Sujet : Re: Alley Oop: Bodacious Caveman Era
De : wthyde1953 (at) *nospam* gmail.com (William Hyde)
Groupes : rec.arts.sf.writtenDate : 23. Jun 2024, 23:07:56
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <v5a6bs$hhvb$1@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
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Scott Lurndal wrote:
Cryptoengineer <petertrei@gmail.com> writes:
On 6/22/2024 5:03 PM, Lynn McGuire wrote:
On 6/22/2024 1:25 PM, Cryptoengineer wrote:
On 6/22/2024 2:09 AM, The Horny Goat wrote:
On Fri, 21 Jun 2024 21:29:23 -0000 (UTC), Christian Weisgerber
<naddy@mips.inka.de> wrote:
>
On 2024-06-21, Ted Nolan <tednolan> <ted@loft.tnolan.com> wrote:
>
Alley Oop: Bodacious Caveman Era
   https://www.gocomics.com/alley-oop/2024/06/21
>
Interesting coincidence as Stonehenge was just in the news.
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Hardly a coincidence. Every summer solstice, Stonehenge is in the
news.
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True though most years orange paint isn't part of Stonehenge at summer
solstice.
>
The news claimed it was orange cornstarch, and the vandals thought
it would just wash off at the next rainstorm. They apparently did
not want to cause permanent damage.
>
Conservators though differently, and removed the powder within
hours.
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Apparently, The stones bear rare and endangered lichens, and it
was thought that *wet* cornstarch would be bad for them.
>
pt
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When we lived in London in 1973, my brothers and I climbed all over the
Stonehenge rocks one weekend. We were just about the only people there.
 The really amazing thing was the thousands of names cut into them from
hundreds of years. We did not add our names.
>
Interesting! My family lived just outside London 1968-1970. (I continued
to be educated in England up through 1978).
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In 1968 I visited Stonehenge for the first time, and at that time
you could walk right up to the rocks. You can't anymore (except on
special occasions, such as Midsummer dawn). I guess they were
blocked off sometime after 1973.
they were blocked off in 1977. I visited in 1976, and later in 1984.
I too visited in 76. I didn't touch them but they were accessible. I was about a week pre-solstice, no celebrations were yet taking place.
William Hyde
>