No Such Thing As A Fish - No Such Thing As A Dragonfish At The Opticians
Episode Date: October 24, 2024Live from the Cardiff Dan, James, Anna and Andy discuss wax, water, Persians and perverts. Visit nosuchthingasafish.com for news about live shows, merchandise and more episodes. Join Club Fish fo...r ad-free episodes and exclusive bonus content at apple.co/nosuchthingasafish or nosuchthingasafish.com/patreon
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Hello and welcome to another episode of No Such Thing as a Fish, a weekly podcast.
This week coming to you live from Cardiff.
My name is Dan Schreiber.
I am sitting here with Anna Tashinsky, Andrew Hunter Murray, and James Harkin.
And once again, we have gathered round the microphones with our four favorite facts from the last seven days.
And in no particular order, here we go.
Starting with fact number one, that is Andy.
My fact is that the Glasgow tree hugging competition
contains three rounds,
speed hugging, dedicated hugging,
and freestyle hugging.
Oh, wow.
Yeah. Freestyle.
What is freestyle? It still has to be a tree, does it?
It all has to be a tree, but freestyle is by a long way the most erotic.
Well, I think we're witnessing freestyle in the background here.
There's an image that we put up on the screens at our live show.
The person up there is Hannah Willow, who is the winner of this year's award.
Hannah Willow?
Yeah.
Did she marry the tree that she hugged?
It looks like it.
They should be married, considering...
Oh, really?
Considering the post they've been striking up here.
I was going to say, Andy, for some of us, an erotic hug is also the speed hug.
You have to hug as many trees as possible in one minute.
Is it?
It's both speedy.
Do you know the number?
I actually don't know what Hannah scored on the first.
but the hugs have to last five seconds each, so it's just...
Do you know what the world record for most trees hugged in an hour is?
No.
Ooh.
Can you have a guess?
What country?
Ghana.
How will... Sorry, Dan.
And how are you factoring that into your matrix of calculations?
So, Ghana, dense forest, trees are close to each other.
Great point, but equatorial saps the energy.
Damn!
I think in Ghana, you probably know this, Dan,
but they've done a lot of tree planting in recent years.
so they got quite a lot of smaller trees.
Oh.
But that's good.
That means you can get between them faster.
Exactly.
I think that's what Dan's asking.
Okay.
Yeah.
Okay.
How many seconds are there in an hour,
there are about 3,600?
I'll say 3,600.
One per second.
One per second.
You have to, someone's not bringing the tree to you
so you can hug it.
You have to go from one tree to another.
Are you allowed to hug the same?
Can you just go from one tree and back again and again and again?
Or just have to be a different tree each time.
Every tree different.
Every tree do?
What if you hug so many and no more trees left in Ghana?
The number is lower than the Teltan number of trees in Ghana.
Okay, but the giveaway.
Does the five-second rule apply to each hug?
No, it doesn't.
Sorry, what's that?
You can still eat it as long as you have to drop the tree for longer than five seconds.
If a tree falls over in the forest,
but no one notices and you quickly put it on your plate, it's fine.
No, in this tree-hugging, you need to hug for five seconds per tree.
Okay, so I'm going to say 400.
400? Any advance?
I think about a grand, about 1,000.
About 1,000.
Anna is correct.
Almost.
It's 1,123, which is on average one every 3.2 seconds.
Wow.
Decent.
That's pretty good.
That's pretty good.
Abu Bakar Tahiru did it this year.
Nice.
But Hannah Willow previously mentioned, I think where she excelled in these three elements
you mentioned, Andy, is the dedication.
And that is where you showed devotion, passion, and loyalty.
So that's where she won the competition.
And that's a single tree, isn't it?
Yes, that's a single tree.
It's interesting.
I think freestyle, that round, is also a single tree.
So you have to show something other than an embrace.
It's not actually a hug at all.
It's you might play at a song.
You might...
She did a dance.
That was her big thing.
Yeah, she didn't know that that was required of her,
so she just had to improvise a dance.
But she is someone who goes out and does forest bathing.
She spends a lot of time getting in touch with nature.
Can we talk about what forest bathing is?
I read that as well, and I like to know.
Well, it's when you go out to the forest and you just bathe, right?
You're like you're, you just take in the smells and the air and the, it's just going out.
It's like a nice walk.
So what I assumed is correct, that it is another way of saying she likes to go for a walk in the woods.
Yeah.
Does she have to take a clothes off, like a bath?
No.
You don't have to take your clothes off in the bath, fun fact.
I don't.
You never take your socks off at any sense.
Absolutely not.
Even the erotic freestyle.
It makes it more erotic if the socks are still on.
It's really cool.
So she's a mum of three and she was asked,
are they excited that mum is the tree-hugging champion?
And she said, no, they were hugely embarrassed to find out
I was tree-hugging champion.
Yeah, I've slightly ruined their street cred, is what she said.
But she's going to ruin it even more
because it's not just about winning the Glasgow
Treyhugging competition.
She now, by winning that qualifies,
to represent Glasgow in the international tree-hugging competition that happens in Finland.
It's like a giant global competition where all our best huggers go and meet in Finland for an ultimate hug off.
That's going to be tough for the favourites from Ghana, isn't it, going all the way up to Finland and that cold weather.
Yes.
It's going to be really tough.
And the taller trees, they won't know what to do, right?
Yeah.
I assume you only hug the bottom of the trees, right?
Yeah, there's no rule about whether you have to hug base or tip.
It's just not...
Grow up, God, dear.
But, no, it is...
It's quite fun.
I mean, I was quite skeptical about it, I think,
it's a bit silly, but the Finnish one,
which is in a place called Halibu, I think.
It was designed this competition by the family of a lumberjack
who realized he'd been growing all these trees,
and he loved them too much to cut them down.
And he was like a shepherd who just can't bear going to the abattoir.
So he and his family thought of this program
program where people adopt trees and they've been trying to...
Is that not just a lazy lumberjack?
Well...
