I did notice earlier, but didn't have time to post, that the map blob in question is in fact a depiction of Iceland. Still no idea what all the clues add up to, though.
So... has there been no progress on the frilly dude either... now that he's there with his lovely wife and some cake? They're not from the same bit of map that isn't Iceland - if that helps? :)
edit: oops - hope my crashing about in here hasn't woken MAGIC.
Hi TL :) That was quite a risk you took, popping in. There is a back up winning number for this thread... Imagine if you'd won! You'd have had to divert some crunching time from Seti. :)
Please wait here. Further instructions could pile up at any time. Thank you.
Well, I thought I'd give one last post to this Thread whilst I still can... Running VERY low on RAC; not sure when I will crunch again, as SETI is my main project on both computers.
I won't be gone permanently; but, if RAC runs out, I will be gone for awhile. I will miss you all.
Take care,
TL
Just crunch here when Seti is down, so one or two days per week, until your rac is back up again. You can suspend Seti, or just set your cache smaller, but either way we don't want you too leave!!
@anniet I am sorry to hear that grandkids aren't in your future, but it's okay just find someone else that you know that has some and share them.
Well if it's not Iceland, it must be Greenland, which would quite understandably appear sideways on a map of that era. It still tends to appear sideways on maps nowadays, although on maps of North America it appears the other sideways.
And frilly dude must be Louis 32/2 and Cake Lady.
I'm going to guess that the object of our quest is the guy who (arguably) invented canning to help feed Napoleon's army as it traipsed around Europe conquering things. The episode of Good Eats in which he appeared was just on a few nights ago*, but I forget his name. Not that other French guy also named Louis.
Okay, a quick look at Wikipedia suggests I mean Nicolas Appert, or Philippe de Girard, or Peter Durand, or Bryan Donkin. Or you could be looking for Sir William Edward Parry, or Admiral Sir James Ross, or maybe even Sir John Franklin, all of whom took canned food when they sailed to the arctic in search of a northwest passage to India, which ties back in with Greenland.
*On the Cooking Channel, which you probably don't get over there.
David
Miserable old git
Patiently waiting for the asteroid with my name on it.
I'm going to guess that the object of our quest is the guy who (arguably) invented canning to help feed Napoleon's army as it traipsed around Europe conquering things. The episode of Good Eats in which he appeared was just on a few nights ago*, but I forget his name. Not that other French guy also named Louis.
*On the Cooking Channel, which you probably don't get over there.
Oh yes we get the Cooking Channel and I have more than one episode of "Good Eats" saved on my dvr!! Everything Thanksgiving I go and download, AND USE, Alton Brown's recipe for soaking a turkey prior to cooking it. As long as I remember to rinse it well after soaking for a day or so, which I HAVE done, it turns out moist and tasting GREAT!!
As for the clues I am just here to say...HI everybody!! Although I DO remember the show, and have seen the story elsewhere, about the guy you are speaking of.
That was good wasn't it, einsteinians? Very interesting crash course on the history of canning food. Thank you, David.
Perhaps if you've finished, we can get back to why we are here...? :) *pause to wave at Mikey* :)
Yes... that is Louis XVI.
No, that is not Greenland, but you're doing a lot better than that street poll where people who'd answered "yes" to whether Iran should be nuked - then pointed to it on a map.
I did worry for Mike's safety for almost a whole hour that day...
Quote:
Why do I have a feeling that if I were to visit that Island I would not need a passport?
Yes, well I get bouts of megalomania too :) Unless... you are the supreme ruler of the Earth and all her minions? :)
It would depend a lot on where you were travelling from to get to it, I think... Either way, if you were a citizen of this Island then you would have something resembling this
on your passport, unless you lived in the north, when you would have a picture denoting hereditarily priveleged upper limbs - which is precisely what got Louis into so much trouble elsewhere...
Let me see if I can point you all in several directions at once.
Beneath the clue expansion there was an enlargement of its top left section. This, the timeline, shows four different time measurement devices... five if you include the doomsday clock, which at this rate, could well bong it's last bong before we even get to know what vegetable I'm banging on about. Four. That's all the non-opposable wiggly bits you will find on a standard hand.
There are also three transportation vehicles. Four if you count the guinea-pig, which you shouldn't. They all have one thing in common. How that got near to Longyearbyen, is not shown, but it's probably how the proactive art above it (see below) got there too.
This next bit is a sad bit :(((
and it's timeline position is -12
It's not a direct clue, but it might help with deductions.
edit: tomorrow, if I can be bothered, I will tell you everything I know about reverse psycholgy... *glare at typo* ... and I might even spell it right too...
another edit: Did enjoy your deductive reasoning a lot, David. Thank you for giving the puzzle some thought - as wrong as it was, it was appreciated :)
Please wait here. Further instructions could pile up at any time. Thank you.
