John Farrier's Blog Posts

A Public Bicycle Repair Station

Dero, a bicycle rack manufacturer in Minneapolis, designed the FixIt. This is a bicycle repair station designed to be open to the public whenever needed. To facilitate simple repairs for people without the necessary tools, the FixIt allows a bicyclist to hang a bike in the air while using tools which are attached with steel cables. An optional air pump is also available.

The tools include Allen wrenches, metric wrenches, tire levers, and screwdrivers. If a bicyclist is unsure how to use them, s/he can just scan the QR code to find a general bike repair manual online. You can watch a demonstration video here.

The website includes an interactive map (keep scrolling down) of FixIt locations. There's one near me, so I may check it out soon. I don't have a hanging rack for my bike, so it could come in handy.

-via Core77


This Is a Hospital for Falcons

In Qatar, falcons serve important roles as pets, family icons, and racing athletes. Falcon owners prize them dearly, so when one is sick, it goes to the Souq Waqif Falcon Hospital in Doha. It's a luxurious and technologically advanced veterinary hospital that spares no expense for falcon care. Tariq Panja of the New York Times talked to Dr. Prasoon Ibrahim, a molecular biologist on staff who, even after 8 years of working at the hospital, still marvels at its facilities:

“In my lab, I saw a gene sequencer for the first time,” he said, his eyes widening.
Set over multiple floors, the facility, subsidized by Qatar’s ruler, treats about 150 falcons a day. Most of the birds come for checkups after being bought in the many shops selling falcons nearby, or to have what staff members nonchalantly describe as a mani-pedi, the falcon equivalent of a manicure in which its beak and talons are sharpened while under general anesthesia. Others arrive to have radio transmitters and GPS devices fitted so their owners can keep track of the expensive birds when they take them out to hunt. The devices are typically attached to tail feathers, though some require invasive implantation surgery.
The most serious work — orthopedic surgery to mend broken bones that in the wild would mean certain death — takes place in an inpatient unit housed on another floor.

-via Marginal Revolution | Photo: Nina Dietzel


When You're Late for Work Because a Moose Is Licking Your Car

Emily Williams, a wildlife ecologist in Alaska, needs to get to work. She's got a novel excuse, although one I wouldn't try here in Texas. Her SUV has become a moose's salt lick. The moose appreciates her sacrifice.

-via Marilyn Terrell


TIE Fighter Stained Glass Lamp

Etsy seller VGFantasy, who lives in Russia, offers this agile spacecraft capable of pursuing and destroying the rebels. It's a bit fragile, though, as it's made of glass. If anything, the illumination makes it only more noticeable and thus vulnerable.

The lamp is one of many fine works of stained glass made by VGFantasy. I'm also deeply impressed by this stained glass lamp recreation of Nagoya Castle in Japan.

-via Technabob


Sculpted Meals So Beautiful That You'll Starve Rather Than Disturb Them

Well, I might go hungry for a little while. I'd certainly miss a meal rather than mess up these garlic mashed potatoes with chili sauce that take the form of the Joker under the expertise of De Meal Prepper, a Dutch food artist. She's a master at turning foods into edible works of art worthy of being served in a museum restaurant.

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Former Bank Robber Sworn-in as Attorney by the Judge Who Sent Him to Prison

When he was 19 years old, Robert W. VanSumeren stood before the bench of Judge Michael Smith in Hillsdale County, Michigan. His life had gone out of control and he had committed a series of robberies, including a bank. Judge Smith sentenced him to six years in prison.

It took him a long time, even after he got out of prison. But VanSumeren took the help that people in his life offered him and began climbing upward. He went to community college, then university, then graduate school, then law school. He married a good woman and fathered two sons. The Washington Post shares his story:

“The feeling of being on the wrong side of the law makes such a powerful stamp on a person,” he said. “I felt strongly that the judicial system needed people like me at the table.”
After passing the bar exam in July 2018, VanSumeren underwent a lengthy investigation by the Michigan bar’s character and fitness committee. Last month, he got approval to be sworn in.

