Day: March 6, 2014

  • Unusual job

    Job Vacancy

     

    I’m “the puller”, but if you’re interested, the position of “hole guy” it is open… …….

    First, we wrap the “hole guy’s” arm in a skin for protection…..

     

     

    Then we find a big hole and the “hole guy” crawls in.

    20140307_Unusual job_001

    We use modern lighting

     

    There it is………

    20140307_Unusual job_002

    Those must be eggs…….

    20140307_Unusual job_003

    I let it take my protected arm, sort of like noodling for fish.

    20140307_Unusual job_004

    Then my buddy pulls me out with the snake attached.

    20140307_Unusual job_005

    AIN’T IT A BEAUTY !!!!!

    20140307_Unusual job_006

    It will feed the whole village for a while.

    20140307_Unusual job_007

    Snake Noodling – – – – – What real men do!

    Maybe standing in line at the grocery store

    Isn’t as bad as it seems.

  • The Best of Tim Whyatt

    20140307_The Best of Tim Whyatt_020

    Tim Whyatt is Australia ‘s equivalent of Gary Larson.  These are some of his best down under cartoons.

    20140307_The Best of Tim Whyatt_019 20140307_The Best of Tim Whyatt_018 20140307_The Best of Tim Whyatt_017 20140307_The Best of Tim Whyatt_016 20140307_The Best of Tim Whyatt_015 20140307_The Best of Tim Whyatt_014 20140307_The Best of Tim Whyatt_013 20140307_The Best of Tim Whyatt_012 20140307_The Best of Tim Whyatt_011 20140307_The Best of Tim Whyatt_010 20140307_The Best of Tim Whyatt_009 20140307_The Best of Tim Whyatt_008 20140307_The Best of Tim Whyatt_007 20140307_The Best of Tim Whyatt_006 20140307_The Best of Tim Whyatt_005 20140307_The Best of Tim Whyatt_004 20140307_The Best of Tim Whyatt_003 20140307_The Best of Tim Whyatt_002 20140307_The Best of Tim Whyatt_001

  • 1920’s 1930’s car crash photos

    Not much ever changes!

     

     

    Just the population (in more ways than one) 

    Mr Jones captured everything that happened in the city for five decades and when he died in 1967, his family donated a vast collection of 34,000 prints to the Boston Public Library.

    They included these fascinating photos (not ALL of them) of vintage car wrecks from the great motoring boom.

    Motor cars became affordable to the masses for the first time in the 1920s. By the end of the decade a Model T Ford cost $298, just a fraction of the $1,200 it cost in 1909.

    The introduction of hire purchase also made it much easier for members of the public to buy cars and by 1929, 20 per cent of Americans were on the road.

    Ford, Chrysler and General Motors were all competing for the boom in business and by the time the depression hit in 1929, Ford was producing more than one car every minute. 

    Technology meant these early cars were capable of achieving speeds of up to 50 miles per hour – but safety measures were nowhere near as advanced as they are today.

     Add in the fact drivers didn’t need to pass a test before they got behind the wheel, and it’s easy to see why accidents were frequent and often spectacular.

    20140307_1920s 1930s car crash photos_001

    Officers examine a car that has ‘wrapped itself’ (?) around a tree, spilling its interiors onto the street in Boston in 1933

    20140307_1920s 1930s car crash photos_002

     Passersby try to figure out how this car ended up nose-down in a trench in Boston’s West End. A glance at the rough, dirt-covered road provides a clue

    20140307_1920s 1930s car crash photos_003

    The scene of an accident in 1935. Information with the photo reveals a car stolen by joyriding children crashed into a lawyer’s car, killing him

    Boston Public Library collection

    Giving a rare glimpse of the day’s fashion, a group of men look over a crumpled car that sits by the side of a residential Boston street

    20140307_1920s 1930s car crash photos_005

    Crowds pose for photographer Leslie Jones alongside a mangled and burnt out wreck in Boston in 1933.

    20140307_1920s 1930s car crash photos_006

    A police (NAZI?) officer poses next to a car that flipped over manoevring around a corner in Roxbury, Massachusetts in 1935.

    20140307_1920s 1930s car crash photos_007

    This truck stood no chance when it came into contact with a tree on a rural Mass. road, disintegrating on impact – leaving just the steering wheel intact.

    20140307_1920s 1930s car crash photos_008

    A fireboat struggles to haul a car out of the Fore River in Quincy, Massachusetts in 1933. They succeeded, but couldn’t save the three passengers, who drowned

    20140307_1920s 1930s car crash photos_009

    This car came out loser in a battle of wills with a trolley bus on Boston’s South End in 1932.

    20140307_1920s 1930s car crash photos_010

    Children peer out of the undergrowth as photographer Leslie Jones captures a nasty wreck smoulding by the side of the road in Hingham.

    20140307_1920s 1930s car crash photos_011

    Crowds watch in awe as a car is winched out of the Charles River in Cambridge, Mass in 1933, close to the Harvard University campus.

    20140307_1920s 1930s car crash photos_012

    Taken in 1934, this photograph shows a truck balancing on a bridge in Dorchester by just one wheel. Workers from the Walter Baker & Co chocolate factory rushed out of the building in the background to watch.

    20140307_1920s 1930s car crash photos_013

    Another angle from the same accident shows how close the truck is from toppling into the water

    20140307_1920s 1930s car crash photos_014

    This car remarkably survived a collision with a utility pole in Cambridge, Mass – with just a mangled bumper to show for the crash

    20140307_1920s 1930s car crash photos_015

    The driver of this car was unlikely to have survived this collision. The wreck is wrapped entirely around a tree, which sits in the driver’s position.

    20140307_1920s 1930s car crash photos_016

    The shell of a truck is pulled from the Charles River after it careered off the Harvard Bridge.

    20140307_1920s 1930s car crash photos_017

    Photographer Leslie Jones had to part crowds of onlookers to capture this accident in downtown Boston. An out of control car collided with a shopfront, smashing windows and ending up on its side.

    20140307_1920s 1930s car crash photos_018

    Local businessman Byron Harwood and Byron Grover were hurt when their car collided with a bus in Waltham, Mass. in 1921. They were lucky to survive this nasty looking wreck. Their car certainly didn’t.

    20140307_1920s 1930s car crash photos_019

    Taken in 1934, this photo shows a car that skidded out of control on ice-covered roads and wrapped around a tree in Auburndale, Mass.

    20140307_1920s 1930s car crash photos_020

    A truck collideded with a bus and flipped over in south Boston, stopping just before it smashed into a cafeteria storefront.

    20140307_1920s 1930s car crash photos_021

    Another view of the same accident shows eager children posing with the upturned truck. It also demonstrates how close the vehicles came to nearby buildings.

    20140307_1920s 1930s car crash photos_022

    A Cudahy Packing Co. truck is hauled out of Fort Point Channel, which separates South Boston and downtown Boston.

    20140307_1920s 1930s car crash photos_023

    Even public servants weren’t immune to accidents. An early mail truck came out loser in this battle with a tree on the tree-lined

    Commercial Avenue, Boston.
    20140307_1920s 1930s car crash photos_024
    Sitting in a Boston wrecking yard, this cross section of a wreck shows how basic car interiors were in the early days of motoring