Oct. 1st, 2011

Match Stats

Oct. 1st, 2011 04:29 pm
anteros_lmc: (Default)
Points: England 16, Scotland 12
Penalties kicked: 2 out of 6, 3 out of 3
Scrums won: 4 out of 8, 8 out of 8
Line-outs won/lost: 11/4, 10/1

Percentage of match Anteros watched: 90%
Number of penalty kicks Anteros watched: 0 out of 9
Number of inanimate objects thrown across room: 1
Percentage of expectations met: 100%
Percentage of dreams shattered: 100%
Allegiance transferred to: The Auld Alliance

Number of words in post-match e-mail sent to [livejournal.com profile] nodbear: 1
Number of letters in above word: 4
anteros_lmc: (Default)
From the web this week...

HMS Victory Restoration

As part of the restoration of HMS Victory Portsmouth Historic Dockyard has posted some fascinating time lapse footage of the ship's mast and yards being removed. They posted this one of the mizzen top mast being removed this week but there are several others including fascinating and dizzying footage of the fore topsail yard being removed, from above! Also this one of the top gallant and topsail yard removal is really quite beautiful.



You can see all the videos on the Historic Dockyards youtube channel here.

The Joy of Jackspeak

Meanwhile over on BBC Radio 4 the Today Programme featured an article on jackspeak, or naval slang. The appropriately named Captain Jolly, a former Surgeon Captain in the Royal Navy, has published a book, Jackspeak: A Guide to British Naval Slang & Usage, which features 4000 examples, collected over 40 years of service. Most of the examples mentioned in the Today Programme article are modern but there are one or two that show their age.

Naval Leadership in the Age of Sail (1750 -1840)

Anyone in Portsmouth at the beginning of December? If so the National Museum of the Royal Navy, along with a range of eminent international sponsors, including the La Sorbonne et Musée national de la Marine and The Gunroom, HMS Surprise, are running a two day conference on Naval Leadership in the Age of Sail (1750 -1840). I'm not entirely sure of the exact date NMRN says 2nd / 3rd December and The Gunroom says 3rd / 4th. Blurb as follows:

From the mid-18th century, the Atlantic Empires engaged in a global struggle which saw the decline of the Spanish Navy, the affect of revolution upon the French Navy, and the rise to hegemony of the British Navy.

The international directors and national organisers of the current programme propose to investigate naval leadership in 1750-1840, during the transition from the Old Regime to the Liberal State in Europe, in a context of changing human values in the years between the ages of Enlightenment and of Liberalism, and the concomitant change from gentlemen's war to total war and wars of annihilation in modern times.

The aim of the conference series is to compare and draw lessons from a study of distinguished leaders in naval politics, administration, and the command of fleets in the period 1750 to 1840, leading to analysis of the immutable traits of leadership which can be inculcated in rising leaders in all fields of endeavour for today and tomorrow.

A full programme is available here here.

Naval Redundancies

And in the real world, more than 1,000 Royal Navy personnel were made redundant as part of a first round of military job cuts. In a BBC interview Prof Michael Clarke, Royal United Services Institute, commented that the public expects the military and the navy to be there, but it never wants to pay for them. Plus ça change....

Profile

anteros_lmc: (Default)
anteros_lmc

July 2016

S M T W T F S
     12
3456789
10111213141516
171819202122 23
242526272829 30
31      

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated May. 13th, 2026 04:46 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios