Presumably running a gas torch over it would have actually done what they were after. But that's butane not gasoline. And probably at a lower setting than this. :)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cn5S9TiDcBI
In what could be understatement of the week, a Connecticut town has admitted that "a poor decision was made" when 24 'merkin gallons (90 litres) of petrol were poured on a baseball field and set on fire. A local government Facebook page for Ridgefield on Saturday confessed to citizens that the miscalculation had been an …
Because it's a tiny, focused, hot flame.
What you want is a large, wide flame - nowhere near as hot but hot enough.
There are weed-burners that would do the trick for ice, even little hand-held ones that you can just stick a butane canister on. They work quite well for weeds (they tend to die before they can spread seed, it kills the seed too, and they tend to stay-dead for a while after), and can be handy for a quick de-ice.
Saying that, some pillock will use them underneath their car fuel tank or something, won't they?
But if the field is wet... the field is wet. Leave it alone. Anything you do to it will just damage it more and make it worse to play on.
Go get muddy instead, it won't hurt you.
I used to work with a company called Detroit Diesel Corporation - who make "engines for the heavy-duty trucking industry" ("lorry engines"). Some of the places their engines are used can get quite nippy (below -40) and even cold-weather diesel can gell a bit. Not to worry, the truckers had a solution for this - built a small bonfire in a metal tray, and slide it under the engine; engine warms up, diesel ungells, all good.
The problem was, DDC didn't know about this, and they only realized when they started getting complaints ... after they changed the oil sump from metal (heavy, expensive) to plastic (lighter, cheaper, what's not to like?)
Icon: Fire hazard
Not to worry, the truckers had a solution for this - built a small bonfire in a metal tray, and slide it under the engine; engine warms up, diesel ungells, all good.
With some of the very old farm engines and the like, putting a gas burner or other flame-based heat source under a bulb near the front of the engine to help pre-heat the fuel was a critical part of the start-up procedure.
As was spinning a gigantic flywheel by hand.
Icon -> I'm sure no one got hurt or lost an eye or anything trying to start one of these babies... :)
"putting a gas burner or other flame-based heat source under a bulb near the front of the engine to help pre-heat the fuel was a critical part of the start-up procedure.
As was spinning a gigantic flywheel by hand."
These are the second and third most important uses of the Youtubes. Our furry friends have already educatted us in the most importand use.
Further viewing: almost any Lanz Bulldog startup.
> built a small bonfire in a metal tray, and slide it under the engine
Supposedly this was a factor in Germany's defeat in Russia; when winter came the Russians were able to keep their T-34s running by warming them up with fire - an option ze Germans, having opted for petrol engines in their Tiger tanks, did not have.
There are weed-burners that would do the trick for ice, even little hand-held ones that you can just stick a butane canister on. They work quite well for weeds (they tend to die before they can spread seed, it kills the seed too, and they tend to stay-dead for a while after), and can be handy for a quick de-ice.
Pfft. Any ice you can remove with a hand-held weed burner isn't worthy of the name.
Real road ice is thick enough that flame-based removal isn't practical, mainly because of water's crazy-high enthalpy of fusion - and enthalpy of vaporization, if you don't want it to just freeze again right back where it was.
Acetylene is excellent where comparatively small amounts of very high temperature heat are required, eg for welding steel.
However, acetylene is more expensive than other fuel gases like propane, and limited in the rate that it can be persuaded to come out of the solution in which it is stored (pressurising it above a certain point causes it to explode).
Where it's quantity of heat that's required, rather than highest temperature, propane wins hands down.
Drying grass out with flames seems unlikely to ever succeed. Apart from the obvious dangers, hydrocarbon combustion produces plenty of water vapour. . . .
So the article suggests using a leaf blower to fan the flames... however if you combine leaf blower with a heat source, you now have something *resembling* a hair dryer, usable on grass Clothes dryers are often gas-fired and so the concept is good so long as you can keep the burner's exhaust temperature low enough to avoid actually catching things on fire. (In the movie 'Spaceballs' Princess Vespa had a comedically ginormous hair dryer...)
Or maybe the kids will just have to learn how to play "wet".
