Visit the Cellar!

The Cellar Image of the Day is just a section of a larger web community: bright folks talking about everything. The Cellar is the original coffeeshop with no coffee and no shop. Founded in 1990, The Cellar is one of the oldest communities on the net. Join us at the table if you like!

 
What's IotD?

The interesting, amazing, or mind-boggling images of our days.

IotD Stuff

ARCHIVES - over 13 years of IotD!
About IotD
RSS2
XML

Permalink Latest Image

October 22, 2020: A knot of knots is up at our new address

Recent Images

September 28th, 2020: Flyboarding
August 31st, 2020: Arriving Home / Happy Monkey Bait
August 27th, 2020: Dragon Eye Pond
August 25th, 2020: Sharkbait
July 29th, 2020: Gateway to The Underworld
July 27th, 2020: Perseverance
July 23rd, 2020: Closer to the Sun

The CELLAR Tip Mug
Some folks who have noticed IotD

Neatorama
Worth1000
Mental Floss
Boing Boing
Switched
W3streams
GruntDoc's Blog
No Quarters
Making Light
darrenbarefoot.com
GromBlog
b3ta
Church of the Whale Penis
UniqueDaily.com
Sailor Coruscant
Projectionist

Link to us and we will try to find you after many months!

Common image haunts

Astro Pic of the Day
Earth Sci Pic of the Day
We Make Money Not Art
Spluch
ochevidec.net
Strange New Products
Geisha Asobi Blog
Cute animals blog (in Russian)
20minutos.es
Yahoo Most Emailed

Please avoid copyrighted images (or get permission) when posting!

Advertising

The best real estate agents in Montgomery County

   xoxoxoBruce  Monday May 11 03:56 AM

May 11th, 2020 : Angel’s Eye View

Quote:
Photojournalist George Steinmetz always liked aerial views, from helicopters or planes or treetops, but for an assignment in the Central Sahara in 1998, none of those were available. So he learned to fly a motorized paraglider—and did so “for about 15 years,” he told me recently, “until drones came along and democratized the low altitudes that I used to have all to myself.”


Quote:
The Grasberg mine in Timika, Indonesia, is the world’s largest mine, and the largest producer of gold and second-largest of copper. A boon to the Indonesian economy, the mine has been a source of tension between the government and citizens who blame it for flooding their lands. It still has about $14 billion of reserves left.
That’s a little disturbing but half way round the world, screw it, couldn’t happen here.





Quote:
Some 30 miles off the coast of Oregon, the C/P Alaska Ocean hauls in a 65-ton load of Pacific whiting, also known as hake. With a crew of 150, the 376-foot-long factory trawler processes its catch on board.
It’s the largest catcher/processor vessel in the US fleet with a capacity to catch and process up to 225 metric
tons of frozen finished product daily. I wonder how many tons of unused bits go back in the ocean to feed
gulls and fish? Providing Americans with safe fresh frozen fish unlike those Asian processing ships that are
all about raping the ocean for profit.




Quote:
Calves conceived by artificial insemination shelter in 3,300 hutches at a Milk Source farm in Greenleaf, Wisconsin. Small dairy farms are closing at a record rate in America's "Dairy State," to be replaced by factory-style operations like Milk Source, which operates throughout the Midwest. The calves will be transferred at age six months to a heifer farm.
The girl calves will be transferred, the boys get eaten before 4.5 months maximum.




Quote:
Near Port Angeles in Washington State, loggers have left thin screens of intact trees to hide large clear-cut areas. Scientists still debate the precise impact of such industrial forestry on climate; replanted trees may eventually absorb as much climate-warming carbon dioxide as is released by logging. But the dire impacts on local biodiversity—and on the landscape—are clear.
Creating wealth and reducing the risk of forest fires. Win Win.

So now you see what the angel's see. They're taking notes.

link


Griff  Monday May 11 07:32 AM

Shhhhhhh... Don't want to upset the wealth creators and their enablers. Values are only measured in the stock market.



Diaphone Jim  Monday May 11 12:25 PM

The fish factory is also called the MacDonald's ship.

The calf factory is also called animal abuse.

Several logging companies used the "leave the roadside trees" technique in Northern California Redwood (and others) production.
You could park and walk (trespass) a 100 feet from forest to clear-cut.



tombstone  Monday May 11 06:18 PM

Angels' Eye View

Great! Leave the row of uncut trees right along both sides of the roadway, so when there's a bad storm, they can blow down across the road! Who cares about minor traffic problems? And maybe kill somebody in a passing vehicle. (Like a little fourth grade girl who was a student of mine.):Good thinking!



Griff  Tuesday May 12 07:46 AM

Can someone move this into the thread? Tombstone makes a good point.



Your reply here?

The Cellar Image of the Day is just a section of a larger web community: a bunch of interesting folks talking about everything. Add your two cents to IotD by joining the Cellar.