.


The Hugging Chair

The Hugging Chair, also called the OTO, is a chair designed for people with autism. Sometimes, people with autism experience needs for continuous sensory pressure. The OTO provides it by wrapping the user with soft, warm fabric. There's a control pad that allows the user to adjust the pressure to suit his/her unique needs at the time.

This is the work of LABAA, a firm based in Nantes, France, consisting of cabinetmaker Alexia Audrain and business partner Corentin Lemaitre. The pair have won a James Dyson Award for the design of this unique product.

-via Toxel


RIP Harrison Ruffin Tyler, Grandson of President Tyler

As we have noted in the past, President John Tyler (1790-1862) left the White House in 1845. He had many children, the last of which, Lyon Gardiner Tyler, was born in 1853 when former President Tyler was 63 years old. Lyon Gardiner Tyler himself sired a child in 1928, when he was 75. That man, Harrison Ruffin Tyler, was the grandson of a President born in the Eighteenth Century.

The youngest Mr. Tyler had been something of a historical curiosity in recent years. Now he has passed on. Last Sunday, The Richmonder reports, he died at the age of 96.

During his life, Mr. Tyler worked in chemical engineering and thrived financially. He eventually purchased and restored Sherwood Forest Plantation, a home once owned by his Presidential grandfather. He also bought and restored the nearby Fort Pocahontas, which was constructed and defended by African American troops during the Civil War.

-via Educatëd Hillbilly


The Popes' Last Warship

The Bishop of Rome had significant temporal power from at least Pope Miltiades, a trend that generally accelerated (with interruptions, Byzantine and otherwise) until the papal domains assembled its own navy to combat Muslim invaders in 849. The Popes intermittently maintained naval forces in addition to armies in the centuries that followed.

Starting in the 1840s, the gradual unification of Italy squeezed the Papal States and its armed forces. The last warship serving in the Papal Navy (Marina Pontifica) was a screw corvette built by the British in 1859 and named the Immacolata Concezione. According to a 1963 article in the US Naval Institute's Proceedings, it had 8 18-pound cannons and a very comfortable cabin built with the Pope's travel in mind. The crew of 46, though, was primarily tasked with protecting the Papal States' fishing rights.

In 1870, the Kingdom of Italy invaded the Papal States and, erm, persuaded Pope Pius IX that the temporal power of the Bishops of Rome had reached a conclusion. The Immacolata Concezione was integrated into the Royal Italian Navy. It later entered French service. The precise fate of the vessel is uncertain, but it was definitely the last warship to sail under the Papal ensign.


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