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Tuesday, 10 February 2026

Meat The Ruffians

NO!  That Is Not A Typo

It is an hilarious pun, hilarious I tell you - laugh or it's the Remote Nuclear Tormentor for you!  Art?

Quite possibly a Remote Nuclear Tormentor

     You see, I am trying to combine two different elements from Janet Macdonald's "Supplying The British Army In The First World War", which has been a fascinating and verrrry detailed account of that activity on an industrial scale.  You ought to recall, from an earlier item about sugar profiteers, General Long, who was a canny customer equally as adept at challenging the profiteers as they were at exploiting the system.  Art!

Refrigerated meat storage in a ship's hold

     Moving from sucrose to protein, Great Britain* imported the majority of it's meat supplies (up to 80%), from South Canada, Argentina and Australia as the primary suppliers.  This meant using refrigerated ships, keeping the meat preserved at sub-zero temperatures, a quantum step beyond mere salting or smoking.

     When war broke out, the government requisitioned all those ships with frozen meat transport capabilities in order to supply said viands to the Army.  This meat needed to then be assessed and inspected for fitness to be consumed, a process that did not sit well with the meat-packing companies supplying the meat, who wanted to be able to set their own prices and sell to whomever they wanted to.  Art!

More like Bottomms; recalled and condemned as unfit
     
     So, to try and get round these restrictions, the meat-packers attempted to import substandard meat that would have failed Army inspection, which they could then sell at a huge markup after it's rejection.

     General Long, whose rodeo experience was extensive, arranged with the inspectors to have all this meat condemned as 'unfit for human consumption', which meant it was destroyed rather than passed along the retail chain.  Art!

Smithfield Meat Market circa 1914

     To get around this - O my these capitalist carnivores loved their profit margins - the meat-packers tried sending the inferior meat direct to London to avoid inspection at divers British ports.  General Long, however, whose rodeo experience was extensive, was one step ahead of them and had forewarned the London health authorities of this trick.  They pounced upon this meat, condemned and destroyed it, HA! take that mendacious meat-packers.  Condemnation of their supplies meant £0.00 return, so they gave up.  Art!


     Further to supplying the British army, there were various missions to Tsarist Ruffia, at Murmansk, Archangelsk and Novorossisk, as well as in Western Siberia in the Kurgan Oblast - map above.  These continued to be operational after the Bolshevik Revolution, supplying their British garrisons and the 'White' Ruffian (pro-Tsar) forces.  In retrospect, they were too small, inefficient and regularly looted to be able to support the Whites properly, yet they made splendid propaganda vehicles for the Bolsheviks and the orcs probably still tell tall tales of British ogres ten feet tall with talons and poison fangs 

     ANYWAY Art!


     NO!  This is Kurgan in 1914, not today.  Bite your tongue!  To show how serious the Whites were about plundering - sorry, 'fighting the Bolsheviks' - look at indent they placed at the British depot there:

580 cigars

58 pounds of confectionery

60 pairs of silk stockings

30 yards of dress fabric

85 tablets of perfumed soap

38 bottles of eau-de-cologne

29 bottles of perfume

     The three British soldiers who formally signed for issuing these 'stores' were doubtless in on the scam, and were dismissed from the service.  Ol' Jan does not recount how they managed to get from Western Siberia back to Great Britain*, or if they managed at all.

     So there you have it, an example of probity and integrity in General Long, and another example of how the orc's magpie genes have not changed in over a century.  


The 'Gift Of Anne'

Which, in Welsh, is 'Ynys Gifftan'.  I am talking about a tidal island in the Drywyd Estuary in - you may be ahead of me here - Wales. Art!

Ynys gifftan

     This is from a recent news item on my feed, as it is now on the market for only (!) £350,000.  Part of the estate agent blurb reads "The property occupies a unique and tranquil position" because it's a tidal island, normally cut off by the tide and only accessible by foot at low tide.

     You may not remember, although Conrad does, that many many years ago we had a whole slew of items dealing with British tidal islands here on BOOJUM! as I think they are quite cool.  In fact we covered Ynys Gifftan in May of 2017.

BOOJUM!: Oldham: Overhwhelmed?

     


     The major problem for any potential purchaser is that there are no jetties or wharves on the island, meaning you cannot land, or easily or safely land, anything from a boat, so anything it requires will need to be carried over by foot or taken over by helicopter.  A rather expensive way to do the weekly shop.  O, nor do they have electricity or running water, which is another reason it was abandoned 60 years ago.