He says, oh yeah, sorry, I didn't chop any down today because I love them too much.
You're right, letting someone hug your trees is much skin off your nose, is it?
This has become a big thing since COVID.
And I remember when we were playing on a previous tour, we were playing Richmond in London,
and I went to Q Gardens beforehand.
And I saw a lady go up and give a massive hug to a tree.
And it looks so nice.
it looks so, because we'd all been stuck
in which she was allowed to connect back with nature
again. And I just, it was a bit
pervy, I just watched them hug for ages.
What were you doing while you were watching? Because if it was just watching,
I think it's fine. I think the rule is if you're in a bush
it's not alright. If you're just in the open,
it's fine. Unless you're hugging the bush.
You might be bush bathing. That's the thing, though.
Yeah. I was just watching. I didn't, yeah, I just watched.
There is evidence that if
I just watched. Don't keep saying it.
But I only watched.
There is evidence that you can lower your blood pressure by touching wood.
Andy said grow up, guys. Come on.
And different types of wood, depending on the texture of the wood, it can have a different effect.
So not the splintery ones.
Not the splintery ones.
Is that in the form of a tree, or is it just any wood?
It actually works with any wood.
Really?
Yeah, they did it where they compared people putting their hand on plastic, on metal,
and then on wood, and their blood pressure went down.
Really?
Oh, well, I hugged a tree in preparation for this fact.
Did you? Yeah.
Your research is always below par, Dan, but this is reaching you depth.
No, but it is really nice.
I've got to say, it was a genuinely nice experience,
and a lot of people have been getting back in contact
with nature in that kind of way.
Again, since the pandemic, and there's been reports all over the world.
So in New Zealand, there's great trees that the curators keep busting people hugging.
He's like, I kind of get it, though.
Like, this tree has ribbons of flaky brown bark,
almost begs to be peeled like a banana.
And he talks about great trees to hug,
like the long leaf pine, the spongy bark that it has.
It practically hugs back, you know.
I can see, I can, but I did only watch.
And what kind of tree did you hug?
It's a tree that's in my garden.
Did you even find out its name?
Okay, this is a bit embarrassing,
because there's five trees.
We named them after each member of our family,
so I hugged Daddy.
I don't want to rain on this tree-hugging parade,
but something smells bad about it.
And it's this.
So it's organized the Glasgow tree-hugging competition by Vicky Dale.
The children's prize was won by Lottie, who is Dale's daughter.
And the children's speed-hugging race won by Freddie Dale's son.
Oh, dear.
What's going on there, guys?
only 15 entrants in this whole contest, by the way, which the Guardian write-up of Hannah Willow
winning was saying, Willow has savoured the rush of victory before, but only on a minor scale.
How major is this 15-enchant competition?
She's super cool, though, by the way. I've gone onto her Instagram, because I was trying to get
in contact with her to ask her questions for this.
Would you be willing for me to watch out of the open?
You're sincerely a daddy.
Well, look, while we're on that subject, there is a thing called, what is it,
dendrophilia, which is basically the sexualization of trees.
I mean, that is a real thing.
I saw a news article of a man in Wiltshire in 2023 who was arrested after apparently having sex with a tree.
So said the headline.
One witness said, I was just walking in the park with one of my mates, and we saw a man hugging
a tree and thought it was interesting.
We walked closer, and as we did, we saw his transfer.
trousers down and thought, this is pure gold.
After I stopped recording,
the police turned up and arrested him.
Wow.
Good grief.
Celebrity tree huggers?
Oh yeah.
So Prince Charles, as we know.
Yeah, he talks to them.
Yeah, King Charles, I know.
He claims he shakes hands with every tree he's planted and wishes them well.
What is a tree's house?
Well, a leaf.
A branch?
I would say a leaf is a finger, yeah, a branch is an arm.
No, he tends to do leaves.
So it's usually at tree planting ceremonies,
and he'll shake a leaf and say,
have a good time and walk off.
But you have to shake so many leaves.
You don't want to do it like a full hug for everyone.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Novak Djokovic.
Again, not that surprising.
Tree hugger.
And when he does the Australian Open,
he goes to the Melbourne Botanical Gardens
and he gets some tree-hugging time in.
Does he?
Does he?
Is that because he kisses the grass as well?
doesn't he? Oh no, he tastes the grass at Wimbledon.
He eats.
He eats it. Yeah. Must be related.
Tree huggers used to be squirrel killers.
I was looking for the first references to tree hugger.
And a lot of people say that it came from the 70s, but the OED says, first reference
to someone being a tree hugger in a hippie, please stop building this motorway here because
it involves felling trees way. It's 1965.
And so there are a few people in Appleton, fittingly, with something.
Wisconsin, who are named that, because Apple is a kind of tree.
But at the same time, in 1965, in Indiana, they were using tree hugger to describe squirrel hunters.
And it was because they basically hide behind a tree that's thicker than them, a tree whose
girth is larger than them, watching squirrels, and then dart to another tree and hug that tree,
and then eventually kill a squirrel.
Although it does say that all treehuggers are possessed with a love of the outdoors, and actually
catching a squirrel isn't an ironclad must.
any more than it is for a fisherman to catch a fish,
which means I've fully misunderstood fishing as well.
That first citation in the OED from 1965,
it was in South Shore, Chicago.
They were building a new road through a load of parks,
and they had to chop down some trees,
and all of these conservationists sort of hugged the trees
and tried to stop them from doing it.
And it turns out that one of the protesters was called Bernard Baum.
And Baum is German for trees.
Yes.
Come on.
That's very good.
We're going to have to move on in a set, guys.
Oh, can I tell you another sort of competition-related fact that has something to do with trees?
It's about the World Conquer Championships.
Have you guys read this?
Breaking news?
Literally breaking.
It's literally happening right now before our very eyes.
The investigation is going on.
Just happened in Northamptonshire and allegations of cheating.
And it's very serious.
There's this guy called David Jenkins.
He's 82.
He's been competing since 1977.
Every year goes to the...
the World Conquer Championships.
