Interesting property

Interesting story. Some basic engineering skills would point to the fact that since the river tunnel under the mountain would be drastically shortening the total distance the river traveled in that stretch, it would increase the drop per foot in the river in the tunnel, with the final outcome magnifying the very problem they were trying to remove, unless they also included a lock in the design, or narrowed the tunnel enough to make the river much deeper in the tunnel, which would make for some very fast moving water in said tunnel...
 
Interesting story. Some basic engineering skills would point to the fact that since the river tunnel under the mountain would be drastically shortening the total distance the river traveled in that stretch, it would increase the drop per foot in the river in the tunnel, with the final outcome magnifying the very problem they were trying to remove, unless they also included a lock in the design, or narrowed the tunnel enough to make the river much deeper in the tunnel, which would make for some very fast moving water in said tunnel...

Looking at the pictures, the project included canals leading to the tunnel so I’d assume they were incorporating locks in the project. Seems like it was started in 1859 (abandoned 1865 six years after it began). That’d be over three decades after the Erie Canal was completed. So, I would think they’d have the knowledge base to account for what you pointed out. That said, the fact they didn’t seem to have an understanding of the time and cost involved may point otherwise. Either way, I think it’d be pretty cool to have a piece of history like that on a property!


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Thats pretty dang cool. Might be cool to go see, not but a hop skip and a jump from school. They might question my ability to purchase it on a college student's budget though...
 
Interesting story. Some basic engineering skills would point to the fact that since the river tunnel under the mountain would be drastically shortening the total distance the river traveled in that stretch, it would increase the drop per foot in the river in the tunnel, with the final outcome magnifying the very problem they were trying to remove, unless they also included a lock in the design, or narrowed the tunnel enough to make the river much deeper in the tunnel, which would make for some very fast moving water in said tunnel...

You think they could’ve sold white water rafting trips in 1865?


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You think they could’ve sold white water rafting trips in 1865?


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Life was difficult enough in 1865 without floating down the river just for the fun of it. If you study history, working class people didn't spend nearly as much time on recreation years ago, recreation was for kings and nobles. The lower class people were probably too busy digging tunnels through solid rock by hand for minimal wages to be spending much money on whitewater rafting.
 
Cool history. Glad it’s not in KY. Everything that sells here is split into as many little properties as possible. All the big tracts of land are disappearing and it’s sad to see.
 
MM, does that mean I’ve been a serf most of my life, and just now becoming a noble ?:D
Maybe we didn't have time for a lot of fancy recreation when we were growing up but we were happy playing with homemade toys. Travelling through Nicaraugua with missionary's I learned that some of the poorest people who live in 10x10 shacks are much happier than a lot of wealthy Americans. Just because someone is wealthy, plays all the time and never did physical labor doesn't mean that they are happy. Contentment comes from the sense of accomplishment of getting your hands dirty in the dirt and grease and seeing the fruit of your labors at the end of the day.
 
Life was difficult enough in 1865 without floating down the river just for the fun of it. If you study history, working class people didn't spend nearly as much time on recreation years ago, recreation was for kings and nobles. The lower class people were probably too busy digging tunnels through solid rock by hand for minimal wages to be spending much money on whitewater rafting.

Yeah, the whitewater rafting rides was a joke. Subsistence living didn’t allow for frivolity. I’ve been lucky enough to work in some of the poorest and least developed places left in this world including West Papua Indonesia and Papua New Guinea. My experience is the same as yours that on the whole these societies were happier than modern American society. I think one big difference was they were happy to have enough. Enough to eat, enough of a shelter to stay dry and warm, enough family and villagers to form community. Americans are conditioned to be mindless consumers always wanting more, that possessions are the scoreboard to determine who is winning in life. Edward Bernays understood how to manipulate human fragility and is considered an architect of the creation of consumerism. His work, methods and 1928 book Propaganda should be taught to students so that they recognize earlier in life not to let others determine how you live. Maybe we’d see an end to “social media influencers” and the Kardashians then.

