All the children of Odysseus (according to Wikipedia):
Agrius, Anteias, Ardeas, Auson, Cassiphone, Euryalus, Latinus, Nausinous, Nausithous, Persepolis, Poliporthes, Rhomos, Telegonus and Telemachus
honorable mention: Cassandra and astyanax

seen from Italy
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from Canada
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Poland
seen from Türkiye

seen from South Korea
seen from Italy
seen from Türkiye
seen from China
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Philippines
seen from United States

seen from Canada
seen from Malaysia
seen from China
All the children of Odysseus (according to Wikipedia):
Agrius, Anteias, Ardeas, Auson, Cassiphone, Euryalus, Latinus, Nausinous, Nausithous, Persepolis, Poliporthes, Rhomos, Telegonus and Telemachus
honorable mention: Cassandra and astyanax
Pine tar paint test, part two.
Being that is summer again in Western NC, it seemed a good time to continue my test.
This is 50% Pine tar paint (20% of which is turpentine), and 50% raw linseed oil.
One coat on a pine 2x6 scrap, one coat on a badly warped trim piece on Slaughterhouse, previously painted black, and a continuation of the picket fence test, with the three leftmost pickets getting their second coat today, and the remaining two getting their first coats, which mostly soaks into the wood.
All of this is still wet, and it will take 5-7 days to completely dry.
I’ll post the results next weekend.
You know, Thorne, I disagree with the Admiral on many accounts … but you cannot deny he’s got style.
Auson, probably
Auson [to Miles]: If I come over there, there's going to be two sounds: me hitting you twice.
Here's the big finish from our School of Nursing faculty's skit from Faculty Night Live! #AUSON #FNL (at Reardon Auditorium)