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Post by socksmom on Jul 15, 2011 8:59:42 GMT -5
I would like to know the artist and the name of the painting on the wall of the cabin by the lake in John boys room. thanks so much!
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Post by Deleted on Jul 15, 2011 13:55:23 GMT -5
and I would like to know if Woodpeckers get headaches from pecking wood.
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Post by Honeybee on Jul 15, 2011 22:50:30 GMT -5
@ Batty, LOL. your so funny. socksmom I'm not sure. Maybe other Waltons fans might known.
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Post by Marilyn on Jul 17, 2011 14:06:33 GMT -5
I'd like to know about that painting as well!
Per the woodpeckers: Pileated woodpeckers, the largest woodpeckers in North America, hammer their heads into trees with a force of 15 mph, 20 times a second. So how do their heads not turn to mush?
Thick muscles, sponge-like bones, and a third eyelid keep bird brains intact.
"If you get hit hard in the head, you can break blood vessels behind the eye or traumatize nerves behind eye," said University of California Davis ophthalmologist Ivan Schwab. "Seeing patients in car accidents and knowing what woodpeckers do made me wonder why these injuries don't happen in woodpeckers."
Last fall, Schwab was honored with an Ig Nobel award, the irreverent version of the Nobel Prize, for his research on how woodpeckers avoid headaches, published in the British Journal of Ophthalmology.
Headache cure Along with their straight-as-an-arrow strikes at the tree, which safeguards against head trauma, birds' bodies are designed to absorb the impact.
One millisecond before a strike comes across the bill, dense muscles in the neck contract, and the bird closes its thick inner eyelid. Some of the force radiates down the neck muscles and protects the skull from a full blow. A compressible bone in the skull offers cushion, too.
Meanwhile, the bird's closed eyelid shields the eye from any pieces of wood bouncing off the tree and holds the eyeball in place. Advertise | AdChoices
"The eyelid acts like a seat belt and keeps the eye from literally popping out of the head," Schwab told LiveScience. "Otherwise, acceleration would tear the retina."
The outside portion of the eye itself is firm, filled with blood to support the retina from being jostled around.
Not tonight ... Bird brains also remain rigid during head banging. Injuries to the human head make our brains bounce back and forth in the cerebral spinal fluid, bathing the organ. But woodpeckers have virtually none of this fluid.
While scientists can't be certain that woodpeckers don't get headaches, Schwab pointed out that the birds are at least very tolerant of headaches.
"During courtship, male woodpeckers will drum up to 12,000 times a day," he said. "If they were to say to their mates, 'Not tonight, honey, I've got a headache,' woodpeckers wouldn't advance."
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Post by Deleted on Jul 18, 2011 11:06:41 GMT -5
Thanks for the headache info
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Post by Marilyn on Jul 18, 2011 21:47:03 GMT -5
Now you guys find out the name of that painting and artist....
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Post by Deleted on Jul 19, 2011 9:45:12 GMT -5
Sure, sure, you take the easy question.
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Post by Marilyn on Jul 19, 2011 12:17:42 GMT -5
Well YAH! ;D
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Post by Deleted on Jul 19, 2011 13:58:37 GMT -5
I am not sure I know what picture we are talking about. I will have to put the DVD in and take a look.
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Post by Marilyn on Jul 19, 2011 14:26:13 GMT -5
A year or two ago I was noticing that picture and am thinking it was a wildlife pic with geese flying? Maybe...
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Post by Deleted on Jul 21, 2011 19:52:50 GMT -5
are we talking about the painting that is in the opening credits in season one?
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Post by socksmom on Jul 21, 2011 20:07:32 GMT -5
it is the one above his nightstand between the door and the bed, it is a cabin in the woods by a lake and a waterfall in the background. very beautiful!
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Post by Deleted on Jul 22, 2011 9:56:22 GMT -5
Which episode gives the best view of the painting?
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Post by Marilyn on Jul 23, 2011 13:50:09 GMT -5
Now I have to pay more attention when I watch the episodes with his room... I was thinking of the frame pic on the other wall.
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Post by kimmy77 on Jul 24, 2011 13:44:00 GMT -5
Hello, I'm new here but a long time fan of The Waltons. I was looking around and saw your question and just had to join to let you know that my Grandmother has that same print hanging in her house. I am in VA and she is in WV so I will call and find out if a name is on it and I will let you know soon.
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