[I would expect a 'field dryer' to take the form of an attachment for one of those riding mowers, at any rate]
[I would expect a 'field dryer' to take the form of an attachment for one of those riding mowers, at any rate]
Not too hard to do actually when you think about it. The blade movement will already create a draft, although generally intended to be upwards rather than downwards. Directing it down (reversing the blade spin) and adding a heat source (piping the engine exhaust plus some extras towards the blades) would make for a far more effective dryer than a dose of gasoline, although the latter will be much more enjoyable :)
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"A former neighbour once tried to de-ice our road using an oxyacetylene torch. It was surprisingly ineffective."
I once watched the staff at Santa Pod Raceway clean up and dry an oil spill by scrubbing the track with detergent and water, then drying it using a jet engine mounted vertically to a trailer. It was as effective as it was loud.
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In case of dragracing tracks, this is not something that they "happen to have at hand".
This is standard equipment. Unlike most racing, dragracing does not allow a spot of water, as the track simply won't allow the power of the cars/bikes and accidents will happen.
http://surfacedrying.co.uk/
Having said that, I don't think it will do much good on a grass pitch drying.
In case of Santa Pod:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oiph8W54lno
Hope to be back there again soon :-)
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"It was surprisingly ineffective."
Not really.
If you take 50kg of ice at 0C and 50 litres of water at 80C & put them together, you'll be left with 100 litres of water - at 0C
It takes a LOT of energy to convert ice at 0C to water at 0C
Back on the subject of the story, I recall one outfit using a helicopter as a blower to try and dry their field. That didn't work terribly well either
Ask Robert Capa about taking photos on D-Day following the early waves, and having someone destroying them for trying to dry them too fast... I think his ghost still haunts the shores because of it.
Anyway, acetate film is hard to burn - I wouldn't try it with nitrate film....
I wouldn't try it with nitrate film..
We have a very big, very carefully-controlled archive for keeping that sort of stuff in. With quite thick internal walls between the various storage spaces (and, for really fragile stuff, a set of temperature-controlled airlocks that stuff can be put in when being taken out of the archive to minimise thermal shock. Don't expect to be able to get out fragile stuff in a hurry. And you really, really, really don't want to upset archivists - they get very protective of the stuff they look after and tend to lose their sense of humour about such things remarkably quickly..).
In chemistry labs it used to be common practice to dry glassware (flasks, test tubes etc) by swilling some acetone around and then using an air blower to evaporate the residue. I had a lot of glassware to clean one day and decided to try to speed thing up - pour in a slug of acetone, swill round, pour out in to the sink, than flash off the remainder by igniting it using a Bunsen burner.
This was working very well until I left a bit too much in one flask and instead of flashing off, it continued to burn. As it got hot, I yelped and dropped it in to the sink, where it ignited all of the other acetone that had been poured in there. The fumes in the drains also exploded, shooting geysers from all of the other sinks in the lab!
I think the correct way for the English to dry a wet field would be to gather a lot of them around the perimeter and have them discuss ways of drying it; the resulting spout of hot air would be enough to shift the seasons.
(Alternatively, have them discuss Brexit...that would be enough to shift the climate.)
Consumer fireworks are legal in most places in the USA, just not in 'tinder box' areas like most counties in the state of Cali-fornicate-you. In short, too many field fires result from home fireworks usage. But I think I can tolerate not having sparklers vs not having neighborhoods go up in flames from a canyon brush fire...
Last time I drove through South Carolina, there were major fireworks outlets everywhere. And a lot of counties in northern Cali-fornicate-you still allow consumer fireworks to be sold around July 4, last I checked. You can't make your own legally, though. Darwin awards, etc. [that's why] though I'm sure that anyone with a large box of matches (and time to waste) could theoretically make *something* capable of burning the hair off of your face.
[when I was young I used to like to make hydrogen balloons and light them - they make a nice 'boom' like a cannon - using household chemicals like drain cleaner, etc. - once singed the hair off of my wrist with a rather big one though, 2 feet or so in diameter, even using fireplace matches to light them]
Ah yes. Fireworks.
Britain: “It’s early November, everything’s wetter than a haddock’s bathing costume, it goes dark around 1pm...let’s set off fireworks!”
The US: “It’s early July, everything’s tinder-dry, there’s enough daylight to read by until 10:30pm... let’s set off fireworks!”
Seemed faintly ridiculous to me when I first arrived in the US, but now I just accept it. When in Rome, etc.
