[kj] OT : a southern sky
Brendan
bq at soundgardener.co.nz
Sat Jul 26 00:33:40 EDT 2008
Call the council / police dude.
When I was a lad I worked at a shop and had to put out and bring in their
big signs every day, they were only about 1.5 * 2m, but in a big wind they
were practically unmanageable, and I'm not weak...corrugated iron is a lot
heavier than shitboard wood...
There was also a story of a man getting decapitated by a sheet of
corrugated iron that flew off a house during a storm in the street below
me...not sure if it was true or not but that was the story. I'll ask my
old man...
Enjoy the storm, I love em! Stay safe.
> also, under these southern skies... worst storm of the decade the
> reports are saying!
> my immediate personal drama, is that the roof of the wood shed has
> blown off, and is perched/wedged in some tree's right on the side of
> the road, which is SHW1, the main road... loads of cars racing by...
> winds are sposed to increase... should i attempt to man-handle the
> roof back to safety(?) should i trust that it is wedged more safely
> that i could secure it? do i even be foolish enough to go near it in
> these winds? (by myself i might add...) its only about 2m square,
> corrugated iron, would be a mish to do even on a fine day... thinking
> about calling some help...
>
> otherwise, all is well, the mrs is cooking me breakfast in bed!
>
> =)
>
>
>
> On 7/26/08, pssyche23 <antoni at clara.net> wrote:
>> Just in case anyone (especially up here in the northern hemisphere) has
>> noticed a very bright object appear in the south east night sky, in the
>> hours after sunset, over the past few evenings I'm glad to announce it's
>> the
>> return of Jupiter ... as the link below suggests, with a small pair of
>> binoculars (ie. 7 x 50) you can see it as a white disc (as opposed to a
>> twinkling star) ...
>>
>> * http://www.skyandtelescope.com/observing/highlights/25508949.html *
>>
>> Last time I seriously bothered to observe Jupiter was about 12 summers
>> ago
>> ... and the 4 largest of it's (20?) moons were visible through my 20-60
>> x 50
>> telescope and they seemed to change positions almost every night, as the
>> image in the URL suggests ... not everyone's cup of tea but for sure
>> beats
>> watching Big Brother ...
>>
>> Regards, Antoni
>
>
> --
>
>
> "due to a lack of trained trumpeters, the end of the world has been
> postponed indefinitely..."
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