He won this time,
and now there are allegations he used as Steel Conquer.
Wow.
And it was the first time he won, maybe?
Yeah, yeah, it was the first time he's won, yeah.
He's the chief judge.
This goes all the way to the top.
Yeah.
It's like the Dale's all over.
Absolutely.
He's got a painted, he had a painted nut,
which he said was just for humour value.
What's the humor value in?
It's a bit, if you play Conquers, I guess it's funny.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I guess.
But it turns out he was concealing steel.
Well, did he use the steel nut to smash his opponents' conkers to pieces?
Because a couple of the opponents said,
my conquer just exploded when he tapped it for the first time.
And yeah, this is a huge.
And we just want to say, for the lawyers,
nothing's been proven either way yet.
It's all still underway.
And he was actually defeated in the final.
It seems like they must be gender divided until the end
because he won the men section,
but then he was defeated by Kelsey Banjbuck from Indianapolis,
who came all the way to North Aptonshire
to defeat him in the final.
Wow.
First American to win.
And what was she using, like, a platinum covered...
Just put the conquer in a shotgun.
Can I tell you one more competition?
Yeah, go for it.
This was in 2002 in Australia.
They had a sheep counting competition.
Oh, yeah.
Like, there were ten competitors.
They ran 400 sheep past them.
Four hundred.
No, they didn't.
Tell them they were 400.
But you had to count them as they ran past you.
There was an indeterminate number of sheep running past you,
and you had to count them.
I would count the legs and divide by four.
Show off.
And is it the idea,
whoever's awake at the end is the winner?
Yeah, that's it.
Okay, it is time for us to move on to fact number two,
and that is Anna.
My fact this week is that the wax coating
on 6,400 shop-bought apples
is enough to make one tea light.
Wow.
Yes, apples, tomatoes, lemons, peppers you get in chops.
It's all covered in wax,
but it's a very tiny layer.
There's lots of rumours that it can give you,
you know, cancer and make your head explode and stuff.
So I thought, I wonder how much they're actually putting on.
And I read that one pound of wax will cover 160,000 pieces of fruit.
And one pound of wax also makes, according to various craft sites,
which I spent a long time on.
But I think one pound of wax makes about 25 tea candles.
And so there you go.
6,400 apples.
Melt the wax off.
You've got a tea light.
You're welcome.
And a tea light is one of those little white round ones, is it?
Because I had to look this up, actually.
That is such a man thing to do.
No man listening knows what a tea light is,
and no woman listening doesn't.
And they were invented to make tea with or something.
I read that.
I don't know if this is true because I didn't know what they were.
But apparently, in the Japanese tea ceremony,
you have put them underneath your kettle to keep it warm.
Oh, my God, this is so weird,
because I've got a small kettle at home,
has a tea light underneath it for making the water warm.
And I just thought that was a gimmick that they found to do with the tea light.
But you're telling me that's the original purpose.
Yeah, because it doesn't look like it has enough flame to keep something heated.
Probably just sort of, you know, maintain.
Just a little, a little simmery.
The wax is so weird.
So this happens even more in America than it does in the UK.
Like in America, everything is sold with a thin layer of wax on the top of it, basically.
I think it's pretty much all fruit, like all apples you buy in the shop here.
Yeah, all fruit you buy here will also have a layer of wax on it.
But it's this thing.
called epicticular wax, like cuticles as in skin, and the thing is, apples grow with a thin layer
of wax on them. Oh, yes. Which is then removed during the harvesting process, and they think,
oh no, we lost all the wax that was growing beautifully on the apple anyway. So they put wax from a
different species back on the apple. So I have a tree in my garden. Oh, no, Dan. Leave it alone.
Well, no, I took an apple off the tree and it was very exciting. It was really exciting. It was a
I was like, my God, I've got an apple from my own garden.
And it was so waxy that even when I washed it under the sink,
it just took ages to get off, yeah.
And I stupidly used washing liquid on it at one point to try it off.
But yeah, I felt it literally the other day.
That's cool, because it's quite, usually on fruit, it's quite powdery and unsightly.
You often see it on plums, it's most obvious.
It's like a white powder.
But why did you want to take it off?
It's fine.
What do you mean?
Oh, I thought you meant off the tree to eat it.
I...
No, no, it just felt odd.
It just felt...
But it grows back.
Even if it gets scratched
or removed during the harvesting,
it would grow back naturally.
But during those few days,
the fruit would shrink a little bit
because it's lost a layer of protection
and it would lose a little bit of volume.
Moisture, right?
Moisture.
And so it's worth spraying the wax on
because it keeps the fruit
at exactly the same size
for that little few days in between.
Yeah, right.
It's essential.
Fruit would be shriveled
in the process of making it
through the, you know,
importing it,
getting it into a short process if we didn't have it on.
And for the same reason, they have it on trees.
It's so that nothing can get in, nothing can get out.
But the wax that grows on plants, this is, okay, this is unbelievable.
So it's amazing stuff, epiucicular wax.
It's really cool.
It repels water.
It repels dirt.
That's why plants are clean, despite the fact that, you know, water has all sorts of stuff in it.
The water just rolls off.
The other thing is it makes it hard sometimes.
If the plant wants to protect itself from insects or other pests,
the wax itself makes it hard for the insect.
to walk on, they fall off
because the wax is kind of like a
travelator or whatever. That's cool. And this is
there's an even more weird
bit to it. There is
co-evolution. So some plants rely
on a single insect to
walk all over them and fertilize the flowers
or whatever it might be.
Some plants have kind of password
protected wax
so only their
chosen insect partner can walk along the leaves and the stems
without falling off. And everything
else falls off. The insect's legs are the password.
Oh, hang on, so does the insect's legs specially designed, they've got little wax
skates on their feet, or does the plant alter when it feels the insect?
Is it like using your fingerprint to open your phone?
Yes. You see? This is why King Charles talks to plants. They're fucking sentient.
Oh no, no, this again. Come on. But it's amazing. I just found that my bed. Yeah.
