Airports

Wondering about airports?
Of course you are.

Wonder no more – https://ourairports.com/ has got you covered for all your airport data needs.

You can even download a CSV file full of airport information:

airports.csv (12,511,182 bytes, last modified Feb 16, 2026)
Large file, containing information on all airports on this site.

From the two heliports in Andorra (AD-EU) through to the Neyuka Airstrip in Zimbabwe (ZW-AF).
GPS coordinates, website details, runway lengths and orientations – they’re all there, and it’s all free to use.

https://ourairports.com/data is the link with all the goodness.

Pretty nerdy stuff, but you never know when you might need to know these sort of things.

More great Asian signs

It was quite a while ago that I (possibly) introduced you to the Border Roads Organisation (BRO) in India.

They are the ones putting up signs like this one:

…with the sole intention of keeping you safe while on their roads.

I’ve been sent a couple of other Asian signs since then, in much the same vein.
In fact, the first one is even a BRO sign. And it’s a classic:

This should be part of a set including other spirits.

Driving dumb,
After rum.

You’ll drive crapper,
After two shots of grappa.

Driving’s a sin,
With a skinful of gin.

Drive after brandy,
And you might meet Gandhi.

Is that last one a bit ambivalent. Might that consequence actually be a bit of an honour?

I don’t know.
But if there’s any psychology that proves that amusing warning signs somehow hit home, then I reckon that the research must have been done in India. Because here we go again:

This is part insulting, part amusing and probably just very well aimed. It’s not like the “No Smoking” signs aren’t all over the petrol pumps already. It’s just that people take no notice of them. This sign refreshes the customers’ memories, while gently(?) nudging them that the proprietor cares a whole lot more about his product than stupid people.

And then there’s this one from just over the border, by the Nepalese Police. And it’s actually pretty deep.

This is right up there with “Real Eyes Realise Real Lies”. But more threatening.

It’s so deliciously straightforward and could easily be used in any (English-speaking) country.

I’ve never upset the police in Nepal, so I’m safe for the moment, but this sort of honest, easy to remember warning would probably keep me on the right side of the law on every visit.

You have my email address. Bring on more Asian warning signs, please.

Don’t forget…

…that you’re supposed to be doing a blog post each day.

It’s late and you’ve been busy, I get it.

That gas hob wasn’t going to buy and install itself. United weren’t going to win at Portsmouth without your support, and yes, that was an absolutely superb braai.

The steak was especially good.

But don’t forget that you still need to sort a blog post before bed.

Ok?

Nice guy

Valentine’s Day tomorrow. Commercialism gone mad, preying on the young lovers of the world, or the Feast Day of St Valentine who lived in the 3rd Century.

How about both?

Busy guy, too. Aside from his caring for the poor and weak during his brief time on the planet, he’s also got himself a number of sponsorship deals Patronages. in the afterlife. He does Terni – a somewhat nondescript city in Southern Umbria in Italy. And he does Lesvos – the Greek island famed for featuring a diverse, mountainous landscape with olive groves, medieval castles, and a rich, traditional culture, and offering a quieter, non-commercialized alternative to popular Greek destinations. 

His other gigs? Well, happy marriages and affianced couples, obviously.

And then… Epilepsy, Beekeepers, Plague and “against fainting”.

I never knew that you could have a Patron Saint “against” a bad thing. And if you can – and you clearly can, because he is – then why not add (in this case, at least) “against” Epilepsy and “against” Plague to the list? Because this dichotomy does make it look like he’s actively supporting those two afflictions.

And while we’re at the whole “religion is a bit weird” thing, how is St Valentine depicted? What are his Attributes? As in – when you see an image of him, how can you identify that it’s him and not some other random 3rd Century clergyman/martyr?

The list starts off fairly routinely: Birds. Roses. A priest giving sight to a blind girl.

We move on to more specific things: A bishop with a crippled person or a child with epilepsy at his feet

Some modern day social media stuff: A priest holding a sun.

And then (perhaps somewhat predictably), it goes a bit nuts:

A bishop with a rooster nearby.
What sort of radius are we looking at here. Is it a small rooster, or is it far away?

A bishop refusing to adore an idol.
How do you even begin to depict that?
Is looking away really the same as “refusing to adore”?
Or does the audience have to do a lot of hard work connecting the dots?

A bishop being beheaded.
A priest bearing a sword.

I feel that we need to know if these two are connected. Is this some sort of Christian coup?

And if it is related to his actual martyrdom, well, they’ve missed a bit:

Valentine was arrested and dragged before the prefect of Rome, who condemned him to be beaten to death with clubs and to have his head cut off. The sentence was carried out on February 14, on or about the year 270.

Yeah. Probably not something you want to see at your local art gallery.