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Saturday, November 15, 2025

World Naked Bike Ride - Part 81

Melbourne, Australia 2019

Today we look at the World Naked Bike Ride held in Melbourne, Australia on March 16, 2019.  Above, a participant paints himself with tiger stripes, though he seems to be a chartreuse tiger, not an orange one.

Another rider getting painted with a happy face on his back ...

and another happy face on his front (and he seems to have been caught red-handed).

The ride begins.  I like the clever slogan on the rider at right: "pubic transport."

The riders pass the unique Pixel Building in Carlton.

They stop to rest (and for a photo) at the Old Melbourne Gaol.  ("Gaol" is an archaic spelling for "jail".)

In front of the gaol, one rider's slogan "See me now" expresses one of the World Naked Bike Ride's goals: to get drivers to pay attention to bike riders all the time for safety's sake, not just when they're naked.

The rear view of See Me Now.

"Fragile Treat With Care" expresses the same goal: to get drivers to pay attention to bike riders and treat them with care on the road.

This guy expresses the other main goal of the World Naked Bike Ride: to try to get more people to ride bikes instead of driving cars, thus reducing the harmful emissions that cars produce.

Riders pose in front of the Department of Education building at Treasury Place.

Riding past St. Patrick's Cathedral.

WNBR riders pass a wedding party, giving this couple something extra to remember about their wedding day.

Riders stop for a photo at the Melbourne Museum.  The weirdly tilted building in the background is the Children's Museum.

Back on the road.

Passing the North Melbourne Town Hall.

The ride ends where it began, outside The Third Day, next to its street art painted by Australian artist LushSux.

Friday, November 14, 2025

Estonian Photos - Part 37

Estonian Photos

We continue our series of photos from the Tartu Ülikooli museum of anthropology in Estonia.

For those who haven't seen my previous posts in this series, a few words of explanation.  The museum provides no information about the men, other than the photos came from the Institute of Anatomy at the University of Tartu.  In particular, it does not say who these men are, or when or why the photos were taken.  However, the photos are labeled "Füüsilise antropoloogia pildistus" (physical anthropology photography).

Who are these men?  My best guess is that they are military recruits.  The very short haircuts suggest that these photos were taken during or shortly after the enlistment process.

Many of the men in this series have dark faces and hands.  Are they are tanned from working outside like farmers, or are they dirty from some dirty occupation?  We don't know.

Note: the dark faces and hands are not as visible in today's post as in some previous posts, but still faintly visible in some of the side views.  Perhaps the photos in today's post were taken in the winter, when farmers would not be spending as much time outside getting tanned.

When were the photos taken?  My best guess is between World War I and World War II, when Estonia was an independent country with its own military.  Before WWI, Estonia was part of the Russian Empire, and after WWII, Estonia was part of the Soviet Union until 1991.

A clue to the time frame is that these photographs were made on glass plates, not film.  Dry glass-plate photography started in 1871 and began to fall out of use in the 1920s.  I found some references to it in Estonia through the 1930s.

One other clue to the time frame of these photos is that in a previous batch, one of the men is wearing a wristwatch.   Wristwatches were considered to be for ladies before World War I.  (Men used pocket watches.)  However, during the war, wristwatches proved very useful for soldiers and pilots.  After WWI, wristwatches came into fashion for men.

Although wristwatches were evidently rare in Estonia (only two men wore a wristwatch among the hundreds that were photographed), it suggests that these photos are post-World War I.

Note: one of the two men in this series with a wristwatch is #297, below.

Since the use of glass plates fell out of use in the 1920s, I think the photos were most likely taken shortly after World War I.

Although these appear to be military recruits, these are probably not military photos.  We know that the museum that currently has the photos got them from the Institute of Anatomy at the University of Tartu.  If these are military photos, why would they end up at the Institute of Anatomy?

I believe the photos were taken by academics doing a study of physical anthropology.  Scientists at the Institute of Anatomy were trying to measure what they considered racial characteristics of the population by measuring the body, including phrenology (measuring the skull), ideas which are now discredited.