More Of Meat, Metaphorically

One of the purchases I made at BOVINGTON TANK MUSEUM in September was 'Meat Grinder' by Prit Buttar, which I have now gotten around to reading.  Art!


     The main part of this work describes the battles for the Rzhev salient, a giant tentacle of Nazi-occupied Soviet territory that was fought over with frightening intensity and then quietly abandoned in the aftermath of Stalingrad.  Art!


     Prit himself is an interesting character.  He read Medicine at Oxford, qualified as a doctor, joined the British army as a Medical Officer in the Royal Army Medical Corps, went into general practice when he left and is now an authority on the Eastern Front of both First and Second Unpleasantnesses.  Hobbies include astrophotography, which is a cut above following a football club.  I have a couple of his books on the Eastern Front as of the First Unpleasantness in my Book Mountain.  If I read these in future I shall let you know.  Conrad bets you can hardly wait.


Talking Of Food Safety -

Conrad noticed this yesteryon and we now have more details.  Art!


     The charges relate to food products including pizza and hummus found to be up to two weeks beyond their sell-by-date, back in 2024.  Now you know why retail staff on the shop floor will move product left at the back of the chiller to the front, so that this type of failure does not happen.  One can also speculate that the Store Manager, and the relevant Department Manager, were either fired or demoted and transferred out, because the buck lands with these people.  For one thing, it damages the brand, and although nobody was reportedly ill thanks to eating dodgy food, that's always a risk as well.  I wonder where the fine was paid from, at the corporate level or that individual store in Barnsley?


O Aye 'Factbytes' Again

One image I snipped weeks ago and haven't gotten around to posting until right now.  Art!


     The main reason is because there were so few of them.  We will omit the Panther as it wasn't the heaviest Teuton panzer by a long way, and instead begin with the Tiger tank.  Art!

Tiger I

     Total produced, 1,350.  Which might sound like a lot except not really.  Compare it to the Sinister's Josef Stalin, where they made 3,850 of the Mark II version and 2,300 of the Mark III, or over 4 times as many.  Then we have the Tiger II.  Art!

Tiger II
     Total made = 490.  About a third of it's predecessor.  Stretching the 'tank' definition a bit, there is the Jagdtiger.  Art!


     Total made = 88 (or possibly as few as 70).  The bigger the vehicle the more time-consuming they are to make, and the more resources they hog, and given Teuton over-engineering, the more expensive they are, and given Teuton engine inadequacy, the more likely to break down.  Note that the total of all three of these AFVs comes to less than the lower number of JSIIIs.  

Finally -

"The road to success is always under construction" - Arnold Palmer



*  Take that, Lavrov!

A Geography Lesson You Never Knew You Needed

PAY ATTENTION!

There will be a quiz later.  Okay, for decades I have heard a particular South Canadian geographical location mentioned, without knowing or caring where it was, up until this very moment: "Martha's Vineyard".  There was a vague sense of it being in the north-eastern corner of the continent, which doesn't really narrow it down since South Canada is so freaking huge.  Art!


     Bottom port.  The island was discovered, named and settled by Bartholomew Gosnold in 1602, named after his mother-in-law.  It is part of the state of Massachusetts, and constitutes most of Duke County, which also incorporates the Elizabeth Islands and Chappaquiddick Island.

     There you go, our geographical lesson for today over.  Now you know where to find it.  

     The island is home to 20,000 permanent residents during the off-season but balloons to 200,000 in the summer when wealthy holiday-home owners come to stay.  There are numerous hotels and inns on the island.  Art!


     Enter Steve Lehto, South Canadian attorney who specialises in Consumer and 'Lemon' Law, which I believe is about products of inferior quality being sold to an unsuspecting public.  Steve himself practices in Michigan, not the Commonwealth Of Massachusetts, but has a Youtube channel where he presents cases that his subscribers send to him, and this one is about <drum roll trumpet call>  TREE LAW!  Art?


     This case was covered by the 'MV Times', where 'MV' means - you may be ahead of me here - 'Martha's Vineyard'.  A property owner in Menemsha, Mrs. Cottle, was suing her neighbours for trespass and illegally cutting down trees on her property.  Said neighbours were the Nixons, who owned the Beach Plum Inn.  Art!

There you go

     The complaint - as they refer to it over there - was lodged in the Duke's County Court in 2019.  Mrs. Cottle alleged that the defendants had deliberately cut down 136 trees on a half-acre of her property, in order to gain better views of the waterfront and harbour at Menemsha.  She was suing the Nixons and the man who cut her trees down, Eric Taylor, for the full replacement cost of said timber being felled.  Art!


     You can see the felled trees above, which included beech, oak and locust species.

