John Farrier's Blog Posts

Dog Survives Car Crash, Walks 4 Miles to Alert Humans and Save the Driver

The Associated Press reports that a mixed human/canine family recently camped in the wooded mountains of Baker County, Oregon. One of the men was driving along a nearby road when his truck crashed and rolled down into a steep ravine. Four dogs were inside the truck, one of whom walked four miles to the campsite to alert his packmates of the accident. What a good boy!

In an authentic Lassie moment, he led the family to site of the crash. US Forest Service rescue workers then extracted the man from the scene using a complex rope system, photos of which you can see here. He was airlifted to the hospital. The man and all four dogs survived the accident.

Photo: Baker County Sheriff's Office


1959: US Navy Submarine Delivers Mail via Missile

The development of submarine-launched ballistic nuclear missiles was a game-changer in Cold War strategy. The United States wanted to subtly express to the Soviet Union that it could place its nuclear-capable Regulus missiles anywhere it wanted. On June 8, 1959, it did so by using a Regulus missile from the USS Barbero to deliver 3,000 pieces of mail.

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Ray Bradbury Wrote Fahrenheit 451 on a Coin-Operated Typewriter

I'm old enough to remember coin-operated television sets in airports and bus stations. But what I found most surprising by this article in UCLA Magazine was that coin-operated typewriters existed. This particular model was designed in 1927 and the payment system was invented in 1938.

As for Ray Bradbury's iconic novel Fahrenheit 451, he composed the original version of the story at some point in the late 1940s (the precise date appears to be uncertain) when he had a newborn baby at home and wanted peace and quiet in which to write. He went to the basement of the Powell Library at UCLA and used one of the rental typewriters for 20 cents an hour. $9.80 later, he had a functional draft.

-via Nag on the Lake | Photo: Art Blast


The Beer Bombs of World War II

80 years ago, the brave men of the western Allied armies were saving Europe and having a rough go of it. Conditions in the field were spartan and beer was a usually unobtainable luxury.

Pictured above is a RAF Supermarine Spitfire that flew from England to Normandy a few weeks after D-Day. Instead of external fuel tanks, the plane has a pair of barrels rigged for delivery of a fuel more precious than aviation gasoline: beer

The Spitfire Academy, an organization dedicated to preserving these historic aircraft, shares the story of British, Canadian, and American aircraft that ferried beer across the Channel to thirsty soldiers. Initially, the technicians attached standard fuel tanks that had been steam-cleaned. But after soldiers complained that the beer tasted like gasoline, despite the cleaning, they switched to flying the barrels themselves.

-via Chris Bolton


Skiing While Juggling

The Teton Juggler gets his name from his famous videos showing him juggling while skiing. He's a "flow artist" who does impressive tricks while on the powder, including throwing a pin around a tree while he skis next to it (0:07) and balancing a pin on another while in motion (0:25).

But he can do a lot more than just ski and juggle! The Teton Juggler also has videos showing juggling on a tightrope, mountain biking, mountain unicycling, and riding a horse. My favorite performance is when he does a back flip while skiing and doesn't miss a single pin.

-via Massimo


Marilyn Monroe's Official Department of Defense ID Card

By July of 1953, most of the fighting in the Korean War was over. Yet many thousands of US service members remained on duty in this explosive war zone.

The following February, Marilyn Monroe married the baseball giant Joe DiMaggio. The couple honeymooned in Japan and, while there, made a brief visit to South Korea. The patriotic Monroe visited about 100,000 troops at ten shows over four days in her official capacity of a United Service Organizations volunteer.

Pictured above is her official registration card with the Department of Defense, using her legal name of Norma Jean DiMaggio. It sold at auction several years ago for $31,250.

-via Book of Joe


Man Breaks His Own World Record for Typing the Alphabet with His Nose

In his biography of Alexander the Great, the First Century AD Roman author Quintus Curtius Rufus described the seemingly limitless physical courage of Alexander, who often led his armies from the forefront. Curtius praised his courage, but also leveled at Alexander:

[...] the charge of reckless daring, which he had in abundance, can have less force, because there was never an opportunity to decide whether he had acted rashly.

Great men of transcendent ambition, such as Alexander the Great and Vinod Kumar Chaudhary, are compelled to push themselves past ordinary limits--to accomplish the impossible again and again. Great striving brings great risks.

Chaudhary established a Guinness World Record last year when he typed the alphabet with his nose in 27.8 seconds. Yet, like Alexander after Issus, Chaudhary was only getting started. He insisted on breaking that record, setting a new one of 26.73 seconds. Now, he's broken that record, striking the keystrokes, with a space between each one, in a mere 25.66 seconds.

