285 Comments for Manicomio Francesca

wrote:
Wow so glad you are back. Missed your postings. But I did discover the forums and the postings of some of the members.
Thanks for the new pictures and commentary.
As others have said hope the bad is gone and life only has good 8in store for you.
Motts, do you know what the sign on the right wall says ?
Glad you are back Mr. Motts!
wrote:
Oh, wait.; that is just a table. (blush)
wrote:
I like how the windows line up with the stains on the ceiling. I was on a gurney just yesterday. So much fun.

Great to see evidence of Motts.
wrote:
Great natural lighting for reading or whatever these rooms were originally used for in the 1700/1800's. These file areas look a bit modernized?
wrote:
Green for the living, blue for the undead, but nobody knows why it is all so clean and untouched.
wrote:
Wouldn't it be odd to find your own file there?
wrote:
Hard to figure out what is what or where and when or even who and why? I couldn't stop the W's once I got going, sorry.
wrote:
I suspect the corpes of olden times would get a little juicey by the time some folks could get there to view. A drain would come in handy in such cases, no?

Or, is it a high class zombie snake entrance?
wrote:
The soap dispenser hanging directly above the drain is quite decorative.
wrote:
Wait, I forgot to LOL at the washing the hoof after using the toilet.. I think not, unless there is another doorway for clean hooves only.
wrote:
Yes, my barn does have french doors. Goats are good zombie fodder to keep the zombies off the humans. Decoys, if you will.
wrote:
A good hose down and a sweepin" and we could be up and running.
wrote:
Heh nah, they were still laid in the cooler horizontally, the rest is hidden behind the wall partition.

Although the campus was in the center of a city district, the asylum walls created a self-contained area for the goats to graze.