Northern Great Britain was hit by a fierce windstorm on Wednesday, with some gusts blowing at over 130 mph. The winds were strong enough to emulsify the Irish Sea along the Fylde Coast, turning the saltwater into sudsy globs that blew up onshore and coated everything in a knee-deep layer of white foam with the consistency of the head atop a fresh pint of Guinness.
The foam is technically called "spume," and is made possible by decaying algae and other organic materials in the water acting like egg whites in this monstrous batch of whip that probably tastes a tiny bit like horrible Scotch from the Isle of Islay.
From Gizmodo
Friday, December 30, 2011
The Beginning Of A Stormy Night...
* WINDS...SHIFTING FROM SUSTAINED SOUTH 15 TO 25 MPH THIS AFTERNOON TO SUSTAINED NORTHWEST 30 TO 40 MPH...WITH GUSTS TO 50 MPH...ALONG AND BEHIND THE COLD FRONT TONIGHT.
* TIMING...8 PM MST THIS EVENING TO 3 AM MST SATURDAY MORNING.
* IMPACTS...TRAVEL DIFFICULTY DUE TO CROSS WINDS ON NORTH-SOUTH ROADS. POOR VISIBILITY IN FALLING RAIN AND SNOW. LOOSE PROPERTY MAY BE BLOWN ABOUT.
Longest train officially in the world
Australian BHP Iron ore train, the longest train to ever run in the world, this train is officially in the guinness book of world records for the longest train.
The record was set on june 21, 2001 in western australia between newman and port headland, a distance of 275km (170 miles) and the train consisted of 682 loaded iron ore wagons and 8 GE AC6000 locomotives giving a gross weight of almost 100,000 tonnes and moved 82,262 tonnes of ore, the train was 7.353 km (4.568 miles) long.
BHP iron ore did this to test locotrol which is where locomotives are evenly placed along the length of the train.
The locotrol setup was 2 locos-166 wagons, 2 locos-168 wagons, 2 locos-168 wagons, 1 loco-180 wagons then the last locomotive on the back.
This very long train is controlled by only one driver.
Go Use Those Gift Cards!
As gift cards grow in popularity with consumers, for retailers they are the gift that keeps giving. Some $41 billion in gift cards have not been used since 2005, according to the research firm TowerGroup, and much of that cash will go straight into the bottom lines of the issuers.
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Tuesday, December 27, 2011
Friday, December 23, 2011
If you lined up Sidney Crosby, Alex Ovechkin, Daniel and Henrik Sedin and Pavel Datsyuk at the opposite blue line and asked them to pass the puck through a hole in the net that is barely larger than the puck itself, I’d say that there is about a 3% chance that any of them successfully hits the target. If you asked a 59-year-old woman to do the same, I’d say there is about a 0.001% chance that she does it.
Luckily for Brenda Hewlett, 0.001% was all she needed. As the story goes, Brenda was at Frenchie’s Ford dealership on Friday getting her old truck serviced when she said, “god, I wish I could afford a new truck, because mine is falling apart.” It must have been her lucky day, as the dealership was holding a draw for a chance to win a new 2011 Ford F-150 4×4. Brenda filled out a ballot and it was picked from the box later that day, bringing her one step closer to the new truck she coveted so much. The only problem was that the final step would require her to shoot a puck from 114-feet away into a hole that is barely larger than the size of a regulation hockey puck. It is a feat that is difficult enough for anyone who has played hockey their entire life, let alone someone who has never previously held a hockey stick or shot a puck. But despite having the odds stacked against her, Brenda grabbed a hold of the stick, took an aggressive slap at the puck, and sent the puck 114 feet down the ice and into the hole, earning her a brand new 2011 Ford F-150 4×4. It is a story that is almost too hard to believe, but it certainly happened, and here is the footage to prove it.
Tuesday, December 20, 2011
Sunday, December 18, 2011
Saturday, December 17, 2011
Sunday, December 11, 2011
Saturday, December 10, 2011
Wednesday, December 07, 2011
It's Raining Bears!
25,303 teddy bears were thrown onto the ice during this year's annual Teddy Bear Toss charity hockey game for the Rainbow Society of Alberta.
From Above
I'm very lucky. I get to travel by air in a way that allows me to take some really unique photos. All of these are taken with a cell phone camera so bear with me.
Monday, December 05, 2011
Saturday, December 03, 2011
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