The valuable content in Tony's email to the SML is quoted below.

"I've just received some nice pictures of the reproduction of a 1773 dial made 
originally by Heath and Wing of London which was re-delineated in 2010 for its 
new home at Holland College on Prince Edward Island in Canada showing six years 
of interesting patination. A footnote accompanying the pictures tells me that 
the dial has become a prominent feature of the campus but there is now a 
'Pokemon Go' creature to be found dancing on it. Ouch!  Tony Moss"

I have witnessed several young people playing Pokémon Go around town. Perhaps 
we can take advantage of this phenomenon and increase peoples interest in 
sundials by encouraging sundials as Pokémon locations. Precise locations are 
available on the web in various sundial registries world wide. 

Perhaps we could nominate the the "slithy tove" as a wild Pokémon character and 
the wabe as a Pokémon cell or gym. An image of a "slithy tove as it did gyre 
and gimble in the wabe is here. 
https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/43/Jabberwocky_creatures.jpg 
Humpty Dumpty reported that "Toves are something like badgers, they're 
something like lizards, and they're something like corkscrews. Also they make 
their nests under sun-dials, also they live on cheese." Perhaps the Pokémon 
toves in the southern hemisphere would have counter rotating corkscrew tails. 

Should we forward this modest proposal to the Pokémon developer "Niantic Inc" 
in California or the "Pokémon Company" in Japan for implementation?

Roger Bailey
Walking Shadow Designs
Sidney by the Sea BC 
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