I was looking up a photo on Flickr this morning and something went wrong.
Here’s what I was shown instead:
Which was almost cooler than the pic I was actually wanting to see.
I was looking up a photo on Flickr this morning and something went wrong.
Here’s what I was shown instead:
Which was almost cooler than the pic I was actually wanting to see.
via DavidColby on Buzzfeed. And it’s all* true.
(or “Buzzfeed comes up trumps because I have no time to write a blog post today”)
While I was born in Sheffield and I live in Cape Town, I have strong family connections to the Isle of Man and I guess that I consider it my spiritual home. You may recognise the favicon on your current browser tab as being a triskelion - the Three Legs of Man.
Of all the facts presented, only one was new to me:
The Island was named the fifth most likely nation to reach the moon next.
Strange, but true. A number of the competitors in the Google Lunar X Prize (a $30 million competition for the first privately funded team to send a robot to the moon) are based on the Island.
I’ve known forever that it is a great place – the best kept secret of the British Isles. Now David has spilled the beans, maybe more people will discover it. But please don’t ruin it. I like it just the way it is.
So go – click through – I’ll test you on what you’ve learnt tomorrow.
* actually, I dispute the bit about Snaefell being the only place you can see England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales from – there are plenty of other mountains on the island with the same view. </pendant>
Another amazing lighthouse pic
This (with gracious permission – thanks) from Richard Larssen on flickr:
This isn’t a blog about lighthouses, but I do like them. Especially when they’re ‘togged this well.
Wikipedia tells us:
It’s made of metal (cast iron), much like the Slangkop light in Kommetjie (steel) and stands 32.9m high (coincidentally just 10cm shorter than Slangkop).
Richard has captured some other amazing pics of Eigerøy fyr, most notably here and [breathtakingly] here.
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