They legalized fireworks year round in my state.
A true local I know predicted that legalizing would immediately lead to poor people buying them, getting drunk and setting them off.
Sure enough, like many other places, my small city had a local law banning unlicensed fireworks in less than a week.
I was young I used to like to make hydrogen balloons and light them
We did this in chemistry at school (as a 6th form pupil anyway) - fill several 2 litre lemonade plastic bottles with hydrogen/oxygen mixture, arrange in the prep lab near where the 3rd-years[1] were having their chemistry lesson, open prep lab door and light all the bottles.
Why yes, we did get into trouble[2]. There's a reason why I failed my chemistry A-level.
[1] 13-14 year olds - so 8th grade? Anyway - they were (apparently) at the age of max screamage..
[2] But not as much as when we all managed to escape a physics lesson being delivered by the really, really unpopular physics teacher - one of us wound her up and then walked out screaming at her. She chased said pupil out the physics lab and the rest of us promptly left by the windows (physics lab was on the ground floor). I feel somewhat guilty about that one since she left shortly afterwards. But we really did future physics students a big favour.
Consumer fireworks are legal in most places in the USA
Most consumer fireworks require a license in Connecticut.
just not in 'tinder box' areas
Iowa, Kentucky, and Vermont, for example, are similarly restrictive. Massachusetts bans the damned annoyances entirely (though from personal experience I know this is not enforced for traditional firecrackers on Chinese New Year, for example), and good for them, I say.
Those are not "tinder box" areas. No one would accuse Massachusetts or Vermont of being short on precipitation.
No, it didn't "work", if you mean drying out the field.
It did, apparently "work" to the extent that a contractor had to come in, scrape off the gasoline-saturated soil, haul it to a hazardous waste site (where it was hopefully processed to remove the gasoline, rather than just dumped in a lined pit) and then haul in replacement soil, grade and seed the field.
Expensive for the town, and the employee who made the "poor decision" is still employed?
surprisingly effective I'm sure. gasoline doesn't have tetra-ethyl-lead in it any more, so should burn away completely, though it's possible that any MTBE additive might affect ground water at some point.
But you know, the solution to pollution is "dilution", right?
[given that it is regular practice with some industries to have an effluent tank for potentially hazardous waste, which is then tested and diluted to 'safe' levels before discharging it into the sewer systems, this is actually more reality than just a joke - being that the solution to pollution is *LITERALLY* 'dilution']
out here in Cali-Fornicate-You, the gummint back in the 90's had voters approve the use of MTBE as an "oxygenate" in fuel to a) increase its price, b) cause a tiny percentage of engines to run cleaner, and c) require a ton of special fuel formulas that change between winter and summer so that gasoline prices would be as 'volatile' (pun intended) and dependent on specific refineries as possible. Yes, it's a scam, since nearly all cars have computers now, so MTBE really doesn't do ANYTHING except the side effect of POLLUTING GROUND WATER if it leaks out of tanks at gasoline stations... which happens often enough that for a long time you'd see a lot of gas stations suddenly fenced off so they could dig up and replace the underground tanks, which were leaking, and get rid of the contaminated soil, etc. making fuel prices EVEN HIGHER. Yeah, gummint... and the fault of MTBE, "voted in" in the 90's and NEVER repealed...
but without the MTBE (or possibly worse additives), gasoline would burn off and any remaining vapors would just dissipate.
The issues of MTBE and tetra-ethyl-lead aside, there are effective bio-remediation techniques for ridding soil of petrochemicals. In other words; bugs that eat the stuff.
We have a waterfront part in my town that, in the distant past, was a fuel tank farm for ships. Long after the conversion to a park, plumes of petroleum products were discovered to be migrating through the ground. The part was closed, Benches and the sod was removed and the soil was tilled while adding some sort of special bacterial concoction. The soil was allowed to sit for a year with occasional additional tilling. After that time, the bugs had eaten the oil. The grass was re-planted and the park is back in operation for the entertainment of the local three-eyed sprogs.
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"The burning question here though, apart from the obvious removal of grass, did it work?"
From the linked video, it was a baseball diamond they were trying to dry out. That's usually "dirt", not grass, so no grass to remove. I suspect they just wanted to make the "dirt" slideable for those "did he make ot to the base" moments so beloved of baseball fans. I doubt the outfield grass being wet was a problem unless it had turned into a lake.