Wow.
Yeah.
By the way, if they are sentient, Dan, you've got a lot of consent to get.
Operation U-Tree's got nothing on you.
Anyway.
It's a huge industry.
The making wax to preserve food in industry.
And it's actually, it was patented in the 1920s,
and Brogden's original wax and kerosene makers who painted it,
went to the Supreme Court to defend it.
This is how big a deal it is.
And these days, things get dipped in baths of it.
So when you're eating a melon,
it might have had a bath in wax before it came to you.
And it could be made of lots of different types of wax, right?
I think you said kerosene,
so you can get like paraffin wax quite a lot of it is.
And then there's other ones that are less
sound like they've come for the petrochemical industry.
Bees wax, they used to do it in.
Bees wax is every...
You know what, bees get a lot of credit for honey.
but people don't talk about the wax that much.
In the Middle Ages, they went on about it a lot.
Did they?
Oh my God.
They really wanged on about it properly.
I think they were quite right.
Well, because in those days, you had to light your house with candles, right?
Yeah.
And if you were just a normal person, a pleb like me,
then you would get it using tallow.
So you would cook your meat, and then there would be some fat there.
And then a Chandler, a candle maker, would come around to your house
and he'd pick up all of the goo
and he'd turn it into a candle
and you would burn it, but it would stink.
It would really, really stink
and all the houses would smell of burnt rubbish.
But then the church decided,
well, we don't want that.
We want perfect white candles
and we want it not to smell like old garbage.
And so they had to have beeswax.
And the beeswax industry in that time
was off the charts.
They were like wars
because the price of beeswax went too high.
Wow.
And they used it for everything, right?
They used it for lubricant, for waterproofing, for all cosmetics are made of beeswax.
They didn't really have any other materials except beeswax practically.
The other reason it was so good in church is because they thought that bees were virgin born like Jesus.
There was this thing.
And if you own bees and you look in your beehive, they never have sex.
You can sit there watching them as long as you want, Dan.
They will not have sex.
Because they go, they kind of find a little region and they all fly.
all the drones fly to this little region,
and then the queen flies there as well,
and then they have sex in the air while they're flying,
and then they all come back.
So no one ever saw them have sex,
so they thought they were virgins.
But that's the same as humans.
I never see humans of sex,
because very similarly, they go to a special place
where I'm not allowed, and they have sex there.
I don't assume everyone's a virgin
just because I haven't seen any of them shagging.
People were stupid in the middle ages, weren't they?
Wow.
Can I tell you a thing about ancient Roman beeswax?
Oh, yeah.
This is so cool.
Okay, I love this.
So you would have a wax mask made of yourself.
And it was for use in life, but it was also for use at your funeral.
What would you use it for in life?
I'm getting onto that. Jesus.
Sorry, you went straight to death.
Sorry, sorry, sorry.
But it's all connected.
That's the weird thing.
So about the age we all are, about 35 to 40, you would have a wax mask mask made of yourself.
And when you had reached political high office, as the four of us all have, sure, you would
have them in your hall, but you would also have your ancestors wax masks, normally male ones,
but often some female ones too, if you're a very politically connected family. And at a funeral,
you would hire a load of men to wear these masks and pretend to be your male ancestors. And
if it was your funeral, someone will be wearing a mask of you at your funeral, dressed as you,
dressed as the highest office you've achieved. Wow. They would wear like a podcaster, uniform,
or whatever. Is this the highest office work to achieve?
I'm afraid so.
Yeah, they would take the piss out of you a bit as well, wouldn't they?
They would.
I think they would wear this mask and wear your clothes
and then go up to your friends and go,
oh, I'm an idiot.
That's quite nice. Why did we stop doing it?
I don't know.
I think we should bring it back.
The fall of Rome, yet again, screwing everything up.
But the other thing you would have in your front hall,
you would have this wall of faces,
like here are my male ancestors,
you would have a wall of your family tree,
and you would have a wall of military spoils
that your family had seized in battle.
So as someone came into your front hall, they would get the full works of like,
here is, what a great kind of guy I am.
Nice.
Hey, actually, back to candles and sex.
Were we talking about that at all?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Have you guys read about brothel candles?
No.
No, but I think I can guess what they are.
Yeah, so, well, this is interesting.
This is around the 1880s, and it was into the early 1900s.
The idea was that in the brothel itself,
every sex worker there would have a candle that would burn down in seven minutes.
and that's how you knew when the session was over.
That's a lot of pressure, which you don't want, do you?
That's going to ruin it.
I mean, you don't...
I'm not asking you personally, Dan,
and I don't want to know the answer.
You got any seven second candles?
It is time for fact number three, that is James.
Okay, my fact this week is that the first known example of mastitis
was in an empress called a tosser.
She was cured, and the doctor's payment
was to be allowed to invade Greece.
Yeah, so we're talking the Achaemenid Empire,
as I'm sure you all know,
based in Iran in the 5th century BC.
They were the biggest empire in the world at the time,
and then eventually they went on and fought the Greeks.
And if you know that movie, the 300, I think it's called,
It's a documentary, isn't it?
It's a documentary.
Well, it's about 300 Spartans
who fought against all these Persians,
and these are the bad guys in that movie.
Oh, yes.
They get a very, very bad rap.
The Persians in this film,
as in the portray as being really dreadful types.
Well, they were like...
I haven't seen the movie,
but they're like...
They were super soldiers.
Normally when you say,
I haven't seen the movie,
it's because we're talking about quite a good movie,
and you absolutely don't have to watch 300.
That was good to know.
I haven't watched the first 299,
so I wouldn't know what was happening anyway.
So, Atossa, she was the daughter of King Cyrus the Great.
She was the wife of Darius the Great,
and she was the mother of Xerxes the Great.
Okay.
So behind every great man, there was a tosser.
And she was like a lot of what we know about her
was written by Herodotus,
and he basically put her as like the power
behind the throne in all these different situations.
And he was Greek.
And he was Greek, so he was writing about them.