     Steve interjected here with a detail from the 'Michigan Complied Laws 600.2919' that determined "It is unlawful to cut down or carry off tree's from another's land', and in Michigan, as in Massachusetts, you are liable to x3 damages if found guilty.  Ooo-err Matron, and we've not even got to the assessed total yet!   Again, Steve interjected there wondering how on earth you'd assess the value of a grove of trees; Conrad can tell him.  You go to a certified arborist, who will examine the stumps, any felled timber, get possible photographic evidence and calculate a total.  

     The Nixons claimed that Taylor was staying at their hostelry as a guest and merely did them a favour by cutting down the trees on his own initiative and that their view of the harbour was already so splendid they didn't need anything cutting down.  Art!

Never travel without one

     This does not compute.  For one thing, Taylor had to dismantle a fence to get onto Cottle's property, so he knew he was trespassing.  For another, how often do you check into your holiday inn clutching a chainsaw and a can of petrol? because there's no way he cut down 136 trees with an axe.

     The case was delayed by Covid and only reached mediation, not even court, in 2022.  When presented with a potential fine of £3.6 million to restore the grove to pre-Taylor status, both he and the Nixons caved.  It's not made clear in the court documents if this is the x3 total from an original $1.2 million or whether the defendants would be on the hook for $10 million if it went to court.  Art!

A view worth millions

     The deal was that the Nixons would pony up $1.5 million and Taylor would pay $1 million, covered by his insurance - which implies he had business insurance as a lumberjack and both parties were lying about intent and capability.  Why not hold out for a jury trial and $3.6 million?  Because, as I'm sure Steve would tell you, a jury's decision cannot be guaranteed to find for the plaintiff, and it would cost a lot more in legal fees, which might not be awarded back.  A chicken on the rotisserie is worth two dodging around the farmyard.

     There you go, justice served and geography elucidated.


ENOUGH!  ENOUGH WITH THE OSCILLOSCOPES!

I fail to comprehend what the news algorithm is working on in order to pimp oscilloscopes at Your Humble Scribe.  Art!


     I remember Gavin, my old boss at Connexions, mentioning that Hawkwind, in their early years, used synthesisers that could only be controlled by an oscilloscope, as they had not yet been plugged into a keyboard, and in P

     ANYWAY ENOUGH OF THIS NONSENSE!


A Correction And An Audit, Thanks To Adrian

Conrad was somewhat surprised to get a Comment on yesteryon's blog, as the valid ones - after deleting ones warning about the imminent Rapture or Vietnamese who-knows-what - only come to 40.  I shall append the Comment from Adrian.

Very interesting about the water pipeline in Sinai, but I don't think that can be a 12" diameter pipe, it looks too small in that bloke's hands to be that size.

     Well observed!  I, too, had my doubts but this was the only photo I could find about pipelines in Sinai.  No photographs even in the British 'Official History'.  Let's reprint the photograph.  Art!


     Take a closer look at the pipe end.  Art!


     The resolution isn't great, but there doesn't appear to be the interior screw thread present at both pipe ends.  Also, note the size of matey's hand against the outside curvature of the pipe.  Art!


     Now compare Conrad's ham-like hands, and we can guesstimate that the pipe is only perhaps 6" in diameter.  Nor is that all.  The pipeline was positioned to the south of the coastal railway being constructed from Kantara, and it's construction always lagged behind that of the rails.  Check these out.  Art!


     Nowhere in the background do you see a railway, either fully complete or being worked upon by gangs of native labourers.  Conrad is pretty sure this is a photograph of a completely different pipeline elsewhere in either Egypt or Palestine.  Nor is that all!  I like to be thorough.  Art!


     According to Youtube, this is a 12" pipe, getting ready for horizontal insertion and with puny humans for scale.  You're welcome!


'Gallantry In Defeat'

Yes, another of Terence Cuneo's wartime daubs, this one depicting an event in the battles of the Gazala Line in mid-1942 in North Africa.  Art!

June 1942

     What you see is the last stand of 107th Battery Royal Horse Artillery, fighting a mixed bag of Teuton and Roman tanks by engaging them with 25-pounder field guns over open sights.  

     THIS SHOULD NEVER HAVE HAPPENED!

     These battles of the 'Knightsbridge Cauldron' were the absolute nadir of British tactics, operations and strategy in North Africa.  Field guns like these ought to be miles behind the front lines, dug in with a screen of tanks and anti-tank guns well forward of them.  I put the item title in quotes because whilst undoubtedly true, someone had blundered for this to happen in the first place.


You What?

