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Author Topic: Meet Jemima...  (Read 9437 times)

Offline Eddy Matthews

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Meet Jemima...
« on: August 30, 2006, 06:58:30 PM »
Here we go guys, this is Jemima - No, not Jemima Puddleduck, but Jemima Paddleduck.... At least she will be in due course  :lol:

I decided I just had to make a model of our logo, so this is the starting point...
~ Never, ever, argue with an idiot. They'll drag you down to their level and beat you with experience ~

David Allinson

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Meet Jemima...
« Reply #1 on: August 30, 2006, 08:55:39 PM »
Eddy.  
I hope that there will be a couple of ducklings trailing along behind!!?  
Anyone else want to have a “go” to compete with Eddies version?  
All the best  
David  
         
 
From: Eddy Matthews [mailto:construction@paddleducks.co.uk]
 Sent: miércoles, 30 de agosto de 2006 10:59
 To: construction@paddleducks.co.uk
 Subject: Meet Jemima...  
 
   
Here we go guys, this is Jemima - No, not Jemima Puddleduck, but Jemima Paddleduck.... At least she will be in due course
 
 I decided I just had to make a model of our logo, so this is the starting point...
 
       
 

 Regards
 Eddy
 
 
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 http://www.paddleducks.co.uk/forum/viewtopic.php?p=8448#8448
 
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thewharfonline

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Meet Jemima...
« Reply #2 on: August 30, 2006, 10:26:22 PM »
I wanted to at one stage.....I think we discussed it on the paddleducks board...but there's no way that I could find a rubber duck that big....or are you just really really small!

Anyway my dog has a thing for rubber ducks...they don't last very long, he chews them up....then again he does the same to the real things too...and then trots up all happy "Look what I've got" he says....bad dog!

 lol good luck Eddy!

If someone could mould one and mass produce it we could sell them in a paddle ducks 'Online store!' lol

Red_Hamish

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Meet Jemima...
« Reply #3 on: August 31, 2006, 02:41:52 AM »
Hello all, I promised Eddy some wonderful adhesive toget him goingonce the cut and shut operation takes place. It is now ready to be sent by post and should be with the extravagant Eddy by the weekend

cheers

Jim

Offline Eddy Matthews

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Meet Jemima...
« Reply #4 on: August 31, 2006, 02:51:43 AM »
Jim, thanks again for the glue... I'll let you know how it goes.

David, yes your absolutely right, it just must have some little ducks following behind! :-)

The one downside to this is that no-one told me just how early these rubber ducks get up in the morning - The postman arrived with it at 7am! He wouldn't beleive me when I said the package contained a giant rubber duck, can't think why.....  :hehe
~ Never, ever, argue with an idiot. They'll drag you down to their level and beat you with experience ~

ajg141

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Meet Jemima...
« Reply #5 on: August 31, 2006, 04:04:10 AM »
Now this one would be a challenge! Maybe suit Red_Hamish?

Andrew

Offline Eddy Matthews

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Meet Jemima...
« Reply #6 on: August 31, 2006, 04:47:27 AM »
With that face it looks more like a bright yellow monkey than a duck!  :lol:
~ Never, ever, argue with an idiot. They'll drag you down to their level and beat you with experience ~

ajg141

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Meet Jemima...
« Reply #7 on: August 31, 2006, 07:03:32 AM »
The last word on this (I think). The attached just might be suitable for the next members meeting. Everyone could get on board! Can you imagine the size of the paddlewheels though!

Andrew

Offline Bob Golder

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Meet Jemima...
« Reply #8 on: August 31, 2006, 07:07:00 AM »
I thought there was something odd about Eddy at the clubhouse today :?
Now I know why :lol:
Cheers from Bob Golder

Offline AlistairD

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Meet Jemima...
« Reply #9 on: August 31, 2006, 08:03:00 AM »
Has anyone seen the story here:
 Â 
 http://www.dailymail.co.uk/pages/live/articles/news/news.html?in_article_id=397263&in_page_id=1770&in_a_source=
 Â 
 about a container-load of plastic ducks which was washed off a  ship in the middle of the Pacific Ocean in 1992, and they are being used to  track ocean currents. Some even went way up into the Arctic, and were caught in  the pack ice and released in the Atlantic and are now being washed up on the  coast of Britain
 Â 
 Alistair
 Â 
 
Quote
  ----- Original Message -----
   From:    ajg141 (construction@paddleducks.co.uk)
   To: construction@paddleducks.co.uk (construction@paddleducks.co.uk)    
   Sent: Wednesday, August 30, 2006 10:03    PM
   Subject: RE: Meet Jemima...
   

