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olyclimber

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Everything posted by olyclimber

  1. Dudes lay off my stash.
  2. I usually feel alot better after sitting on the throne. And lighter.
  3. Choada, I'm glad you removed the angry rhetoric. So many times spray just results in name calling and insults. Thank you for cleaning up your post.
  4. The Snow Peak Cannister Puncher is a dependable piece of quality gear. I've had mine for 3 years and I've field tested the heck out of it. It really stand up after repeated use, especially heavy use when I'm using it to puncture a lot of stuff, like stove cannisters and whatnot. Whether you are camping on the beach in Costa Rica, relaxing at camp on the West Buttress of Denali, or just car camping with the family, the Snow Peak Canister Puncher is the tool for the job. At twice the price it would still be a bargain. The Snow Peak Cannister Punch responds better when you give it a name, like "Punchy". There is nothing like "opening up a can" with the Snow Peak Cannister Puncher.
  5. YOU SUCK AT THE INTERNET
  6. OK, we got that one nailed. now...who can name everyone in this pic? lol
  7. thats not funny dru!
  8. olyclimber

    Loving you

    whatever. there will always be sad haters, misdirecting their own pain outward. LOVING YOU.....ITS EASY CAUSE YOU'RE BEAUTIFUL
  9. what do you get when you guzzle down sweets? full on!
  10. If so, CC.com is gathering climbing magazines (old ones as well as current) to send over seas to climbers serving our country in the military. Rock & Ice, Climbing Mag, Alpinist, or any other climbing magazine will work. PM myself or Jon in the Seattle area for collection and CC.com will pay to ship these magazines abroad. We already have a couple of service men who are asking for anything to read other than the rags they have laying around at their station. See this thread for more info. You can PM or email Jon or I for collection in the Seattle area, or just send off yourself a climbing magazine care package to the addresses mentioned in the link above. Thanks everyone!
  11. agreed! i'm going to make a reference to this thread on the climbers board.
  12. Thats right beyotchs, I did it myself. I replaced the front parking brake cable on my truck. I only had to order a couple of parts (one of them being the actual part I needed) and make one run to the wrecking yard to get a part that I broke with my awesome wrenching skillz. Damn works good now!!! I'm now available as a consultant for replacement of the front brake cable of a 1989 Toyota truck, Deluxe Extra Cab 4X4. Price 50$ per hour plus beer. Next up, I have a headache. Brimming with confidence here, I'm cleaning a kitchen knife.
  13. If anyone has climbing mags they would like to send to Thomas and his friends, PM me or Jon and we can collect them and CC.com will pay to send them over. I'm in West Seattle for a hand off, and Jon is Seattle/Greenlake area. thanks.
  14. sasha grey always seems to find the classiest films to be in
  15. olyclimber

    Loving you

    [video:youtube]auYCXBzep9o lalalalalalallalalalalaalallalalallalalallalaaa
  16. sorry about the image display issues folks. i cleared the forum cache and it seems to have helped.
  17. i don't know if that was semi-auto...sounds like an fully auto or at least 8 round burst mode. the army should take a look into this tech. but they'll need a way to affix bayonets and mount a scope/rangefinder
  18. An estimated 3.2 million nonpowder guns are sold in the United States each year; 80% of these have muzzle velocities greater than 350 feet per second (fps) and 50% have velocities from 500 fps to 930 fps (AC Homan, US Consumer Product Safety Commission, unpublished data, 1994). Most of these guns are intended for use by persons aged 8-18 years. At close range, projectiles from many BB and pellet guns, especially those with velocities greater than 350 fps, can cause tissue damage similar to that inflicted by powder-charged bullets fired from low-velocity conventional firearms (3). Injuries associated with use of these guns can result in permanent disability or death (4); injuries from BBs or pellets projected from air guns involving the eye particularly are severe (5). For example, based on data from the National Eye Trauma System and the United States Eye Injury Registry -- a system of voluntary reporting by ophthalmologists -- projectiles from air guns account for 63% of reported perforating eye injuries that occur in recreational settings.
  19. i would like to see some hard numbers as to how many eyes have been put out by red ryders. don't talk to me with emotion about this subject...I just want the facts.
  20. olyclimber

    rant

    especially with the chicks. every girl loves a poet.
  21. OK, with Bill and the peeps that messaged me (if they remain interested) then I think we have enough people. Thanks!
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