John Farrier's Blog Posts

Colorado Has the Highest Lighthouse in the United States

Colorado has the highest lighthouse in the United States and this is a photo of it.

But wait--why does Colorado have a lighthouse at all? It's landlocked.

Well, the Frisco Bay lighthouse is located close to the Dillon Reservoir outside of Denver. The site has an elevation of 9,017 feet, thus making this structure, which is a mere 26 feet all, the highest lighthouse in the United States.

It's actually functional, not just a decoration, as it provides a beacon directing recreational boaters to the nearby marina. K99 News reports that it was built when the reservoir was constructed in the 1960s.

-via Terrible Maps | Photo: CodeJeffrey


Magnets Keep This Bed Floating in Midair

Neodymium magnets are immensely powerful--so much so that getting one accidentally stuck up your nose may require a hospital visit.

Grant Slatton, a software engineer, used the magnetic force of a set of magnets to good effect to build a levitating bed. When the magnets are set in opposition to each other--five in the frame and five in the base--they can hold his bodyweight in the air.

The guidewires keep the bed hovering in the proper spot. The magnets, Slatton explains, must be very close to each other to maintain repulsion.

Slatton appreciates the fame the bed brought him when he first shared it on the internet in 2012. But he also notes that the bed wasn't particularly comfortable.


Louisiana Doesn't Stop Because of a Mere Blizzard

From Houston to Pensacola, the Gulf coast is experiencing rather unseasonable weather. But in the South, we just roll with it. This sentiment is especially true in southern Louisiana, which had its first blizzard warning in history.

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The All Things Swedish Vending Machine

Japan is rightly famous for its vending machines from which it is possible to purchase all needful things. The Swedish embassy in Tokyo decided to make use of this cultural niche by creating a vending machine that sells only Swedish products. Unseen Japan visited and photographed this wonder.

The correspondent found for sale Swedish branded teas and coffees, lingonberry jam, and canned surströmming, which is a variety of salted herring that Sweden is famous for. You can shop from it yourself in the Ikebukuro shopping district of Tokyo unless it is isekai'd.

I wonder why the sign is in English instead of Japanese or Swedish.


Food from Countries That No Longer Exist

Food Nibbles is a British YouTuber who makes foods from unconventional sources. His playlists include foods from defunct restaurants, school lunches around the world, and the favorite foods of UK Prime Ministers.

I'm quite taken with the idea of eating foods from countries that no longer exist--at least as independent nations. First on the list is my own Texas, which was an independent republic before the United States joined it in 1845. Naturally, Food Nibbles made chicken fried steak.

For Yugoslavia, which collapsed in the early 1990s. To represent this temporarily unified nation of the south slavs, Food Nibbles selected pljeskavica, which is a beef dish.

-via Boing Boing


Doctor Performs Vasectomy on Himself

Self-surgery is not new. Most famously, a Soviet doctor performed his own appendectomy in 1962 because there was no one else available in Antarctica to do it.

Dr. Chen Wei-nong, though, performed a less time-sensitive operation: a vasectomy. Oddity Central tells us that this plastic surgeon in Taiwan performed his own vasectomy, recorded it, and then posted the video online. I can confirm that this video is indeed available, should you wish to watch it.

Although a vasectomy normally takes 15 minutes, Dr. Chen is not a urologist, so figuring out the procedure and completing it took him a full hour. He suggests that men seeking to follow his example instead have it performed by a urologist.


Riding the Lucky Bus

Wrath of Gnon, a culture critic who lives in Japan, shares this story about the Great Hanshin Earthquake, which struck southern Japan 30 yeras ago today on January 17, 1995. Bus driver Yusui Yoshimasa survived, as did his Mitsubishi Fuso Aerobus. In fact, the bus was put back in service and was popular among students preparing for exams.

NHK World-Japan interviewed Yoshimasa about his experience during and after this terrifying event. He's still driving, but a different bus.


Scientists Name Newly-Identified Giant Isopod after Darth Vader

Popular Science reports that scientists from Singapore, Indonesia, and Vietnam have just classified a species of giant isopod in Vietnam. They've named it Bathynomus vaderi after Darth Vader, as they see a resemblance between its head and Vader's famous helmet.

