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- Newsgroups: alt.folklore.urban
- Path: sparky!uunet!newsstand.cit.cornell.edu!cornell!uw-beaver!news.u.washington.edu!milton.u.washington.edu!wiml
- From: wiml@milton.u.washington.edu (William Lewis)
- Subject: Re: Net's Funniest Kitchen Disasters
- Message-ID: <1992Dec27.055355.14485@u.washington.edu>
- Sender: news@u.washington.edu (USENET News System)
- Organization: University of Washington, Seattle
- References: <1992Dec23.234214.27493@Cadence.COM> <1992Dec25.114527.27420@u.washington.edu>
- Date: Sun, 27 Dec 1992 05:53:55 GMT
- Lines: 53
-
- In article <1992Dec25.114527.27420@u.washington.edu> dst@hardy.u.washington.edu (Dale Tanigawa) writes:
- >There are a few legends here at the UW involving Drumheller Fountain ...
- > ... Supposedly,
- >a grad student dumped a failed experiment in the fountain where it reacted
- >with all the duck shit to become something else entirely. The resulting
- >substance was a flourescent orange-yellow, and heavier than water so you
- >couldn't see it from looking from above (due to aforementioned duck shit).
- >When the fountain was turned on for its daily display, it sucked the stuff
- >off the bottom and spewed it into the air, resulting in a nice orangey-yellow
- >water plume, and lots of flourescent glow-in-the-dark ducks.
-
- This may be the same incident, or it may be unrelated, but maybe three
- years ago someone dumped a lot of bright day-glo dye (a sort of yellowish
- green) into the fountain. It was close enough to the usual color of the water
- that out of the corner of your eye you might not notice it, except if
- you look more closely it's obviously artificial. After a few days of
- speculation as to what it was, it was discovered to be fluorescin (?),
- a dye used for marking lakes and streams. After a week or two it
- decomposed harmlessly (or so they say... but if you look closely,
- in the dark of night, the mutant fish can be seen scheming in the depths..
- muahahahaha...!)
-
- There are a bunch of other legends associated with Drumheller. Its
- unofficial name is Frosh Pond, and most people have a friend or
- a FOAF who knows someone who was dumped in at some point. (Not unlikely;
- I've seen at least two (presumed) sorority initiaition rituals there
- in the middle of the night.) Other legends:
- -- It's bottomless.
- -- There are maybe 3 feet of water, covering N feet of gooey muck,
- such that if one were to jump in, one would become hopelessly
- stuck and drown, your body being added to the sludge.
- -- Somewhere in there, there is a Volkswagen (details of how it got
- there vary) which is just barely covered by the water.
-
- Most of these were debunked a while ago when they drained the fountain
- to clean it & do some maintenance on the water jets. A friend of mine
- was standing nearby when they pumped the water out, and reported lots of
- mud, tree branches, misc junk, but no Volkswagen. For a while after this
- it was possible to see the concrete bottom of the foutain, but the waters
- have long since returned to their original opacity.
-
- Some mornings when the water jets are turned off, tired fowl will
- congregate on the iron ring on which are mounted the smaller jets
- (there's one central fountain surrounded by a bunch of lesser spouts.)
- Since this ring is just under the water, it's not apparent that it's
- there, or even that the birds are standing on anything, thus giving rise
- to the solemn and mysterious phenomenon of the Mystic Circle of Ducks. =8)
-
- --
- email: wiml@u.washington.edu | Home: Seattle, Washington |
- (William Lewis) | 47 41' 15" N 122 42' 58" W |
- NeXTmail: wiml@ingalls.cs.washington.edu `-------------------------------'
- --*-- Member, Coalition to Preserve Semantic Vacuity --*--
-