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History Traveler
History Traveler
1 y

Roaming Historical East Sussex on the 1066 Country Walk
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Roaming Historical East Sussex on the 1066 Country Walk

The ruinous, medieval fortifications clambered out from the marshland ahead of me, heralding the endearing, designated ‘Ancient Town’ to come. Winchelsea is one of the highlights of the 1066 Country Walk, which threads 31 miles along rolling Wealden hills between the coastal towns of Pevensey and Rye, via Battle and its Great Wood. Relaunched in 2021, the trail commemorates East Sussex‘s association with the Norman conquest. The path is waymarked by 10 sculptures created by local artist Keith Pettit, each inspired by the Bayeux Tapestry. If split into two days of 15 or so miles, the first day sees the walker set off from Pevensey, where William’s Norman army landed on 27 September 1066, and head to Battle, where the Battle of Hastings took place on 14 October 1066. The Normans occupied the castle at Pevensey in 1066, which was once a Roman fortress and whose surviving, impressively robust curtain wall is originally Roman. The 1066 Country Walk picks up across the road where a shady corridor opens onto the Pevensey Levels. This Site of Special Scientific Interest is traversed with a steady plod over flat paths intersecting wetland meadows. The path ascends into the woody and gently rolling hills of the High Weald and soon passes directly in view of the 15th century, brick-built Herstmonceux Castle. A few hours after setting off, I set myself down on a bench atop Tent Hill, a rise in the former medieval deer park of Ashburnham Estate. The Ashburnham family established themselves on this land a few decades after the Norman conquest, and the grounds of the grand Ashburnham Place were designed by Lancelot ‘Capability’ Brown in 1767. More tantalising is the suggestion that the English or Norman armies may have pitched up here, with views stretching to the South Downs, on the eve of the Battle of Hastings. A few more miles took me alongside Senlac Hill, the generally accepted site of the Battle of Hastings. Battle Abbey was built on its summit on the orders of King William to mark the battle and perhaps compensate, spiritually-speaking, for all the killing it involved. Battle offers plenty of rooms in hotels, inns and private apartments if prepared in advance. In warmer months, there are also campsites a taxi journey away. Battle Great Wood; Farbanks HengeImage Credit: Kyle Hoekstra On the other hand, perhaps a more authentic means of bedding down on the route is to pitch surreptitiously beneath the conifers of Battle Great Wood, an old woodland criss-crossed by wide, muddy tracks. The early medieval English made use of the woods for charcoal and the iron industry. As the last light was split by pines, I claimed a well-drained patch between their roots onto which I unfurled a pocket-sized tent, stretched out and lit my stove. The following morning I wriggled from my sleeping bag to a quiet dawn chorus. Overnight rain had made gummy bog of the morning’s tracks which headed south and east towards Rye. At one moment, I had to remove my bag to crawl beneath a tree that had been wrenched over a walkway. When I was far from woods and marshland, I made coffee and porridge in a field beside a big oak. A regular sight along the 1066 Country Walk are converted oast houses, elsewhere called hop kilns. These singular, cowled buildings, where hops were dried and stored for brewing, allude to the centuries of rural hop-growing which preceded 20th century industrialisation. The walk soon broke onto open pasture and delivered me to a sculpture known as Farbanks Henge, a circle of oak monoliths inspired by trees on the Bayeux Tapestry. Here I met Peter, a local of Battle, and walked with him on the subsequent miles of country lanes and meadows through Icklesham to Winchelsea. As we approached Winchelsea, he pointed out the isolated ruins of a gatehouse. I was already attuned to the town’s intriguing past. Over the past day I’d listened to Alex Prestons’ 2022 novel Winchelsea, which depicts the smuggling operations which ran rife in the area in the 18th century. The town was an important node in cross-Channel trade and became affiliated with the confederation of ‘Cinque Ports’. The present town was assembled on a grid in 1288, after ‘Old’ Winchelsea was abandoned to the sea – its name plausibly deriving from language for the marshland (‘qwent’) and the beach (‘chesil’). Rye, East Sussex, EnglandImage Credit: Shutterstock I watched Peter walk eastwards for Rye, which sits on a ridge above the intervening marshland. Rye is a substantially larger town with impressive historic remains. Its photogenic streets climb from venerable inns towards the Citadel, which contains St Mary’s Church, whose origins are Norman, and Ypres Tower, built to protect Rye and its harbour from later French raiders. I chose to wait in Winchelsea a little longer. I ate lunch while looking over its striking, half-ruined church and contemplating the extensive wine cellars which run under the town. The sun was still high, and on Winchelsea’s Beacon Hill I dropped my bag by the remains of a mill destroyed by the Great Storm of 1987, which was once also the site of a Saxon church. I looked over the way I had come, at how the Weald comes to kneel at the sea. Then I lay with my back on the old mill stone, my mind alive to the tales I had gathered over the past two days.
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Hot Air Feed
Hot Air Feed
1 y

Why are Air Marshalls Too Busy to Track Illegal Migrants?
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hotair.com

Why are Air Marshalls Too Busy to Track Illegal Migrants?

