ive watched this video 5 times in the last two days and it always makes me laugh til i get a headache & i wanted it on my blog but didnt find it anywhere so guess i gotta do it myself
ASICCAZA y Bergara presentan a la AESAN su plataforma para la digitalización de la trazabilidad de la carne de caza
ASICCAZA y Bergara presentan a la AESAN su plataforma para la digitalización de la trazabilidad de la carne de caza.
Continue reading ASICCAZA y Bergara presentan a la AESAN su plataforma para la digitalización de la trazabilidad de la carne de caza
Only ghost files on it atm but Mystery Files and Puppet History are next. Watcher has back pedalled on deleteing all their free content to lock it behind a pay wall but y'know what? maybe I just dont want to give them ad revenue anymore, which is evil but screw them. Also they may still back pedal on their back pedalling, which is to many pedals anyways.
To answer this question we must go back several centuries, almost to the year 1200, and to a region inland Gipuzkoa that was a natural passage between the coast and the Araba plains, where king Alfonso X The Wise founded the town of Bergara. The wool of the great Castilian herds would be exported to England via this town and so did the great English innovations such as steam engines on their way to the Iberian Peninsula.
In this context, Bergara became an important manufacturing center focused on the textile and metallurgical industry. What does this have to do with blue, though? At the beginning of the 19th century, when Bergara had centuries of textile specialization on its back, a fabric called nanquin - a yellowish cotton tissue both strong and light - began to arrive from China to Europe via the then English port of Maó.
Yellow was a color that wouldn’t hide any stain, so the fabric - very fit for workwear - should be dyed blue. Indigo dye needed lots of water and Bergara had a huge river in the middle and centuries of textile expertise, so many locals saw the opportunity and created companies to start dyeing that Maó tissue blue. By 1888 they would produce 17,000 pieces a year already. When industrialization hit Spain the companies of Bergara got to produce 90% of blue Maó in the country, and later in the 70s they also started dyeing denim; the industry of dye died out in the 00s when the denim started to be dyed massively in Morocco, India, or Brazil.
The most interesting thing is that the blue workwear made in Bergara was so popular and ubicous that people started calling that shade of blue Bergara blue; in the early 20th century Bergara blue was a synonym for work overalls, and there’s a store in Madrid that still mantains the original 1917 name:
El rifle Crest Carbon está construido sobre una culata ligera y sólida de fibra de carbono Monte Carlo, que está fabricada con la tecnología más innovadora. La culata Crest también incorpora espaciadores de LOP y nuestro cargador M5 que proporciona a los usuarios una versatilidad única para la transición sin problemas de cargador AICS a una de trampilla. Esta culata, ahora combinada con nuestro…