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Nov 20, 2022
2,775
27,997
Wisconsin
I once worked on a turkey farm in Suffolk and dispatched between 800 and 3,000 birds a day.

I also gutted & butchered many of those I dispatched.

I'm genuinely shocked that no one knew a bird only had the one orifice :oops:.

Perhaps the poop occasionally found on eggs was a hint?

Jay.
As a teenager I raised chickens and sold the eggs at my grandfathers pharmacy. They were not washed on his counter, they were not white either. Customers loved them! I am sure that is illegal today.

Although I was aware of the anatomy, I learned it from a book in biology... not from my practical experience. Just sayin'...
 

mawnansmiff

Lifer
Oct 14, 2015
7,802
8,578
Sunny Cornwall, UK.
Did anyone resolve why the think US homes are made of paper?
Here you go Michael, it's all in here.

One striking aspect of houses in America is the flimsy quality of even the most expensive ones. Houses are built literally like a house of cards. Weak beams, plywood, flimsy insulation, flimsy siding, and roofing that either blows off in high winds or just rots away after a few years [unless the termites get there first].

It's really no wonder that, come tornado or hurricane season, houses are literally ripped off of their foundations and tossed into the air. Learn more about American houses and why other countries seem to have home-building down to a science.

In contrast, houses and most buildings in Europe are much sturdier, being built with stone or cinder blocks or brick for the whole wall and inside walls. This is true for new houses and apartment blocks as well as old buildings.

This is the reason we see buildings many hundreds of years old still standing in good shape. In the United States, a 50-year-old house is considered old and is torn down to make room for another flimsy yet expensive structure.

American houses sometimes do have the appearance of having brick walls; however, these are usually just stuck onto the outside of the plywood walls giving a false sense of quality and strength. It is understandable that using flimsy wood is cheaper than using stone or concrete, but this is not really evident by the prices of houses.

The American mindset of bulldozing the old and building something new instead every few decades keeps us from having a sense of history, at least where architecture and physical structures are concerned.


And that is from an American website :LOL:

Jay.
 
Here you go Michael, it's all in here.

One striking aspect of houses in America is the flimsy quality of even the most expensive ones. Houses are built literally like a house of cards. Weak beams, plywood, flimsy insulation, flimsy siding, and roofing that either blows off in high winds or just rots away after a few years [unless the termites get there first].

It's really no wonder that, come tornado or hurricane season, houses are literally ripped off of their foundations and tossed into the air. Learn more about American houses and why other countries seem to have home-building down to a science.

In contrast, houses and most buildings in Europe are much sturdier, being built with stone or cinder blocks or brick for the whole wall and inside walls. This is true for new houses and apartment blocks as well as old buildings.

This is the reason we see buildings many hundreds of years old still standing in good shape. In the United States, a 50-year-old house is considered old and is torn down to make room for another flimsy yet expensive structure.

American houses sometimes do have the appearance of having brick walls; however, these are usually just stuck onto the outside of the plywood walls giving a false sense of quality and strength. It is understandable that using flimsy wood is cheaper than using stone or concrete, but this is not really evident by the prices of houses.

The American mindset of bulldozing the old and building something new instead every few decades keeps us from having a sense of history, at least where architecture and physical structures are concerned.


And that is from an American website :LOL:

Jay.
In under 500 posts,

I will pay more attention next time I am in Europe. Seems like I remember wood houses, but… thay was a long time ago (for me).
 

ThomasS

Part of the Furniture Now
Apr 30, 2024
541
4,851
52
Bayfield, WI
The horrible matchstick construction of most houses here is part of why I bought the one I did. It’s a log cabin of sorts - called cordwood construction. It’s firewood length logs (16 inches) stacked up with cement in between. Very quiet, very sturdy, and very well insulated.
 
Jan 30, 2020
2,317
7,650
New Jersey
I feel like the house thing pretty much comes down to resource availability. Our country is a huge land mass, and we are plentiful in trees and in more modern times, the ability/space to utilize tree farming. If we were a rocky island, I'm sure that would have been a different case.
 
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dd57chevy

Starting to Get Obsessed
Apr 7, 2023
172
529
Iowa
I feel like the house thing pretty much comes down to resource availability. Our country is a huge land mass, and we are plentiful in trees and in more modern times, the ability/space to utilize tree farming. If we were a rocky island, I'm sure that would have been a different case.

