Songs of the Land and Sea

Songs of the Land and Sea A radio programme covering primarily sea shanties, folk songs, local choirs and town bands.

The programme is currently heard on www.UpClose.Radio, the community station for Torridge and North Devon, on Sunday nights between 9pm and 10pm.

A new analysis of 105-year-old data on the effectiveness of ‘dazzle’ camouflage on battleships in World War I by Aston U...
18/03/2025

A new analysis of 105-year-old data on the effectiveness of ‘dazzle’ camouflage on battleships in World War I by Aston University researchers Professor Tim Meese and Dr Samantha Strong has found that while dazzle had some effect, the ‘horizon effect’ had far more influence when it came to confusing the enemy.

During World War I, navies experimented with painting ships with ‘dazzle’ camouflage – geometric shapes and stripes – in an attempt to confuse U-boat captains as to the speed and direction of travel of the ships and make them harder to attack.

The separate ‘horizon effect’ is when a person looks at a ship in the distance, and it appears to be travelling along the horizon, regardless of its actual direction of travel. Ships travelling at an angle of up to 25° relative to the horizon appear to be travelling directly along it. Even with those at a greater angle to the horizon, onlookers significantly underestimate the angle.

Despite widespread use of dazzle camouflage, it was not until 1919 that a proper, quantitative study was carried out, by MIT naval architecture and marine engineering student Leo Blodgett for his degree thesis. He painted model ships in dazzle patterns and placed them in a mechanical test theatre with a periscope, like those used by U-boat captains, to measure how much onlookers’ estimations of the ships’ direction of travel deviated from their actual direction of travel.

Professor Meese and Dr Strong realised that while the data collected by Blodgett was useful, his methods of experimental design fell short of modern standards. He’d found that dazzle camouflage worked, but the Aston University team suspected that dazzle alone was not responsible for the results seen, cleaned the data and designed new analysis to better understand what it really shows.

Dr Strong, a senior lecturer at Aston University’s School of Optometry, said: “It's necessary to have a control condition to draw firm conclusions, and Blodgett's report of his own control was too vague to be useful. We ran our own version of the experiment using photographs from his thesis and compared the results across the original dazzle camouflage versions and versions with the camouflage edited out. Our experiment worked well. Both types of ships produced the horizon effect, but the dazzle imposed an additional twist.”

If the errors made by the onlookers in the perceived direction of travel of the ship were entirely due to the ‘twist’ on perspective caused by dazzle paintwork, the bow, or front, of the ship, would always be seen to twist away from its true direction. However, Professor Meese and Dr Strong instead showed that when the true direction was pointing away from the observer, the bow was often perceived to twist towards the observer instead. Their detailed analysis showed a small effect of twist from the dazzle camouflage but a much larger one from the horizon effect. Sometimes these effects were in competition, sometimes in harmony.

Professor Meese, a professor of vision science at the School of Optometry, said: “We knew already about the twist and horizon effects from contemporary computer-based work with colleagues at Abertay University. The remarkable finding here is that these same two effects, in similar proportions, are clearly evident in participants familiar with the art of camouflage deception, including a lieutenant in a European navy. This adds considerable credibility to our earlier conclusions by showing that the horizon effect – which has nothing to do with dazzle – was not overcome by those best placed to know better.

“This is a clear case where visual perception is more powerful than knowledge. In fact, back in the dazzle days, the horizon effect was not identified at all, and Blodgett's measurements of perceptual bias were attributed entirely to the camouflage, deceiving the deceivers.”

Professor Meese and Dr Strong say that more work is required to fully understand how dazzle might have increased perceptual uncertainty of direction and speed but also the geometry behind torpedo-aiming tactics that might have supported some countermeasures.

Visit https://doi.org/10.1177/20416695241312316 to read the full paper in i-Perception.

Mayflower A Ca****la Choir are holding a fundraising concert for the RNLI in November.
01/10/2024

Mayflower A Ca****la Choir are holding a fundraising concert for the RNLI in November.

This unusual vegetable was entered in a class at a Devon horticultural association's spring show last weekend and had ma...
24/03/2024

This unusual vegetable was entered in a class at a Devon horticultural association's spring show last weekend and had many people wondering what it was. The answer will be revealed in tonight's edition of Songs of the Land and Sea on Up Close Radio between 9pm and 10pm.

As mentioned on tonight's show, the Devon County Show livestock committee has announced a full range of classes for four...
17/03/2024

As mentioned on tonight's show, the Devon County Show livestock committee has announced a full range of classes for four new breed categories at the 2024 event this May. One of the new categories is in the cattle section, two in the sheep section and the fourth is a new pig breed category.

First up is the Red Poll Cattle breed, No longer on the rare breeds survival trust watchlist thanks to the hard work of the Breed Society, these multi-purpose cattle will grace the Devon County Show for the first time in the 150 year history of the show. The majority of this docile, low-input breed are used as suckler cows, but a number of milking herds still exist with an average yield of 5,000 litres at 4.2% butterfat and 3.5% protein.

Two new native breeds will be introduced to the sheep section. The Kerry Hill breed originates from the hills around the small town of Kerry, on the English/Welsh borders. Once extremely numerous, numbers since declined and the Kerry Hill was until recently included on a list of Rare Breeds. However, this striking sheep with its characteristic black and white face and legs is now making a comeback, thanks mainly to its attractiveness to small holders,

The Llanwenog is a versatile sheep breed, which produces excellent meat. It is characterised by its lack of horns, a black face and ears and a tuft of fleece on the top of the head. In temperament, the breed is hardy and docile, making them an economical breed to keep.

The pig section is delighted to invite entries to a new Kune Kune pig class. As the smallest domesticated pig, Kune Kune pigs are delightfully placid and friendly in character, thriving on human company. Their ease of management and ability to live almost entirely from grass, the Kune Kune is now a popular breed for small holders.

Commenting on the new classes, Becky Hurd, Competition Co-ordinator said: “Livestock has always been the heart and soul of the Devon County Show since it first started back in 1872 and will continue to remain its principal raison d’etre. Agricultural shows like us have a responsibility to support and celebrate this type of farming, and to recognise the extraordinary effort the farmers put into producing their animals. Equally, we have a responsibility to ensure that breeds which are lower in numbers nationally, are given the opportunity to thrive. Casting the spotlight on some of these breeds at the Devon County Show is a positive step towards securing their future.”

Picture: A Kerry Hill Sheep

Check out this local album from Will Keating to be launched in May.
10/03/2024

Check out this local album from Will Keating to be launched in May.

Arts cinema, theatre, live events, talks, exhibitions, pottery and a makers shop housed in a beautiful historic venue in Falmouth, Cornwall.

Sunday 10th March @ 9pm at www.upclose.radio
10/03/2024

Sunday 10th March @ 9pm at www.upclose.radio

On this Sunday' show we learn who is to be the president of this year's Devon County Show and what they hope to bring to the mix, we hear about the Feast Day held annually in St Ives and there are some comedy gags from the late Mrs Rosewarne, plus a great mix of folk songs and sea shanties. Listen in from 9pm at www.upclose.radio

Some interesting pebble art on one of our local North Devon beaches.
29/02/2024

Some interesting pebble art on one of our local North Devon beaches.

11/02/2024

On tonight's show another great selection of sea shanties and folk songs and we'll also be hearing about Ugbrooke House, the ancestral home of the Clifford family, in an interview with Lady Clifford, the former High Sheriff of Devon. Log on from 9pm.

03/10/2023
03/10/2023

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