Why are Air Marshalls Too Busy to Track Illegal Migrants?
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
1 y

“Robodoctor” Finger Can Check Your Pulse And Feel For Lumps – No Human Needed
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“Robodoctor” Finger Can Check Your Pulse And Feel For Lumps – No Human Needed

Unlike existing devices, this new robotic finger is sensitive enough to "feel" for lumps and can even take a pulse.
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
1 y

Conspiracy Theorists Think They've Found A Gigantic "Doorway" In Antarctica On Google Maps
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Conspiracy Theorists Think They've Found A Gigantic "Doorway" In Antarctica On Google Maps

Maybe it leads to that "pyramid" they found in 2016.
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
1 y

Laschamp Event: Listen To The Eerie "Sound" Of Earth's Magnetic Fields Flipping
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Laschamp Event: Listen To The Eerie "Sound" Of Earth's Magnetic Fields Flipping

The event lasted around 440 years.
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
1 y

Traces Of The Milky Way’s Original Disk Show Our Galaxy Is Unexpectedly Ancient
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Traces Of The Milky Way’s Original Disk Show Our Galaxy Is Unexpectedly Ancient

Named PanGu after the Chinese god who created heaven, this disk was the seed around which our galaxy grew.
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
1 y

Why Your Batteries Die (Even The Rechargeable Ones)
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Why Your Batteries Die (Even The Rechargeable Ones)

And what to do once they're gone for good.
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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
1 y

‘The hand of God was over Tampa’: The legacy of Lieutenant Dan
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‘The hand of God was over Tampa’: The legacy of Lieutenant Dan

Florida man Joe Malinowski, known as “Lieutenant Dan,” became a social media sensation overnight for his decision to ride out Hurricane Milton on his 22-foot sailboat despite warnings for all residents of Tampa to evacuate. While the mayor had threatened to arrest Malinowski, he rode out the storm in his boat — just as he did during Hurricane Helene — and he's now become a symbol of defiance. “We have tried so many times with that individual to get him off of that boat, and the officers will eventually just take him into custody, and for his own good, because he’s not to survive in a sailboat in the bay with anywhere from eight to 12 feet of storm surge,” the mayor said. The mayor had also stated in a previous interview that anyone who stays would die, which turned out not to be the case. The man remained defiant despite threats and told cameras “that the safest place to be is on a boat in a flood,” while rolling his eyes. “We learned that with Noah. Everybody that stayed on land drowned. Noah and the animals live,” he added. Malinowski, who is missing his lower left leg, live-streamed his experience and insisted that he had no issues during the storm. As the sun rose over Tampa, he celebrated his survival, stating that “The hand of God was over Tampa.” Pat Gray of “Pat Gray Unleashed” never saw an issue with Lieutenant Dan’s refusal to leave. “It’s his choice. He’s an adult. He’s an American,” Gray says. Want more from Pat Gray?To enjoy more of Pat's biting analysis and signature wit as he restores common sense to a senseless world, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution, and live the American dream.
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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
1 y

Trump says Joe Rogan interview will happen: 'I'm doing it'
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Trump says Joe Rogan interview will happen: 'I'm doing it'

