Friday, January 23, 2015

So, I started this blog ten years ago today



I'm unsure how much longer it will continue, however. It takes an enormous amount of time and with the number of visitors continually falling, my head is telling me to stop. Now. Today.

That said, as there are currently 49,060 posts here, my heart is wanting to get to 50,000, so I'll strive to reach this, then reappraise the situation. In the meantime, if you see any posts here you think your friends, family or colleagues would appreciate, I'd be extremely grateful if you'd share them on social media or wherever.

Thanks. And thank you for visiting!

Little fella and his dad perform Love Me Do

Recorded some years back, Brent Stimmel and his then three-year-old son perform The Beatles' Love Me Do.


YouTube link.

Man who traded dog for rifle planning to kill his son and son's girlfriend sent to prison

A man from Mason City, Iowa, who traded his dog for a .22-calibre rifle that he planned to use to kill his son was sentenced to more than 22 years in federal prison on Wednesday. US District Chief Judge Linda Reade sentenced Billy Douglas Thorne, 58, as an "armed career criminal" because of six prior felony convictions for crimes including armed burglary.

Thorne was convicted in April of possession of a firearm by a felon after a jury trial. Thorne traded his dog, Luna, for a rifle in July 2012, according to witnesses who testified at his trial. Thorne told his ex-wife and other witnesses that he planned on using the firearm to kill his son, as well as his son's girlfriend.



In threatening text messages, Thorne told his son that he was coming after him. In one message, Thorne said: "i sold the dog, i gave her away for a shootem up." The son reported his father's messages to the Ankeny Police Department, and Thorne was charged with first-degree harassment.

Thorne's son went to Mason City with a witness who knew the rifle had been hidden in a park. Thorne's son turned the gun over to police. Thorne will be in the custody of the US Marshals until he can be transferred to prison. Additionally, he'll serve a five-year supervised release term after he leaves prison.

Convict on the run found hiding in sofa

It may be he was just looking for loose change, but a Canadian convict caught curled up inside a couch at an East Vancouver home will have to get used to some less comfortable seating in his near future.



The Vancouver Police Fugitive Unit armed with a search warrant descended on the home on Tuesday in search of a 36-year-old Calgary man on the run from a three-and-a-half year sentence for drug offences. Fearing their search would turn up empty, a nosy police canine became curious about a sofa in the living room.

Investigators removed fabric from the bottom to uncover the concealed man, leaving even veteran officers mystified. “In my 24 years of police service, I have never in my career seen a suspect hide inside the body of the sofa,” said Insp. Ian Upton. The man found inside was Adam Michael Harlock, who was arrested along with his wife and three others following a targeted traffic stop in Calgary in Februrary 2009.



After finding cash and ketamine in the vehicle, Calgary officers searched three northwest homes, discovering a haul of drugs, guns, cutting agents, cash, and cars. In addition investigators seized several police shirts and body armour with ‘POLICE’ written on them, four sets of handcuffs, a police siren and mini-light bar. Harlock will be shipped back to Alberta to begin his sentence.

Baby elephant rescued after falling into pit

A baby elephant that slipped into an unused water storage pit in southwestern China has been freed with the help of local police.



The animal had most likely fallen into the pit after rainfall caused the ground near it to become slippery, according to authorities in Yunnan province.



After repeatedly trying to climb out of the pit, the elephant appeared distressed. It had “probably” been stuck there at least 24 hours before rescuers came to help, local police say.


YouTube link.

Rescuers began digging away the side of the pit to create a ramp. It took several attempts, but eventually the calf was able to climb to freedom, where it promptly ran into nearby forest.

School bus driver accused of stealing died after drinking witch doctor's potion to prove innocence

A school bus driver in Kenya died after drinking a potion brewed by a "witch doctor" to prove he had not stolen books, sparking angry protests from villagers.

The school directors in a village in Kisii County hired a witch doctor to seek out the thief of school books, with the driver volunteering to drink a potion to prove he was innocent.



"The driver was dared ... to prove his innocence by drinking the mixture," local police chief Simon Kiragu said. "The 33-year old collapsed and died immediately after the drink."

Furious villagers then took revenge on school leaders by torching the school bus and the deputy director's house.

Smoker given record fine for throwing cigarette butts from window of home

Courts in Singapore have applied a record fine for a man who was repeatedly throwing cigarette butts out of his home, the National Environment Agency (NEA) have said.

