
Orthos |

Aberzombie wrote:Honey will take on a bit of the flavor of whatever nearby plant life the bees are making use of. For example, if the hive is next to a stand of orange trees, the honey might have a slight citrus flavor.On a similar line, red, green, and blue honey was produced by bees in France last year, making everyone perplexed. It was later discovered that the cause was a nearby M&M processing plant.
Was the colored honey still edible or was the byproduct from the plant dangerous or toxic somehow and the resulting honey thus inedible? I'd buy a thing of green or blue honey.

Klaus van der Kroft |
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Klaus van der Kroft wrote:Was the colored honey still edible or was the byproduct from the plant dangerous or toxic somehow and the resulting honey thus inedible? I'd buy a thing of green or blue honey.Aberzombie wrote:Honey will take on a bit of the flavor of whatever nearby plant life the bees are making use of. For example, if the hive is next to a stand of orange trees, the honey might have a slight citrus flavor.On a similar line, red, green, and blue honey was produced by bees in France last year, making everyone perplexed. It was later discovered that the cause was a nearby M&M processing plant.
From what I remember hearing when I saw this in the news last year, the honey was perfectly eddible and tasted just the same. In fact, some farmers were selling it.
However, the authorities finally determined they posed a potential risk, as the product was adultered.
I'd personally buy me a pack of funny coloured honey in a heartbeat!

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Today is the 50th anniversary of the loss of the USS Thresher, a submarine. She went down 10 April 1963, with 129 on board.
Every year, Portsmouth Naval Shipyard holds a ceremony honoring those lost in the accident, reading all 129 names.
The accident led to the development of the SUBSAFE program, which went online in July 1963. Since then, no SUBSAFE certified submarine has been lost.

ShadowFighter88 |
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That the Australian Evacuation of Gallipoli in World War 1 was originally predicted to suffer 50% casualties? The commander who originally gave this estimate (General Sir Ian Hamilton, who was more worried about damage to British Prestige) was soon replaced with one who projected 30% casualties; Lieutenant-General Sir Charles Monro. The actual casualties sustained during the evacuation? Two wounded.
How? Two cunning tricks. The first was the drip rifle, or Scurry Rifle, devised by then-Lance-Corporal William Scurry. Two tins, some string, some water and a box of rocks created an improvised delayed firing mechanism for a rifle - water would drip down from one tin into the other, eventually exerting enough force to drop the box of rocks and pull the trigger. This could give the Turks the impression that the trenches were still manned even after everyone in there had buggered-off twenty minutes ago.
The second was a bit of mental conditioning. Several times, at different points of the trenches, the Aussies would stop firing. The Turks would wonder what was going on and approach cautiously over No Man's Land, thinking the Australians had left or suffered some other setback. Naturally, No Man's Land got a bit messier when the Aussies popped out of cover at the last minute and opened fire on the exposed Turks. They repeated this ruse a few times and eventually, the Turks stopped falling for it. Meaning the long delay in firing as the troops evacuated was seen as just another attempt at an ambush. An impression that lasted longer thanks to Scurry's self-firing rifles. By the time the Turks realised that it wasn't another ambush and went to check, all they found were empty trenches with the Aussies well away.

Klaus van der Kroft |

-With very few exceptions, every word in Castilian that begins with "Al" (such as Alcaide-Warden, Aldea-Village, or Almohada-Pillow) is of Arabic origin.
-The first reccorded use of unmanned aerial vehicles occured during the First War of Italian Independence, in the mid-1800s, when Austria bombarded Venice with hot-air balloons. The operation was exceedingly ineffective.
-The use of vacuum as means of aerial buoyancy was postulated as far back as the Rennaissance. However, the structure required to keep a vacuum sufficiently large to cause a vessel to levitate has proven too heavy to be of any use. It is estimated that, weight notwithstanding, a vacuum flotation device would be 15% more efficient than helium.

Kajehase |

The 1923 FA Cup final at Wembley Stadium between Bolton Wanderers and West Ham United has an official attendance figure of 126'047 spectators, although it's estimated to have actually been somewhere between 240'000 and 300'000 with another 60'000 locked outside the gates. Crowd control was taken care of by Police Constable George Scorey and his horse, Billy.

Abed Nadir |

...Crowd control was taken care of by Police Constable George Scorey and his horse, Billy.
Was Billy the horse "invisible" by any chance?

ShadowFighter88 |
The popular story about how hard-to-kill Rasputin was was pure propaganda his killers spread. They just shot him in the back of the head, dumped the body and called it a night.
At the very least, the bit about baking cyanide into a cake is total bulldust - even if a lethal amount could survive the baking process, Raspy had a bad stomach and wouldn't have eaten it anyway.

Limeylongears |

The bit about him being Russia's greatest love machine is completely true, however.
Despite the fact that the death penalty for murder in the UK was abolished in the 1960s, piracy with violence or mutiny could still incur a death sentence up until 1998; a (regularly tested) gallows installed in Wandsworth gaol wasn't taken down until 1994.