VanSumeren then asked Judge Smith to administer the attorney's oath. The judge agreed:

“I didn’t know if the judge would go for it, but I thought it was worth asking,” said VanSumeren, who lives in Jackson, Mich., and passed the Michigan state bar exam on the first try.
Smith said he was astonished by the request. But he was also delighted.
“I have to take my hat off to him — he has changed his life,” Smith said. “It’s really quite remarkable and rare. Very seldom do you see such a successful turnaround.”

-via Instapundit | Photo: Dana M. VanSumeren


Stolen Gustav Klimt Painting Found 23 Years Later in the Same Gallery

Estimated value of Portrait of a Lady by Gustav Klimt was $66 million--assuming that anyone could ever find it. The painting vanished 23 years ago from the gallery in Piacenza, Italy where it hung. Recently, a gallery worker found it inside one of the walls.

On Feb. 22, 1997, thieves broke into the gallery through a skylight. It is likely that they discovered that the painting was too large to get out through the skylight and so decided to store it on site. The BBC reports:

That was until a worker clearing ivy from the wall of the gallery where it was stolen stumbled on a metal panel.
Behind it lay a recess, within which was a black bag containing what appeared to be the missing painting.
Checks are still being carried out on the recovered work, which has been handed to police.
But gallery director Massimo Ferrari is confident the original has been found, because it has the same stamps and sealing wax on the back of the painting.
Police are investigating whether the thieves had left the painting hidden with the aim of removing it when worldwide media attention moved away from one of the most notorious art thefts in years.

-via Messy Nessy Chic | Photo: Yorck Project


Huge Dog Ensures Little Girl Gets on School Bus Safely

This is Gordon. He's an English Mastiff--a mountain of a dog. Every morning, when his little human and her friend wait for the morning bus ride to school, he watches them. No harm befalls her. When that duty is discharged, he jaunts back to his manor to await the little human's return.

-via Ian Miles Cheong


Chinese Craftsman Uses Panda Poop for Traditional Calligraphy Paper

In Qiliang, the village where Liu Xiaodong lives, papermaking is a craft that has been handed down from generation to generation for a thousand years. This bamboo paper is used in traditional calligraphy. Liu has developed a new way to make this bamboo paper--after pandas have processed the bamboo a bit. Xinhua reports:

Noting the abundant bamboo fiber in the poop of pandas, Liu came up with the idea to make paper with it. He hoped that the beloved animal could help him save the dying craft.
For three years, Liu worked on realizing the idea and finally made it in 2017 after hundreds of experiments. The panda waste was collected from a nearby panda conservation center.
Workers first rinse the poop and beat down the fiber into a pulp, and then add the juice of kiwi fruit vines and stir the pulp. Finally they add the mulberry bark, screen the paper, and press and dry it.

-via Dave Barry | Photo: George Lu


Angry Octopus Spits Water at Biologist

Harry, a doctoral student in New Zealand, refers to his octopus as "evil." The octopus in question appears to share similar sentiments about his biologist. He says that, four months ago, he accidentally knocked over a pipe where she was hiding.

She can carry a grudge. The octopus sucks up water from a pump and spits it at Harry when he walks past. The video above is from one of her unsuccessful (but recorded) attempts. Harry has gotten thoroughly soaked.

-via Super Punch


This Restaurant in Sweden Serves Every Dinner Offered at the Nobel Prize Banquet Since 1922

One way to eat a Nobel Banquet meal is by winning a Nobel Prize. That's kind of difficult, though. You have to be really good at something, and, unfortunately, the categories of that something are tightly restricted. Unfairly, really. I mean, there's not even a Nobel Prize category for monster trucks, which shows how out-of-touch the Nobel Committee is these days.