The 38-year-old man was fined S$19,800 (£10,000, $16,000) and sentenced to five hours of Corrective Work Order for committing 34 acts of high-rise littering at Compassvale Walk. He was fined S$600 (£300, $480) for each of the 33 offences, and the Corrective Work Order was meted out for one offence.



The NEA had received five instances of feedback on high-rise littering at the block of flats, but the problem persisted despite stakeouts by the agency’s officers and many “educational rounds” by the town council and a grassroot organisation. The agency did not specify what took place during those rounds.

A surveillance camera was installed and it caught the man repeatedly throwing cigarette butts out of his unit’s window. NEA said that it received about 2,500 complaints about high-rise littering in Singapore in 2014, the most common litter being cigarette butts, tissue paper and food waste. It has stepped up its enforcement, outreach and education efforts and has installed cameras at close to 600 locations.

Judge rules that landlords can't stop men standing to pee

Splashy urinators in Germany may now micturate in peace, after a man won a court battle against his landlord for the right to tinkle as nature intended. The man sued his landlord after he refused to pay back €1,900 (£1,455, $2,200) of a €3,000 (£2,300, $3,500) deposit, saying he needed the money to repair urine-related damage on the bathroom floor.

The landlord had brought in a "technical expert“, who had the unenviable task of confirming that wayward droplets were indeed the cause of the damage to the marble tiles. While Düsseldorf judge Stefan Hank found the pro-sitting landlord's arguments "credible and understandable“, he said that he could not side with the landlord.



"Despite the increasing domestication of men in this regard, urinating while standing up is still widespread", he wrote in his judgement. The landlord should have warned the renter of the floor's "sensitivity" to potentially damaging bodily fluids beforehand, the judge reasoned. "Anyone who still practices this formerly dominant custom has to expect occasional clashes with - especially female - flatmates.

"But they don't have to worry about corrosion to the marble floor", he concluded. There has long been a campaign in Germany to convert messy Stehpinkler - standing urinators - into Sitzpinkler - their more socially responsible brethren. Many German homes have notices in the toilet asking guests to make use of the seat rather than risk unwanted collateral damage to the bathroom.

Toddler narrowly escaped exploding manhole

An explosion in a manhole on a Birmingham street just missed a small child who was walking nearby. The explosion happened on Thursday lunchtime at Warwick Road, Acocks Green. The cause is still being established.



Video footage shows the child and two adults walking past the manhole immediately before the explosion. National Grid is investigating. West Midlands Fire and Rescue said the explosion had narrowly missed the child. "We got there this afternoon.

"We understand a nearby mains box was smoking prior to the incident, which may have caused two manhole covers to become dislodged," said a representative. "Fortunately - and amazingly - the family passing by weren't hurt. Utility companies are investigating who owns the manholes and the cause."


YouTube link.

A National Grid representative said such explosions did happen, but were "not common". "We have a team on site trying to find out whether there was gas involved in the explosion," she said. "We will remain there until we either find a gas escape or somebody can establish a cause."

Cat survived for six weeks in chimney

Chloe the cat survived for six weeks stuck down a chimney. Marion Wood, 75, from Stoborough in Dorset, went to visit her family in Vietnam in December and arranged to leave Chloe in a pet cat kennel outdoors, with her neighbours feeding and taking care of her. Mrs Wood said: “Two days after we got to Vietnam we had a call from my neighbour, who said that Chloe had gone missing and the last time she was seen was on the roof.



“Nobody could find her; they looked for days everywhere, trawled through farmers' fields and searched high and low.” Marion then returned home with husband Patrick last Saturday. On Sunday morning she was upstairs when she heard a faint meow coming from behind the sealed up fireplace in the spare bedroom. She added: “At first I thought I was just jetlagged and imagining things but then I heard it again. I shouted for Patrick and we cut the fireplace open and found Chloe.



“She was half-dead; emaciated and couldn't see anything. We brought her downstairs and gave her some water and my neighbour Tammy Parkins, who works for Castle Vets, agreed to take her into the vets that morning.” Staff at the vets fed Chloe every two hours, even coming in when the practice was closed, and on Sunday the vets said Chloe had a 50/50 chance of survival. On Monday her chances dropped to 70/30 but now just three days later she is back at home after beating all the odds.



Mrs Wood says the staff Castle Vets in Poundbury saved Chloe's life. Marion said: “It's amazing that a cat could survive without any food or water for six weeks. The fireplace had been sealed up for at least 20 years. She must have been determined to get in the house while we were away and this was clearly the only way she thought she could do that. A massive thank you must go to Castle Vets; if they hadn't been so helpful we could now be telling a very different story.”

There's a news video here.