Frank and Ernest by Thaves for October 22, 2024

  1.  bored 2 death
    ᴮᴼᴿᴱᴰ2ᴰᴱᴬᵀᴴ  about 1 month ago

    Rory made the same observation six years ago⠄⠄⠄

    gocomics.Com/thebarn/2018/10/09

     •  Reply
  2. The rat
    Ratkin Premium Member about 1 month ago

    Yet I have to run uphill in the local park to find running water on the surface. It’s all underground where I live this time of year after a long dry summer.

     •  Reply
  3. Missing large
    kendavis09  about 1 month ago

    they didn’t need to anyway, water runs down hill.

     •  Reply
  4. Pexels pixabay 278823
    Doug K  about 1 month ago

    Nursery Rhyme Physics is similar to Comic Physics.

     •  Reply
  5. Missing large
    PraiseofFolly  about 1 month ago

    Is that Neil deGrasse Tyson, as a kid?

     •  Reply
  6. Profile pic
    The Orange Mailman  about 1 month ago

    He said the H word.

     •  Reply
  7. Missing large
    dbrucepm  about 1 month ago

    the well was on top of the hill

     •  Reply
  8. Oip
    klbdds  about 1 month ago

    “Water seeks its own level”

     •  Reply
  9. Cobra 1
    [Traveler] Premium Member about 1 month ago

    They say a plumber only needs to know 3 things: hot is on the left, cold is on the right and stuff flows downhill.

     •  Reply
  10. Missing large
    zager.pe  about 1 month ago

    F&E did this very same one back on 6/7/03. I have it on my fridge. I’ll put this one next to it…somehow

     •  Reply
  11. Missing large
    uniquename  about 1 month ago

    Those early physics classes are working.

     •  Reply
  12. Missing large
    jtburgess Premium Member about 1 month ago

    IF the hill is only the foothill of a larger mountain, then the water comes from higher up, and would be cleaner than anything fetched from down below. . . . It’s a possibility.

     •  Reply
  13. Cover of prophecy of honor
    FGWaiss  about 1 month ago

    The illustration in my picture book made it clear: The well was on the top of a hill.

     •  Reply
  14. 2c4f4aec 1e40 4883 b4f4 2bbbabae7709
    simonwerman Premium Member about 1 month ago

    And surprisingly, wells are in fact often at the top of a hill. Geohydrodynamics can seem weird sometimes.

     •  Reply
  15. Male model
    GojusJoe  about 1 month ago

    Assuming there is a well at the top of the hill, and assuming the well is no more than 40 feet deep, then yes, the hydrodynamics works. Of course, there could be other scenarios, i.e. a lake, a river or stream. How big is this hill and how far does it extend? Could we get some clarification from the author? Okay then, according to Google, the author was Charles Burney in 1777 or James William Elliott in 1870 or Alfred James Caldicott in 1878. So much for clarification.

     •  Reply
  16. Missing large
    mbhiggins5555  about 1 month ago

    Perhaps that is where the town water tower was located, with an access spigot.

     •  Reply
  17. Gocomic avatar
    sandpiper  about 1 month ago

    It is if the water supply is a pond that is above the level of the house. And as to the tumbling, it’s just something kids do for fun.

     •  Reply
  18. Avatar92
    curtlyon19  about 1 month ago

    OMG, never realized! duhhhh

     •  Reply
  19. Img 1157
    brick10  about 1 month ago

    It’s not a hydrodynamics story, it’s a gravity exploration.

     •  Reply
  20. Grelber1
    tony_n_jen2003  about 1 month ago

    “Jack and JillWent up the hill,Jack came down with a smileAnd Jill came down with a buck.” A poem by my 8th grade French teacher.

     •  Reply
  21. Missing large
    Smeagol  about 1 month ago

    Little ditty ’bout Jack and Diane… oops wrong reference.

     •  Reply
  22. Missing large
    gammaguy  about 1 month ago

    These days, fetching water is beyond the pail.

     •  Reply
  23. Images 3
    Strawberry King  about 1 month ago

    Ugh. I just thought about that horrible Adam Sandler movie. The only good thing about it was Al Pacino being in it.

     •  Reply
  24. Captain smokeblower
    poppacapsmokeblower  about 1 month ago

    If it were a lower hill, with neighboring higher hills, the geological formations could produce an artesian well on the lower hill.

    It wouldn’t work gravity wise, for them to go down into a valley and fall upward.

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment

More From Frank and Ernest