Conrad freely admits he's a dinosaur for whom nothing exists unless it's written down, which is why I have a 2026 Diary, an A4 notepad and a 'Project Book' for hasty note making.  Also, I cannot make heads or tails of this.  Art!


     A sequel to this?  Art!


     Featuring the '2000AD' cult character - 


     Set in a nearby solar system -


     Of course, I may be overthinking this .....





Monday, 9 February 2026

The Joy Of Metallurgy!

SIT BACK DOWN!

Don't worry, I am not going to be going through the whole periodic table; instead we are going to be concentrating on a single metal, since we've gotten through as many iterations of 'Dog' and 'Stone' as is entertaining.  Art!




     That's a bit dull.  Let's go back and make amends.  Art - be retrospective!

     There we go, focussing on today's metal: gold.

     As ever, we here at BOOJUM! like to be exact in our definitions, so allow me to quote my 'Collins Concise English Dictionary': 'A dense inert bright yellow element that is the most malleable and ductile metal, occurring in rocks and and alluvial deposits; used as a monetary standard and in jewellery, dentistry and plating.Art!

     


   
Referral to my 'Brewer's Dictionary Of Phrase And Fable' informs us that alchemists, those Bitcoin miners of antiquity, regarded gold as representing the Sun, whilst silver represented the Moon.  In heraldry gold is represented by dots, which seems rather humble.  Art!


     Wait what?  NOT that kind of Dot, Art - get a grip! 


     They call it 'Or', this being the French for 'Gold', which sounds like the beginning of many hundred bad puns.  The carat - another source of bad puns when pronounced - is the unit of measurement for gold present in any article, with the greater the carat meaning the higher the proportion.  24-carat gold is pure gold, but is impractical for any kind of jewellery worn daily, so it's alloyed with nickel or zinc to be more durable.
     Okay, that is our run through gold as defined by all sorts of people.
     Here an aside.  Yes, Spandau Ballet did a song called 'Gold' which I hated then and still hate now.  No, they don't get an illo; refer to the word 'hate'.  Art!


     This is Jonathan Fink, which I've spelled out as the font above is a tad obscure.  Ol' Jon read Ruffian language and history at Edinburgh University, and you ought to listen to his vlog, "Silicon Curtain" if you're tired of Western pundits mis-pronouncing Ruffian or Ukrainian names and places.

     For Lo! yes indeedy Ally Sheedy, we are come to the main meat of the matter for today's Intro: "Putin's Gold Is Gone" which is hyperbole yet only slightly.  Art!


     Now, Ol' Jon covered this affair on 22/01/2026, where he attested that the National Welfare Fund - which I have been equally attesting has run out when it certainly hasn't yet - is selling off it's liquid assets of Yuan and gold to cover the monthly gap between expenditure and revenue; i.e. the Mordorvian deficit.  On that date Putin had sold off 60% of the total volume, but as I am typing this up as of 9th February 2026, the sold volume is now 70%, meaning the total has dropped from 405 tons pre-Special Idiotic Operation to 133 tons.  Art!


     Despite it's title, you can trust this publication.  The staff and editors decamped from Mordorvia when the SIO began and print outside Ruffia, hence they can tell the truth about their nation and countrymen.  Their statistics quote the Ruffian Ministry Of Finance saying they will be selling gold (and Yuan) to the value of $165 million up to February 5th, and later said they will continue selling after February 5th.  Between January 16th and February 5th they sold off $2.48 billion of liquid assets, the biggest ever sale in Ruffian history.  

     Back to Ol' Jon.  He pointed out that none of this 'investment' holds any long-term, medium-term or even short-term benefit for Mordorvia, as it's all being converted to items that are being destroyed in Ukraine.  Art!


     This destroyed kit cannot even be resold for scrap as it's all on Ukrainian territory.  Overall the Ruffian economy is still functioning but is also increasing in brittleness thanks to the 50% fall in oil and gas revenue (year-on-year) in January.  AHA!  Validation!  The 'Moscow Times' also asserts that the NWF might be exhausted early this year.

      Once again, real life intervenes.  Ol' Jon said that the value of Ruffian gold had soared as global gold prices also soared, to $5,500 per ounce in January and then promptly fell to $4,500 in February, in a display of volatility that is rare for gold, and indeed entirely unwanted by investors, who prize the stability of gold prices.  Ooops.  Even the international gold trade hates Mordorvia.
     Ol' Jon's summation of this process is "This is what late-stage war finance looks like" - not a dramatic collapse but an increase in systemic risk.  Art!