You can combine your pitch drying with a BBQ, the folk of CT can learn a thing or two from cricket in India:
A carefully planned application of an appropriate amount of heat under controlled and supervised conditions, versus gung-ho chucking on any amount of fuel, igniting it and being shocked at the result.
It's not just the folk of CT that could learn something, the latter approach does appear to be prevalent at many levels in the USA.
There is a product called Quick Dry that will rapidly soak up the water in a damp field. Go Google it.
Also helps to get out with a rake and work on the low spots, spreading out the wetness.
It takes more than a few minutes to work, so some planning ahead is needed. Rake and put down quick-dry, then wait a few hours. It is effective but won't make miracles happen.
My kids have played spring softball and those fields are just unplayable a lot.
w0w...https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pTq1urcRg5Y
1:07
Turface Quick Dry Infield 4 in 1
Baseball field mix Quick Dry turface Axis absorbtion MVP
=
https://turface.com/products/infield-conditioners/quick-dry
Turface Quick Dry
Save the Game from Rain!
The fine particles of Turface® Quick Dry®
make it the perfect choice
for quickly clearing up puddles and mud on skinned infields.
Just dump and rake to make your infield safe and playable.
Absorbs its weight in water!
Won’t harden or cake like similar water-absorbing products
Used to rescue more infields than any other brand
Yes, playing fields tend to be on the flood plain. Because anything else you put there would get regularly flooded, which a field can recover from.
Pity that they now let developers build over those fields - and then they are so surprised when after the developer has departed with the profits the new buildings get flooded.
Now that is one proficient spider. Amazing creatures and the self-propagating irrational fear of largely harmless to human critters doesn't help much and is annoying to see. While some are a touch dangerous to humans, most aren't and there is much more danger from farmyard animals, automobiles, the bugs that spiders eat, pets and, in un-civilised parts of the world, privately owned firearms (which have no practical use against spiders except for ill-advised bludgeoning).
Agreed Nick. These Huntsman spiders are pretty timid, despite being large and scary-looking. They do hurt if they bite you, but it's not going to be fatal and they'd usually just prefer to run away.
I'm kinda happy to tolerate them around the house as they eat lots of other things I'd prefer not to share with. However under pressure from SWHBO, who pointed out that maybe they wouldn't appreciate being accidentally being sat on, I used to just chase them out the back door. Occasionally though I'd come across one with a bad attitude so the size 10 would come out. Hopefully I was using natural selection around my place to breed less-aggressive ones...
Yeah agreed - I can picture that! I had a nasty shock when driving one night when I looked right and there was a large huntsman about 6 inches from my nose. When my heart rate came back down I realized it was on the outside of the window. Made me jump though, and I had to squash down hard on my mild arachnophobia for the rest of the journey, while it simply enjoyed the breeze.
That wasn't a spider. THIS is a spider...https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wRQucp31n0c
Ah, looks like a breed we have around here.
Last week my cat got a bit peeved at me after I wasn't watchful enough while walking, and happened to find his tail with my foot.
Not sure how, but later that night I saw him carry a mouse into my room. Only, it wasn't a mouse.
I am a bit arachnophobic, but at least I have a large enough jar and being that NZ doesn't have anything more poisonous than a white-tail, Mr Spider was removed safely and without (futher) injury.
I am a bit worried about what form of revenge the cat may attempt next time I do something deserving of extreme revenge, like delaying his feeding a few seconds or not giving him a taste of milk every now and then.
(Must check if we are actually supposed to have this breed of spider (or something similar) in NZ or not)
I mean, it was a spider..
Oi! Leave spiders alone - they are really, really useful little beasties[1]. Especially if one's home gets infested with clothes moths that laugh at the usual methods of controlling them.. (although the moth clap-dance still works but you usually get funny looks from guests when you charge round the room trying to kill them.)
[1] My wife classifies them into 'Henries' and 'Georges' - Henries are the long-leggedy ones with small bodies that lurk around the coving and eat mainly each other and Georges are everything else - especially house-spiders. And house-spiders don't get put outside in autumn because the cold will kill them, unlike wolf-spiders.
