RandyT
Elite Member
Or a pop tart shaped like a gun.You can’t even use your thumb and index finger and say bang…
Or a pop tart shaped like a gun.You can’t even use your thumb and index finger and say bang…
And yet, it seemed that 25% or more of your order (whatever it was) would come back "out of stock" or "backordered". Agree on the oddball stuff offered. I wonder how much of that anyone ever ordered.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.
Same with TV. Even in the early days of TV, you could find something entertaining, funny, enlightening, interesting or restful. Today, there is not a series worth watching. I haven't seen a good comedy show or comedian in years; they aren't even on TV any more unless you watch a rerun of Roseann or Carol Burnette. Boston Legal and NCIS went the way of the Do Do. Twenty four hours of contrived news and comment doesn't cut it any more.Shoestring potatoes. Not an order, but they were in every grocery store.
Ah, Johnny Carson. He was the last of the great late night hosts. His monologs were funny. His guests were intelligent and interesting. I remember Carl Sagan, Truman Capote, Gore Vidal, David Horowitz, and he gave early breaks to famous acts like George Carlin. When Leno took over, he turned it into the starlet of the day and Late Night For Dummies. I'm old enough to remember Steve Allen as host, and Carson carried on the tradition. He was the last.Same with TV. Even in the early days of TV, you could find something entertaining, funny, enlightening, interesting or restful. Today, there is not a series worth watching. I haven't seen a good comedy show or comedian in years; they aren't even on TV any more unless you watch a rerun of Roseann or Carol Burnette. Boston Legal and NCIS went the way of the Do Do. Twenty four hours of contrived news and comment doesn't cut it any more.
Ah, Red Skelton, Johnny Carson, Ed Sullivan, Colgate Comedy hour; we miss you.
We had a 10-meter small bore range in the basement of thee Junior High.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.
My brother had to take down a dozen trees to get fire insurance for his place. He has a 1000-gallon tank on the hill above the house, and keeps the chemicals to make fire retardant slurry at the house.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!
That experience effected me when i started to build my house in idaho. I was at the building dept with plans and asked the clerk where i get permit to remove some trees. She just stared at me and asked if they were my trees. When i said yes, she asked me why i want a permit to cut my own trees. Enough said.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.
Private dozer operators saved many but also came under attack by regulators for blazing trails in sensitive wetlands and on public lands.
It takes a permit with public comment to remove most trees and permit is several hundred dollars… just saying.
When all said and done it was 2k for me to have a single backyard walnut tree taken down…
Embers can travel many miles and high wind with low humidity is akin to a tinderbox situation leaving only structural hardening…
I remember driving through there with my big truck and the wind was always blowing the wrong way.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.