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Topic: Solutions to Cylinder Problem at RealityCarnival.Com
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Jules  30
05-27-2005 06:59 PM ET (US)
get the dog to bite open can of soup
pour soup down pole as lubricant
glue dog to your back
tie rope round pole's circumferance - tie loose ends round yourself and dog
slide down pole using the chicken soup lubricant and weight of dog
prey!
Gary F. Goodman  29
04-11-2005 12:07 PM ET (US)
1. Glue one end of the rope to one end of the soup can.

2. Place the other end of the rope in the dog's mouth.
    
3. Glue the dog's feet to the top of the pole, near the edge.

4. Deposit glue on the OTHER end of the can.

5. Holding the crope and the epoxy, jump off the pole.

6. When you stop swinging, fix the can to the pole with the glue that you just put there.

7. Jerk the rope from the dog's mouth.

8. You now have a free end of the rope, whose OTHEER end is glued to a can, WHICH -- is glued to the pole, 1/2 mile from the ground.

9. Climb down the rope. You will be less than 12 feet from the ground. Jump. You are free. Allow the dog to die. Humans are ALWAYS more important than dogs.
the foley  28
02-23-2005 10:09 PM ET (US)
no. you cant escape. you don't have enough endurance, and probably strength, to bring your bodyweight down an entire mile. your going to die.
Cthulhu Hotep  27
12-18-2004 01:46 AM ET (US)
Edited by author 12-18-2004 01:50 AM
I tie the can to the end of the rope securely. I swing the can in larger and larger arcs, smashing it against the top of the pole until it bursts open. The dog and I have lunch. I then use the sharp edge of the can to cut the rope into sections and weave a basket carry with leg holes for the dog. I use the epoxy to secure the knots. Similarly I make a seat and attach three identical fourteen foot lengths of six-ply braided ropes and make these into redundant lineman's belts which I attach to the seat with strong knots and epoxy. I make knee pads from smaller woven mats of rope and make ankle pads from loops of rope, careful not to make them too tight but affixing them with epoxy to my clothing and the skin beneath to ensure they don't come off during the climb. I tie a length of rope around my waist and tuck the can into it for later. (You didn't mention clothes, so I assume I have none). I then place the dog in the basket carry and sling it across my back. I drop the loop of the lineman's belt over the far end of the pole and begin working my way down, by leaning back on the seat and bracing my ankle and knee pads against the pole. It's a controlled slide and at an average rate of about 1 foot per second I should be down in about two hours. At the bottom, if there is no one to rescue me, I cut through the climbing belt with the can and release the dog. Then I go looking for the person who put me on top of the pole...
Fern of tripoli  26
09-19-2004 08:46 PM ET (US)
Well there's more then one way.(gear_n_thunder@hotmail.com)

1- shave the word "help" with the glue and the rope on the dog, throw over the edge and wait.

2-unravel the rope, then with the wire make a form of sail. then jump holding onto the sail, gently float down.

3-Glue one end of the rope then let the dog bite the same end(dog dies of poisoning) coat the dog with glue, throw it over the edge let it stick to the side of the poll then jump.

4- (most realistic) break open the can of soup and lube the "middle" part of the rope. Tie both ends of the rope to your forarms and wrist(jumprope style), push the rope of the edge in order for it to "wrap" the edge, get to the edge put the dog between you and the poll and slide down.
Dorothy  25
09-15-2004 01:31 PM ET (US)
This method is nicer to the dog but still leaves him at the top of the cylinder, which seems ungrateful. Spend a little time training the dog to hold the rope firmly in his teeth until ordered verbally to release it. Hang the rope off the cylider and have the dog hold one end of the rope in his teeth while you climb down, holding the epoxy and the soup. When you reach the end of the rope, glue the can of chicken soup to the side of the cylinder with the epoxy, tie the end of the rope around it, and ask the dog to release the rope. Climb down from the soup can.
Chris Weber  24
09-13-2004 07:38 PM ET (US)
The dog's intestines would work to bridge the rest of the gap past the rope.....I would use the expoxy to nicely euthenize the dog....use the top of the soup can to cut open the dog and triple loop the intestines, applying epoxy to help hold together the new triple braided rope....

