Fuddyduddy1952
Super Member
- Joined
- Aug 10, 2022
- Messages
- 9,077
- Tractor
- john deere
A hundred years ago Sears Roebuck catalog you could order morphine and syringes.
Is J. C. Whitney even in business any more? They used to sell fiberglass bodies that would turn a Volksbuggen into a flashy car. Scrounge a Porsche engine and transaxle, and you could really be unsafe at any speed.
Sort of. Regurgitated and recycled ... now part of carparts.com ....RIP JC Whitney. I had many sets of crappy "off-road" lights from there. Almost bought a train horn too.
Wondering where they went to. They had a positively huge warehouse and distribution center on the south side of I 80 just west of Joliet, Illinois. Used to offer some pretty strange stuff too. Always had one of their catalogs on the top of the toilet tank in the bathroom for 'relaxing reading'.Sort of. Regurgitated and recycled ... now part of carparts.com ....
I haven't scrolled though it to see if they still have that weird stuff vibe.
You can still get the 'Girlie' suicide knobs (steering wheel spinners) where the gal drops her top when you turn it. Available at most sleazy truckstops.Can you still purchase striptease highball glasses or stripper pens?
I remember driving to HS with my shotgun sitting in the rack in my back truck window during bird seasons, and it was replaced by a rifle during deer and elk seasons. I have carried a pocket knife since grade school and still do. None of the guns or knives were considered unusual, and frequently we would go to the parking lot during lunch break to compare each other’s guns.In the seventies in Louisiana you could bring your guns, knives and bows to school where they had classes in weapon safety and proper handling.
Albuquerque (including unincorporated areas) is about 1 million population, so not really large in the sense of largest US cities. It’s about 10 miles east/west and 20 miles north/south, making it seem larger than it is because it’s situated in the Rio Grande valley so it’s long and narrow.Albuquerque must be one big place. We drove around it on our trip out west and it seemed like we'd never get past it. It's the only big city I remember from the trip. The other thing I remember from the drive is the high number of pickup trucks with passengers riding in the bed. I sometimes wonder how the seat belt laws affected that.
Insurance companies should do risk rating of homes located in flammable forest locations and assign a high rate for properties where the owners haven’t reduced hazards by thinning trees and brush, and reduce rates for those who have reduced their hazards.I wonder if in the next few years, people will be required to have home owner's insurance, with exculsions for wild fires and such. I mean you have to have it on your car and motorcycle all ready in my State. And they have lobbyists that work day and night, to get legislation in. Right now the insurance companies are just dropping policies left and right for owners: Meaning that they get no money. Right now they are selective of the areas, but at some point, they will want to recoup their losses here, and spread the loss out to include everyone, with some sort of law. I don't insure my boat, yet in some areas, this also became a requirement for attending a meeting.
I bought a chrome VW bumper for $9.98 plus shipping from Whitney plus assorted Model A parts...Sort of. Regurgitated and recycled ... now part of carparts.com ....
I haven't scrolled though it to see if they still have that weird stuff vibe.
They do... we all pay a high rate and if you aren't on top of it you're cancelled...Insurance companies should do risk rating of homes located in flammable forest locations and assign a high rate for properties where the owners haven’t reduced hazards by thinning trees and brush, and reduce rates for those who have reduced their hazards.
What should count most is the forest density, brush, and other fuels around the structure. That directly relates to how defensible the structure is to wildfire.They do... we all pay a high rate and if you aren't on top of it you're cancelled...
Very hard to get insurance now and much harder if cancelled... and the companies know it.
Fire rating based on build is almost non existent...
Spending money on a clay tile roof, now exterior exposed wood, triple pane windows, full inside and out fire sprinklers plus we'll cleared with a fire hydrant in front with 180 psi and a fire station a 1/4 mile away means nothing...
What counts is how close to park and open space!
Your house will be the one that fire teams defend during wildfires."Insurance companies should do risk rating of homes located in flammable forest locations and assign a high rate for properties where the owners haven’t reduced hazards by thinning trees and brush, and reduce rates for those who have reduced their hazards."
I've done that, but everyone else around me has not. Its a weird situation. I have reminded neighbors to get their forest fire loads down. And they don't care at all.
I think you would find property owners very proactive here and in much of Northern CA as in wine country but even vineyards burned with no dense forest.What should count most is the forest density, brush, and other fuels around the structure. That directly relates to how defensible the structure is to wildfire.
Sometimes it was fun picking out the interesting stuff from the silly junk. They used to have remote trunk release conversion kits ... a solenoid and a steel cable with a lever that wedged into the lock slot. Sometimes it worked.Used to offer some pretty strange stuff too. Always had one of their catalogs on the top of the toilet tank in the bathroom for 'relaxing reading'.
They should do that everywhere. I cleared everything taller than the eaves so nothing could fall onto the roof. But most of my neighbors have 50' trees 20' from the house for 'shade'. Storms with 60+ MPH winds are not uncommon here.Insurance companies should do risk rating of homes located in flammable forest locations and assign a high rate for properties where the owners haven’t reduced hazards by thinning trees and brush, and reduce rates for those who have reduced their hazards.
Maybe different definitions, but I see them in most stores these days.Shoestring potatoes. Not an order, but they were in every grocery store.
We used to deer hunt before school, school all day, then football practice.I remember driving to HS with my shotgun sitting in the rack in my back truck window during bird seasons, and it was replaced by a rifle during deer and elk seasons. I have carried a pocket knife since grade school and still do. None of the guns or knives were considered unusual, and frequently we would go to the parking lot during lunch break to compare each other’s guns.
You can’t even use your thumb and index finger and say bang…We used to deer hunt before school, school all day, then football practice.
Just tired thinking about those days.
You can’t even bring a water pistol to a school now.