   
The last word on this (I think). The attached just    might be suitable for the next members meeting. Everyone could get on board!    Can you imagine the size of the paddlewheels    though!

Andrew



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http://www.paddleducks.co.uk/forum/viewtopic.php?p=8458#8458

--------------------    m2f --------------------

Alistair Deayton
Paisley
Scotland

ky paddlewheeler

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Meet Jemima...
« Reply #10 on: August 31, 2006, 10:47:11 AM »
handsome young chap in the pic,the yellow brings out the brown in his eyes,good luck and I got a ol nitro motor Ill let you have,its going to be gas powerd right? :sunglasses hehe.

ky paddlewheeler

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Meet Jemima...
« Reply #11 on: November 05, 2006, 07:08:30 AM »
well eddy have you done anything to her?

Offline Eddy Matthews

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Meet Jemima...
« Reply #12 on: November 05, 2006, 07:10:36 AM »
Sadly Jemima has been put away for a while until I get some other stuff out of the way.... Hopefull next year she'll get her bum wet :)
~ Never, ever, argue with an idiot. They'll drag you down to their level and beat you with experience ~

Offline Roderick Smith

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Re: Meet Jemima...
« Reply #13 on: July 31, 2011, 07:00:33 PM »
This is one of two threads on the subject of the plastic bath ducks tracking ocean currents, but I can't find the other.

Roderick B Smith
Rail News Victoria Editor

From Sun.31.7.11 Melbourne Age.
www.theage.com.au/victoria/toys-make-like-ducks-and-get-the-flock-out-of-there-20110730-1i5pz.html
Toys make like ducks and get the flock out of there.

The hunt is on for nearly 29 000 rubber ducks across the world.
Moby-Dick is Herman Melville's 1851 story of the search for a great white whale; Moby-Duck is Donovan Hohn's 2011 story of the search for some little yellow ducks. 28 800 of them.
In Jan.92, the cargo ship Ever Laurel was caught in a severe North Pacific storm, spilling several 12 m containers full of plastic bath toys overboard.
In November that year some of the ducks were washed up on the beaches of Alaska, 1500 km from the accident. Over the years there were more beachings, on the USA west coast, Russia, various Pacific Ocean atolls and Hawaii.  Computer models predict that nearly 20 years later, more beachings may occur in Australia, South America, around Indian Ocean - even, via the Arctic, along the coast of Britain and east-coast USA. The beachings will continue until the sun, waves and wind eventually erode to pieces the remaining ducks.
For scientists - and now, writers - the epic, decades-long, transoceanic journeys by the little toys have been a boon. The ducks' odyssey has shed valuable insight into the behaviour of ocean currents and wind patterns and has spawned several journal articles and, recently, two books: Flotsametrics, by Curtis Ebbesmeyer, was published by HarperCollins in 2009; and Hohn's book, published by Scribe, comes out in Australia tomorrow. Legendary children's author Eric Carle published 10 Little Rubber Ducks, based on the incident, in 2005.
Hohn, a New York-based features editor for GQ, told the Age that he came across a newspaper report of the story 5 years ago. His interest was initially piqued by the accident - ''the fact that containers fell off ships was astonishing'' - but he became fascinated by the lost contents.
''The image that comes unbidden to mind is tens of thousands of rubber duckies out on the deep. There's something humorous about that image … a rubber ducky is a childish plaything that's indigenous to the bathtub, is man-made and bright yellow. The ocean is terrifying and magnificent, God-like … mysteriously wrathful and difficult to fathom.''
When Hohn discovered the ducks had became a science experiment, he knew he had a book. ''The toys became data, a way of revealing the ocean currents. That made them all the more fascinating. I got a map … which plotted where these toys had been found … and also, using computer models, a prediction where the remaining ones would go. That map plotted a trail that I wanted to follow.''
Hohn, an admirer of Melville's book, enjoyed being a 21st-century version of Captain Ahab. ''One of the things Melville gets right is that the sea engenders fables. One of the questions that I took the better part of my book to answer is the tantalising [prospect] the ducks would have crossed the Arctic and made it to the North Atlantic. I like that because the Arctic is this inhospitable and mythic place where explorers go to die, with the duckies going through it.''
The book also shows the reader the Chinese factories where the ducks were made, the shipping conglomerates who own the container vessels, scientists who trek through Alaskan wilderness - so it reads like a fable on globalisation. That has attracted some criticism for Moby-Duck in the US - Scientific American's reviewer wrote that ''by the end of the book I wonder what the point is''.
Hohn defends his narrative. ''The book is very simple: Follow the trail of the toys.'' At least, he said, it is more readable than Melville's classic. ''Moby-Dick divides the world into zealots and people who say, OK, enough with the whiteness of the whale. Get back to the hunt.''

 

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