Picture of the day

Chug chug chug...

Bundesarchiv_Bild_101I-219-0597-15_Russland-Mitte-S%C3%BCd_leichte_Flak_Josef_Niemitz.jpg
 
http://1.bp.########.com/-3SIUNBdf2ZI/UNA8SEavR5I/AAAAAAAA5dM/pfrTEFYnFKU/s1600/A+german+world+war+2+colour+historical+image+showing+Panzer+III+tank+crossing+a+river.jpg

Any idea what that basket-like arrangement is on the back?
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Firewood. You can't always find it when you need it out on the steppe
 
Firewood. You can't always find it when you need it out on the steppe

Don't think so. From reading through Carius's "Tigers in the Mud" and some of the ad-hoc solutions they were coming up with in Russia, I would be more inclined to think it was for shoring up ditches and soft ground to make specific routes more passable for the tanks.
 
they're called FACsINES- and everybody used them to shore up or cross ditches, etc-
 
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No, a fascine is a bundle of sticks. Look at the Italian Fascist emblems dating back to Roman times. What the soldiers above are doing is creating a "corduroy road" over otherwise impassable ground. Done all the time around here.
 
Corduroy road, or the remnants thereof, was common to find in the bush when I was growing up. Hard on trees, but it makes goo into road, and I suppose that's what counts.

Here's a corduroy bridge, probably leading from one long patch of corduroy to the next.

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Fascine - a tightly bound bundle of sticks used by military engineers as a method of filling in trenches and/or strengthening earthworks.

Been around since Roman times.
 
Don't think so. From reading through Carius's "Tigers in the Mud" and some of the ad-hoc solutions they were coming up with in Russia, I would be more inclined to think it was for shoring up ditches and soft ground to make specific routes more passable for the tanks.

Notice how the pieces are too short to be used under both tracks as in the other photos?

Besides which, a 25 ton tank will snap those 4-5 inch pieces like twigs.

Good for making crosses on graves anyway.
 
I think I've see picture of the B-17 in post 2174 before.

I think the original caption was that the wing was knocked off by a bomb from a bomber flying above it.
 
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