Sunday, August 27, 2017

Youtube daily report Aug 27 2017

THE CHURCH OF ST GEORGE AT LOUKISIA

The church of Saint George the Trophy-bearer (Agios Georgios Tropaiophoros) is located in eastern Boeotia

The small church was built on the northern slopes of Mt. Ktypas (ancient Messapion)

The monument, according to its architectural elements, could be dated to the early 12th century

It is a small-scale church, which belongs to the idyllic and rare architectural style of the four-storied single-room with a dome

Its interior was decorated with frescoes dating back to the 13th-14th centuries

and betray relations with the painting tradition of Attica

For more infomation >> Ι. Ν. Αγίου Γεωργίου (Λουκίσια) - Church of Agios Georgios (Loukissia) {HD| ♪} - Duration: 2:56.

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Citroën C3 1.4 VTi Dynamique - Duration: 0:59.

For more infomation >> Citroën C3 1.4 VTi Dynamique - Duration: 0:59.

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热:英超-热苏斯破门斯特林97分钟绝杀 曼城2-1险胜| 中国 消息 - Duration: 7:30.

For more infomation >> 热:英超-热苏斯破门斯特林97分钟绝杀 曼城2-1险胜| 中国 消息 - Duration: 7:30.

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Ultime notizie: Barbara D'Urso e Gerard Butler: arriva la conferma | K.N.B.T - Duration: 2:00.

For more infomation >> Ultime notizie: Barbara D'Urso e Gerard Butler: arriva la conferma | K.N.B.T - Duration: 2:00.

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Barbara d'Urso: un nuovo amore prima del ritorno in tv? | M.C.G.S - Duration: 3:44.

For more infomation >> Barbara d'Urso: un nuovo amore prima del ritorno in tv? | M.C.G.S - Duration: 3:44.

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石原さとみ「24時間テレビ」閉幕で涙「誰よりも頑張らなきゃいけないと思った」 櫻井翔らも温かく見守る|24H ニュース - Duration: 3:16.

For more infomation >> 石原さとみ「24時間テレビ」閉幕で涙「誰よりも頑張らなきゃいけないと思った」 櫻井翔らも温かく見守る|24H ニュース - Duration: 3:16.

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ブルゾンちえみ、90キロ走って実証した"耐久アイメイク"話題 アイライナー、アイシャドーなど愛用コスメは?|24H ニュース - Duration: 3:19.

For more infomation >> ブルゾンちえみ、90キロ走って実証した"耐久アイメイク"話題 アイライナー、アイシャドーなど愛用コスメは?|24H ニュース - Duration: 3:19.

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ブルゾンちえみ「チャリティーランナーを知らされたのは本当に1時間前?」に言及 詳細振り返る<24時間テレビ>|24H ニュース - Duration: 2:57.

For more infomation >> ブルゾンちえみ「チャリティーランナーを知らされたのは本当に1時間前?」に言及 詳細振り返る<24時間テレビ>|24H ニュース - Duration: 2:57.

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Spider-Man's Costume

For more infomation >> Spider-Man's Costume

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I NEED YOUR OPINION! (Battlefield 1 Next Montage coming) - Duration: 2:38.

For more infomation >> I NEED YOUR OPINION! (Battlefield 1 Next Montage coming) - Duration: 2:38.

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ROAD TRIP TO EUROPE | PART 3 - Duration: 5:41.

We packed up our home to our campervan

and went for a 31-day road trip

Over 6000 kilometers and 6 countries in our mind

Europe as destination

Travel with us

ROAD TRIP TO EUROPE - part 3 -

Sponsored by KABE-ADRIA Oy & J. Rinta-Jouppi Oy Lappeenranta

Morning! We just left Copenhagen

- DENMARK -

- SATURDAY 27th May -

Our first stop today will be a deer park in Vejle

But my relatives haven't heard about it at all

so we are not sure what kind of it is

But we will find out :)

After that we will continue our trip to the Wadden Sea National Park

- today or tomorrow

And we have decided to go to some campsite for a night

because criminality have started to appear more and more here

and the threat of ending up to be their target/victims

This is totally new thing to us concerning campering/caravanning

At our ROAD TRIP UP NORTH you weren't even able to be afraid of that

because the whole atmosphere were so different

So that's why we have to think again our route and plans

Anyhow we are continuing driving Denmark further

but we will be staying for nights in campsites

On the day before yesterday we got scared because

when Simo went to empty our chemical toilet, somebody running closer to our vehicle

and I managed to close the doors just before he was

close to our front door

And I was just thinking that is Simo able to come back to our motorhome

what is happening

Luckily that situation turned out good and Simo managed to get back in the motorhome

That was a good warning fo us!