I think that there are a couple distinct things that drive unhappiness in our modern society. One is a lack of tribe or community. Large cities, broken homes and technology/social media all contribute to this. Social media is a poor substitute for real community (except you guys) . There is a really interesting book called Tribe, written by Sebastian Junger. The premise is that humans are wired to live in small groups working together against adversity. That adversity or threat could be other tribes, the threat of starvation, etc. He was a journalist embedded with troops for a year in the Koragal Valley, Afghanistan in terrible conditions with the constant threat of death. Everyday they all looked forward to returning home, yet when he returned to the US he found he was depressed and missed Afghanistan. He found many of the other guys did too and that several of the soldiers had re-enlisted. He couldn’t understand why he missed such a horrible place, and eventually came to realize that what he missed was the sense of tribe and the heightened sense of purpose against adversity (staying alive) that was shared with the soldiers he was embedded with. He surmises that a lot of PTSD is related not just to the atrocities of war but to diminished sense of tribe and sense of purpose. Strangely and sadly, war has been one of the few ways that these conditions were recreated for modern Americans.

1) So the lack of community/tribe and the lack of real adversity faced by Americans in our modern wealthy society may greatly impact our happiness.

2) Coupled with the lack of physical labor which is a form of adversity. Humans need balance, an exercise of the mind and body. Plenty of modern jobs leave out the physical part and leave out a sense of accomplishment at the end of the day. There’s a contentment missing. It’s why an office worker goes home and watches Deadliest Catch on TV. Small tribe, facing adverse conditions in physically demanding jobs that have an accomplishment at the end of the day. Ever notice how many TV shows are people watching other people do physical work? Deadliest Catch, Dirty Jobs, Flip This House, etc? Entertainment used to distract people after a hard days work, now they watch people do hard work. It’s why for many of us our hobbies are important. They replace some of what is lost in the modern workplace.

3) Consumerism, an endless quest for more that has become the religion for far too many Americans.

4) Vitamin D deficiency, seriously stay with me here. Humans were not meant to spend all their time indoors. Your body makes vitamin D from exposure to sunlight. Most Americans are severely vitamin D deficient which has profound impacts on your immune system and mental health. There have been lots of studies performed that demonstrate that people who work outside have less instances of depression and greater overall happiness than those who work indoors. This may be controversial, but recall the stories that black Americans were having worse outcomes with COVID-19, the virus must be racist right? No, the level of melatonin in your skin determines how easy your body makes Vitamin D. Black Americans are on average even more Vitamin D deficient because their environment doesn’t match the environment that their bodies evolved to live in. Just like the insanely high rate of skin cancer in Australia, where European pigmentations are not adapted to the environment.

I apologize guys for the diatribe here. Last week our school had a fifteen year old commit suicide which was the latest in a string of young people (and older) taking their lives around here. I’ve been thinking a lot about what is wrong with our society that this is happening so frequently. I think that the lockdown exacerbated depression for some people struggling with it, but also think that the stuff mentioned above has an impact. Build community, help young people overcome their technology/social media addictions and get outside! Time to take a kid hunting or fishing!


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Yeah, the whitewater rafting rides was a joke. Subsistence living didn’t allow for frivolity. I’ve been lucky enough to work in some of the poorest and least developed places left in this world including West Papua Indonesia and Papua New Guinea. My experience is the same as yours that on the whole these societies were happier than modern American society. I think one big difference was they were happy to have enough. Enough to eat, enough of a shelter to stay dry and warm, enough family and villagers to form community. Americans are conditioned to be mindless consumers always wanting more, that possessions are the scoreboard to determine who is winning in life. Edward Bernays understood how to manipulate human fragility and is considered an architect of the creation of consumerism. His work, methods and 1928 book Propaganda should be taught to students so that they recognize earlier in life not to let others determine how you live. Maybe we’d see an end to “social media influencers” and the Kardashians then.