Yeah.
Yeah.
She was also a wife twice, right?
Three, I think.
Okay, but she married a brother at one point, didn't she?
She did marry her brother.
Not her choice.
No.
His choice.
His choice.
It was kind of a done thing at the time,
and her brother was basically trying to get their empire,
and he thought that this,
a bit like the Egyptians would sometimes marry brothers and sisters,
because it would make them a stronger unit.
Although I think it was illegal to do that.
It was until he made it legal.
Yeah, that's a good thing about being king.
And he actually married two of his sisters, didn't he?
He married her and another sister.
And I think he might have married his niece at one point as well.
Wait, was that Cambyses just to be?
Yeah, Cambyces, yeah.
First husband of Atossa.
Yeah, okay.
But you were quite limited,
because if you belong to one of the noble poshous families
or the royal family at that time,
you could only marry someone from the seven,
which is such a cool thing to be a member of
and it was the seven most important families.
So it was a small pool.
I think Snow White had the same issue, don't she?
But then Cambysius, the brother, went away
and their brother, Bardia, usurp the throne.
This is all kind of very, very late gossip of the...
How is it pronounced?
Accombinid.
The Echimid.
Or Persian.
Just called the Persian.
The Persian Empire.
But then the person, Darius the Great,
was the one who became her big deal husband.
And he assassinated Bardia, who was the usurper,
and then to sort of cement his control and power,
he married all Cyrus the Great's female descendants.
Yeah.
As in just he married the whole family.
It was a different time.
It was a different time.
But not so many trees in Persia.
No.
Yeah.
They were brutal though, weren't they, the Persians,
with the torture that they did.
Oh, really?
Well, it's just the exact.
examples are wild. Like, I was reading about, so Cambyses, he had a judge who had done some behind-the-scenes stuff that he was unhappy with. And so he basically had this judge killed and then stripped of his skin and then to remind any next judge not to do all the bad stuff that this guy had done, they laid the strips of his skin over the judge's chair that the next judge had to sit on, right? So the next judge was sitting on the previous judge.
and the next judge was the son of the previous judge.
By the way, it's so weird that the groan came
only when I said the son had to sit on the skin of his father.
Is it possible that this is a load of kind of Greeky propaganda?
Because I think loads of what we know about Persia
comes from historians like Herodotus who were Greek
and had a good reason for...
That is true, for Slackwark.
In fact, Atossa, who is written about
as the most important, powerful member,
female member of the Achaemenid Empire,
also maybe didn't exist.
Maybe.
Wow.
She's the only sources we have are Herodotus,
who famously made up a lot of shit.
I sometimes like to think that Herodotus just made it all up,
and basically everything we know
about Greek and Persian history is just from his head.
But I think it's Herodotus and Eastclos wrote a play
that mentioned her, but so it could be.
Well, we know that Darius existed.
Definitely, and Cyrus the Great.
I think Cyrus existed and Xerxes existed.
100%.
Cyrus the Great was great, by the way.
Oh, yeah.
You know, you read about old kings, emperors, et cetera, and they're all bastards.
Cyrus the Great, he's one of those annoying people.
He's just a good all-round guy.
He's just constantly doing nice stuff.
So he forgave people constantly.
He was very famous for when he invaded somewhere.
He'd instead of killing people or taking them prisoner, he'd draw them into his bureaucracy or into the top of his military.
He was the good.
grandson of this person. What a nice guy.
What, that is nice.
I've taken over your entire country.
I'm going to let you join my side.
It was a different time. It was a different time. It was a different time. It was. That meant
good in those days. He famously captured Babylon. He did it quite cleverly at night.
So he overnight managed to divert the whole River Euphrates into a canal so that his
soldiers could just walk across a riverbed.
And so he arrived in Babylon. Everyone in Babylon woke.
up and gave up. I'm like, oh my God, how did you get here? And he released all the Jews there
had been taken captive there and said, you can go back to Jerusalem, so Jewish people
love him. He defeated his grandpa, who tried to murder him, and immediately forgave him.
Although I think he killed all of his grandpa's kids, because they might be threats. But every good
guy... Does that include his dad?
I don't think it did include his dad, no. He didn't kill his own dad.
You really... The more you talk about the Cyrus guy...
He was the guy who started this army that's in the 300,
and they were known as the Immortals.
And there were 10,000 of them in this army.
And the way that they did it was,
if ever any of them got killed or injured or a bit sick,
or just didn't fancy it,
then they would go off, they would take them off the battlefield
and immediately replace them with someone else.
Right.
So as far as you're concerned, the enemy,
they're always 10,000 of them.
And so you think they are immortal?
Can you just tap out by raising a hand?
I've really had a great time.
I've met a lot of friends, but I'm done.
Is it like NFL?
Is that how they do in NFL?
Oh yeah, bring on the offence.
I think they're all offence in this case.
They wore tiaras.
They were called tiaras, but they were actually felt caps.
And the main thing they used was a spear,
and it was a really long spear,
and they had a counterbalance at the end of the spear,
and the counterbalance would be a different type of.
fruit depending on how good you were.
So the best possible thing
you could have was a little like an apple at the
end of your spear. And then you were part of the
apple regiment. Wow, because that
meant you had to suspend more weight at the front.
Whereas if you had like a watermelon.
Yeah, so the counterbalance was so that you could
have a longer spear and it wouldn't dip down.
But actually, the weight of the thing
would always be the same. It would just be in the shape of an
apple or a banana or a grape or something.
That's nice. I'm trying to think of a really
shit fruit. If you had a raspberry
or something on the end.
They were kind of famously luxury-loving the Persians,
and this, again, is a lot of propaganda that was dished out by the Greeks.
Basically, the Greeks kept saying,
these people wear trousers.
They're just too addicted to luxury.
Genuinely, that was an example that is.
Their kings have parasols.
Embarrassing.
You know, a servant has to shade your king with a little umbrella.
Weak.
So there was a lot of that.
