Kimmeridge
my name is Matt
Been talk about that for years. Never happened.
There used to be a restaurant called The Cloud Club but that was way before my time.
Walter Chrysler had an apartment at the base of the tower in his lifetime I believe.
I think part of the problem is that there is only one tiny elevator for access to that area.
I remember walking around the ruins of the Club. There was a wall with private locked humidors.
These photos are eighteen years apart: an Ash tree in the woods here.
Jay Dwight
No, this is an old tree that lost a limb a long time ago and had rotted from the inside over the decades I have lived here. It's more than twenty feet around and yet thriving. Where I live the borers are not yet ascendant, but Ash "decline" has been evident for awhile.
Jay Dwight
The tree, if in New England, is no doubt infected to some degree (none are left here in New Hampshire but in Western Mass I occasionally see some alive, although you can tell by their thinning crowns that they're all infected). The gaping hole in this one isn't likely to be caused by the ash borer - either directly or indirectly, as it's such an old wound and the ash borer is a relatively new pest; also, they don't tend to leave piles of sawdust that you can see in the third pic - that's likely carpenter ants and perhaps some woodpecker damage. The bark would also be peeling back in sheets if badly infected - this bark appears to be pretty intact, although this guy won't be standing for long.
March 31, 2024 by SPP™ SlowPokePete, on Flickr
SPP
They use the cabin at its base. I've relocated porcupines in the past: get them into a garbage can and drive a good ways off. There was a young one wandering across the yard yesterday evening as I walked down the drive with the dogs, who were good enough to leave it alone. After the recent ice storm I am thinking to log around the house, which is surrounded by 100" tall pines. It will make a mess, but if one hits the house it could be a write-off.
The first photo is 2007. The tree was a porcupine den.
The fact that it still stands is remarkable, and a testament to the increased strength of a larger diameter tube with thinner walls.
Jay Dwight
IMG_7151.jpg
After a dreary day here we get lucky for a few minutes.
Národní muzeum in Prague completely restored and absolutely beautiful. Finished in 2019. Natural history exhibits honor both current science and Victorian "cabinet of curiosity" style of display. Well worth a visit if you like science or beautiful buildings or you have kids who like mammoths or you like mammoths. Excellent job. Well done.
April 2, 2024 by SPP™ SlowPokePete, on Flickr
SPP
The sun aligns with our path into the woods.
Jay Dwight
How is Prague now?
In 1990 I took the overnight train from Venice to Prague. Then we rented this very fast Toyota and made a tour of all the Bohemian churches in the countryside.
That was about a year after the wall fell. You would drive into these little towns with this fast car and people would come out of their homes just to get a look at it.
No billboards, no western advertising. And no GPS.
I remenber wading into a freshly ploughed field with my church book trying to ask the farmer which way to the church. He thought I was nuts.
The only western influence - a T Moble phone booth in the main square.
It is Europe now. Your experience was a very long time ago in many more ways that just years. My wife and I lived there for 4 years in the 2000's and it has changed significantly even since then.
Here's just one of the excellent restaurants we visited. https://www.almaprague.cz/en
Here's our hotel. https://www.ariahotel.net
One of the newer museums. https://www.kunsthallepraha.org/en
Recent design. https://www.dezeen.com/tag/prague/
Last edited by j44ke; 04-03-2024 at 12:12 PM.
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