#travel

psych@diasp.org

Boulangerie 2024

Unlike one of my all-time favorite photos of a Boulangerie with its wares, and reflections of a passerby,
this store caught my eye for its entire essence, architecture, from street sign to graffiti, now a shuttered landmark.

Below is that 'vintage' image I took with this stuff called chrome - Fujichrome and Kodachrome.

Boulangerie

Joyous holidays!
Hope it is nutritious, delicious, peaceful and healthy. Looking at the calendar... Wow! Hope we all enjoy some goodness.

More new & vintage #photography of #Paris in my album (Flickr) @ https://flic.kr/s/aHsk6hHYg7
Or on my own site @ http://www.fenichel.com/fenfotos.shtml - with a dozen more collections of #travel photos.

#Fenfotos #Paris #Boulangerie #architecture

Patisserie
ramnath@nerdpol.ch

#quote from #JamesHorak, he sums it up nicely:

“If #time #travel is possible, will be possible, has ever been possible it is with us now.” - James C. Horak

We will officially have time travel technology in about 150 years.

These “drones” that you see now disable and take away nuclear weapons. They are losing them en masse.

We have been working for several years to ensure that this timeline continues to exist.

claralistensprechen3rd@friendica.myportal.social

This is the era where Turks were on the rise abutting the Roman Empire, which had already split into Roman and Byzantine parts because of papal corruption, because the papacy and the imperial government were parasitically attached to each other, one of the reasons why a Roman emperor moved the capital from Rome to Constantinople, and the papacy refused to recognize the move as legitimate (9th century, The Great Schism). Eventually the Turks would best the Byzantines but also had sights on Rome, too.


Bob the Traveler - 2024-12-13 22:06:00 GMT

Pope Celestine V resigned the papacy OTD in 1294 after just 5 months in office, to return to his previous life as an ascetic hermit cromwell-intl.com/travel/franc… #travel #history

claralistensprechen3rd@friendica.myportal.social

There are some folks that don't have to pretend to be time travelers. ;-)


Bob the Traveler - 2024-12-09 03:48:00 GMT

Baron Miklós Istvánffy de Baranyavár et Kisasszonyfalva, born OTD in 1538, served as Palatinal Governor of #Hungary from 1582 to 1608 cromwell-intl.com/travel/hunga… #travel #history

rhysy@diaspora.glasswings.com

Personally I'm happy just to be outside and enjoy the nice view.

Collecting data from the most extreme places on Earth can require the skills of the most extreme outdoor enthusiasts. Surrounded by glaciers and roughly 6,400m (21,000ft) above sea level, Willie Benegas spotted a pop of green moss wedged in granite. "Wow, this is an odd place for moss to be," he observed. In 2011, Benegas, an extreme mountaineering guide, was 500ft (152m) above the steep, exposed terrain of Mount Everest's Camp 2 and – despite having summited Mount Everest over a dozen times – he still found himself "impressed". Using a sterilised cloth Benegas scooped the moss into an envelope to be transported to a lab on another continent.

Benegas collected the moss samples for the non-profit Adventure Scientists, which acts as a matchmaking service between outdoor enthusiasts and scientists. "Scientists like to have samples taken in locations where it's difficult – sometimes damn near impossible – to get funding [to go]," McDermott says. "I was flabbergasted [Adventure Scientists] were even willing to try."

"Climbing is selfish," says Hari Mix, a mountain climber who collected data for Adventure Scientists during his Himalayan expeditions in 2012 and 2013. "There's no real point to it. I was looking for ways to add meaning or some kind of contribution to my trips."

In Washington State, John Soltys, a long-time volunteer for Adventure Scientists, says data collection bestows a sense of "purpose" on his family's alfresco activities. Soltys stumbled upon Adventure Scientists in 2013 while on a camping trip to Berkeley Park in Mount Rainier National Park, Washington State. Soltys's young children became "absolutely mesmerised" by the scurrying pikas – mountain-dwelling, mouse-like mammals. Soltys scoured iNaturalist, a social network for sharing biodiversity finds. There, he found Adventure Scientists, which was also utilising the platform to collect data on pikas. His family now volunteers with the nonprofit 100 times a year, he says. "Yeah, we're doing that crazy stuff," he says.

Well, good for them, I suppose. Sounds a bit too much like work to me. The "point" of being outside is to be outside and not at a screen thinking about stuff. Having a checklist of activities to do would be a big Nope, but hey, anyone who wants to climb 6,000 metres to collect some moss... more power to 'em, I say.

#Travel
#Science

https://www.bbc.com/future/article/20241112-the-mountaineers-and-hikers-collecting-data-in-extreme-environments-that-scientists-cant-reach

claralistensprechen3rd@friendica.myportal.social

Being a political humorist should be one of Vincente's credits.


Bob the Traveler - 2024-12-02 03:48:00 GMT

Vicente Fox Quesada was inaugurated as president of #Mexico OTD in 2000, in Mexico's first peaceful transfer of executive power to an opposing political party following a free and democratic election cromwell-intl.com/travel/mexic… #travel