The story I got is that the way to guarantee that something won’t fall over from frost-heave is to have more of its volume and its mass underground than aboveground. That’s why the standing stones in my yard are only 5 feet tall. That was the most that the Komatsu could handle…
When I first moved up here and discovered that there’s a steady wind across my fields, I cooked up the idea to make installed things that would make noises. I started researching what it would take to make a stainless steel frame and curved sort of “lips” to produce an aeolian harp. I also thought up a “wind hammer dulcimer” -- the idea being to have a big stainless sound-board that would change pitch depending on how much rainwater was in it, strung with strings that had wind whirligigs with cams and hammers that would lift and drop based on wind speed. Then I went to my buddy Mike, who owns the MiG machine and asked him how hard he thought that would be. And that was the end of that project.
I had a dream once in which I had gigantic curved blades, like airplane propellors, on big posts in the field, positioned so that they would direct and control the blowing snow into shapes that could be seen from high above. Turns out that’s a math problem and one doesn’t simply request stainless steel to assume elegantly curved shapes.
No flint in that group. All I did was run them under some water and give them a quick scrub -- leaving the rat piss on would have been cheating, that stuff is sticky!
blf says
Rock gardening?
Caine says
Blf:
That’s a nice idea. Problems though -- first, I’d have to clear out some area of my semi-feral property. Prairie winds. There go my rock towers.
rq says
Nice. :D
blf says
Why? The rocks will grow just fine amongst the bugs, plants, and bepuppeted rats.
Mass. Stonehenge. Which is an example of “balanced art”.
Marcus Ranum says
I assume you’ve seen the movie of Andy Goldsworthy’s “Rivers and Tides”?
Caine says
Blf:
That kind of mass I don’t have. Very little can stand up to prairie winds.
Caine says
Marcus:
I have not.
rq says
By the way, these are some seriously awesome-looking rocks. Are they local?
Caine says
rq:
Some of them. Some of them date back to SoCal, some from Utah, some from Montana. A little here, a little there. :D
blf says
Forty-foot high killer rats: Rathenge.
rq says
They are magnificent.
Marcus Ranum says
Caine@#7 -- it leaves me panting with excitement, my hands twitching with the need to grab something and do something to it.
Marcus Ranum says
The story I got is that the way to guarantee that something won’t fall over from frost-heave is to have more of its volume and its mass underground than aboveground. That’s why the standing stones in my yard are only 5 feet tall. That was the most that the Komatsu could handle…
Marcus Ranum says
prairie winds
When I first moved up here and discovered that there’s a steady wind across my fields, I cooked up the idea to make installed things that would make noises. I started researching what it would take to make a stainless steel frame and curved sort of “lips” to produce an aeolian harp. I also thought up a “wind hammer dulcimer” -- the idea being to have a big stainless sound-board that would change pitch depending on how much rainwater was in it, strung with strings that had wind whirligigs with cams and hammers that would lift and drop based on wind speed. Then I went to my buddy Mike, who owns the MiG machine and asked him how hard he thought that would be. And that was the end of that project.
I had a dream once in which I had gigantic curved blades, like airplane propellors, on big posts in the field, positioned so that they would direct and control the blowing snow into shapes that could be seen from high above. Turns out that’s a math problem and one doesn’t simply request stainless steel to assume elegantly curved shapes.
Caine says
Marcus, I’ll have to watch it. Thanks for the mention!
Marcus Ranum says
Are those flint nodules?
And did you varnish them or oil them or something to make them look so nice?
Caine says
No flint in that group. All I did was run them under some water and give them a quick scrub -- leaving the rat piss on would have been cheating, that stuff is sticky!
Marcus Ranum says
leaving the rat piss on would have been cheating, that stuff is sticky!
Oh, ah!
Crimson Clupeidae says
I’m not going outside, except to go in the pool.
Thermometer on the back porch is currently reading 123F. (It was hotter yesterday.)
Pretty rocks, though! I want to go see if I can find my trilobite fossils now.
Crimson Clupeidae says
For Marcus:
Wind driven kinetic sculptures: https://www.google.com/#q=wind+driven+kinetic+sculpture