Tipping point being reached

     It's worth noting that Ruffian gold is mined in their eastern provinces, the ones worst stricken by squalor and poverty and whom never see a kopek of the gold they produce.

     Well, enough of Mordor's misery, time to move on!


O Make Your Mind Up!

You may recall that, recently, we posted a buzzkill item that asserted life in the universe, and specifically our Milky Way galaxy, was far less likely to develop than had been previously thought, thanks to the extent plate tectonics played in the development of life, and especially intelligent life.  

BOOJUM!: Lonely

     You need plate tectonics to generate carbon dioxide, and you need a finely-balanced amount of CO₂ to avoid either toxicity or lack of photosynthesis.  Art!


     Frankly, the hypothesis behind this sounds like fuzzy-wuzzy touchy-feely thinking.  Conrad = not impressed.


More Gentle Shoeing

There is a Canadian on Twitter whom loathes Trump with the incandescent rage of a thousand supernovae - no exaggeration there - who goes by the moniker 'Canada Hates Trump', leaving no room for misinterpretation.  They posted a rebuttal to the Saggy Senile Sepia Sackbut's image of the Obamas.  Art!


     Not very flattering, admittedly.  But wait!  It gets worse.  Art!


      A picture does in fact say a thousand words, and not one of them are nice.

    

Another One From Tel

Terence Cuneo, that is.  You know, official war artist during the Second Unpleasantness and onwards.  Art!

'Saving The Guns At Le Cateau'

     This one requires a bit of explication.  Le Cateau was the second of the big encounter battles the British Expeditionary Force had with the advancing Teutons, and was noted for the heavy loss of Royal Artillery field guns - 38 of them.  This is because, according to the doctrine of the time, they were deployed in the open, well forward.  By the time it was realised they needed to limber up and retreat, numerous Teuton machine guns were in range, and proceeded to shoot down the horse teams trying to withdraw.  Here we see Captain Reynolds and Bombardiers Drain and Luke getting an 18-pounder away from under the very rifles of the Teuton infantry.  All 3 were awarded the Victoria Cross.

     No, there are no photographs of the actual battle - combat photography was still being invented.  There is one of dead horses and gunners post-battle which I'm not going to put up here, you can Google if you feel ghoulish.


Well This Is Interesting

You may remember that we covered the - er - 'documentary' 'Melania' last week and were pretty scathing about it, as it seems to be a film puff-piece intended to flatter King Piggy.  It had banked about $7 million at the box office, hence a $3.5 million profit on it's $40 million budget.  How on earth you spend $40 million on a documentary is beyond me.  Art!

She's wearing heels; he's wearing lifts

     I have an update from 'Box Office Mojo' about their take to date.  Art!


     As you can see, they upped the number of cinemas this farrago is being shown at, when normal business practice is to cut them, so as to reduce overheads for films starting to lose profitability.  One gets the feeling that the MAGA faithful were told to attend on Saturday, since the collapse on Sunday takings is so marked.  Now up to $6.5 million profit.  Only another $33.5 to break even!


Finally -

Ooooh, this one's a zinger!

"I have left orders to be awakened at any time in case of national emergency, even if I'm in a cabinet meeting."  Ronald Reagan.  

     <whistles nonchalantly>



Sunday, 8 February 2026

Looking Backwards

Across The Irish Tea

I think there was Christmas in there as well when the Goons sang it.  Art!


    Here's another product of looking backward.  Sorry I cannot identify the year, except that it would have been before 1955 when this title stopped being published.  Note that for purposes of appealing to a male audience, the young lady wears considerably less than the chap sitting next to her.  Also!


     This is the artist in question who deemed it acceptable to have women wear cold, inflexible metal lingerie and not a lot of it.  Blame him.

     ANYWAY I need to crank out this afternoon's update because the laundry is still waiting to be dried, and Conrad needs to see if he can bodge together a double-boiler for cooking a sauce.  ON WITH THE LINKS!

2025

BOOJUM!: If I Were To Say 'Tanks'

2024

BOOJUM!: How Very INTERESTING

2023

BOOJUM!: If I Were To Say "The Secret Service"

2022

BOOJUM!: The Answer Is NO!

2021

BOOJUM!: THE SUPERB OWL

2020

BOOJUM!: Let Me Tell You A Storey ...

2019

BOOJUM!: Why Pyjamas = Evil

2018

BOOJUM!: Attack Of The Killer Socks

2017

BOOJUM!: Cavilling Caviomorphs!

2016

BOOJUM!: Had I A Gaster, It Would Be Flabbed

2015

BOOJUM!: Bibim Bap

2014

BOOJUM!: Welcome To - Slutch