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austin_dern

July 2025

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I've kept my humor blog going and somehow have found something that's on theme to the pandemic for yet another week running. I don't know how these things are true. But run in the past week have been:

On to my photo dump. After the Jampot and Jacob's Falls we drove a little bit farther north and ended up at the Eagle Harbor lighthouse, which includes a bit of a museum, which is the kind of thing we could never resist.

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The Eagle Harbor Lighthouse, one of the fewer-than-you'd-expect lighthouses that we visited on our week up there. Great skies, I'm sure you agree.


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And a look at the grounds leading up to the lighthouse. The fog horn building, I think, is the thing off to the right there.


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We did indeed pay our museum and lighthouse admiKioskside.


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We entered the lighthouse in the kitchen, with a great old-fashioned decor that I'm glad we don't have to cook with.


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Great old Monitor-top icebox, too.


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So here we get a pretty well-explained chair. Not explained: did ... did they just fire up a copy of Print Shop Pro from 1989 to dig out the Napping Mexican In A Sombrero image like that and print it out? Or did they have, like, a thousand of them printed out so when one page gets worn out they can replace it with a fresh new one ?


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The lighthouse had a great 1910s(?) vintage record player, here showing a medley of patriotic airs, plus Dixie. The exposition referred to was the one held in 1915 in San Francisco.


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And here's the serial number and manufacturer's label for the Victor Talking Machine.


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Stereoscopic slides! [personal profile] bunnyhugger's father was really into them when I first met him, although then one day in about 2012 he just decided he was done and sold it off. Anyway, here's a potentially 3-D picture of Central Park, New York City.


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The Monarch-brand stereoscopic viewer set up with a view of US Capitol.


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And, always fascinating, the 4th-Order Fresnel Lens which back in the day was not used to make this lighthouse visible from much farther away. Why do I say this was not used?


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Well, there's the story: the orignal lens was lost during renovations, somehow, and the Keweenaw County Historical Society was, seventeen years later, loaned another one.


Trivia: The first aluminum baseball bats were made in the late 1960s by Anthony Merola, who had been manufacturing aluminum pool cues. Source: A Game of Inches: The Story Behind The Innovations That Shaped Baseball, Peter Morris.

Currently Reading: The Plastic-Man Archives, Volume 1, Jack Cole, Archive Editor Mike Carlin(?).

PS: Reading the Comics, April 13, 2020: More Words At Play Edition, one of those lightweight comic strip review posts that I get to do sometimes.

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