Bot #001@aussie.zoneM to Melbourne@aussie.zone · 1 year agoDaily Discussion Thread: Tue 19 Sep 2023message-squaremessage-square217fedilinkarrow-up122arrow-down11file-text
arrow-up121arrow-down1message-squareDaily Discussion Thread: Tue 19 Sep 2023Bot #001@aussie.zoneM to Melbourne@aussie.zone · 1 year agomessage-square217fedilinkfile-text
minus-squareCEOofmyhouse56@aussie.zonelinkfedilinkarrow-up7·edit-21 year agoOh. I thought it might have been because you’ve accidentally poked an eye with your hook hand while swatting a fly.
minus-squareSeagoon_@aussie.zonelinkfedilinkarrow-up7·edit-21 year agosailors would sometimes lose an eye from ropes flicking up they would also lose a lower limb from a rope accidently coiling around an ankle ships are dangerous, the sails exert strong forces and anchors are very heavy the dark adapted vision thing is probably because they used sextants for navigation and that meant looking at the sun
minus-squareSeagoon_@aussie.zonelinkfedilinkarrow-up5·1 year agoin the Northern hemisphere because they have a pole star. We don’t have a pole star so we use the sun at noon.
minus-squarecalhoon2005@aussie.zonelinkfedilinkarrow-up4·1 year agoreally? so was there no astronimcal navigation in the southern hemisphere…?
Oh. I thought it might have been because you’ve accidentally poked an eye with your hook hand while swatting a fly.
sailors would sometimes lose an eye from ropes flicking up
they would also lose a lower limb from a rope accidently coiling around an ankle
ships are dangerous, the sails exert strong forces and anchors are very heavy
the dark adapted vision thing is probably because they used sextants for navigation and that meant looking at the sun
You use a sextant at night.
in the Northern hemisphere because they have a pole star. We don’t have a pole star so we use the sun at noon.
really? so was there no astronimcal navigation in the southern hemisphere…?