Cul de Sac by Richard Thompson for September 06, 2010
Transcript:
Alice: Wow! Dill: That's my brothers' latest trebuchet. It won the blue ribbon in Ancient War Machines at the county fair! Alice: Your mom must be proud of your brothers. Dill: She was till they launched the dining room furniture into the neighborhood pool.
margueritem about 14 years ago
That’d sour me, too…
leakysqueaky712 about 14 years ago
Look out Dill……..you may be next for the launching pad.
GROG Premium Member about 14 years ago
Yeah I could see how that might put a damper on things, Dill
JP Steve Premium Member about 14 years ago
Dining table…INCOMING!!!
Sisyphos about 14 years ago
Mixed emotions. Maybe they needed a new dining room set anyway?
DGWillie about 14 years ago
Hi, MargueriteM – Miss you over at you-know-where!
cdward about 14 years ago
I want to meet Dill’s brothers some day! If not in this comic where their anonymity is nigh on sacred, then in a spinoff! I like these guys - and they can have my ratty dining room furniture!
Steve Parmelee Premium Member about 14 years ago
I can NEVER find that “Ancient War Machines” competition and exhibit at the county fairs I visit!
Me_Again about 14 years ago
I love Dill and his unseen brothers.
fritzoid Premium Member about 14 years ago
I’d prefer never to see Dill’s brothers, but I’d like to see more of his parents. We’ve met Mr. Wedekind once (Dill’s Birthday party) and possibly Mrs. Wedekind (a parents’ night at Blisshaven), and it would be enlightening to learn more about what sort of parents gave rise to Dill and the boys.
Besides, Madeline and Peter Sr. don’t appear to have ANY friends or social lives, so far as we’ve seen. The Wedekinds live right across the street from the Otterloops, and you’d think they’d get together for cocktails or something from time to time. Yeah, the focus of the strip is on the kids and not the parents, but when parents get together they mostly talk about their kids anyway…
cleokaya about 14 years ago
Instead of furniture he could launch his friends into the pool. What a grand time that would be.
richardcthompson Premium Member about 14 years ago
The pool was empty but there may have been a few people sitting at the dining room table.
Donna Haag about 14 years ago
My thirteen year old son wants to build a trebuchet. I tolfd him I would help, but his dad won’t let us. Something to do with the safety of the neighborhood and yhe slightly dangerous leanings of the builders. I told him I could probably hit the local Starbucks (I work there); he still won’t let us.
fritzoid Premium Member about 14 years ago
They needed more chairs down at the pool anyway…
glenardis about 14 years ago
iamtxmilady, skip the trebucket. think spud cannon.
as to meeting dill’s parents and brothers. why? if you meet them, see them, then they are a fixed item defined by the author.
not seeing them allows your imagination to conjure up a thousand different images limited only by the scope of your own creative ability.
close your eyes and they are there.
keechum about 14 years ago
Kids will be kids.
fritzoid Premium Member about 14 years ago
That’s the thing, glenardis, we already HAVE been introduced to at least one of Dill’s parents. (The mother wasn’t identified as such in the strip, but in the Garland Treasury commentary RT said that he thinks it might be Mrs. Wedekind.) From what we’ve seen of Mr. Wedekind, he seems like he’d be fun to bring back once in a while, and it seems that socializing with Madeline and Peter would be a fun and convenient way to do it.
(I’m assuming of course that Richard doesn’t regret having made him definite, and is hoping we’ll forget.)
JanLC about 14 years ago
iamtxmilady, I once saw a miniature version at a Renaissance Faire. It stood no more than 5 or 6 feet tall, but could fling a 5 lb weight quite a ways. Maybe your husband will let you build the smaller version.
Anyone remember “Northern Exposure” where Chris was determined to fling a cow with his trebuchet? He ended up flinging a piano instead, with the whole town of Cicily watching. They made a party of it.
JP Steve Premium Member about 14 years ago
http://www.coolest-gadgets.com/20070711/desktop-trebuchet-spells-trouble/
pschearer Premium Member about 14 years ago
The History Channel has shown any number of documentaries with trebuchets launching pianos and even small cars.
Everyone should have a hobby.
habamom about 14 years ago
fritzoid, Speaking as the mother of boys ages 4-6-8: I often socialize with my kids’ friends’ mothers (largely because of arranged playdates, which neighborhood kids don’t usually have), but rarely do my hubby and I socialize with the parents of our kids’ friends as a couple.
One reason we avoid this kind of socializing is because all of the children have to be underfoot OR a babysitter (or two) hired because our kids are not at an age when they can be left alone for any length of time.
But perhaps Dill’s brothers could be pressed into service as babysitters….
vldazzle about 14 years ago
My friends in SCA have built and used many trebuchets. As a scribe I have been required to draw/paint them on scrolls for many awards, just as I often illustrate archers and those fighting with rapiers.
comics4brown about 14 years ago
I must have missed all those “War Machines” entries at the fair … maybe this year.
DCStark over 13 years ago
All y’all ought to come out here to Delawarte in the Fall, when they do the Annual “Punkin’ Chunkin’” Competition! You’d see some HUGE trebuchets then!
HerokidPlayz over 6 years ago
Dill’s brothers are like the noodle incedint from Calvin and Hobbes.they keep mentioning them, but we never get to see them. We need to have a storyline where they are seen.