People Asked The Internet “What Is This Thing?” And Get Surprised With Answers
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 12 มิ.ย. 2024
- People Asked The Internet “What Is This Thing?” And Get Surprised With Answers.
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If it was a bat home/hotel, it would be bigger and would have a few rungs inside for the bats to hang on, when sleeping.
)∞o<
It is specifically an earwig trap: you put in stacks of wet cardboard and that particular smell will attract them inside and they will happily hide between the layers.
Once a week, IN FULL DAYLIGHT, so they won't run away, you unhook the trap, empty the contents in a garbage bag, wash the trap thoroughly, stack in more wet cardboard slits and hang it up again.
•Very effective without the need for insecticide.•
Chickens LOVE earwigs so if you keep chickens you may want to make one.Free feed!
That last one looks like a butterfly box, a safe place for the butterfly
The wooden fids are hollow and may still contain the a series of needles used in sail making and repairs. These wooden ones are only used on various types of non-metal lines (ropes) Metal ropes (Cables) require stainless steel or iron tools.
Judging my their size, they are used to make mooring lines and other such large diameter lines primarily used in maritime related applications.
Thank you. I thought the ends looked like they came off. When that wasn't mentioned I thought I was just complicating something simple.
The landing gear part.... has added context today😂
Not a bat house. Check the internet for bat house design. The native pollinator or earwig suggestion is more likely.
At 720 the brass inserts have been called stumbling blocks. They represent where a person was taken during the period before and during WW2
The last one looks like an insect hotel, though I have never seen one just like this.
The last object is a bee house for native solitary bees. The cardboard bit has gotten damp and collapsed, but it used to make a bunch of tubes for the bees to nest in. I see a bunch of people saying it is a bat house, but the slats are too closely spaced for bats.
I've not seen a slatted front but that makes sense. I could see how that would protect the tubes from birds. By solitary bees do you mean mason bees?
The last object is a bat house, not an insect hotel. One of my neighbors has one on the back of his garage and my father used to make them. This one looks like it is plastic. The cardboard is in there so it is easier to clean out the guano. The bat houses my father made just had no bottom in them so the guano would drop to the ground, which is why my neighbors hangs above a flower bed. Guano is great fertilizer.🦇🦇🏚🦇🦇
That must be it, SOLVED!
Bat houses are open on the bottom for the bats to fly in and out. Also, as someone said before, there would be something at the top for the bats to grip to hang from. Also as said before, bat houses are hung much higher up. I think who said it is for Mason bees is correct and that a fresh cardboard insert is needed. ❤
Yeah.....there is no such thing as an insect hotel,a roach motel is a brand name for poison based attractant traps and have become a generic term for poison traps
Those tiles as you call them on that pathway are known as grass block, they are used for erosion control,I use to work for a company that made these ,they are also used for drive ways
The concrete post could also have been use by surveyors. I used to work for a company one summer in my youth that surveyed. I saw many of old ones. Some had a date on the side like your picture. Sone had a brass round plate on the top with the position. I never saw a bracket or a mailbox. Down in Florida the state would use these to mark off sections rather than use some ones yard. In fact I remember one in the middle of a Lady's yard that was right in the middle of her two clothes line post. It was difficult that job for it was laundry day.
I have a much smaller fid that is part of a rigging knife & fid set by Barlow (a gift in about 1963). I keep it with my palm, sail needles, wax, and other rigging supplies.
Those fids are beautiful, also called marlin spikes, indeed for splicing loops at the ends of ship ropes, nice find there!, and I think the last object is for mason bees/pollinators, it is to low for a bat-box and the wrong design.
It is for solitary bees
The marlin spike is metal and often a part of a folding seaman's knife called a pusser dirk.
I really like these.
Thank you, I really like trying to identify or guess mostly the interesting objects.
you're welcome.
❤
Is the last object a bee house?
I got the fids and the thread/cord winder!!
Those gold circles in the ground/road, Germany, if they ring they are a security system . My opinion.
The last object is an insect hotel. The owner is supposed to maintain its contents, as the innards need to be replaced every year. The slanted front prevents rain, yet allow opening for bees etc.
It’s a bat house
Last one looks like a Bat Box. A place for Bats to nest.
Last object: Bat house.
👁👁 always a pleasure… 9:01
And also the gray squares are also call paving stones,
The mystery object is a bat house.
One small bat can eat up to 1700 mosquitoes every night as it flies around. While people use to try to get rid of bats, most now want to attract them, but to the bat boxes instead of the attic - their droppings are VERY damaging to a home.
Makes sense, thanks!
Was the landing gear from a Boeing?
Robot voices make for lazy video production.
Bat House
Thanks Andy!