I think that there are a couple distinct things that drive unhappiness in our modern society. One is a lack of tribe or community. Large cities, broken homes and technology/social media all contribute to this. Social media is a poor substitute for real community (except you guys) . There is a really interesting book called Tribe, written by Sebastian Junger. The premise is that humans are wired to live in small groups working together against adversity. That adversity or threat could be other tribes, the threat of starvation, etc. He was a journalist embedded with troops for a year in the Koragal Valley, Afghanistan in terrible conditions with the constant threat of death. Everyday they all looked forward to returning home, yet when he returned to the US he found he was depressed and missed Afghanistan. He found many of the other guys did too and that several of the soldiers had re-enlisted. He couldn’t understand why he missed such a horrible place, and eventually came to realize that what he missed was the sense of tribe and the heightened sense of purpose against adversity (staying alive) that was shared with the soldiers he was embedded with. He surmises that a lot of PTSD is related not just to the atrocities of war but to diminished sense of tribe and sense of purpose. Strangely and sadly, war has been one of the few ways that these conditions were recreated for modern Americans.

1) So the lack of community/tribe and the lack of real adversity faced by Americans in our modern wealthy society may greatly impact our happiness.

2) Coupled with the lack of physical labor which is a form of adversity. Humans need balance, an exercise of the mind and body. Plenty of modern jobs leave out the physical part and leave out a sense of accomplishment at the end of the day. There’s a contentment missing. It’s why an office worker goes home and watches Deadliest Catch on TV. Small tribe, facing adverse conditions in physically demanding jobs that have an accomplishment at the end of the day. Ever notice how many TV shows are people watching other people do physical work? Deadliest Catch, Dirty Jobs, Flip This House, etc? Entertainment used to distract people after a hard days work, now they watch people do hard work. It’s why for many of us our hobbies are important. They replace some of what is lost in the modern workplace.

3) Consumerism, an endless quest for more that has become the religion for far too many Americans.

4) Vitamin D deficiency, seriously stay with me here. Humans were not meant to spend all their time indoors. Your body makes vitamin D from exposure to sunlight. Most Americans are severely vitamin D deficient which has profound impacts on your immune system and mental health. There have been lots of studies performed that demonstrate that people who work outside have less instances of depression and greater overall happiness than those who work indoors. This may be controversial, but recall the stories that black Americans were having worse outcomes with COVID-19, the virus must be racist right? No, the level of melatonin in your skin determines how easy your body makes Vitamin D. Black Americans are on average even more Vitamin D deficient because their environment doesn’t match the environment that their bodies evolved to live in. Just like the insanely high rate of skin cancer in Australia, where European pigmentations are not adapted to the environment.

I apologize guys for the diatribe here. Last week our school had a fifteen year old commit suicide which was the latest in a string of young people (and older) taking their lives around here. I’ve been thinking a lot about what is wrong with our society that this is happening so frequently. I think that the lockdown exacerbated depression for some people struggling with it, but also think that the stuff mentioned above has an impact. Build community, help young people overcome their technology/social media addictions and get outside! Time to take a kid hunting or fishing!


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Your diatribe was a worthwhile read. You have got a lot of things right about the keys to contentment and fulfillment.
 
Yeah, the whitewater rafting rides was a joke. Subsistence living didn’t allow for frivolity. I’ve been lucky enough to work in some of the poorest and least developed places left in this world including West Papua Indonesia and Papua New Guinea. My experience is the same as yours that on the whole these societies were happier than modern American society. I think one big difference was they were happy to have enough. Enough to eat, enough of a shelter to stay dry and warm, enough family and villagers to form community. Americans are conditioned to be mindless consumers always wanting more, that possessions are the scoreboard to determine who is winning in life. Edward Bernays understood how to manipulate human fragility and is considered an architect of the creation of consumerism. His work, methods and 1928 book Propaganda should be taught to students so that they recognize earlier in life not to let others determine how you live. Maybe we’d see an end to “social media influencers” and the Kardashians then.