We drive to Vejle across the Great Belt Bridge

This bridge is paid one too

This time it was charged by your vehicle's weight, we guess

The staff asked our vehicle's weight

The cost of acrossing the bridge was 50 euros / 365 DKK

This one was cool too, worth the price - at least once

- THE GREAT BELT BRIDGE -

- VEJLE -

We come to this Vejle City Camping

and this turn out to be a really nice campsite

They have very nice and friendly customer service, giving instructions about the city etc

The sun is setting down and

we are heading to a deer park near here

Hope we will see some deers

- VEJLE DYREHAVEN -

This turned out to be a proper park

You enter the park through the gate

and there are deers wandering around the whole park

But it's not allowed to feed the deers

There are several deer parks in Denmark, this isn't the only one

Simo: "They are wagging their tails! :D"

We found some deers

They are just wandering around - so cute!

This was a nice place to visit!

And the deers were so tame but they still have a big forest to wander around

It was nice to visit here!

Now we will cycle through the harbour

back to the motorhome and go to sleep

ON THE NEXT EPISODE:

We get chance to drive on the beach! :D

Remember to subscribe my channel

to keep up with our road trip

IF YOU LIKED, PLEASE CLICK YOUR THUMBS UP AND SUBSCRIBE MY CHANNEL! :) <3

For more infomation >> ROAD TRIP TO EUROPE | PART 3 - Duration: 5:41.

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DUE BUGIE UNA VERITÀ w/Tr3MeNd0 - Duration: 5:01.

For more infomation >> DUE BUGIE UNA VERITÀ w/Tr3MeNd0 - Duration: 5:01.

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內地零食開箱:挑戰試吃偉大祖國生產的零食!去中山第二集|Owennn去旅遊|Owen - Duration: 9:19.

For more infomation >> 內地零食開箱:挑戰試吃偉大祖國生產的零食!去中山第二集|Owennn去旅遊|Owen - Duration: 9:19.

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That Time When the Elite of the Western World Rented Pineapples by the Hour - Duration: 7:59.

The humble pineapple is most often seen today either sitting proudly in the centre of an

uncomfortably well stocked fruit bowl or being used as the home of a lovable talking sponge.

However, between the 16th and 18th centuries, pineapples were so expensive and rare that

they were often displayed like fine works of art.

Converting exactly how much a whole pineapple cost back in the 16th, 17th and 18th centuries

to modern day dollars is almost impossible to do with any real accuracy.

That said, the general ballpark estimates tend to ring in at around five to ten thousand

dollars per pineapple, depending on such things as the quality of the fruit and season.

So how did this particular piece of fruit come to be so valuable?

After the pineapple was first encountered by Europeans on the island of Guadeloupe during

Christopher Columbus' second trip to the Caribbean in November of 1493, efforts were

quickly set in motion to find a way of reliably producing the fruit back in Europe.

(The fruit itself is indigenous to South America and had been cultivated there for centuries

prior to its "discovery" by Columbus.)

Despite sinking vast sums of money into the problem, European royalty, who positively

adored the fruit for its natural sweetness (sugar and sugary items being in short supply),

for centuries after its "discovery" the only real way to obtain a pineapple was to

pay to have one directly imported, which was no cheap affair.

Many transport ships of the age were too slow and conditions too hot aboard the vessels

to keep whole pineapples from rotting during the journey.

So to get a whole pineapple fruit safely from the plant to one's table in Europe took

the fastest ships and most favorable weather conditions.

As a result, virtually the only people who could afford to purchase a whole pineapple,

let alone eat one while it was perfectly ripe, were royalty or the ridiculously wealthy.

The first step to allowing the rich, instead of just the super rich, a chance to own or

even look at a pineapple wouldn't come for another two centuries after its "discovery",

when the Dutch were able to begin successfully cultivating the fruit in the very late 1600s.

Exactly who first managed to grow a pineapple in a non-tropical climate isn't known for

sure, though a woman named Agnes Block is generally credited as being the earliest to

do so around 1687.

While earlier accounts of fruit producing pineapple plants in Europe do exist, whether

or not these plants were cultivated in Europe or simply transferred to the continent as

juveniles isn't clear.

More important than Block in the pineapple saga, however, was Dutch cloth merchant, Pieter

de la Court, who is often cited as the individual who devised the most efficient (at the time)

method of growing pineapples in a non-tropical climate.

His method was mostly comprised of utilising hotrooms that were kept consistently warm

and humid.

These had to be carefully designed in order to vent the smoke and hot fumes out of the

structure, while keeping the weather inside, as well as the soil temperature, within very

specific ranges.

