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Feedback: a doggy guide to the depth of snowdrifts

Plus meteorology’s strange fascination with canine units, a drainspout for the multiverse, things we’d rather not know, and more

Feedback is our weekly column of bizarre stories, implausible advertising claims, confusing instructions and more

snow cartoon

Snow dogs

A HUGE winter storm made landfall in the eastern US last week, bringing massive drifts of snow and a flurry of unusual units to measure the deluge. Many of you wrote in to comment on strange advice from the BBC to ““.

An displays record snowfall depths for a variety of US states, illustrated according to whether this is enough to conceal a small, medium-sized or large dog.

Ian Beaver writes, “Wasn’t it veteran BBC weatherman Ian McCaskill who told us during an evening forecast that the day’s heavy rain had been ‘a worrying time for small dogs’?”.

“A colleague of Bernard Costello placed an order with a well-known chemical supplier, and was promised delivery within “±3 days”. By tachyon, presumably.“

Canine units

IN FACT, canine units crop up with surprising frequency in meteorology. Romans have their “dog days” of wilting summer heat and, on the opposite side of the world, a cold snap in Australia might be called a “three-dog night”. Here in the UK, they endure as units of precipitation – as in, “it’s raining cats and dogs”.

At the time of writing, the BBC had, inexplicably, added a panda to its chart. Advice to anyone caught in a blizzard: if you look outside and can’t see a panda, it’s safe to assume there are at least 40 inches of snow on the ground.

Foiled again

MORE questions emerge on Shield, the company that knits foil-coated prophylactics to protect your brain from electromagnetic signals. John Morton notes that the woollen hat claims to reflect signals from “cell phones, wi-fi routers, microwaves”, and yet also claims to be radar-invisible.

“If it can reflect microwaves and be radar-invisible, it must be some sort of Schrödinger’s hat, in that it can simultaneously reflect all microwaves while not reflecting them,” writes John. Perhaps the military should start cloaking their aircraft in cardigans made of this tinselled yarn?

Plumbing the universe

MEANWHILE, Dave Harton directs our attention to another trestle table set up in the Kickstarter market of ideas: Obshi, “The World’s First Patented Multiverse Drain System”.

It’s easy to be fooled by its simplicity – a spout that opens with a quarter-turn of the fixture, allowing the contents to drain away. But the contents of what, exactly? And where are they draining to? “Surely it’s got something to do with wormholes,” suggests Dave. The Kickstarter page hints that Obshi is “designed for use with many applications”. Indeed.

Senior position

EAGLE-EYED Luke Sully spots that the consumer and community spokesman for Age UK, a charity dedicated to improving the lives of the elderly, is none other than Joe Oldman.

Puffed up

BURIED under a pile of boastful factlets from internet megamart Amazon, Feedback wondered what units should be used to measure such self-congratulatory press releases.

“Yawns, obviously!” cries Barrie Watson, while Jon Hinwood proposes that the units for self-congratulatory bilge ought to be “one pouter pigeon for a typical puff piece, but one peacock for strutting around and admiring one’s own tail feathers”.

Peter Bleackley says that the appropriate unit is the Montgolfier, “which measures how full of hot air something is”– named for the pioneering brothers of balloon flight. Feedback considers this just the thing to deflate swollen egos.

Dilute dose

WOULD-BE poisoner and ginger supremacist Mark Colborne has been detained indefinitely under the Mental Health Act for plotting to kill Prince Charles so that his red-headed son Harry could ascend to the throne.

Following the story on , Charlie Wartnaby notices that the image used to illustrate the dangerous chemical substances seized by police from the man’s home instead “shows a bottle of nice, pure distilled water”. Feedback suggests that although this may seem innocuous, the royal patron of homeopathy would no doubt recognise an essential solvent for amplifying the potency of poisons.

Acts of God

FEEDBACK watched with dismay as the mind-bendingly foolish psychoactive substances bill – which would make the smell of flowers illegal – was nodded through Parliament and now looks set to become law.

A howl of anguish was by MP Paul Flynn in an early day motion, quoting èƵ to lambast the bill as “one of the stupidest, most dangerous and unscientific pieces of drugs legislation ever conceived” (30 January, p 26).

In Westminster, such motions are known as “prayer”; Feedback suspects this keenly reflects both the authority needed to challenge such folly and the likelihood that such an intervention will happen.

Pass the mind bleach

IN THE spirit of questionable generosity, Shane Dwyer contributes to our list of things we’d be happier not knowing. He shares something he was “told years ago and [has] been trying to unlearn ever since” – that cockroaches like two things, moisture and darkness.

“What is the last thing you do every night before bed?” he asks. “You moisten your toothbrush, you hang it up and then you turn off the bathroom light.” Thanks Shane. We’ll be sleeping with the bathroom light on in future.

Topics: electromagnetism / weather

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