I think that there are a couple distinct things that drive unhappiness in our modern society. One is a lack of tribe or community. Large cities, broken homes and technology/social media all contribute to this. Social media is a poor substitute for real community (except you guys)
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. There is a really interesting book called Tribe, written by Sebastian Junger. The premise is that humans are wired to live in small groups working together against adversity. That adversity or threat could be other tribes, the threat of starvation, etc. He was a journalist embedded with troops for a year in the Koragal Valley, Afghanistan in terrible conditions with the constant threat of death. Everyday they all looked forward to returning home, yet when he returned to the US he found he was depressed and missed Afghanistan. He found many of the other guys did too and that several of the soldiers had re-enlisted. He couldn’t understand why he missed such a horrible place, and eventually came to realize that what he missed was the sense of tribe and the heightened sense of purpose against adversity (staying alive) that was shared with the soldiers he was embedded with. He surmises that a lot of PTSD is related not just to the atrocities of war but to diminished sense of tribe and sense of purpose. Strangely and sadly, war has been one of the few ways that these conditions were recreated for modern Americans.

1) So the lack of community/tribe and the lack of real adversity faced by Americans in our modern wealthy society may greatly impact our happiness.

2) Coupled with the lack of physical labor which is a form of adversity. Humans need balance, an exercise of the mind and body. Plenty of modern jobs leave out the physical part and leave out a sense of accomplishment at the end of the day. There’s a contentment missing. It’s why an office worker goes home and watches Deadliest Catch on TV. Small tribe, facing adverse conditions in physically demanding jobs that have an accomplishment at the end of the day. Ever notice how many TV shows are people watching other people do physical work? Deadliest Catch, Dirty Jobs, Flip This House, etc? Entertainment used to distract people after a hard days work, now they watch people do hard work. It’s why for many of us our hobbies are important. They replace some of what is lost in the modern workplace.

3) Consumerism, an endless quest for more that has become the religion for far too many Americans.

4) Vitamin D deficiency, seriously stay with me here. Humans were not meant to spend all their time indoors. Your body makes vitamin D from exposure to sunlight. Most Americans are severely vitamin D deficient which has profound impacts on your immune system and mental health. There have been lots of studies performed that demonstrate that people who work outside have less instances of depression and greater overall happiness than those who work indoors. This may be controversial, but recall the stories that black Americans were having worse outcomes with COVID-19, the virus must be racist right? No, the level of melatonin in your skin determines how easy your body makes Vitamin D. Black Americans are on average even more Vitamin D deficient because their environment doesn’t match the environment that their bodies evolved to live in. Just like the insanely high rate of skin cancer in Australia, where European pigmentations are not adapted to the environment.

I apologize guys for the diatribe here. Last week our school had a fifteen year old commit suicide which was the latest in a string of young people (and older) taking their lives around here. I’ve been thinking a lot about what is wrong with our society that this is happening so frequently. I think that the lockdown exacerbated depression for some people struggling with it, but also think that the stuff mentioned above has an impact. Build community, help young people overcome their technology/social media addictions and get outside! Time to take a kid hunting or fishing!



Your diatribe was a worthwhile read. You have got a lot of things right about the keys to contentment and fulfillment.
Agree completely!
 
https://www.uchicagomedicine.org/fo...-deficiency-may-raise-risk-of-getting-covid19

One of many articles that highlight the Vitamin D - Covid outcome connection. I really recommend having your Vitamin D level tested and taking a Vitamin D supplement if you are deficient.


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I eat enough fish, plus lots of icecream, plus lots of milk, so I'm probably good on vitamin D. But thanks for the heads up, healthy living equals feeling great. BTW, venison has a lot of vitamins too. Venison has 50% less fat than beef, making it a healthier red meat alternative. And where's it's low in fat, it's high in protein—that's why eating venison is great for anyone trying to build lean muscle.
 
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