Ah, one knows that vegetable is a very starchy one and you are on an event where there was a great shortage of it, and why the doomsday seed bank is included. I see you even included the vegetable in one section! How electric.
Those old maps are terrible compared to modern ones.
I'm thinking you are on to something about climate change denial.
Hi, Uli :) I'm so glad you can still post! I was thinking of cementing the tardis into that corner over there *point to the middle of the room* in the hope it would keep TL engaged a little here, and now I'm having other thoughts too...
Oh. Here... let me hold that for you... just while you rest... *lunge at rolling pin*
:)
Quote:
I see you even included the vegetable in one section!
Yes... and it was first posted nearly a month ago second only to its native relative, the eggplant aubergine teapot. It even appeared in the wordjumble thread (incarnation 6) although it did look a lot less happy than it does now...
Quote:
Those old maps are terrible compared to modern ones.
I know! *SNORT* anyone would think those people who drew them had never seen a map before! :)
Quote:
I'm thinking you are on to something about climate change denial.
That was the topic of our very first chat wasn't it, Gary :) Back when I was ALL SHINY and new :) My first chat here on the other hand, was of a highly technical nature and should have been enough to warn all einsteinians that one day... their cafe too would need a doomsday vault :)
But no. Nothing to do with climate change. And the time period is pre-the infamous famine.
Just to fill in some gaps: The potato was the first vegetable grown in space, on the space shuttle Columbia, and from those beginnings ... all hail the quantum tuber... *pause for intruding thought* ooh... sounds almost as grand as The Last Onion Emir... on the International Space Station.
In the shuttle tragedy :(( ... no vegetables came to any harm whatsoever as far as I have been able to ascertain, but some people, silkworms, spiders, ants and bees did :(
*blink* It was years later, people... so you can't blame potatoes for THAT! And recently, Peru deposited the potato (amongst other vegetables indigenous to their country) in their black box at the doomsday vault*.
The fourth time measuring device was the pot. Time was measured in the potato's place of origin (hence the guinea pig) by how long it took a pot of them to cook. Erm... Potatoes... not guinea-pigs. They did eat those, but didn't tell the time with them.
Quote:
Would that be a Guinness harp from Eireland?
Yes, Chris, it would. And it's where the Irish invented the pothole*. The hot pot of potatoes would be placed on the ground to facilitate the mashing of its contents, and over time, a hole would form.
So well done! We have the vegetable... and a component part for the historical event (sort of) that I'm looking for...
*erm... their seeds... not the whole vegetables... *which I did not know :) funny how we just take words for granted...
Please wait here. Further instructions could pile up at any time. Thank you.
RE: I did notice earlier,
Except then the occidens and oriens would be wrong...
So... has there been no progress on the frilly dude either... now that he's there with his lovely wife and some cake? They're not from the same bit of map that isn't Iceland - if that helps? :)
edit: oops - hope my crashing about in here hasn't woken MAGIC.
Hi TL :) That was quite a risk you took, popping in. There is a back up winning number for this thread... Imagine if you'd won! You'd have had to divert some crunching time from Seti. :)
Please wait here. Further instructions could pile up at any time. Thank you.
RE: Well, I thought I'd
Just crunch here when Seti is down, so one or two days per week, until your rac is back up again. You can suspend Seti, or just set your cache smaller, but either way we don't want you too leave!!
@anniet I am sorry to hear that grandkids aren't in your future, but it's okay just find someone else that you know that has some and share them.
Well if it's not Iceland, it
Well if it's not Iceland, it must be Greenland, which would quite understandably appear sideways on a map of that era. It still tends to appear sideways on maps nowadays, although on maps of North America it appears the other sideways.
And frilly dude must be Louis 32/2 and Cake Lady.
I'm going to guess that the object of our quest is the guy who (arguably) invented canning to help feed Napoleon's army as it traipsed around Europe conquering things. The episode of Good Eats in which he appeared was just on a few nights ago*, but I forget his name. Not that other French guy also named Louis.
Okay, a quick look at Wikipedia suggests I mean Nicolas Appert, or Philippe de Girard, or Peter Durand, or Bryan Donkin. Or you could be looking for Sir William Edward Parry, or Admiral Sir James Ross, or maybe even Sir John Franklin, all of whom took canned food when they sailed to the arctic in search of a northwest passage to India, which ties back in with Greenland.
*On the Cooking Channel, which you probably don't get over there.
David
Miserable old git
Patiently waiting for the asteroid with my name on it.
RE: I'm going to guess
Oh yes we get the Cooking Channel and I have more than one episode of "Good Eats" saved on my dvr!! Everything Thanksgiving I go and download, AND USE, Alton Brown's recipe for soaking a turkey prior to cooking it. As long as I remember to rinse it well after soaking for a day or so, which I HAVE done, it turns out moist and tasting GREAT!!