Exactly . In Jones county we have a limestone quarry which sourced the material to build many homes in Anamosa (Iowa) , It was even used to construct the Anamosa Penitentiary :1733590424658.png
But , yes , "stick built" homes are the predominate method of construction , though . It really isn't the fault of , I don't know , greedy , corner cutting builders ? . It is dictated by the market . Many factors go into the equation .
 
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MisterBadger

Part of the Furniture Now
Oct 6, 2024
618
4,528
Ludlow, UK
In under 500 posts,

I will pay more attention next time I am in Europe. Seems like I remember wood houses, but… thay was a long time ago (for me).
Here in Ludlow we have at least 500 timber framed houses, all at least 3 centuries old, built before bricks caught on again more than a millennium after the Roman building industry collapsed with the end of the Empire in the West. And there are also a few new ones with timber frames, built to look like the old ones, but you need to be rich to afford that kind of house here, unless you build it yourself. But building standards for new housing in the UK, are crap. I wouldn't want to live in one built in the last 100 years or so - apart from one of those new oak-framed jobs I mentioned (but buying one of those won't leave you much change of a million quid here).
 

MisterBadger

Part of the Furniture Now
Oct 6, 2024
618
4,528
Ludlow, UK
Likewise. Built cheap and built quick.

I bought a brick built house in Great Cornard in 1989 that was a mere 2 years old. Freezing cold, draughty, thin walls and ill fitting doors & windows. I couldn't wait to sell it.

Jay.
I remember them going up. I had friends on a farm in Little Cornard. They swore they'd sell up and move when those horrible boxes started appearing over Prospect Hill. And they did. I don't care to go back that way again, and look. The old farmouse is now probably part of an extension to that housing estate. And that, dear Americans, is another stupid thing about this country that you missed so far - we build crappy little houses all over perfectly good, food-producing farmland.
 
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dd57chevy

Starting to Get Obsessed
Apr 7, 2023
172
529
Iowa
Here in Ludlow we have at least 500 timber framed houses, all at least 3 centuries old, built before bricks caught on again more than a millennium after the Roman building industry collapsed with the end of the Empire in the West. And there are also a few new ones with timber frames, built to look like the old ones, but you need to be rich to afford that kind of house here, unless you build it yourself. But building standards for new housing in the UK, are crap. I wouldn't want to live in one built in the last 100 years or so - apart from one of those new oak-framed jobs I mentioned (but buying one of those won't leave you much change of a million quid here).
I'm not sure if they're built anymore , but don't you have a good number of older row houses ?
1733597288114.png
 
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Steddy

Lifer
Sep 18, 2021
1,409
24,124
Western North Carolina
...to the dismay of the other Americans. What do you do with them?
I use one to rapidly heat water for washing and RINSING my dishes. The hot water takes a looong time to get to my kitchen faucet. We have a well and I don’t like wasting water if I can help it.
I’ll tell you what I don’t use it for, making hot crap flavored water, I believe some call it tea.
 

MisterBadger

Part of the Furniture Now
Oct 6, 2024
618
4,528
Ludlow, UK
I'm not sure if they're built anymore , but don't you have a good number of older row houses ?
We do. Mostly in a medieval walled town like Ludlow, houses were independently built abutting one another to save space, but we also have a couple of 19thC purpose-built terraces (but built on the site of medieval ones). Rapidly-expanded industrial towns have a lot, mostly from the Victorian period, to accommodate large numbers of workers near centres of production. The first house Mrs B. and I bought, was one of those. There, you really need to get on with your neighbours. Now everyone who can afford it wants defensible space around them. Some more modern social housing is in terraces but it's quite rare these days.
 

Steddy

Lifer
Sep 18, 2021
1,409
24,124
Western North Carolina
That's what I love about this Forum. We can knock seven bells out of each other yet still enjoy a beer and a bowl together afterwards puffy

Jay.
Agreed. I would much rather knock your balls or bells in person. An online forum is no substitute for face to face ball breaking. A privilege and great fun amongst friends.
Bell knocking, I mean ball breaking, is not everyone’s cup of tea, I mean cup of coffee.
Damn this thread. It’s affected my Merican speech.
 
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