
This beautiful true-colour image of Saturn’s tiny moon Mimas was captured by NASA’s Cassini probe in orbit around the ringed planet. It is truly worth visiting the Cassini site to see this image and others like it in high resolution.
Fri 11 Feb 2005

This beautiful true-colour image of Saturn’s tiny moon Mimas was captured by NASA’s Cassini probe in orbit around the ringed planet. It is truly worth visiting the Cassini site to see this image and others like it in high resolution.
Thu 10 Feb 2005
Posted by anaglyph under Spam Observations
[7] Comments
Spam Observations #4
Landon Flanagan took the trouble to write today, to tell me of what I can only presume to be a new invention that his father and sister intend to patent:
Good evening
Our parents have been married for twenty years.
They tried everyting in their relations and thought that nothing could awake their interest.
But one day father made unusual thing with my sister and then they told about it our mom and me.
Thank you, your
Landon Flanagan
This has such a wonderful Edward Gorey flavour about it that I thought I would use the opportunity to recommend that all readers of Tetherd Cow Ahead (both of you) should have a copy of Gorey’s The Curious Sofa: A Pornographic Work in their library. Go buy it NOW:
The Curious Sofa at Amazon.
If anyone would care to provide an illustration of what they think The Unusual Thing might look like, send it to me and I will post it on The Cow with full credit.
Tue 8 Feb 2005
Posted by anaglyph under Food & Drink, Travel, Words
Comments Off on Taffy 2
Well, I were curious weren’t I? How did salt water taffy get its name? Seems no-one knows. The National Candy Association puts forward this probably apocryphal story:
Many manufacturers claim a shopkeeper by the name of David Bradley was one of the first sellers of the candy. In 1883, a huge storm hit Atlantic City and flooded the boardwalk. Bradley’s store was flooded and the ocean water soaked his entire stock of taffy. In one account, a young girl asked if the store still had taffy for sale. Bradley jokingly told the girl to grab some ‘salt water taffy’. This is believed to be the first reference to salt water taffy.
Tue 8 Feb 2005
Posted by anaglyph under Bizarre, Food & Drink, Geek, Science
[3] Comments

I looked in the tin 1 minute before and 1 minute after, but there was no observable change in the curry. Since then, a mild aura of suspicion has intruded upon my reality, as I wonder exactly what it is that happened at 12:45 on that otherwise unremarkable day of April 23, 2003.
Mon 7 Feb 2005
Posted by anaglyph under Food & Drink, Stupidity, Travel
1 Comment

Bodega Bay is an unprepossessing little place with not a lot to recommend it save for a great little Mexican diner and the possibility of experiencing weird cold fogs that roll off the ocean in the middle of summer.
Just outside the town I stopped at a roadside shed that promised ‘Salt Water Taffy’ which is something I’d never heard of. Maybe taffy made with the age-old tradition of hand collected sea water, I thought, one of those quaint things that sounds bizarre but actually tastes quite nice, the recipe having been lovingly handed down over generations by laconic elderly candy-makers with laugh wrinkles and plenty of time for a cheeky wisecrack at a young whippersnapper like myself. I went inside and marvelled at the hundreds of different flavours, and, savouring the possibility of banter with the locals asked the girl at the counter why it was called ‘salt water’ taffy.
She looked at me like I’d said “Klatuu barada nicto”, chewed her gum once and said: “Because it’s made near the ocean.”
I bought a bag of the candy, went out and sat near the water and unwrapped what was essentially a chewy glob of sugar saturated with some incandescent alien ‘apple’ flavour. It was truly sick-making. Experimentally I threw one to the seagulls, wondering how many it would take to turn them into a hyperactive flock of murderous killers.
Mon 7 Feb 2005
Posted by anaglyph under Australiana, Ephemera
Comments Off on Accidental Museums

Demolition of a building up on King St, in Newtown where I live, revealed this sign which must date around the 1940s. Green Coupons were a redeemable ration system used in WW2 in Australia. A new construction has now obscured the sign again, for another fifty years, perhaps.