The RAF V bomber bases used to use a jet engine mounted on a truck which towed a fuel bowser. They use less fun methods these days (and only the Royal Navy submarines have nuclear weapons in UK forces these days).
Thankfully they never needed to deliver their "bucket of sunshine" -->
The “Drones” was the name of the fictional gentlemens’ club in PG Wodehouse’s Jeeves & Wooster books. It was a club of what we might otherwise refer to as upper-class twits.
Bear that in mind, and from now on any news stories you read about ”drones being used to deliver groceries” or ”drones sighted on airport runway” etc. will be just that little bit more surreal and interesting with the appropriate mental substitution.
Nup. In many places in Australia during the wet season it rains with a capital F. Regular afternoon thunderstorms are a usual occurrence in several of the larger cities in summer. If you're really in the north - such as Darwin - you get monsoon-like rains.
Of course, in those places where it doesn't rain all that often (I think Birdsville has an annual Australia Day match), when it does rain, your main problem is generally that the bit of ground that your pitch used to be on is now some distance downstream...
Because it's expensive.
I play amateur rugby in the north of England. A wet winter and you can go weeks without a game. Amateur clubs just can't afford the drainage.
Apparently the RFU are willing to fund the installation of our drainage but (understandably) only if we can get a long lease on our pitch which the land owner won't agree to.
I know you play rugby and are perhaps a little scared of breaking a nail, getting your skirt dirty and so on but.. Y'know playing in the mud can be rather fun, right? And big tough men don't actually mind getting dirty... :)
Best game I ever had was in Wanganui, near the boys college, where our field had a stream running through it thanks to lots of rain and not-so lots of drainage. That was back before we got "touch rugby". These days I think there's more water on the field from the players crying over the thought of getting their hair wet than there is from actual rainfall....
(cue flames, threats and other such fluff... :) )
As an aside, perhaps you can look into doing some fundraising and labour raising to get the field sorted? Perhaps the land owner would be willing to meet you part way, say they provide the materials and your teams provide the labour? I realise novaflow (or UK equiv) must cost a bit to cover a decent sports field, and the gravel etc would also cost a pretty penny or two, but some banding together can get this stuff done with less effort than most realist. Maybe some drainage companies will even have usable "scrap" lengths of piping that could do the job.
The rules are that we can't play if you can drown on the pitch. Years ago I played with a ref that said flooding was fine, but if there's a breakdown in one of the an infield lakes, he'd stop play for a scrum.
I believe the landowner wants to flog the land to a housing developer at some point and so we're apparently in talks with moving down the road to a more permanent ground.
Guess sports field technology has advanced in 50 years so we should never see a water-logged pitch for Important Games.
Different when Leeds lost an FA Cup final. The ground staff spent all morning working sand into a wet pitch as a result of which it was like playing on soft moss. As a result also they lost when the ball, expected as per normal physics to bounce straight into the arms of Gary Sprake, who was positioned exactly right and ready, just went plop and almost dribbled underneath him into the goal.
a) Kiddie field.
2) Astroturf hurts like hell when you hit it c/f real grass according to most athletes.
*) I thought we were all supposed to be thinking green and doing our bit for carbon sequestration? Astroturf sucks up no OCO whatsoever. Grass is the very epitome of photosynthetic political correctness.
Until you fire up the ride-on mowers of course, but then you can't make an omelet without firing up the ride-on mowers.
As I recall, baseball infields (the runner areas between bases) are usually coated with that clay-like material that looks a bit like cat litter. Probably similar to that 'quick dry' compound someone already mentioned.
The center around the pitcher's mound, and the outfield, would all likely be grass-covered though. but most of the running takes place on a clay like material.
More akin to the stuff on an "all-weather" soccer pitch (do they still have such horrors?) - actually, just dirt really.
All-weather soccer pitches. Ha! The one at St John Backsides Comprehensive washed out in the first year it was put in so that from then on right behind one corner there was an ankle-breaker & concussion pit. Made for short corner kicks. Star school player places ball on corner, signals in a businesslike manner where he wants all the other players to be, snarls at the weedier ones, takes three paces back, plunges out of sight with a gratifying scream of pain.
Always a good decision..
Just check for live hand grenades beforehand!
My dad did the R & D trick in the back garden - when we moved in - then cross rotavated - then went round beating the crap out of scaffolding pins - and the egg shaped extremely live not-a-scaffolding-pin..
