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My Somerset holiday took a strange turn
Rob replied to ColdHands's topic in Nothing whatsoever to do with coins area!
If you want a scientific answer, how about persistent luminescence from a hat that has been washed in a detergent with luminescent ingredients, which most have. Think discos. That can last for tens of minutes after exposure to UV light and will be accentuated by the relative darkness inside the tower. You did say the day was the hottest one of the year when levels were 7-9 (high to very high), and whilst not necessarily at maximum, there would have been a fair degree of exposure to UV getting there. You also have to consider the light sensor response curves for various wavelengths if the camera tries to compensate for these or has a sweet spot for maximum enhancement when capturing the image. Note to self. Need a life. -
My Somerset holiday took a strange turn
ColdHands replied to ColdHands's topic in Nothing whatsoever to do with coins area!
Another thing that piques me: Note how well formed the disc of the object is. Seen at my side-on angle, it conforms well to an ellipse draw in one of my art programs (in this instance, Pinta) - see attachment. So, was this a flat object that caught me perfectly side on as if it were perched at a perfect 90 degree angle to the stone bench, so as to present a perfect disc to me? As opposed to a skewed disc that a hat slouching on a bench would present? Or ... was it a sphere? A sphere presents a perfect disc no matter the angle. -
My Somerset holiday took a strange turn
ColdHands replied to ColdHands's topic in Nothing whatsoever to do with coins area!
Well, as l explained over chess, l'm into music, l recently spent good money on some choir samples to use in my own productions (male, female and childrens' choirs). I can appreciate a human voice from the shrieking winds, but note: I heard the male voices singing in unison at the height of the wind shrieking (if l remember correctly). I didn't go up there expecting any of this. As l say, l am not into Christianity, mystic Christianity, or New Age. I am spiritual though, l believe in God. - Today
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My Somerset holiday took a strange turn
ColdHands replied to ColdHands's topic in Nothing whatsoever to do with coins area!
Hi there, some more images. The one in the OP is at 10am, as is the final image in this post. I too am skeptical of others' paranormal experiences except when they align with what l have experienced. I actually made this post to seek out explanations. So: 1. Hat: i) The image showing the lady with the hat: I think she was the only such lady. ii) The winds at the top, though veeeery welcome, were quite gusty and they took my own hat off but l had one with a chin strap. That was a relatively calm day; in a gale l can imagine being blown all the way to Oz. It's a no-hat zone. iii) I don't think that object was a hat. Note how it's too bright, and how it has a veined pattern on the intensified edit. Also look at the immediate entryway, that is nowhere near as bright as the hat, yet it is reflecting the sky, perhaps the stone is less reflective than a bright straw hat, l don't know. iv) However, note the position: the object is clearly sat on top of a stone bench, as if it indeed were a hat. So l'm open to it being something, placed on the bench. 2. Sunbeam: i) the edges are too sharp, a sunbeam would be more diffuse ii) you'd think the sunbeam would highlight the deeply-grooved (what's the word?) stonework of the tower walls. iii) Also, as l say, the sun could not penetrate that far down, we're not in the tropics - the sun would have to be directly overheard to shine all the way down to the floor of the tower. I've included a photo of the top of the tower - you can see how far the sun was coming down. I was photoing almost everything l could set my sights on. -
My Somerset holiday took a strange turn
Michael-Roo replied to ColdHands's topic in Nothing whatsoever to do with coins area!
I agree with Jerry; it's a hat. -
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We mustn't fixate on that now - look, a timely new death threat! Almost looks like something he could have purchased on Fiverrr. He did one thing especially well: Location, Location, Location (Folkestone ... you know?).
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A rare and historically important silver dirham struck during the reign of al-Walid I (705–715 AD), one of the most influential rulers of the Umayyad Caliphate. This coin is dated AH 93 (711–712 AD) and was minted at Surraq, a lesser-known but significant mint associated with early Islamic administrative and economic activity. https://coinsnantiques.com/collection/umayyad-al-walid-i-ar-dirham-surraq-mint-ah-93/
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Best way is to avoid ebay. Don't feed the beast, as they aren't open minded. By their own admission they don't have enough experts to remove claimed fakes, so have to rely on alternative opinions. Given Barton's metal is a gold leaf bound to a copper substrate, it is virtually impossible to get sufficient metal flow of the gold when cutting the blank from the sheet to completely cover the copper edge as seen above on my halfcrown. The smaller the denomination, the easier it will become due to thickness, but punching equipment isn't renowned for producing perfect blanks, and not required, given the coin with be struck with a collar to stop the metal flowing sideways. It isn't impossible to get some gold on the edge, but perfectly covered? Not in my opinion, though others may choose to differ.
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Yes, most certainly a worn die. And a truly shocking price which would be way too high even for a good strike UNC example. Here's a much better example at a reasonable price: https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/157378763239?var=0&mkevt=1&mkcid=1&mkrid=710-53481-19255-0&campid=5338946167&toolid=20006&loc=&customid=4581527531114051_710033490_o.9beeaa501cf11ef92efac014f4958c05&msclkid=9beeaa501cf11ef92efac014f4958c05
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Nor can you get a satisfactory explanation for his leader's £5m bung!
