johndaman66 wrote: » Alfred Hitchcock's mother, Emma Whelan and Charlie Chaplin's mother Hannah Hill, were both from Cork. .
mzungu wrote: » Above species of bamboo called Phyllostachys bambusoides (or Japanese timber bamboo) that flowers at the same time no matter where it is throughout the world, or what geographic zone it is in. After this happens, the plant will die. The fact that environment has no impact on when this mass flowering occurs has lead to the suggestion that there is an alarm clock of sorts in the cells of the plant which signals the diversion of all energy to flower production and the cessation of vegetative growth. The mechanics behind this remain a mystery.
Lady Haywire wrote: » Carrots with tops on will go off far quicker than those with the green leafy parts removed. On the flip side, the ones with fresh, healthy tops on them are the freshest carrots, but should be used asap or tops removed to keep them from going bendy.
py2006 wrote: » Wikipedia disagrees...
Chancer3001 wrote: » Wow I Wikipediad that bamboo and found this insane stuff too One plant produced culms growing a remarkable 47.6 in (121 cm) in 24 hours.!!! You'd nearly see it grow in real time The flowering interval of this species is very long, about 120 years! You wouldn't want to be waiting around for a bouquet!
ohnonotgmail wrote: » apparently bamboo shoots have been used as a form of torture. The victim was tied down over the shoot and the shoot would grow through them. Mythbusters did an episode on it and it will pierce through flesh as it grows.
Alanna Thousands Valley wrote: » Forget fancy 2k all-carbon bikes, light bamboo cycles could be the next craze!
Wibbs wrote: » Well, sorta M. The story was based on a previous piece by Clarke, The Sentinel. Him and Stan met and decided to flesh it out into a novel and screenplay and yep those two were concurrent alright.
Ipso wrote: » And then Kubrick decided to leave out the bits that explained what was going on.
Sajid Javid wrote: » The expression the hair of the dog, for an alcoholic drink taken to cure a hangover, is a shortening of 'a hair of the dog that bit you'. It comes from an old belief that someone bitten by a rabid dog could be cured of rabies by taking a potion containing some of the dog's hair, it never cured anybody.
ohnonotgmail wrote: » The platypus (other egg laying mammals) does not have a stomach. Its food goes straight from the esophagus to the intestine.
StupidLikeAFox wrote: » Bamboo scaffolding on Google images:https://www.google.com/search?q=bamboo+scaffolding&safe=off&client=ms-android-samsung&prmd=isvn&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwiW0fST4uvfAhWGRxUIHRaeAEoQ_AUoAXoECAsQAQ&biw=360&bih=560
Chancer3001 wrote: » So we add that to food instead of an actual banana.
sbsquarepants wrote: » Now first the disclaimer - this could well be an urban myth!! You know those little foam banana sweets - that taste delicious but not quite like a banana, they're distinctly bananaish however? Well the story I heard, is that is what bananas used to taste like before a fungal infection wiped out the variety everyone used to eat. When we switched over to a different variety they never updated the artificial flavour in the sweets, leaving them stuck in some sort of delicious banana time warp.