Wednesday, 7 September 2011

In Deep Ship


The SS Richard Montgomery was an American Liberty Ship. The Vessel built in 1943 was used to carry cargo during the second world war.




In 1944 the ship left Hog Island Philadelphia on its final voyage. The ship was carrying 6, 127 tons of munitions. Its mission was to go to England where it would meet up with a convoy, then it would continue on to France.

Once the ship reached Southend it came under the authority of the Thames naval control.
The Harbour Master ordered the ship to berth about 2.5km of the coast of Sheerness.
On the 20th August 1944 the ship dragged anchor and ran aground on a sandbank.


On the 23rd August 1944 a local salvage company had the job of removing the cargo from the grounded ship, within a few days the ships hull cracked and its holds started to take on water, the salvage company continued operations for as long as possible, but after a few weeks had to abandon efforts.

The ship had now broken into two pieces and any salvage operations would be very difficult to carry out. In 1967 a Polish ship The Kielce which had sank in 1946 with a similar amount of ordnance on board exploded after an attempt to neutralise its dangerous load. This caused an explosion similar in force to an earthquake of a magnitude of 4.5, and made a 20ft (6m) crater in the seabed.Fortunately there were no fatalities but the authorities were very dubious about attempting this kind of operation again.



In 1973 the Maritime and Coastguard Agency placed an exclusion zone around the wreck, as there was still a large amount of unexploded ordnance on board the sunken ship.















Several assessments of the danger of the wreck have been made, the reports state that some 3000 tons of munitions are still on the sunken ship, containing about 1400 tons of highly explosive TNT.
One report by the BBC suggested that if the ship exploded it would throw a 1,000-foot (300 m) wide column of water and debris nearly 10,000 feet (3,000 m) in the air and generate a wave 16 feet (5 m) high. Almost every window in Sheerness (pop. c20,000) would be broken and buildings would be damaged by the blast.


Assessments made in the last few years have stated that an explosion could potentially cause £1 billion pounds worth of damage. The ship has continued to deteriorate, and serious concerns are being made as to the stability of its load. With the proposal of an airport possibly being built in the Thames estuary a solution must soon be found to this explosive problem.

Monday, 5 September 2011

Island of The Dolls



La Isla de la Munecas is found south of Mexico City by travelling along the Canals of Xochimilco. The story behind it is that the island once had a sole inhabitant, Don Julian Santana Barrera. While Julian was in fact married, he decided to spend the last 50 years of his life alone on his own little island.

One day Julian was relaxing on his private island when he spotted a doll floating down the canal. Julian fished the doll out and later found that it had belonged to a little girl living in a village further up the canal. The unfortunate girl had been playing near the water when she slipped, fell in and drown.


The story is a lot weirder than that though. After finding the doll, Julian soon discovered the Island had one extra inhabitant. The girl wasn't willing to give up her doll that easily, not even after death. Now stuck with a girls doll and her ghost, Julian decided it was time to take up a new hobby.

The island Hermit began collecting dolls, amassing thousands of dolls over his lifetime and lovingly displaying them across the island for the little girl.


Now from nearly every tree on the island (and just about everywhere else he could stick them) mutilated dolls simulated acts of torture and suicide. A shrine was erected for the girl, and as long as new dolls came rolling in the ghost was appeased. Or so Julian thought...


After 50 years of manic doll collecting, Julians life finally came to an end. The death of a lone crazy island hermit wouldn't really draw much attention, had he not drown in the same canal as the little girl he claimed had haunted him. Had he been paying his regards to the dead child and merely fallen in? Or had the restless spirit finally grown tired of the old man? Only Julian will ever know for certain.


Now Island of The Dolls is merely a creepy Mexican tourist attraction, visited every so often by boats of tourists. It is claimed the dolls whisper and must be offered gifts to appease them on arrival; true or not, the location is still creepy. Would you ever dare visit La Isla de la Munecas?



A Leap too Far



Astral Projection anyone ?
Nah its so yesterday.

Now everyone is Quantum Jumping.

Well when I say everyone, I mean some people are trying.
I don't want to stereo type, but those who feel there lives are unfulfilled or have a higher sense of purpose, looking for some spiritual or other worldly guidance, those who have more money than sense and are quite happy to give it to some guy who promises to change their life in six easy payments, or those who have next to nothing and its a last ditch effort to get their sorry arses back on track.....sound familiar.



When Jesus talked about our salvation, he said it wouldn't be easy, but I don't think the path to spiritual utopia has anything to to do with our sort code and bank account number. Whenever one of these so called experts tell us that they can fix everything, do we really believe them, Some do obviously but if someone has truly found the path to enlightenment, discovered the answers to life, the universe...everything do you think they would really need to squeeze us mere mortals dry to help us achieve our own goals ?

Maybe I'm being a bit cynical, I'm an open minded guy, Who remembers "Quantum Leap" I watched Scott Bakula jump around the multiverse, lending a helping hand on his way, But is it possible.......