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My Somerset holiday took a strange turn
Peckris 2 replied to ColdHands's topic in Nothing whatsoever to do with coins area!
Some years ago the music industry changed over to digital, and invented this thing called a 'compact disc'. The CD partly shown in the picture is clearly of a small male choir singing a single note... -
My Somerset holiday took a strange turn
jelida replied to ColdHands's topic in Nothing whatsoever to do with coins area!
Looks to me like someone standing to the left of the window holding a panama hat beside their bum. Jerry -
Paddy started following My Somerset holiday took a strange turn
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My Somerset holiday took a strange turn
Paddy replied to ColdHands's topic in Nothing whatsoever to do with coins area!
I am naturally very sceptical of reported supernatural experiences. The crescent in the side of the picture could be a stray light beam, a common anomaly, particularly when using a telephoto lens. The singing voices could be a breeze striking a resonant note in the upper reaches of the tower. I was not there, so I cannot confirm one way or another. However, I appreciate that for some the presence of supernatural forces is important to their way of viewing life, and if such experiences help them make sense of this crazy world, then good for them! -
I've been looking for a MS 1916 for a while as an upgrade to my AU58, the bottom coin. Finally I see one on Ebay Top coin. When I looked carefully at the coin I was truly unimpressed. Although the coin looks to be mint state from the patina but the strike quality lets it down badly. The reverse is similar. Like they say judge the coin not the attributed grade.
- Yesterday
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My Somerset holiday took a strange turn
Rob replied to ColdHands's topic in Nothing whatsoever to do with coins area!
For as long as I have been on this planet and certainly in the past 5 and a half decades, Glastonbury has had more than its fair share of weirdos. From the nobility to the peasantry, it has somehow found itself bound into an annual religious schedule. Just the latest incarnation of the out of mind experience seemingly required by a group of questionable sanity. I blame the son of the then Marquis of Bath for being an integral part of the ensuing chaos, with his wifelets and copious quantities of dope. Those attracted to Stonehenge invariably made their way down to Worthy Farm for the music a couple days after the summer solstice. I could never understand why many didn't wear shoes, given the levels of dogs**t on the pavements in those days. And passing through prime agricultural land, the chance of being hit by a flying cowpat was high. Moving to the current day, you may have dodged a bullet, as it would have been quite possible for Trump to make an appearance too, given his position as President, God, and a total belief in all things narcissistic. I heard he had gained copyright over the word Trump. The strange sounds you could hear was probably his personal choir of disciples, perfecting their flatulence for his appearance as God at this year's non-festival. -
My Somerset holiday took a strange turn
ColdHands replied to ColdHands's topic in Nothing whatsoever to do with coins area!
I could also add, I momentarily heard a small male choir singing a single note, two or three times within the space of about 1-2 minutes, whilst in that tower. I thought it was about 10 male voices but then l checked and 3 monks were hung drawn and quartered there. Maybe it was 3 voices singing in unison? I swear it happened just like that. -
Picture of Jupiter
ColdHands replied to blakeyboy's topic in Nothing whatsoever to do with coins area!
I bet it only cost £800-£2,000. Cheap lens indeed! Congrats on the pic btw. -
Sadly you cannot get "rabies" out of "Jenrick"
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So l visited Glastonbury Tor with a camera and a half decent zoom lens. Sure enough someone had stuffed a football into one of the windows of St Michael's Tower (the tower at the top of the tor), and the tower was descrated with graffiti, just a load of names, some within love hearts. I can't think of a better way to jinx onesself. That said, l'm not into mystic Christianity and all the New Age meditation and occidental dharmic practises l saw going on there. There was also a woman with a pale hat, probably white or very light yellow. Ok the point is, I later checked my pics and saw something odd. Seemingly sat on one of the stone benches within the tower was an object, it sort of looks shaded in the original pic, indicating it's dead and subject to light cast on it from all around (the tower is open top, roofless, but the skylight doesn't infiltrate very far down into the tower). However, it's rather bright compared to the surrounds. I'm 50:50 on it being .... incandescent? It definitely wasn't the previously seen football, that was there even as l left (l took some parting shots). It wasn't the woman's hat. Any opinions on what it was? I have processed the image to intensify the colours and there appear to be faint blue veins running through it in one of my processed edits. The sepia edit is to show how bright it is compared to the surrounding countryside basking under open skies on the hottest June day recorded. The lady in front of the sphere was either reading the memorial inscription within the tower, or she was doing some New Age prayer (as l had witnessed her doing on a few occasions).
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Cambs coin collector joined the community
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Ancient coin, possibly E European, for ID help please.
Paddy replied to Paddy's topic in Ancient Coins
I just tried Google's image search for the first time, and here are the results: "This is a medieval "Bull and Horseman" type silver Jital coin, likely from the Kabul Shahi or Saffarid dynasties dating between 850-1000 AD. The coin features a recumbent zebu bull on one side and a horseman holding a lance on the other. These coins were commonly used in regions corresponding to modern-day Afghanistan, Pakistan, and northern India." ... and some of the visual matches: -
Wrong thread!
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They got the word from [possibly indentured] Hindu sailors. Unsure what it means. It's also a city in Azerbaijan. /end derail