Accidentally burning down one's pineapple hotroom or killing the plants with smoke was

a very common thing in the early going.

After news of Court's ability to grow pineapples and other exotic plants and fruits year round

reached England, many nobles sent their gardeners to the Netherlands to learn his techniques

first hand at considerable expense.

If you're curious about why the Dutch had such a stranglehold on Pineapple production,

it's largely because the Dutch West India Company enjoyed an almost total monopoly on

trade in the Caribbean at the time, allowing wealthy Dutch citizens to import numerous

pineapple plants to experiment with, despite the expense.

As you can probably imagine from the many stereotypes that exist about British weather,

growing pineapples in England proved to be rather difficult and it's noted that only

exceptionally skilled or vastly wealthy gardeners were capable of such a feat.

A man called John Rose is often mistakenly attributed with growing the first pineapple

in England because of the existence of a painting commissioned by Charles II in 1675 in which

he's clearly shown presenting the king with a ripe pineapple.

As it turns out, the pineapple seen in that painting, which was based on a real encounter

the King had, was imported from the Bahamas and ripened in England by Rose.

As for the real first pineapple grown on English soil, that didn't exist until around 1714-1716

when a Dutchman called Henry Telende was able to grow one for his employer, Matthew Decker,

who subsequently had a painting commissioned in 1720 to celebrate the not unimpressive

achievement.

Telende's method of growing pineapples was quite involved, managing to maintain the perfect

soil temperature via a specially designed hothouse containing tan pits lined with pebbles

inside.

On top of the pebbles, he placed manure, then on top of that sat tanners' bark (oak bark

soaked in water).

Finally, the pot containing the pineapple plant was placed in that.

Manure by itself created too much heat in the early going, but the tanners' bark helped

regulate that and provide a more even heat over time, keeping a steady soil temperature

within the very specific range needed for growing pineapple plants.

Even after growing pineapples on English soil became a possibility, getting hold of one

was still so costly that many nobles didn't eat them, opting instead to simply display

them around their homes as one would a precious ornament or carry them around at parties.

Those who weren't quite as affluent could also rent a pineapple for a few hours at a

time.

This pineapple would be passed around from renter to renter for their respective parties

over the course of several days until finally being sold to the individual who could actually

have the right to eat it.

Because of this, even among those who'd handled pineapples, very few ever actually

experienced what it was like to eat a pineapple.

Due to the natural sweetness of the pineapple, which was described as being akin to "Wine,

Rosewater and Sugar" all mixed together, the fruit was seen as nothing short of a delicacy

by the notoriously sweet-toothed English elite living in a time when refined sugar was a

very expensive commodity.

Charles II in particular was said to love pineapple, partly due to its sweetness and

partly due to him being amused by the fact the fruit looked like it was wearing a tiny

crown; as a result, Charles II often referred to the fruit as the "King-pine".

A final reason the pineapple was so popular, at least with artists, was its unconventional,

striking appearance.

As 16th century Spanish historian Gonzalo Fernandez de Oviedo y Valdes stated, "I

do not suppose that there is in the whole world any other of so exquisite and lovely

appearances…

My pen and my words cannot depict such exceptional qualities, nor appropriately blazon this fruit

so as to particularize the case fully and satisfactorily without the brush or the sketch."

Dunmore_PineappleIn fact, after the pineapple's introduction to England, it became a prominent

feature of art and architecture of the period, such as Scotland's now famous Dunmore Pineapple

(pictured right), commissioned in 1761 by the Earl of Dunmore.

So the next time you order a pizza and see that they casually put pineapple on it when

you clearly told them not to (because who on Earth would want to sully delectable pizza

with a sweet fruit?

;-)), remember that three centuries ago, even just having said fruit, let alone discarding

bits of it off your main dish, would have been the ultimate sign of wealth and excess.

Today, you might have heard of the tradition of presenting someone with a pineapple as

a housewarming present.

This tradition goes back to the time described in the preceding article when presenting such

a gift was seen as a magnificent gesture.

For more infomation >> That Time When the Elite of the Western World Rented Pineapples by the Hour - Duration: 7:59.

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"감사합니다♥"..박수진, 둘째 임신에 '행복 미소' | 연예뉴스 24/7 - Duration: 2:01.

For more infomation >> "감사합니다♥"..박수진, 둘째 임신에 '행복 미소' | 연예뉴스 24/7 - Duration: 2:01.

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Shocking Age Differences Between These Bollywood Siblings You Didn't Know About ! ! - Duration: 4:13.

Shocking Age Differences Between These Bollywood Siblings You Didn't Know About

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