As for the clues I am just here to say...HI everybody!! Although I DO remember the show, and have seen the story elsewhere, about the guy you are speaking of.
Why do I have a feeling that
Why do I have a feeling that if I were to visit that Island I would not need a passport?
That was good wasn't it,
That was good wasn't it, einsteinians? Very interesting crash course on the history of canning food. Thank you, David.
Perhaps if you've finished, we can get back to why we are here...? :) *pause to wave at Mikey* :)
Yes... that is Louis XVI.
No, that is not Greenland, but you're doing a lot better than that street poll where people who'd answered "yes" to whether Iran should be nuked - then pointed to it on a map.
I did worry for Mike's safety for almost a whole hour that day...
Yes, well I get bouts of megalomania too :) Unless... you are the supreme ruler of the Earth and all her minions? :)
It would depend a lot on where you were travelling from to get to it, I think... Either way, if you were a citizen of this Island then you would have something resembling this
on your passport, unless you lived in the north, when you would have a picture denoting hereditarily priveleged upper limbs - which is precisely what got Louis into so much trouble elsewhere...
Let me see if I can point you all in several directions at once.
Beneath the clue expansion there was an enlargement of its top left section. This, the timeline, shows four different time measurement devices... five if you include the doomsday clock, which at this rate, could well bong it's last bong before we even get to know what vegetable I'm banging on about. Four. That's all the non-opposable wiggly bits you will find on a standard hand.
There are also three transportation vehicles. Four if you count the guinea-pig, which you shouldn't. They all have one thing in common. How that got near to Longyearbyen, is not shown, but it's probably how the proactive art above it (see below) got there too.
This next bit is a sad bit :(((
and it's timeline position is -12
It's not a direct clue, but it might help with deductions.
edit: tomorrow, if I can be bothered, I will tell you everything I know about reverse psycholgy... *glare at typo* ... and I might even spell it right too...
another edit: Did enjoy your deductive reasoning a lot, David. Thank you for giving the puzzle some thought - as wrong as it was, it was appreciated :)
Please wait here. Further instructions could pile up at any time. Thank you.
Just a win, while I still
Just a win, while I still have a RAC to post.
Pluto will always be a Planet to me.
Ah, one knows that vegetable
Ah, one knows that vegetable is a very starchy one and you are on an event where there was a great shortage of it, and why the doomsday seed bank is included. I see you even included the vegetable in one section! How electric.
Those old maps are terrible compared to modern ones.
I'm thinking you are on to something about climate change denial.
Would that be a Guinness harp
Would that be a Guinness harp from Eireland?
Waiting for Godot & salvation :-)
Why do doctors have to practice?
You'd think they'd have got it right by now
RE: Just a win, while I
Hi, Uli :) I'm so glad you can still post! I was thinking of cementing the tardis into that corner over there *point to the middle of the room* in the hope it would keep TL engaged a little here, and now I'm having other thoughts too...
Oh. Here... let me hold that for you... just while you rest... *lunge at rolling pin*
:)
Yes... and it was first posted nearly a month ago second only to its native relative, the eggplant aubergine teapot. It even appeared in the wordjumble thread (incarnation 6) although it did look a lot less happy than it does now...
I know! *SNORT* anyone would think those people who drew them had never seen a map before! :)
That was the topic of our very first chat wasn't it, Gary :) Back when I was ALL SHINY and new :) My first chat here on the other hand, was of a highly technical nature and should have been enough to warn all einsteinians that one day... their cafe too would need a doomsday vault :)
But no. Nothing to do with climate change. And the time period is pre-the infamous famine.
Just to fill in some gaps: The potato was the first vegetable grown in space, on the space shuttle Columbia, and from those beginnings ... all hail the quantum tuber... *pause for intruding thought* ooh... sounds almost as grand as The Last Onion Emir... on the International Space Station.
In the shuttle tragedy :(( ... no vegetables came to any harm whatsoever as far as I have been able to ascertain, but some people, silkworms, spiders, ants and bees did :(
*blink* It was years later, people... so you can't blame potatoes for THAT! And recently, Peru deposited the potato (amongst other vegetables indigenous to their country) in their black box at the doomsday vault*.
The fourth time measuring device was the pot. Time was measured in the potato's place of origin (hence the guinea pig) by how long it took a pot of them to cook. Erm... Potatoes... not guinea-pigs. They did eat those, but didn't tell the time with them.
Yes, Chris, it would. And it's where the Irish invented the pothole*. The hot pot of potatoes would be placed on the ground to facilitate the mashing of its contents, and over time, a hole would form.
So well done! We have the vegetable... and a component part for the historical event (sort of) that I'm looking for...
* erm... their seeds... not the whole vegetables...
*which I did not know :) funny how we just take words for granted...
Please wait here. Further instructions could pile up at any time. Thank you.