Must have been built under contract by Morris because even after all that it didn't explode..
contract by Morris because even after all that it didn't explode..
Oi! I'll have you know that our Morris Minor is a fine piece of kit![1] And I'm pretty glad that it hasn't exploded either..
[1] I use the word 'kit' as shorthand for '1950's engineering using agricultural suspension and costs a fortune every year to keep working and looking nice'. But t'wife loves it so who am I to argue? You can't fault her taste in the finer things of life - especially as she married me..
Has anybody thought of the use of the giant raygun in the sky? Cheap as dirt, cheerful actually, it works like a charm. ... As I recall Florida isn't one of those places where the sun doesn't shine...
Another useful tip from ancient times - the Parthenon has (if I recall properly) a curved floor - to make the water go away - so no puddles for the gods. Maybe the lesser gods could take an example from the worshippers of Athena?
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This gives you a drainage system to get rid of excessive water
Or, as we've done here for generations, fired clay pipes with gaps along the upper side. They work nicely and don't have the problems associated with burying plastics..
(Search-engine-of-your-choice for "clay land drains". Laid with small gaps between the sections..)
So they did what? Took 5 or 6 trips to the filling station with a single can or did they go whole hog and ring up the $70 worth of gasoline in one go? Most shops around here won't let you simply fill up a drum in the back seat of your car as they want it to be grounded to reduce the odds of static discharge so I'm wondering just how they did it. Please tell me they emptied a 1 gallon hand pump sprayer a full 24 times before actually lighting up the sod.
On the upside, since they'll be rebuilding it from scratch maybe they can do it right with some sharp sand, gravel, and perhaps even a bit of drainage pipe instead of the previous, "We'll just paint base lines down at the field by the marsh and the kids can play there. What could go wrong?"
Has some pretty good techniques...
First of all, don't let the critical surfaces get wet.
Then run a rope around the rest - it doesn't strictly dry it (although it can trail a towel as well), but it does knock the moisture off the grass, and onto the ground, where is it fairly likely to soak in (assuming the ground isn't waterlogged, in which case come back in a few days...)
This reminds me of the time when a neighbor decided to get rid of a wasp's nest under the eaves of his house by soaking it in kerosene and setting it on fire. He was left without 25% of his roof, a large bill form the fire department, and looking forward to years of his neighbors snickering every time they looked his way.
On the positive side, he told me, he did successfully eliminate the nest.
...would have been to order 50,000 somethings (shoes, handbags, electronics etc) from Amazon for same day delivery and use all the little silica gel packets to get the job done (do not eat remember). The incidental waste (swag/products) would be efficiently disposed of (kept) by the town employees.
Actually, in Cali-Fornicate-You right now, gasoline is approaching $4/gallon again. Reason: new taxes, special formulation requirements, and the usual refinery problems [all caused by state government regulations, many of which are based on false science like 'oxygenate' in gasoline and special formulas that have no effect on computer-controlled engines].
It's an unfortunate part of living in the state where gasoline prices are 25% or more higher than everywhere else in the USA, and consumption is probably highest due to the average length of daily commutes. If it takes you one hour each way by CAR, think TWICE that on public transit...
Then again, in UK I guess fuel prices are even higher than here... [similar problems too I bet]
[crude oil prices are not the main driving factor of Cali-Fornicate-You fuel prices - if they were, then fuel would be cheaper than ever here]
So go live in South Carolina or Georgia.
Gas is about a dollar a gallon there most days, *and* they let you use that little ratchet and peg in the gas pistol handle so you can wander around while the car if filling.
Also: no earthquakes, though you do get hurricanes of late, and snow for the last two years.
1998 called. They want their "pun" back.
Strikes me that the easiest way to dry ground out once it is wet (professional fields attempt to avoid this by covering the fields when it rains) would be to erect a large, transparent, air-supported marquee over it, of the sort used to shelter rooftop tennis courts and suchlike. Kind of like a huge hovercraft skirt. The incident sunlight would get evaporation going and the airflow would keep it going until the ground parched and the grass died of thirst.
Maybe they could just man up and get muddy.
Failing that, there's always astroturf.
But burning away all the grass in a futile attempt to "dry" it...
I can just imagine a golf course greenkeeper's reaction to such a suggestion.