The idea is that our universe is only one of many.Scientists are now starting to look at the Multiverse theory as being quite plausible. In the near future The Laser Interferometer Space Antenna (LISA) is going to be launched, and part of the outcome of its mission is to discover the existence of other universes. So possibly in the next few years we could have irrefutable proof that the existence of other universes is indeed fact.



Also it has been observed that the exact location of an atomic particle is hard to pin down, the idea being that the particles have multiple points of existence. Some say that the particles exist not just in multiple locations in our universe, but in multiple locations across a multiverse.




Now this is where people start hypothesizing that if multiple universes exist containing particles spanning the multiverse, that maybe multiples of us also exist. One suggestion is that every choice we make opens up multiple paths of possibility and each outcome is explored in a different universe by a different us, and so on.....





So could we potentially contact our other selves and learn from the wisdom of the different choice potentials ?
Maybe, but for now I feel that I am wise enough to realise if someone wants me to pay for the chance to be enlightened that I don't need to travel to another universe to know the outcome.

Saturday, 3 September 2011

Lost and Found



Actor Sir Anthony Hopkins had just signed his contract for his 1974 film The Girl from Petrovka. After flying back over to London, England he decided to have a look for a copy of the novel. Since he was in the film, he figured he should at least of read the book it was based on at least once. He went from store to store, searching stores across London's Charing Cross Road, but to his dismay there wasn't a single copy in stock.
He began his journey home empty handed, but sitting at Leicester Square waiting for his train, Anthony spotted a discarded book. By a great stroke of luck, the book was actually The Girl From Petrovka by George Feifer. Amazed by his luck, Anthony picked up the book and set off home to give it a read. This event in its own is not interesting, merely a lucky coincidence, however what followed next was much more.
2 Years later while filming in Vienna, Anthony was visited by the author, George Feifer. During their conversation, George mentioned that he did not have a copy of his own book. He explained that he lent his personal copy to a friend, who had then lost the book in London. George then went on to explain that the copy had been rather precious, in that it contained his personal annotations in the margins.
Anthony got up and went to fetch the book he had found 2 years previously, presenting it to George and asking "Was it this one?" . To both their astonishment, the writing in the margins was George's annotations. George Feifer was reunited with his book, countries and years away from where it was lost, by an actor in the film adaptation of the very same novel.

Six Flags New Orleans


In 2005, America felt the wrath of Hurricane Katrina. 1,836 people died in the horrific chaos caused by this powerful display of nature. In the aftermath of the destruction, from hurricane and floods, people across Louisiana were left to pick up the pieces of their lives. The hardest hit area being New Orleans. The Levee they thought to protect them critically failed, the resulting floods devastated the area.
After the flood people began rebuilding their lives, their homes, their businesses, but not everything was saved. Now without owner or without care, buildings crumbled into ruin... Areas laid destroyed, torn by winds and corroded by water. Through all the destroyed areas, nothing stood as a symbol of natures danger more than Six Flags New Orleans. The parks haunting images and scenery remains to this day a powerful reminder of how fragile our creations truly are.
The park started its life in 2000, when Alfa Smartparks opened it to the public as Jazzland. The park took off, seeing over 1,000,000 visitors in its first season. However Alfa Smartparks soon fell into bankruptcy, Jazzland became the property of New Orleans. For the park to stay running New Orleans had to find a new tenant to lease the land. The tenancy soon fell on Six Flags, the worlds largest Amusement Park Corporation. They bought the lease in 2002 and turned it into Six Flags New Orleans, signing to keep the park for 75 years. 


The park, while being the lowest earner in Six Flags collection, managed to remain profitable for its lifetime. With the facility seeing an average of 830,000 visitors a year. Sadly though, once the disaster struck, the gates would remain closed. Problems with legal proceedings, insurance companies and lack of profit lead to Six Flags abandoning the park. Now back in the hands of New Orleans, the city needed a new tenant to rebuild the park.
The parks future was unsure, until April 2008 when Southern Star Amusements announced they would take a look at redeveloping the land and reopening the park with 60 rides (over twice the size of the original park). This was exciting news that sadly did not last long. On 27th of September, 2008, SSA announced that it would no longer consider reviving the New Orleans Themepark. While they didn't give any reasons, many speculated that it was due to Six Flags removing rides from the park, to be repaired and reinstalled elsewhere.

No serious considerations for the parks redevelopment appeared until January 21st, 2011, when Southern Star Amusements officially announced redevelopment plans.  Along with a 22 Page redevelopment plan, SSA stated: "We have been reaching out to various non-profit groups that serve the community to find ways to work with them should we be successful. We are looking for ways that the park can benefit those groups directly. Our goal is to create jobs for the city's musicians and artisans and to inspire the youth that there are fun and rewarding careers available to them if they stay in school and get the best education they can."
Hopefully the park will reopen, and the nightmare dreamscapes of the park can finally be put to rest... But for now, Six Flags New Orleans stands there. Dead but not forgotten; reminding us all that this planet is not as docile as it seems.

