Saturday, September 02, 2006

who's in?

my local beer is called 'doom bar'... i love the stuff, but i can only find it back home. here's a little description of it from the brewery website.

i noticed that the brewery sells poly-containers of either 17.6 or 35.2 pints of the stuff, to be deliverable over the uk... i was going to purchase one of these, but since i imagine the beer has to be drunk reasonably quickly, i was wondering if any of the astro-boys would like to chip in and split the barrel as it were?

i can vouch for the quality of the beer - we could have some sort of beer 'festival'. i'd even make a batch of pasties. let me know if any of you are interested.

Friday, September 01, 2006

i love it

Wednesday, August 30, 2006

spooks & spectres

norris has just shown me one of the most compelling pieces of evidence for the existence of ghosts - see the observer's hunch for details, and a bone-chilling video.

in this game you have to keep an open mind... (dark energy for goodness sake) ...the establishment frowns on paranormal matters. however, i have seen some weird things in my time. things that can't be explained by the normal rules of logic, and i'm not talking about david copperfield being able to fly (he goes into a sealed box - and still flies).

i'll tell you about some paranormal experiences i have had

1) my encounter with the beast of bodmin

it was some years ago now. a friend and i were camping by the river in the woods near our house. twilight was approaching, and so perhaps my eyes were playing tricks on me... nevertheless, as i stood on the stone bridge looking down into the river i saw this large black shape seemingly stalk downstream and into the darkness beyond. i didn't think too much of it at the time, i thought it might be an otter or some other animal. later on i reasoned -- it's was far too big to be an otter, and besides, it moved like a cat. later i learnt that the Beast had been spotted further up our valley. in my opinion, this sighting could only have been the Beast of Bodmin. good job for me he wasn't hungry.

2) classic ghost

back home i live opposite a church + graveyard. this has never bothered me, but there was one time where i swear i could see a spectral shape in the churchyard. human shaped (people visit graves all the time)... but this thing simply vanished. classic ghost.

3) chains

this isn't one of mine, but my brother may fill you in. he (and others) have claimed to have heard a sound like the picking up and dropping of chains out the back (i wouldn't know - by bedroom doesn't face that way). clearly this is a restless spirit hanging around our back garden.

4) the night time stood still / ghost union

this one happened at uni in london, and perhaps my friend alun can corroborate the story, since it involved him too. i can't remember exactly where we had been before (in a pub probably), but we rolled up to south kensington with the plan to get a couple more drinks in the union. normally there was someone on the door to check cards, etc. no-one there. we entered the union anyway. the place was deserted. no-one was to be seen. no students, no staff (it wasn't that late). we had a wander round... a veritable marie celeste of a place. we eventually gave up and got the tube to kings union... and had a great night. i cannot explain what happened that night, but i'm sure it is paranormal in nature.

all i'm saying is... keep an open mind.

john... the camera please

i think we should get some pictures on here...

Tuesday, August 29, 2006

john, i hope you've got some speedos...

norris should have been doing work today... instead he's been devising methods to measure the density of a human being - specifically in regards to john's weight loss campaign. the idea is that muscle is 22% denser than fat, and so any changes in john's weight should be detectable via a density measurement. namely, is he putting on or losing fat or muscle?

norris has come up with an experiment we can do involving putting john in a bath and working out his exact volume. he says he'll post details on his blog later. norris and i will be the control sample. a back of the envelope calculation earlier revealed that at the moment john was densest, followed by me, followed by norris. however the calculation did assume that a human being could be modelled as a cylinder.

now that's real science.

Monday, August 28, 2006

Dreams of loneliness, like a heartbeat drives you mad in the stillness of remembering what you had.

I have been having some very intense dreams of late... the sort when you wake up and it takes you a few seconds to realise you're back in reality.

The dream I had last night (amongst other things) prompted me to make a back up of all my important work on my laptop to the RAID at work... let's just call it a premonition. It also made me think that I should buy myself an iMac to provide some redundancy on the old data front. I'm also running very low on memory on my powerbook.

The dream I had involved an armed robbery (with a twist), involving me losing my laptop... the conclusion of the dream posed me witha moral dilemma, the details of which I can't go into here... needless to say it was all very real. Dreams fascinate me - I'd like to try what Feynman claimed he managed, and be able to control and 'experience' my dreams more directly.

