11 April, 2010

Orc Farm

You thought Orcs were a figment of Tolkien's imagination? Think again...




























Seen near Thorington Street (map here), on the Suffolk-Essex border.

13 comments:

  1. I LIKE IT!!

    I think I'll get a similar sign made for my house ;)

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  2. Who knew Orc farming would be the next agricultural revolution?!

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  3. Are they next to Hobbit Hill? Because that would be awesome.

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  4. So THAT's where orcs come from. It explains quite a bit, actually.

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  5. Scott - You're welcome :-) I saw the sign and thought of you.

    Constance - Who indeed?

    Meghan - Alas, no, not that I know of.

    Rick - It would have to be extraodinarily productive to be the source of all Tolkien's teeming armies of darkness :-)

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  6. Oh, not all from this one farm! But if they are grown as a crop, that eliminates some rather repellant speculation about how the supply is kept up.

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  7. Carla, you should stop in there one day and tell them you have a friend in America who'd like to know how deep English Orcs are planted :)

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  8. Anonymous2:38 pm

    Excellent! I've seen a couple of Rivendells before, but never an Orc Farm. Thanks for the pics and post, Carla.

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  9. Rick - Didn't we discuss here a while ago the possibility of Orcs being parthenogenetic? In which case I suppose one could farm them like bees.

    Scott - That's probably a trade secret :-)

    Ben - Hello and welcome! There are a couple of Rivendells and Lothloriens around, but fortunately not very near to Orc Farm. I wonder if it's a traditional name or if the owners had a sense of humour?

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  10. They have to make sure no trolls escape from the neighbour farm, though. Don't want to have any trollocs around. :)

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  11. Gabriele - no, indeed. Trollocs are about the only thing I can remember about 'Wheel of Time'; definitely not creatures you want to have around :-)

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  12. Yes, we did speculate about parthenogenesis in orcs.

    It would be really wonderful if it is a traditional name, not an LOTR joke.

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  13. Rick - Or a misspelling, or some sort of acronym, or something equally mundane.

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