Will Chaudhary press forward again? Or will he face a mutiny as Alexander did and be forced to settle for the empire has has been able to conquer?

-via Dave Barry


Why Is There a Bullet Hole in the Lincoln Memorial?

In one of the holiest temples of America's civic religion there is a bullet hole. Search carefully in the frieze of the Lincoln Memorial and you may be able to spot it.

Here's a clearer image. How did this happen?

In September 1942, when the U.S. government worried about Axis attacks on the American homeland, anti-aircraft defenses stood guard over major cities and important sites. One soldier manning a .50-caliber machine gun in Washington, D.C., accidentally discharged his weapon, firing a burst. Three bullets struck the Lincoln Memorial. One of bullet holes could not be practically repaired, so it remains there to this day.

-via U.S. Naval Institute | Photos: U.S. Park Service


The Star-Spangled Banner on a Gayageum

Luna Lee is a Korean musician who specializes in traditional Korean instruments. She's a world-acclaimed master of the gayageum, a stringed instrument somewhat similar to a large European zither. In the past, we've featured her version of Chicago's "25 or 6 to 4" and AC/DC's "Thunderstruck."

Yesterday's Memorial Day commemorations may put my fellow Americans in a patriotic mood, so it is appropriate that Lee recorded a performance of our majestic national anthem.

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Sorting Hat Cookies

Shiori, a Japanese chef who goes by the online name of Fiocco Cookies, makes extraordinary confections that look like perfectly-decorated sweets. And if you break them open, you'll also find even more sweets inside!

These cookies that serve in place of the Sorting Hat from the Harry Potter franchise is an especially ingenious application of the cookie design. I hope that you pick the right cookie lest you end up in the wrong house!

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Where Are They Now? The 17-Year Cicadas

Two weeks ago, the Forest Preserve District of DuPage County, Illinois became famous on the internet for their viral video illustrating the 17-year life cycle of a cicada (Magicicada septendecim). The video features employees in simplistic costumes playing the roles of our insect friends in their quest to grow, thrive, and find mates.

Now the forestry workers are back with an updated video showing what the cicadas are up to lately. Tom Velat, the ecology supervisor, describes how the cicadas are trying to avoid predators. Velat also provides advice on how to live alongside the cicadas while preserving our pets and favorite plants.


The Tea Bowls -- Mixed American/Canadian Football Games

CBC tells us about a pair of ingeniously-designed football games that were played in 1944. They took place between American and Canadian troops in Britain. The organizers called the games the Tea Bowl I and II in reference to the English national beverage and the winning team took home a silver teapot trophy.

The first half of each game was played according to American football rules and the second half according to Canadian football rules. The Canadians won the first game and the Americans won the second game. There was going to be a Tea Bowl III, but everyone involved became distracted by Operation Overlord.

-via Raffi Melkonian


This Japanese Man Taught Himself Romanian and Then Became a Published Novelist in Romanian

Tettyo Saito, 30, has spent many years as a hikikomori--a socially reclusive person. He failed college entrance exams and so stayed at home with his parents, rarely leaving. He watched a lot of movies during that time, including one from Romania that fascinated him.

Saito realized that he needed to learn some of the Romanian language to understand the movie better. So, with textbooks and online communities, he taught himself Romanian. Eventually, a 2023 article in The Asahi Shimbum reports, he began writing fiction in that language.

After sharing some of his work with Romanian online communities, a publisher in Romania picked it up. Saito has published a few novels that are actually read and respected in Romania.

He still has, though, yet to visit that nation.

-via Wrath of Gnon | Photo: Yuta Torio


Enjoy a Cicada Shot

We are at the point in the 17-year long life cycle of the cicada when our little winged friends are roaming the earth in search of mates. They're everywhere, including in our drinks.

Noon Whistle Brewery, a brewpub in Chicago, offers unique drinks that have a bit of extra protein in the form of a single cicada which, the company assures us, has been locally harvested. So you know that you're supporting local growers. 

The cicada is served in a measure of Jeppson's Malört, a liqueur closely identified with Chicago and described by comedian John Hodgman as flavored like "pencil shavings and heartbreak."

-via King Aelfred the Great


A Vending Machine for Unclaimed Packages

Twitter user Michael (@bovineflu) spotted this odd vending machine at a train station in the city of Freiburg in southwestern Germany.

This machine sells unclaimed delivery packages. The look like they've been resealed after opening, which is probably a good precaution lest some dangerous--or worse, valuable--items be accidentally sold. Michael describes it as "100% my kind of slot machine." Everyone is a winner!

-via Massimo


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Profile for John Farrier

  • Member Since 2012/08/04


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