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January 29, 2008

Hum

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Mystery humming noises have plagued the inhabitants of various locations over the years, from Taos, New Mexico, to Largs in Scotland to Bristol. Explanations have varied, often involving the electrical grid, power plants or military experiments. But in the case of Sausalito, California, where a community living on houseboats was driven mad by a persisent hum for several summers, as described in this great BBC radio series The Sound of Life: The Underwater Chorus, the mystery was finally solved when biologists decided it was caused by a fish. The drone caused by a gathering of male midshipman fish all competing for mates is truly uncanny:

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Not only do they hum, but they’re also bioluminescent. You can hear more of their sounds here

January 28, 2008

V & A: Spectacular Craft

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If you’re in London and you’d like to see some lungs made out of glass (Annie Cattrell, below) or a table full of lace jellyfish (Anne Wilson), you should go and look at the V & A’s Out of the Ordinary: Spectacular Craft exhibition.

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Don’t walk straight past Susan Collis’s more mundane-looking display: if you go up close you’ll see the paint-spattered table is not what it seems, and neither are the rawl plugs.

If you’re quick, you could walk from there up to the Serpentine Gallery, to see children being driven crazy by Anthony McCall.

January 25, 2008

For the Breezy Uplands

Many people are familiar with London Transport’s long history of beautiful advertising posters – especially as they’ve very sensibly been reissuing some old ones recently – but you may not know that the London Transport Museum has an amazing collection online. My favourites are the ones enticing Londoners out of the city because it's bluebell/harvest/blackberry time, to leafy suburbs and further:

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and sometimes much further still:


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January 23, 2008

The Strange Story of a Doodle

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Steve at The Sneeze tells this very funny story of his attempts to uncover the truth behind an incomprehensible drawing that his dad keeps putting on his birthday cakes. And if you read all the way down, you’ll see that finally the mystery is solved. “The only reason the internet exists is for this conversation to be on it” – I agree. Via Drawn.

January 22, 2008

Open House

Apparently January 10 was Delurking Day. I missed it, and anyway those demands by blogs for silent visitors to stop lurking and leave a comment make me a bit uncomfortable as a reader – as if I was innocently wandering through a landscape when suddenly caught in a gamekeeper’s headlights. So feel free to carry on quietly looking around. But comments are nice and I know a lot of people do wander through here, so please take this opportunity to make observations/suggestions/a small noise if you feel like it. More importantly – this site is fairly young but can I make a plea for people to remember to leave a reaction now and again when they visit their really long-lived favourites - because, as this recent post from the mighty Growabrain shows, the most established bloggers can stop feeling appreciated and they may not always be there.

January 21, 2008

Glowworms v Fireflies

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Did you know that glowworms glow green and fireflies glow yellow? And both are beetles. Radio 4 has a fascinating little documentary about bioluminenscence and nature’s “lamp of love” – part of a series called Nature’s Magic, which also covers glowing jellyfish, electric rays and flies’ eyes. Listen again here. Thanks to Speechification for pointing the way to the BBC nature department’s impressive archive.

January 19, 2008

South London Phonebox Mystery

This intriguing handwritten note was found in a Clapham phonebox - apparently a similar one was sighted in another part of South London a year ago. Being in a hurricane is no joke, it's true, but who was the hurricane recorder? And why are they sharing their story with the users of a phonebox? My first assumption was that it's a band promotion or an art thing, but there are no contact details. Anyone know any more about it?

January 16, 2008

Birdsong Translator

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If you've always wanted to know what your name sounds like translated into nightingale language, this site gives you the chance. Via Metafilter.

January 12, 2008

Rasputin and the Fashion House

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I never knew there was any link between the Mad Monk and bugle-beaded evening dresses, but Le Style Sauvage has dug up the fascinating story of Prince Felix Yusupov, one of the assassins of Rasputin, who after the murder fled Russia with his wife, Princess Irina Romanova, niece of the tsar, and set up a fashion house, Irfé, in America. It was a big hit, partly for their elegant designs and because twenties America was thrilled at the idea of having its dresses made by a murderous foreign aristocrat. Sadly few of their designs survive; the dress above is at the Brighton and Hove Museum, which seems to have a pretty good collection of early fashion.

January 4, 2008

Unexpected London Sight No. 3: The Agapemonite Church

Visiting a friend in Hackney a few years ago, we came across this magnificent church half-hidden away among some trees. What caught my eye initially was the unusual imagery of the statues above the door:

and the surprising nature of the services listed on the board:

A passing taxi driver screeched to a halt and hurried up to explain to us that he was a member of the Ancient Catholic Church who now use the building, and to recommend the great accuracy of the clairvoyants who do readings there on a Thursday night.

Further investigation revealed that the Church of the Good Shepherd had even stranger origins.

It was built in 1849 by the Agapemonites, a religious community set up in Somerset by a former Anglican clergymen, Henry James Prince, who claimed the Holy Ghost had taken residence in his body, and was particularly keen on preaching to wealthy widows and taking a large number of 'spiritual' brides. The sect was so successful that they managed to raise £20,000 for the building of this gigantic, 400-seating church in the then small hamlet of Clapton, where Prince died and was buried standing up in readiness for the resurrection. He was succeeded by the Clapton Messiah, John Smyth-Pigott, a charming preacher who during a service in the Clapton church suddenly proclaimed himself to be the messiah, causing riots among the local population who demanded that he walk across Clapton Pond to prove it. Failing in this, he fled to Somerset, where he concentrated mostly on the spiritual brides angle, fathering children with names like 'Power' and 'Glory', and overcame an attempt to tar and feather him, and was finally defrocked by the amazingly patient Church of England. The Clapton church was abandoned by the Agapemonites in the 1920s.

You can read more about the Agapemonites here.


January 3, 2008

Norfolk Sounds

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Lucky Fed by Birds was given an Edirol R-09 recorder for Christmas and so is able to bring you back the authentic sounds of coastal Norfolk in winter.

Firstly, the sound of someone learning to use their new recording equipment:

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The noises of the marshes – wind, water, birds and the crunch of an approaching pensioner:

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More wind, this time in boat masts:

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And a log fire:

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The gold clutch bag thoughtfully provided as a case also turned out to be ideal for transporting this find back to London in one piece:



January 1, 2008

Happy New Year from Bluebell

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If you nip over to Bluebell FM, you can hear Bluebell's essential predictions for 2008. Don't start the year without them...

Apologies - it seems there's been a problem with the RSS feed which means it hasn't been updating with the latest episodes, but that's all fixed now, I hope.