Sunday, August 27, 2006

sunday

had a few drinks at rob's house last night, and it seems to have ruined my sunday... waking up the wrong side of noon, and i feel somehow cheated out of the day. i'm in a reflective mood, so please bear with me; this could turn into a long one.

i was thinking about a conversation we were having about what a strange job astronomy is, and why we do it. for me, i always struggle to explain to people what the point of it is - my argument being that for me astronomy is about knowing as much about the Universe in the broadest possible sense, and i couldn't bear going through my life looking up at the stars and not knowing what they were. of course, i love the business - i'm almost certain this is what i'll do for the rest of my life... yet i always feel slightly awkward explaining this to people with real jobs.

this got me thinking about my life (i said i was in a reflective mood), and the things we worry about. i wonder what our ancestors would have thought of us - would they be proud or ashamed when we told them that we spend most of our time trying to figure out how the Cosmos goes, and the rest of it either drinking silly amounts or writing blogs? what with John's genealogy project, this reminded me of a letter i have from the first world war from someone probably younger than me now which kind of puts things into perspective, and makes me think that any of our concerns pale in comparison to the things some of our ancestors had to go through for us to beable to do what we do. thought i'd share it with you here, because it's pretty interesting.

it is from a friend of one of my great great uncles who became very sick during the war (with TB i think) to his parents:

Dear Mr Broad,

Thank-you so much for your most kind and welcome letter which I received on the 9th. I am awfully sorry to hear of Tom being so very ill, I quite remember his illness at Border camp, as I was taken ill with pleurisy about the same time. I left Border camp to go on my over-sea leave just before Xmas 1915, I was feeling queer at the time, so I went to a private doctor in London, and he ordered me to bed. I was in bed three days when I had to be taken into Fulham Military Hospital where I lay for some weeks, had I have not done as I did, probably I should have been in the same state as poor Tom is today; had he have had the proper attention in the first place no doubt he would have been alright up to this present day. When he was taken ill he lay on the boards in a cold Barrack Room for days without food. I could see a great difference in him then, it is usually the way in the army, one has to be half dead before receiving the least attention. Tom was always in the best of health and spirits, until we left our billets for deep out camp Farnborough and then it seemed to me he lost all heart of soldiering, and finally grew worse. Him and I were always the best of friends, I met Tom the day I enlisted at Fulham and we arranged to be billeted together. We had a very comfortable billet, and we had everything I think we could wish for, it was more of a holiday than the life of a soldier, but I may say I have had some terrible hardships since.

I often thought of the good times Tom and I had, while I was in the thick of the fighting for weeks at a stretch. I had my first experience of warfare at Loos, from there I went to Ypres, where I got a small dose of gas, but not enough to get me home. I then got well and was back in time for the attack on St. Eloc. We were moved from there on to the Somme the beginning of 1916. I went all through the bombardment, and was there for the great attack on July 1st. It was a terrible sight, I shall never forget it and I must thank the Lord that I am alive up to this day. I came home suffering from shell shock, I am still a bit shaky, and I shall not be fit for some time to come. I was buried alive two days in succession, the second time being more severe. There were six of us in a small German dugout - two of my mates were killed outright as they stood at the mouth of the dugout, the remainder of us were at the bottom, and had it not been for two of the Royal Engineers, we should have been there now, but as you say Mr Broad, I think myself Tom would have chosen going out and trying to do his best, in preference to what he has had to suffer, but I sincerely hope and trust that he will be spared to you. I am sure it has been a great trouble to Mrs Broad and yourself.

Dear Mr Broad you are quite right about Mr Jack Grey, it is the same one who used to attend South Downs Secondary School, and was in Mr Richards class. He wishes me to send his kindest regards to you. I should very much like to come and see Tom, but leaves are very scarce at present; but should I ever have the luck to come that way, I should be delighted to call on you. Now I must conclude, please give my best love to Tom.

Kindest regards to Mrs Broad and yourself.

I beg to remain, yours sincerely,
J. L. Evans.

PS- Dear Mr Broad, enclosed photograph I would like for Tom to have.

I think this is a fascinating window to probably one of the worst times in our ancestor's pasts. Makes me think that pretty much all my worries and misgivings about my life are frankly a bit stupid. I wonder what we would do in a situation like that.

Sunday reflection over.