Anyway, you can still eat like a winner at the Stadshuskällaren, a hoity-toity restaurant in Stockholm. Upon reservation and request, diners can eat any of the meals offered at the Nobel Banquets dating back to 1922. The Smithsonian reports:

“The Nobel Banquet is a celebration that’s known worldwide, so we thought it would be a good idea to let everyone have the opportunity to enjoy the menus and taste what it’s like,” says Maria Stridh, co-owner and CEO of Stadshuskällaren. “It’s a fun thing to do if you’re traveling from another country and want to try something special that’s related to Sweden. Often people will select a certain year that’s important to them, such as the year that they were born or the year when someone from their country won the prize.”

-via Nag on the Lake | Photo: Stadshuskällaren


Nose Warmers Look Adorable and Protect You From the Horrors of Winter

Etsy seller Aunt Marty wants to protect both your dignity and your nose from the winter cold. She crochets cute animals that wrap around your face, garbing your schnoz with an animal. In addition to puppy forms, she offers skunks, pandas, cats, ducks, and roosters.

-via Design You Trust


Fashion Designer Makes a Case for Bringing Back the Codpiece

Are we doing codpieces again? Yes, we are. The fashion world is demanding it of us and we must obey.

Don't scoff. They're a symbol of traditional masculinity--assuming one looks back to the Sixteenth Century, when codpieces were all the rage in Western Europe. Rachel Tashijan writes in GQ about a recent podcast discussion between fashion designer Thom Browne and fashion historian Michael Glover about the codpiece:

Like many objects sprung from delusional masculine grandeur, the codpiece is a punchline, yet so much more. “The codpiece is all about boastfulness and braggadocio, sad men pretending to be more than they could ever hope to be,” as Glover diagnoses in his book, and in a recent phone call, he shared the more pedestrian details: “It would have had to have a fairly hard exterior, probably made of leather. Inside, the padding would probably have been horsehair.” (Horsehair is very breathable—hence its starring role in the world of luxury mattresses.) It would have been measured, he confirmed, though a brief google search reveals that if there was once a special term for the profession of codpiece measurer, it has been lost to the sands of time. [...]
A runway fashion observer may not know “the history of it, but they know of a codpiece,” Browne explained in a recent interview. That vague sense of historicism gave the collection its edge of madcap humor, underscoring that the codpiece’s more familiar contemporary cousin, the cup, is far from immune to that same ridiculous interpretation. Rendered in seersucker and affixed to dresses, suits, and dresses that looked like suits, the codpiece, Browne said, was “somewhat for decoration, and for humor.”

Codpieces could be a nice addition to your wardrobe. But you could go even more retro with a New Guinea penis gourd.

-via Ian Miles Cheong | Photo: Etsy seller The Armored Dragon


Fishermen Rescue Bald Eagle from Octopus

The red leviathan had risen from the abyss to consume the symbol of the glory of America.

Fortunately, these Canadians were on site to rescue it. John Ilett and his friends, salmon farmers, came upon the scene off the northern tip of Vancouver Island. They closed the distance, hooked the beast on a pole, and pulled it off. CNN quotes Illett:

Ilett said he's been working on the water for about 20 years and admits he's seen incredible things, but this encounter ranks as the coolest to date. "It's moments like this why I love my job and being out in the environment where I can work and live," he said. "It's just amazing."
Illett has been reading comments on social media discussing whether or not his team should have intervened and said it's a different feeling when you're watching the situation unfold in front of your own eyes.
"Am I at fault because I'm human and I felt compassion for the bird?" he said. "At the end of the day both animals are alive and well and they went their separate ways and we feel pretty good about what we did."

Thank you, Canada.

-via Richard Hernandez


This Duct-Taped Banana Painting Is a Work of Art

Oh, sure, a lot of you were skeptical of the duct-taped banana being a work of art. But it sold for $120,000 before a performance artist ate it.

Now that's art.

And so Dave Pollot is continuing the banana meme with this gorgeous landscape featuring a duct-taped banana attached to a mountain. He is selling at auction to benefit a charity. So far, the price is $4,500.

That's a far cry from $120,000. But let's admit it: taping a banana to a wall requires skill worth $120,000.

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Profile for John Farrier

  • Member Since 2012/08/04


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