Aokigahara Forest


Aokigahara is a freaky forest out in Japan, right at the base of Mt. Fuji. Now what makes this forest freaky is that it is one of the most popular place in the world to commit suicide. Being a popular suicide site isn't that scary, but unlike the Golden Gate bridge or Niagra Falls, the bodies don't just "wash away". Nope, the corpses of the unfortunate are just left there, swinging from trees or rotting inside tents.
Every year Japanese police and volunteers make a macabre journey into the woodlands to see what they can find. Why anyone would volunteer to journey into a forest full of bodies is beyond me, especially since they have found as many as 70 bodies in a single year. But the creepiness doesn't end at the rotting corpses...
Aokigahara (Also known as The Sea of Trees) is so dense that wind doesn't even reach its depths... There's also next to no animals there, leading to most of the forest being completely silent. Then between the bodies and silence, there's the darkness. The density also blocks out the light, leading to some areas being completely caped in black. The Japanese government has also made sure the whole area is full of signs, holding messages in Japanese and English that read "Life is a precious thing! Please reconsider!", "Please consult the police before you decide to die!" or "Think of your family!".
From the darkness, silence and corpses, you would expect people to avoid the place... but no. Being at the foot of Mt. Fuji, Aokigahara has a few nice caves that draw regular tourists. The Aokigahara Bat Caves attracting many visitors. However, along with the tourists comes a more sinister type of person, Aokigahara Scavengers. These people, realising the dead may have money or jewellery, venture out into the forests in search of treasure. They move through the trees, praying on the corpses like ghouls, disturbing the dead for their pocket change.
The whole place is just shrouded in creepy and to no surprise, Aokigahara is a famous setting for ghost stories. The sea of trees is supposed to be filled with Yurei (Freaky Japanese ghosts. If you've seen the Grudge, you know what I'm on about), thanks to the suicides and something called Ubasute. Ubasute is an apparent Japanese tradition where younger family members would take the useless old people (Such as that Grandma which never buys you presents) and drop her off in the woods to die of dehydration/starvation. At least it was more humane than British care homes.
The tradition of committing suicide in Aokigahara is accredited to a book called Black Sea of Trees (Kuroi Kaiju by Seicho Matsumoto), which features two characters committing suicide inside the forest. This however isn't entirely true, as suicides were committed in the forest before the book was published. Well before the book there was a story of two farmers, who down on their luck and struggling to feed their families, ventured deep into the forest to take their own life. The poor men figured that if they killed themselves, it would leave more food for their children...
Aokigahara forest is a place of great sorrow, suffering, greed, betrayal and misfortune, where the last breaths of so many were taken. So much life is lost within this land of the dead, where even the trees sit silent, and yet its beauty remains captivating. Tourists come to the area in droves, stories are woven from the lost life and human interest remains forever held by the sea of trees.

Oak Island - The Money Pit




In 1795 Daniel Mcginnis observed lights coming from Oak Island, he went to island and discovered a circular depression on the southeastern corner, next to the which was a tree with a tackle block connected to it.


With the help of his friends John Smith, Samuel Ball and Anthony Vaughan, Daniel excavated the depression and found a flagstone a few feet below, also pick markings were observed on the pit wall.
As they dug down they found layers of logs every 10ft, they soon became frustrated and abondoned thier quest at around 30ft.

Others have since taken up the challenge and in over 200 years many have searched for the elusive treasure of Oak Island.

Early during one such venture an inscribed stone was found(which unfortunately has been lost).

There have been various interpretations as to the meanings of the inscriptions, The image belows depicts one of the more popular translations.


Adventurers continued to dig, In 1849 a drill probe was used which encountered multiple layers of charcoal, putty and coconut fibre.

At 98ft down a spruce platform was discovered guarding two oak chests containing loose metal pieces (pieces of eight ?).

In 1897 the drilling continued, beyond the level the chests were found, layers of wood and iron were discovered,further down a 30ft layer of hand worked blue clay, a seven foot cement vault at 153ft and an iron barrier at 171ft.


Various companies and individuals have been involved with attempts to excavate the treasure, costing millions of dollars and so far six adventurers have given thier lives. The pit has thrown up many challenges through flooding and collapse,underground interconnected tunnels fuelled by sea water causing all sorts of problems and to this day still no treasure has been found.

The current owner Dan Blankenship, who owns 78% of the Oak Island Property has applied for a treasure trove licence from the Nova Scotia government but as yet has had no reply, He has now started a petition to get his application agreed.

I've always been fascinated by this story, the fact that so many people have put so much time and effort into finding what is hidden here, even losing there lives.
Is it a worthy cause ?
What do you think is hidden there ?