I hope this never happens to me.....or my dog...lol
Fatman  23
08-17-2004 04:54 PM ET (US)
SLAUGHTER THE DOG AND TURN HIM INTO ANOTHER HALF MILE OF ROPE!!!!!!!!!!!!
Anivair  22
08-16-2004 05:15 PM ET (US)
Interactive: Wait until the dog is looking almost hungry enough to eat me. Epoxy the rope to the top of the pole and let it hang over the edge.

Then, use the epoxy/pull method to open the can (not likely). Pour the contents of the can onto the top of hte rope (maybe not all of it if it's a big can) and start to climb, remembering to take hte epoxy with you.

When you get to the bottom, epoxy the bottom to the pole and wait for the dog to gnaw through the soup soaked rope. For a german sheperd this should be about an hour, but you've already been climbing.

WHen the rest of the rope falls, dodge it and then climb down.

The realistic. Wait a long time for the dog to get hungry and epoxy the rope. Fail to open a can with your bare hands and decide to climb down anyway (maybe hoping that the dog will gnaw the rope. After about a hundred feet, loose your grip and fall to your death.
Adam Browne  21
07-21-2004 07:15 AM ET (US)
my email's hullabaloopie@aol.com by the way, in case Cliff is posting his solutions out.
Adam Browne  20
07-21-2004 07:10 AM ET (US)
OK, so there are about 10 trillion cells in the dog's body. If the DNA in each cell were to be isolated and stretched out, each molecule would be 2 metres long. Of course, the molecules would have to be braided to a thickness sufficient to support your weight, which would require some patience and a steady hand -- but apart from that, all you need is to somehow employ the rope, the chicken soup and the epoxy to make the apparatus geneticists use to derive DNA from cells.

Then you're home-free. I mean, 10 trillion multiplied by 2 metres -- that's a REALLY long rope, even accounting for the length lost in braiding. If you don't want to kill the dog, which I'm sure you don't, you could probably remove a million cells or so without doing the animal much harm -- you'd have plenty of DNA rope even then. Or, if you're REALLY solicitous about the dog's well-being, you could just carefully remove the intron DNA from its cells - junk DNA - it would never miss that; might even do it some good.

Once you're down the bottom, make sure you take some of the rope with you so you can sequence it and produce a new German Shepherd. Then, in a sense, the dog's made it down there with you too, and everyone's happy!
Rev. D. Ed SiriuSLY  19
07-01-2004 03:00 PM ET (US)
Probably pass out a few times from oxygen deprivation before I actually got around to doing anything....
TXguess  18
06-16-2004 01:54 AM ET (US)
Edited by author 06-16-2004 02:19 AM
I would glue one end of the can down and pull hard to open it and then do the same to the other end to turn the can into an open and sturdy metal tube. I would then thread both ends of the rope through the tube creating a bolo tie of sorts.
I would then gently and apologetically glue the dog's mouth shut, glue its legs together and apply a coat of the epoxy to the palms and finger pads of my hands for protection and increased gripping ability.
Once the glue dried, I would hoist the dog over my head and one shoulder like a satchel. Then drop the rope loop over the edge of the cylinder and grab both pieces of the rope and lower us over the edge.
We should then be able to essentially repel or slide down using the can as a tool to navigate and adjust speed, distance and stability. (Like the old kids' toy where you move the ball back and forth by pulling apart the pieces of rope to move it away and bringing them together to let it come back to you.)
A smooth easy ride with no rope burn!
gerwen  17
04-15-2004 11:40 AM ET (US)
Use epoxy to fix soup can to side of pole so it is standing perpendicular to pole and parallel to the ground.
Tie a loop in rope and put loop over can and drop the rest of rope down.
Climb down rope.
With a couple feet of slack at bottom of rope, glue bottom of rope to pole.
Hang from part of rope attached at bottom. Shake rope loose from soup can above.
Get pummelled by half a mile of rope as it falls on and past you.
Climb down rope to ground.

If you want to bring the dog, either glue him to your back or glue two of his paws together and put them around your neck draping him over your back. Having your paws glued together is better than starving on top of a pole.
Winslow  16
03-07-2004 02:42 AM ET (US)
Looping the rope around the pole and tying it to one's waist seems to be the most logical solution. It makes no difference, though, because my severe fear of heghts would certainly doom ME in this situation.
Daniel  15
02-20-2004 11:35 AM ET (US)
I would just tie the rope arount my waist and loop it around the pole. Then just ease my way down moving the rope as i go and leaning back to make it tight.
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