I have a couple of
friends in Virginia who feed my need for weirdness. I met (well, “email met”)
Stretch through the Pundit’s Apprentice, who was one of the mainstays of the
choir I used to sing in. PA continually challenges my mental acuity and gives
me opportunities to Look Stuff Up, activities I adore. Both of them
occasionally send me news of the bizarre, obituaries from the Telegraph and book or film
recommendations.
Today’s vignette
comes courtesy of Stretch. I knew Stretch was worth cultivating when I noticed
his signature line: “Omnes moritatem. Deus suos cognoscet.” I’ve only read a
little about the Albigensian
Crusade, as I’m not much of a medievalist, but that’s an order you don’t
soon forget. (And probably one uttered by commanders for millennia, because
it’s often hard to tell who’s your friend and who’s your enemy when the field
of battle slops over into civilian territory.) It was given by the papal legate
when asked how the soldiers were supposed to know who was a heretic and who was
of the true faith when they attacked the city of Beziers. “Kill them all,” he
said. “God will know his own.” These days that sort of thing would cause a
firestorm on Twitter, and CNN would go ballistic; but things were different in
the 13th Century.
Anyhow—what Stretch sent
around to a select few was this video from Mental Floss on saberage: how to
open a bottle of Champagne with a saber. Or a kitchen knife. Or a machete.
Well, he had me at
“Champagne”, so I watched it all the way through. And had a few thoughts:
They’re using Piper
Sonoma, which technically is not Champagne. But I do understand why they might
not want to use the good stuff. In case of Unfortunate Incidents.
It just tears my
heart in two to see sparkling wine go undrunk, for any reason; which is what
happens when you rip a cork out the way it’s done here. Couldn’t they at least
have put a bowl under it to catch the overflow?
If that gibbering
Mental Floss twit can master the technique, I think it must be fairly
straightforward, once you screw your courage to the sticking place, as it were.
But if so, why would they slap that “Do not try this at home” warning all over
it? I thought the whole purpose of this video was to give visual instructions
and demonstrations of how to do it, no? WTH?
I like the whole Zen
thing of the technique being all in the follow-through. Like smashing blocks of
wood with the heel of your hand, it’s all in seeing just beyond the rim. You see the blade and the cork beyond the
lip of the bottle; the rest is just detail.
It occurred to me
that a bayonet might work—not one of those WWII jobbers, sharp on both sides;
but maybe one from the 19th Century. As might be used on a
Martini-Henry rifle. So I asked the question. Naturally, Stretch has a few:
I knew he would.
(Points to anyone who can identify the rifles associated with these bayonets.)
I’m thinking that the
one in the center would be pretty good—looks like it has a blunt edge, and also
has a good handle for gripping.
So I’m hoping someone
on the email tries sabering a bottle, and that they record it. I’d try it
myself, except that I’m not allowed sharp objects. (Or flammable substances.)
Um.
2 comments:
The writer of another blog I follow, Amalah, has done this many times. With a saber and a chef knife, anyway. Video: https://vimeo.com/221413
Original blog post: http://www.amalah.com/amalah/2007/06/taking-my-adrin.html
Thanks, Carrie. If I understand the Mental Floss instructions, Amalah used the wrong edge of the blade--unless it was blunt on both sides. (It looked pretty ceremonial, I grant, so it may well be.) I can't help thinking that you doesn't want to put a nick in a blade that you might have to use on someone at some point.
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