This is some of the most profound idiocy I've ever witnessed. Anywhere. Ever.
Dry grass can burn very hot and very quickly. My grandmother, whose immigrated from England to Canada before WWI and who in turn immigrated with her husband and family to California following the Long Beach earthquake. After finally settling on a small "farm" in Central California she developed the practice of burning over the "north 40" every year in the later spring. One time she stationed me down wind with a hose to protect the neighbor's wooden fence and torched the plot. The wind gusted and I was suddenly confronted with eight to ten foot high flames roaring right at me. Somehow I made a standing backward high jump over the fence behind me. Happily she always mowed a fire break around the plot and I was able to use that and the hose to stop the fire. She came hurrying around the burn to see if I was all right.
The best solution would be to put a laptop in the middle of the pitch, browse to The Register, and simply post a comment about how smoothly Brexit is panning out and how wonderfully Theresa May is handling the situation. For a quicker drying time, the comment should be made in a thread totally unrelated to Brexit.
Faster still... Mention that Windows is better than Linux, and Elmer Fudd is right in that we should backdoor encryption!
Or, even faster...
Invite Righto and that other fella[1] who was sadly banned for a no-holds-barred grudgematch...
[1]I apologise for not being able to remember his name. One of the more interesting characters we had around here! [sniff]
fresh sushi.Only if you definition of "fresh" extends to "dead for several days and lying in the sun"..
No.
My definition is several weeks. At least going by the taste and stench. I mean tantalising aroma.
--> My face at the smell of putrid rotting fish fresh sushi
We commonly use Helicopters in such cases.
That said, when it comes to sports we would probably only resort to that for a thugby match. They're the only group sufficiently fearful enough of water to warrant it. The kids would love the chance to get muddy while playing baseball!
We've been known to use the same method for drying concrete inside buildings as well, although I'm sure better planning would be cheaper than finding a chopper pilot willing to hover inside a building! (spent some time trying to find a link - miss the days when a "+" or "-" had a decent effect on search terms, rather than today when all engines do a "or" search on every word and also do their "Couldn't find many results for what you typed, here's something completely unrelated instead!")
Thanks but.. It breaks Google by being a bit unusual, and as I won't allow google's BS JS to run on my machines.... :
Our systems have detected unusual traffic from your computer network. This page checks to see if it's really you sending the requests, and not a robot. Why did this happen?
(search was "allintext:helicoptor dry floor" on google.co.nz)
You simply invent a time machine, travel into the past and cover the pitch/field before it rains.
And leave a note to yourself to explain why the pitch/field was covered so you need to build a time machine and go back to put the cover in place and pass the time machine plans on. Don't leave the result of the game in the note, you wouldn't want to mess with causality after all.
From the 70s...
So a large whale washes up on the beach... Rather than haul it away... load it with explosives and let the birds eat the bite size chunks that would be left...
You can read what really happened. Lets just say bite sized if you are an elephant sized bird and they still had to haul away 1/2 the carcass... I remember loving this video back in the early internet days
enclose area to be dried with airtight surface with built-in rills and water permeable hollow spikes (to bring partial vaccum below surface level) and reduce pressure in contained area via pump.
Gasolene may still be used to power pump if desired or alternative ecofriendly method of employing local sex workers to crank of pump allows for local officals to put BJs on expenses as well as being more fun to watch than football.
Admittedly overuse of pump may produce desiccation and freezing of grass with result that it is turned to powder after a few seconds of use but ground will be much drier and harder.
Well, the obvious solution is, as always, sharks with lasers.
But what if you did not bring your sharks along or, heaven forbid, forgot the lasers at home? That has happened to me, and I'm sure it has happened to all of you as well.
In that case, there is a very eco-friendly method: Plant a row of trees. The gentle oak will gladly soak up liters and liters of deadly water. What's more: You can then soak the oak with gasoline and set fire to it, or build a fleet of ships complete with cannons and other necessities you'll need in order to crush your enemies. Win-win.
My favored backup plan for when I cant bring my sharks, is the giant Lunar based deathray laser, slightly more economical than the orbital option due to costs involved in building the required volcano to mount it in.
As for the biological option, Oaks may not have the pitch dry enough in time - I vaguely recall something about a mid-morning game ?... Perhaps I could recommend...Kudzu