President Donald Trump suggested on the Monday episode of the "Full Send Podcast" that he would soon appear on "The Joe Rogan Experience" to speak with the titular host. While the Republican has appeared on a number of popular podcasts in recent weeks, a sit-down with Rogan would undoubtedly help maximize his reach. Rogan's show is in the top three podcasts on Spotify, which is the top U.S. podcast network, and Rogan's show boasts over 17.4 million subscribers on YouTube. "Full Send Podcast" host Kyle Forgeard said to Trump, "You're doing a lot of podcasts recently. One that I would love to see you on is — I think Joe Rogan has to have you on." Forgeard then asked, "Would you do that?" "Oh, sure I would," said Trump. "I mean I think I'm doing it, actually." Forgeard pressed the Republican for clarification, "So you are going to do Joe Rogan?" "Yeah, I am," said Trump. After Forgeard suggested that Rogan's massive popularity is the result, in part, of his illumination of corruption during the pandemic, Trump noted that Rogan is a "good guy" with a "good voice." The Daily Beast indicated that neither the Trump campaign nor a Rogan representative responded immediately to its requests for comment. While there has not been an official response from Rogan or his team, the Joe Rogan Podcast account posed the question Saturday, "Do you want to see @realDonaldTrump on the podcast?" At the time of publication, the post had received over 480,000 likes and the comments were overwhelmingly supportive. Days prior to the poll, Elon Musk said definitively, "It will happen." The Joe Rogan Podcast X account subsequently shared an article referring to Trump's possible appearance on the show. Rogan has long downplayed the possibility of having President Donald Trump on his podcast. He told Lex Fridman in July 2022, for instance, "I'm not a Trump supporter in any way, shape, or form. I've had the opportunity to have him on my show more than once; I've said no every time." 'It would be interesting to hear his perspective on a lot of things.' "I think you'll have him on," responded Fridman, citing Kanye West as an example of a guest Rogan had a good conversation with despite possible earlier skepticism. Rogan said, "Yeah, but Kanye's an artist. Kanye doing well or not doing well doesn't change the course of our country." Rogan, who supported Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) in 2020 and signaled he would back Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis (R) were he to go the distance in 2024, has sporadically defended Trump in the time since while also softening his position about not doing an interview. Patrick Bet-David pressed the issue last year, asking if it might happen. Rogan told the entrepreneur, "Maybe. Maybe." "It would be interesting to hear his perspective on a lot of things," Rogan told Bet-David. "I would like to know: What is it like when you actually get into office? I would like to know things like what is like versus perception. What is it actually like when you get in that building? ... When do you know that people are f***ing with you? When do you know that the intelligence agency's lying to you?" In a September interview with Fridman, Trump indicated that he was unaware there was "any tension" between Rogan and himself, noting, "I've always liked him, but I don't know him." "I only see him when I walk into the arena with Dana [White], and I shake his hand," said Trump. "I see him there, and I think he's good at what he does, but I don't know about doing his podcast. I guess I'd do it, but I haven't been asked, and I'm not asking them. I'm not asking anybody." Trump characterized Rogan as a "liberal guy, I guess," but alluded to possible common ground. "He likes [Robert F.] Kennedy," said Trump. "Bobby's going to be great. But I like that he likes Kennedy." Robert F. Kennedy Jr. endorsed Trump on Aug. 23, indicating that in a second Trump administration, he would have the opportunity to help "Make America Healthy Again." Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
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The Blaze Media Feed
The Blaze Media Feed
1 y

Violent felon accused of fatally shooting off-duty corrections officer who intervened after suspect allegedly beat female
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Violent felon accused of fatally shooting off-duty corrections officer who intervened after suspect allegedly beat female

A felon with a violent criminal history is accused of fatally shooting an off-duty corrections officer who intervened when the suspect allegedly was beating a woman at a Florida truck stop early Saturday morning.The U.S. Marshals Fugitive Task Force arrested 29-year-old Demaurea Grant at 7:30 a.m. Sunday at a home in Gastonia, North Carolina, and is pending extradition to Jacksonville, the Florida Times-Union reported, citing Jacksonville Sheriff T.K. Waters' announcement during a news conference.Grant is charged with murder, possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, aggravated assault with a firearm, and discharging a firearm in public.Grant is accused of killing Officer Bradley McNew, a sheriff's office corrections officer and 24-year veteran of the department, the Times-Union said.The Jacksonville Sheriff's Office said a male and female were involved in a violent dispute around 1:20 a.m. in the 12900 block of Duval Road. You can view surveillance video of the incident here. The suspect was observed exiting a black Mustang, placing a black handgun on the hood, removing the female from the driver’s seat, and then battering the female, throwing her against the vehicle and the ground.Off-duty Corrections Officer Bradley McNew had just finished his shift, heard the disturbance, and went to check on the female victim, the sheriff's office said. The suspect approached McNew, said it was a family matter, re-engaged with the female, and then pointed the gun in Officer McNew’s direction, the sheriff's office said.The suspect and female returned to the vehicle, and as they were leaving the scene, the suspect was observed hanging out of the window, firing the handgun, and striking Officer McNew, the sheriff's office said, adding that he was taken to a hospital where he died. The Times-Union said McNew was in plain clothes at the time.The sheriff's office noted that the Mustang had a North Carolina license plate of RHL-4285. Sheriff Waters said the U.S. Marshals took Grant ― a felon with a violent criminal history ― into custody without incident, the Times-Union said, adding that tips from citizens as well as the investigation by detectives from the Sheriff's Office, the Marshals Service Fugitive Task Force, and the State Attorney's Office led to his arrest.Grant is charged with murder, possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, aggravated assault with a firearm, and discharging a firearm in public, Waters said, according to the paper.The sheriff added that a female who was with Grant was taken into custody on an unrelated warrant regarding a North Carolina crime, the Times-Union said, adding that the sheriff's office didn't release her name or say what her relationship, if any, might be to Grant.Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
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