I think that the scientists at the Institute of Anatomy may have persuaded the military to let them take photographs of the naked new recruits for "research" purposes.  I have no written evidence to support this idea, but since the photos were at the Institute of Anatomy, and the photo subjects appear to be military recruits, it's now my best guess as to what happened.

One other question that perennially arises from these photos is: why were the men photographed in pairs?  Was it to save film?

The answer is that these photos were made on glass plates, not film, but glass plates were more expensive and involved more labor than film, so yes, it's likely that the men were photographed in pairs to save on glass plates.

So, bottom line: My best guess is that these photos were taken after World War I, the subjects are new or recent Army recruits, and the Estonian military allowed scientists from the Institute of Anatomy to take photos of the naked recruits for a study of physical anthropology.

Thursday, November 13, 2025

Vintage Military - Part 82

 General Patton Pissing into the Rhine

By the spring of 1945, World War II was nearing its end.  Allied forces were driving back the Nazis in Europe, and American forces were recapturing territory from Japan in the Pacific.

On March 22, American General George S. Patton's engineers constructed a pontoon bridge across the Rhine river and sent a division across.  Crossing the Rhine was highly noteworthy. It meant that the Allies were now driving into the heartland of Germany.


The next day, Patton walked halfway across the bridge, unzipped his fly, and proudly pissed into the Rhine while a photographer recorded the moment (above).  Patton claimed he hadn't urinated that morning so as to have a full bladder for the event.  "I've been looking forward to this for a long time," he said.

The stream of piss was edited out of officially published press photographs, but you can see it above.

Here's a somewhat better photo.  You can see the stream of piss, now at a different angle, and I think you can see the end of Patton's penis.

Afterwards, Patton sent a dispatch to Allied Supreme Commander General Dwight D. Eisenhower that said "I have just pissed into the Rhine River. For God’s sake, send some gasoline."  (He needed gasoline to keep going into Germany.)

It turns out that Patton wasn't the only one.  A couple of weeks earlier, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill visited the first areas on the western edge of Germany to be occupied by the Allies, including the famous Siegfried Line that Germany had built to defend itself.  Above, Churchill (at center) and his generals among the "dragon's teeth" of the Siegfried Line that were meant to keep enemy tanks from crossing.

With a childish grin of satisfaction, Churchill pissed on the dragon's teeth.  However, Churchill forbade any photographs of the event, whereas Patton made sure he was photographed pissing into the Rhine.  Churchill pissed on the Siegfried Line to show his hatred and contempt for Hitler and the Nazis.  But I don't think Patton pissed into the Rhine in contempt of Germany.  Rather, I think he was marking his territory: "I'm here. Now this is mine."

Allied forces continued pushing into Germany, while meanwhile the leadership expired on both sides.  U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt died on April 12, to be succeeded by Vice-President Harry Truman.  And Adolf Hitler committed suicide on April 30.

Germany surrendered on May 8, 1945.  Japan kept fighting until the U.S. dropped atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki; then Japan surrendered on August 15, ending World War II.

Wednesday, November 12, 2025

Olympic Photos by Paul Richer - Part 9

Olympic Photos by Paul Richer, part 9

We continue our series of nude photographs by Paul Richer of athletes in the 1900 Paris Olympics.  Richer was on an official Olympic commission to study the athletes.  Richer was responsible for taking nude anthropomorphic photos of the athletes, and since it was an official commission, almost all the athletes who were asked to participate did so.

We start with French tennis player André Prévost.  He won a bronze medal in men's doubles.

Here are Paul Richer's photos of André Prévost, front view ...

rear view ...

and side view.

Disclosure: I have removed yellowing from Richer's photos and brightened them.

This is French athlete Frantz Reichel.  He was on the French Olympic rugby team that won a gold medal.

Here are Richer's photos of Reichel, front view ...

rear view ...

and side view.

This is German cyclist Thaddäus Robl.

Here are Richer's photos of Robl, front view ...

rear view ...

and side view.

This is French cyclist Paul Ruinart.

Here are Richer's photos of Ruinart, front view ...

rear view ...

and side view.

Next time: more Paul Richer Olympic athlete photos.