But one of the great things they had in the Persian Empire,
post. So
as I look at this,
it's now less exciting than I think it...
I think it's just really interesting.
They have an amazing postal system.
Sometimes you look down at a note,
the confidence just drains.
Like all the blood drains from the face.
Did they have a morning and afternoon post, Andy?
James, they had so many posts.
They were, honestly, they make the current post office
look absolute dog shit.
They were just...
So, like, a huge empire, so you have to get stuff, you know, like thousands of kilometers.
Basically, all the way to the Balkans, like where Albania is today, all the way to the edge of where Iran is today.
So it's absolutely massive.
Exactly.
And they had this amazing thing called the Royal Road, which was basically only allowed for the use of posties and the army.
And to go all the way from Western Iran to what is now Western Turkey, a place called Sardis, 2.5,000 kilometers.
On foot, it would take three months.
They could get post in a week.
So that genuinely was amazing.
and it was the fastest land travel system in the world at the time
because it relied on very, very fast horse relays.
You would just ride a horse for as long as it could go
and as soon as it stopped, another horseman would take the post.
Yes, and the stations were set up for that, weren't they?
So Cyrus, when he set up the post stations,
worked out exactly how long a horse can go at full speed
before it just collapses, and then where the horse is fainted,
he builds a little post office.
And then he's like, leave the next horse here, a nice guy.
I should just explain the fact.
that he started with.
This doctor who was allowed to invade Greece.
So he was called Demosides
and he'd been previously taken as a slave in a raid
and he'd found himself in this Akimid empire.
And Darius the Great, who was Atos's husband,
he had broken his ankle, right?
He'd fallen off his horse and really actually dislocated his ankle.
And all of his doctors tried to help him
and the way they tried to help him
was basically yanking him,
around and pulling him up and down and hopefully it would get back in place.
And he absolutely hated.
He was unable to sleep.
He was in so much pain.
But he found this guy, Demosides, who had been taken as a slave, and this guy was a doctor.
And Demosides made his leg better.
And to say thank you, he gave him two sets of golden shackles.
So he was basically saying, you're still enslaved, but at least you've got gold now.
Oh, wow.
Anyway, so then Demosides becomes very popular.
A tosser gets his boil on her breast.
We think now it's mastitis because he managed to cure her
and he wouldn't have been able to do any surgery
and she lived to quite a long age,
so we think it probably was mastitis.
He manages to cure her and he says,
I will only cure you if you give me anything in return.
She says, fine.
He says, well, let me go to Greece as part of a raid.
And then when he gets to Greece, he escapes,
because that's where he was from originally when he was enslaved.
So that's kind of the story.
And he goes back to Croton, which is where he was from,
and he marries the daughter of a really famous wrestler called Milo.
And this guy is extraordinary.
Have we spoken about him before?
I don't think so.
I don't think we have.
He was an Olympian.
He won six Olympic events in his time.
And he was just one of those guys who was so big and massive.
He could do Feats of strength that almost seemed impossible.
So he could hold out his arm.
with his fingers outstretched
and challenge people to attempt to bend his little finger.
And they couldn't do it.
They would be trying and be going,
he would stand on a greased iron disc
and challenge people to push him off it.
They never could.
He could hold a pomegranate in one hand
and challenged others to take it from him.
Nobody could.
And despite holding it very tightly,
it was never damaged.
This guy is incredible.
And in his off years,
he were trained by carrying a newborn calf
on his back every day,
until the Olympics took place,
by which time he was carrying a four-year-old cow on his back,
and he would carry it the length of the stadium,
and then kill it, roast it, and eat it
as part of like doing the hacker that the New Zealanders do.
It was like his intimidation process.
What a life for that cow?
What the hell?
Incredible.
Four years on someone's shoulders and then killed.
Yeah, exactly.
You'd think you're like best buddies that suddenly, yeah.
And so then the legend goes that he died
when he tried to show one final bit of feet of strength,
which was he was passing a man who was chopping a tree,
and he said, I will rip this trunk in half with my bare hands,
and the guy said, incredible.
He said, what an honor for you to do that, Milo.
And for some reason, the guy then went off while he did it,
and as he stretched to separate it,
something cracked, and his fingers went in, and he got stuck,
and he just died because the guy didn't come back.
But he did win the tree-hugging contest for three years in a row.
We're going to move on to our final fact of the show, and that is my fact.
My fact this week is that one way to tell how deep you are when scuba diving
is to take a set of snooker balls with you.
Is that because you're at the bottom, if you've done that?
You've sunk to the bottom.
Or is it because you're so fat, once you can't hear the snooker players going,
where you go without balls?
and you know you're in trouble.
No, this is a fascinating thing that I didn't know,
which is that as you go lower into the ocean,
different bits of color disappear.
And so if you had no way of knowing how deep you are,
you can consult your snooker balls,
and if you can see that your red ball is no longer red,
that your yellow ball is no longer yellow,
but your green ball is still green,
then you know that you're roughly where you are in the ocean.
It is genius, I must say.
It is fascinating.
So this is...
It's very inconvenient.
No, no, no, Anna.
Oh, contrary, because I looked and the cheapest depth gauge you can get online is 30 pounds,
but the cheapest set of snooker balls is only 15 pounds.
There you go.
I'll take it back.
What if you drop one and then...
You better hope it's a red one.
But like, how will you know what colour they are?
Because you can still see the colours.
So, okay, so say you're going down, say you're going down, at about 20 feet, red stops being red.
Okay.
So you know all the red balls look gray.
Yeah, exactly.
So you're like, oh, I must be about 20 feet down.
You go down to 50 feet.
Orange disappears altogether.
Oh, I must be at 50 feet.
You keep going down.
Where's yellow gone?
I'm 100 feet deep.
So the more you go down, color starts disappearing.
And it's fascinating.
So, for example, if you were, let's say, 50 feet below the ocean, maybe even 100,
and you cut yourself, you would bleed green blood
because that color would be morphing towards,
so people...
I think it's quite...
I think it's even just 10 metres
because red disappears very fast.
