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SUBSIM: The Web's #1 resource for all submarine & naval simulations since 1997 |
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#16 | |
Navy Seal
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There was a young lady in my complex who walked her dog every day past a tree at the end of the block; the dog would rush up to the base of the tree and growl and woof a bit; a squirrel then would climb down the tree trunk and stop just beyond the reach of the dog; the two of them would taunt each other, the dog woofing at the squirrel, the squirrel chattering at the dog; this would go on for a bit until the young lady would pull on the leash and start to walk away; they did this every time I saw them; the young lady has moved away (shame, she was very easy on the eyes), but the squirrel still occasionally wanders down the tree trunk as if looking for the dog to come back... <O>
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#17 |
Ocean Warrior
![]() Join Date: Feb 2010
Location: Kentucky
Posts: 2,528
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Story years ago from a local medical helicopter pilot. They were flying for a patient from the south-eastern part of Kentucky. The pilot received a radio message that B-52's were flying maneuvers in the area. He said he was looking around and couldn't see any. Then when he looked down, he saw something looking strange. He then realized it was one the airplanes. He said if he didn't know to look for them, he would not have seen it. At that time, B-52's were still painted in the camouflage pattern.
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Of all the forms of Martial Arts, Karaoke causes the most pain! |
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#18 |
Starte das Auto
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At the beginning of WW2 the triumphant Luftwaffe's fighter aircraft were usually painted in various tones grey and grey-greens on their upper sides with just the apex of the fuselage spine darkened with these colours, which were sometimes drawn down the light blue fuselage sides in various light mottles. This camouflage was designed for combat in the higher atmosphere and over the sea.
Later, as their machines spent far more time on the ground because of logistical shortages and became subject to more frequent low-level attacks, they moved over to using browns and greens in their top camouflage (sometimes quite garish too) with solid colour now covering the fuselage sides and not just the spine ![]()
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Last edited by Eichhörnchen; 02-26-19 at 03:02 AM. |
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#19 |
Starte das Auto
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Read here the fascinating story of how the Peppered Moth actually evolved a dark form to survive predation in the increasingly grimy environment of the Industrial North of England
http://www.mothscount.org/text/63/pe...selection.html (But please note that the moth shown at the top right of this feature is not a Peppered Moth but a Magpie Moth ![]() Below you can see the original Peppered Moth imago alongside its evolved melanistic form. Many other previously light-coloured moth species evolved these dark forms as acid rain steadily ate away the algae on trees, rendering their camouflage ineffective ![]()
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#20 |
Starte das Auto
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![]() ![]() This British butterfly is a master of camouflage: not only is it almost invisible against the heathland where it lives, it also famously angles its wings upon landing so as to cast no shadow http://www.habitas.org.uk/priority/s....asp?item=5582
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#21 |
Fleet Admiral
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In one of my animal product catalogs I have shows an "anti-bird catching" collar for a cat. It consists of brightly colored panels and is designed to flair out.
Evidently this is better than any bells as the birds can react to the small movements of the bright colors easier and sooner. The article pointed out that a bell on the collar may make the cat more vulnerable to predators as if the cat runs away, the bell rings, where when the cat is stalking a bird, the bell does not ring until it is too late.
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abusus non tollit usum - A right should NOT be withheld from people on the basis that some tend to abuse that right. |
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#22 |
Starte das Auto
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^ That's a very interesting aspect I hadn't thought about... where you are trying to counter the camouflage nature has bestowed on the cat
I'm trying now to think of other instances of this... it can't be compared to the wearing of day-glo armbands and suchlike by cyclists because with these you're not trying to counter a deliberate camouflage Perhaps the painting of high-vis markings on the vehicles of, and the bright blue helmets of, UN personnel.... operating in a war zone strictly as non combatants, not to be targeted Russian tanks in Berlin at the close of WW2 also commonly had large white crosses painted on their turret tops so that allied ground-attack planes could identify them more easily
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#23 |
Starte das Auto
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#24 |
Navy Seal
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Squirrels, moths, cheese throwing, zebra hating flies...
You are, indeed, a very strange person... ![]() ...don't change... <O>
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#25 | |
Dipped Squirrel Operative
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Interesting, I did not hear it before. But my wife did, she has been in Africa some time ago and it seems to have been well known by the folks there. Tsetse flies are a plague ![]()
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>^..^<*)))>{ All generalizations are wrong. |
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#26 |
Chief of the Boat
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Currently being tested on race horses at a stable nearby my place of abode.
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#27 |
Starte das Auto
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Moira told me when I came across this story that they used to think the black & white stripes made them almost disappear in the veldt heat-haze... a good idea but perhaps now completely misplaced
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