Re: Is there a problem with rah?

Re: Is there a problem with rah?

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 Re: Is there a problem with rah? Dan Reply Send to a Friend   Print
 
Subject Author Date
Is there a problem with rah? Scott 02-04-2007
Richard Riley wrote:
> On Sun, 04 Feb 2007 19:33:49 -0600, Dan <B2431@aol.com> wrote:
>
>> Richard Riley wrote:
>>> On Sun, 04 Feb 2007 16:13:42 -0600, Dan <B2431@aol.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>> Roger wrote:
>>>> <snip>
>>>>> It must be psychological. Last night when the outside temp was showing
>>>>> -6 I bumped the shop up to 72 from 70 and still felt cold. The
>>>>> temperature in the shop is very consistent throughout the whole
>>>>> building.
>>>>> Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member)
>>>>> (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair)
>>>>> www.rogerhalstead.com
>>>> Dern sissy, when I was young I had to trudge through blizzards to
>>>> get to my hangar. It was up hill...... both ways...
>>>>
>>>> Now let me tell you about having to kill a cave bear to get sinew to
>>>> sew fabric for my first airplane.......
>>> Sinew!? This generation, I tell you, they do not appreciate what they
>>> have!
>>>
>>> In my day we had to beat papyrus bark to make the fiber to spin into
>>> thread! But tell the kids these days....
>> We had no papyrus in the glaciers. We had to shave live woolly
>> mammoths to get fibers to weave for our fabric.
>>
>> On the bright side our wives didn't complain about our building
>> airplanes, I was the first in my glacier to build one, since there was
>> no such thing as divorce. We would simply trade 'em off to another clan.
>>
>> Life was rough back then, I tell ya.
>
> We never had momoths. We tried shaving giant sloths once, couldn't
> get them to hold still long enough. I tell you, for something called
> a sloth, those babies can move. We did figure out obsidian blades,
> though - they're great if you're near a volcano. Sharp and cheap.

Now you know why sloth is one of the seven deadly sins.

>
> But these kids today, with their fancy "steel" and "aluminum" and
> "gasoline" - they do not understand what it was like in the old days.
>
> Hey, is it true you can distill fermented honey by freezing it? My
> old building buddy Og swears he's seen it done.

Dunno about that, but the youth of today do not appreciate how we
invented such nav aids as the first VOR at Stone Henge.

Dan, U.S. Air Force, retired


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