Red is a shit colour.
It's got no energy.
It sees one bit of water
and disappears into it.
And I think on diving websites
it says like early scuba divers
if they cut themselves
can get quite shock
because you're eight metres underwater
and you go,
I'm an alien.
But this is the amazing thing.
This is why
is so many fish red?
Because loads of fish are red.
Yeah.
And they're doing it in the deep sea.
Loads of fish are red
and it's for camouflage.
because you can't see red at that depth.
So they look grey or black,
and all the red light's been absorbed.
They're basically invisible,
but blue is the colour that lasts the longest
and penetrates the best.
So there are very few animals
which have big blue bodies.
The blue whale is basically so confident.
Like, there are no predators.
But in the reefs, you get like blue and yellowfish, don't you?
And the reason is that they want to signal
where they are for sexual reasons
or something like that or scare things away.
And yellow is the complementary color to blue.
So the complementary color to red,
is green, they really contrast against each other.
The complementary colour to blue is yellow,
so that's why you get lots of blue and yellow fish.
But also it means
if there were traffic lights in the
fish world,
there would be no use being red and green
because the red would disappear straight away.
They would have to be blue, which is the thing that
stands out the most. So the
red light would be blue, and
the green light would be the complementary color to that,
which would be yellow.
And if you look at SpongeBob Squarepants,
they get it wrong.
I should quickly say where I got this fact from,
because I was reading a novel when we were on tour.
We were in Dublin, and I bought this book on the way over,
which was Whalefall by Daniel Krause.
It's a science fiction book, so it's all fictional, but this was in it.
And it's the story of a guy who's going scuba diving,
and he's accidentally swallowed by a whale.
And while he's in the whale, he's still got the scuba gear on him,
so he makes it into one of the stomachs,
and he knows he has an hour of oxygen left.
and it's the story of how he attempts to get out of the whale within an hour.
It's one of those books. It's like the Martian.
It's proper science trying to work out how to not be digested in a whale's stomach.
I learned so much despite it being fiction.
I know, for example, if you do get swallowed by a whale and you're in its stomach,
don't try to escape via the anus. Not going to work for you.
You need to go back out the other way.
I'm not going to say whether or not he makes it out, but don't do that.
Does he try the an anus?
He does. His initial thought is, I need to just go all the way out through the end.
And he gets...
This guy sounds like an idiot.
Well, I think when you're inside...
Wait, what's wrong with that?
Well, because you get digested by the digestive juices?
What does he discover as a scientifically incorrect reason?
One thing is that a whale doesn't want to eat you.
It wants you out of it.
It's not a nice thing for them.
You can see inside a whale because largely it swallows bioluminescence.
So actually, you can get sight inside a whale.
What do you mean it swallows stuff that's biolyminescence?
Yeah, exactly.
So it might swallow an octopus that has bioluminescence attached to it.
So you can use that as a torch.
You can use an octopus as a torch inside a stomach.
Oh my god, I've lost a snooker ball
It is, did you get 90% of animals in the ocean glow in the dark?
Which makes sense because as we say, all colours go away
So they have to make their own colour
But 90% have fluorescent colours that show up
And as we say, if you don't have fluorescent colours
And you want to disguise yourself in your prey
Then you're often red or black
But that becomes a problem if you meet a dragonfish
Which is the only fish that can actually
generate red light. So the dragonfish knows that it's so deep down that red light can't penetrate,
so it brings its own, and it's got these headlights under its eyes, kind of like wallpaint,
and they flash red. And so as soon as they land on a fish that's red that thinks it's completely
invisible, it shows up red. The only problem is that red doesn't travel very far in water,
so they have to get literally centimetres away from the prey.
But they basically have an invisible torch.
Because nothing else can see the red.
Only they can see it. Only they can see what they're trying.
Like one of those blue light things that you get, like UV torches, right?
Like that, yeah. It's very cool.
But they can't have an eye test.
Because if you bring them to the surface, they will explode.
Now, if you can just read the first...
What was that?
That's so funny.
On sea color, color in the sea, oceans used to be pink.
And in fact, the whole world was pink.
Is that like a bacteria thing?
It is a bacteria thing.
Yes.
Good guest, Dan.
Ten points.
I'm the only member of this family gets marked when they say something remotely correct.
Well done, you have a star.
How many marks are you up to after 10 years?
This is my first one.
It's a good feeling.
It's improvement.
And this is the revelation quite recently
that the world's oldest colour is pink.
And this is from researchers
who found ancient pink pigments
in rocks that were 1.1 billion years
old. And so they were over
500 million years older
than the second oldest known pigment.
And they're fossils of chlorophyll,
but back in the day, really back
in the day then, chlorophyll was
it's now green, that's what makes plants green,
but back then it was pink. And
it was this pink produced by ancient bacteria.
And that was all there was. And that was
the oceans were full of, and so the whole world was pink.
Barbie's world was 1.1 billion years ago.
You knew she was old-fashioned, but...
Have you guys heard of Yum, Yum, Yum, Yum, Yellow?
Yum, Yum, Yellow.
Yum, yum, yellow.
No.
Is it the yellow of that mustard yellow
that is meant to make us think it's delicious, whatever it is?
No.
Is it sea-based?
It's a sea-based.
Is it a starfish?
It's not.
What have I already said about yellow?
Yellow and bluefish on the reefs.
Yes. So yellow is very easy to see underwater.
And there is a theory that if you're wearing Yum Yum Yellow
when you're scuba diving, you're more likely to get eaten by sharks.
Oh.
And scuba divers will talk about this, and they'll say you should never wear yum, yum, yum, yellow.
It comes from early...
In the World War II, there was a lot of incidents in the Pacific
where US Navy people would end up in the water
and they'd get eaten by sharks and stuff like that.
It comes from that originally.
and we're not really sure whether it's not it's true that sharks do go for yellow.
Are we saying people aren't willing to test this?
Well, it seems theoretical that it's true,
but the international shark attack file said
the benefit of increasing one's chances of being rescued
far outweighs the minimal risk of attracting a shark.