Giant isopods are a popular source of meat in East Asia, so it was easy for the researchers to acquire large quantities of them from fishermen for examination. The researchers' article in the journal ZooKeys makes no mention of mysterious powers from Bathynomus vaderi, such as the ability to choke people without touching them.

-via Dave Barry


First Recording of a Meteorite Strike

Joe Velaidum of Prince Edward Island has a doorbell camera mounted at the front door of his home. CBC News reports that in July, that camera recorded a meteorite strike right in front of his home. Velaidum says that he had stood in that spot just a couple minutes before the bug meteor attack, so he's very lucky to have been elsewhere at the time.

Scientists think this is the first time that a meteorite strike has been recorded with both audio and video. They recovered about 95 grams (3.3 ounces) of extraterrestrial material from the site, which they are now testing.

-via David Thompson


Softball Game Held at the North Pole

USS Seadragon (SSN-484) was a Skate-class nuclear submarine that surfaced through the icecap at the North Pole on September 15, 1960. For recreation, the sailors laid out a softball diamond that used the marker for the North Pole as the pitcher's mound. When a sailor successfully cleared the bases, he circumnavigated the world.

-via US Naval Institute | Photo: Norman Polmar


Hippo Chases Humans, Bites Truck

Yes, Moo Deng, the baby pygmy hippopotamus, is cute as she tries to eat the zookeepers. Full-size hippopotami (Hippopotamus amphibius), though, are dangerous wild animals that kill between 500 and 3,000 humans per year.

It's entirely possible that a hippopotamus is stalking you right now.

What happens when a hippopotamus decides he doesn't like the bumper sticker on the back of your truck? Katherine Gilson, Steve Teichmann, and Richard Teichmann found out when a hippo charged them during an expedition through the Manyoni Private Game Reserve in South Africa. The humans escaped, but their truck took some damage.

Content warning: foul language.

-via David Thompson


OK Go's New Video Is a Recording of 64 Videos on 64 Phones

Before we get into the sheer technical sophistication and precise direction of this video, I'd like to point out that the song itself is beautiful. "A Stone Only Rolls Downhill" calls upon us to stoically accept the hardships of life:

I wish I could say it would be all right

I wish I could tell you it would all be fine

But a stone only rolls downhill

And these things

They'll be what they will

All of which is true for the human adventure.

Now let's get into the video. OK Go is famous for its innovative and physically complex music videos. The band recorded 64 videos and displayed them on 64 phones side by side. The final product is not a digital rendering, but, Rolling Stone reports, a recording of those videos playing on the actual phones.

-via Nag on the Lake


What Is the Purpose of This Weird Door?

Core77 directs our attention to this unusual door manufactured by the New Jersey-based firm Construction Specialties. The door has a door inside. Why? The answer is below the fold.

Continue reading

A Stop-Motion Chase Scene Created in a Single Room

Kevin Parry is a master of stop-motion animation. We've shared his work extensively and all is worth watching.

His latest project used 444 shots recorded over a 10 day period. The end result of his precise labor is 36 seconds of adrenalin-pumping chasing. Parry depicts a man on the run from the law and being pursued by police cruisers. He never leaves his chair, but with clever yet often simple visual effects, he tells a story of a cunning criminal who has complete mastery of his car.

Enjoy this episode of Grand Theft Auto: Living Room. But don't drive like this at home.

-via The Awesomer


Olympic Kitesurfer Rescues Girl from Drowning

Bruno Lobo was a champion swimmer and triathelte before switching to kite surfing, a sport in which he represented his homeland of Brazil in the 2024 Olympics. Sky News reports that on January 10 he was recording a training session off the coast of São Luís when he saw a 15-year old girl struggling to swim and losing her strength.

Lobo immediately abandoned his surfing and brought the girl to his board, then paddled the two of them ashore as she clung to his back. Lifeguards met them in the surf. The girl appeared to be okay and, at the end of the video, is in good enough condition to thank and hug Lobo.

-via Colin Rugg


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Profile for John Farrier

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