So the thing is, if you're yellow, people will be able to see you
and be able to rescue you.
There was a person called Valerie Taylor who invented a wetsuit
which had the same markings as sea snakes.
because Great White Sharks
don't like sea snakes
and the theory was that they would see you
and think you were a snake
and then would swim away
and it's a really good theory
the only problem...
Well, tiger sharks are keen predators
of sea snakes.
Oh no!
So it does save you from the Great Whites
but the tigers will still get you.
Do you know that's a new thing
sea snakes in 2021
a report was done by a scuba diver
who noticed that every time he was going
into the water sea snakes were trying to
shag him. And it was because
they can't really see. The only way they can
know properly what they are going to be eating
is by tasting it. So they
wrap themselves around the legs and the
torsos of scuba divers, and
they start licking them and then going, oh no,
this is not a sea snake.
Wait, do they want to
are they testing if they want to eat it or shag it?
So it's mating season.
And because they can't see, basically in order
to know what they're dealing with, they need to lick it.
And that's not good.
The other thing with sea snakes is the way of courting is the male will go up and look for a female
and then the female will swim away.
And so if you're a diver and the load of sea snakes come up to you and you swim off away from them,
they think you're playing hard to get.
Yeah.
So apparently the best thing to do is just go to the bottom of the reef and just let them...
Let them have a go.
Right.
And soon they'll realize that you're not a sea snake and bugger off.
Yeah.
Wow.
There was a study recently of a body of water,
a body of water that one of us loves more than any other in the world.
Oh, gosh, I don't have a favourite body of water, I don't think.
Dan, you've been there looking for a...
Oh, Loch Ness.
Oh, L'Ness.
Oh, right.
There was a theory that maybe, just maybe, a very, very big eel
might be the L'Kness monster, like a six-meter-long eel.
Carl Sagan, great scientist, admittedly more of space than of water,
thought that there could be 310-meter eels living there,
and if they all teamed up,
they could look very convincingly like the Longest Monster.
And there was a study, a sort of trawl of the DNA in the water,
and it found huge amounts of eel DNA.
And so, right, we're on a winner.
Like, maybe the Longest Monster is actually just a load of eels.
But unfortunately, the latest thinking is that probably
there are not giant eels living there,
because the maximum length of a European eel,
as I don't need to remind you guys,
is about 0.9 meters long.
The odds of finding a six-meter eel are very slim.
But that just means six times more of them need to get together
to pretend to be a lot of this monster, right?
That's true.
They just need to buy a bigger trench coat.
Yeah, well, so maybe. Maybe that's it.
Quite a cool thing related to Dan's original fact
about wavelength traveling different amounts underwater.
You know when it's been a hot, sunny day,
and you think, I'll get in the river because it's a nice hot, hot sunny day,
and you put your toe in, it's like, oh, the water's so warm and nice.
and then you put your full foot in,
and it's fucking freezing
underneath that.
That is because in the electromagnetic spectrum,
which you'll remember from school,
infrared waves have an even longer wavelength than red,
and they're the ones that we get heat from.
And so when they come from the sun,
the heat lands in the water
and immediately spreads on the surface,
and it only gets 10 centimetres down max.
So that's why, I mean, obviously then it does mix in a bit
because it's liquid, but that is why
when you put your foot in the water and you think,
lovely.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Interestingly, that's the same with trees, right?
So if you...
Oh, there we go.
It all comes back to that view.
No, no, it's true.
If you're, if you hug, wrap your arms around the lower trunk of daddy
and you're going to have a colder experience.
So they found this out with koalas, basically.
It's a very similar thing, which is that koalas, when it gets really hot,
they travel down a tree and they hug a tree much lower.
And they did scans on the tree to see the heat signals.
On a lower bit of a tree, it's always colder.
So they're regulating themselves because they don't sweat koalas.
They have to sort of lick out the wetness out of them.
They lick themselves and then that evaporates and takes away the heat.
I mean, that's a different way saying it.
They don't have to suck their own sweat out.
But this thing actually about the koalas is interesting
because that study was done a few years ago, right?
And they wondered if anyone else did it.
And they found that there's a type of lemur called the white Sifaka.
and they do the same thing in Madagascar.
And the amazing thing about that,
they hug the trees because they want to get cool.
Because the water comes up from below,
it's a little bit cooler, it can keep them cool.
And what they found out is that they never do it
until the temperature gets to 30 degrees.
And then for each one degree increase,
it doubles the chances of the lemas going there.
So it means that if you're in Madagascar
and you don't have a thermometer with you,
all you have to do is count the number of lemas
who are around the trunk.
And now I'll tell you what the temperature is.
That's incredible.
That's amazing.
Guys, we're going to have to wrap up in a sec.
Do you know what kind of TV dolphins like
while we're talking about seeing things underwater?
It won't be flipper, right?
It won't be stuff that they're in.
Well, they just, I don't really like to watch things that I'm in.
What do dolphins like?
They love fish to eat fish.
Reality stuff.
Reality shows.
Yeah?
Yeah.
Well, some scientists showed some bottle noses planet Earth and SpongeBob SquarePants
and tried to see whether they prefer real-life underwater scenes
or ones where they stupidly get the traffic lights wrong.
And it turns out that actually dolphins are interested in all TV shows no matter what is on.
I knew they were stupid.
Although male dolphins slightly prefer to watch videos of female dolphins.
Okay
Just like your average British man
At the end of any day really
I'll watch anything
Mildly prefer it
If there's a female in it
Good on him
A lovely thought to end on
Have I got that right?
No, it makes you think
Yeah
Meanwhile Dan's watching
Forestry live 24 hours a day
Okay everyone
That is it
That is our facts
Thank you so much for listening
If you'd like to get in contact
With any of us
find us on our socials, email us.
We'd love to hear from you.
Otherwise, Cardiff, that was awesome.
Thank you so much for having us.
We will be back again, and we will see you then.
Goodbye!
