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rbw1966

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Everything posted by rbw1966

  1. I dont remember
  2. When a buddy of mine and I did Cooper in November of a low-snow year we saw some of those aforementioned cables. I have an old, out of print history of Mt. Hood at home and will try to remember to research what it has to say about that. Very cool picture Carl. I wonder if anyone has a shot of that from a further panorama.
  3. I ride to work every day, rain or shine. Funny sort-of-related story: Good friend of mine had a 1969 Firebird that he inherited from his dad who died when he was young. His mom kept it garaged until Mike turned 21 and then it was his. Mike spent many many hours and dollars restoring that car to its original condition, had the motor balanced, new paint everything. It was a piece of art when done. I helped him move from his house in Lake Oswego to a place on Sylvan and was driving his truck loaded with his crap as he drove his firebird. He was 4 cars in front of me as we pulled from 217 onto 26. Traffic was backed up and this asshole swerved around the line of stopped cars and cut off Mike, barely missing the front bumer and causing Mike to slam on hi brakes. Mike honked at him and the guy gave him the finger. Mike hops out of his firebird and walks up to this yahoos window. The guy trys to throw open the door of his car and Mike slams it closed, reaches inside and grabs the guy by the collar and punches him twice in the face before walking calmly back to his car. As I watched all this go down from 4 cars back several people got out of their cars and applauded. It was beautiful.
  4. I rented a scooter in Rome over the summer and had a blast. Its like soloing a long alpine route below a group of mountaineers--you're always on the watch for someone trying to kill you. It was the only way to cool down too.
  5. rbw1966

    mmm britney

    Looks like the cover of a harlequinn romance or something. creepy
  6. Looks like I gotta stay closer to home. I'll be at Frenchs tomorrow.
  7. True dat! I may be at Smith this weekend.
  8. Forrest birngs up an EXCELLENT point: flexibility. Life moves to a different tempo is euro countries. If you create a cooky-cutter itinerary you will soon be pulling out your hair in frustration with trying to adhere to it. Develop a general idea of what it is you want to do and flow with it. Remember you are on vacation and go with it. Adapt to changes. Oh, and if you are wearing shorts the day you decide you want to go to the Vatican there is a small cart outside the gates of the city that sells these crappy scrub-like pants. Tres chic!
  9. Sure you do--you can use it whilst role playing "Lost in Space" with Trask. "Warning! WArning! Danger, Will Robinson" I'm guessing by your choice of fashion that you play Dr. Smith.
  10. Some dipshit riding one of these things down the sidewalk in my neighborhood almost ran me down. Bummer he won't have it around anymore.
  11. In Oregon, bicycles have the confusing distinction of being considered as both vehicles and pedestrians. In other words, they are supposed to follow the rules of the road ascribed to drivers as well but cars should treat them as pedestrians. Cops in Portland are not afraid to ticket cyclists either for pulling stupid shit like running lights, riding in the dark without lights etc. A friend of mine got a ticket yesterday for riding in the dark without a light and almost got a DUI for riding while intoxicated. Is it being a self-righteous dick to want to retaliate against someone who risks your life? I've been on both ends of the car-bike near misses, more frequently I am the cyclist than not. The time I almost hit a cyclist the idiot was in the crosswalk coming the wrong way and ran the light. He got indignant with me (as he had every right to be since I should have been watching more carefully) however, he was also in the wrong for essentially jaywalking. This debate is old and tired. Cyclists should be more cognizant of how their actions are perceived by drivers--for instance riding between cars downtown, running red lights etc only serve to increase tensions between cars and cyclists. Drivers should be more aware of giving cyclists a wide berth on roads.
  12. rbw1966

    Whats for dinner

    Having the naked chef over for din-din? Bon appetit!
  13. I've been to europe many times and am heading back again over christmas. 6 weeks is a bit short for thinking about the hassles of car buying. Great idea for longer trips though. Renting a car can be a nice alternative. Some places are pretty cheap but keep in mind that gas is way more spendy over there. Travel light. As light as you can get away with. Hauling heavy bags around the train stations etc really sucks. Take night trains so you can consolidate travel and sleeping arrangements. I took a sleeper train from Rome to Venice, Amsterdam to Paris as well as a night boat from Split to Ancona. You wake up in a new city and ready to go. You'll want to check out the huge toursty cities like Rome, Paris, Frankfurt. Go for it. But try to stray from the beaten path. Your experience will be so much the better if you can meet some of the locals in the smaller villages. Try to experience some of the central and eastern european countries if you can. Prague is an awesome city, so is Dubrovnik, Bratislava, Budapest, Warsaw. I'll be climbing in the Tatras this winter and I can't wait. And finally, I can't stress this enough: buy some phrase books (Lonely Planet makes some great ones) and use them. Even if the people you speak to know English, it means a lot if you show even the smallest efforts at speaking their native tongue. I've heard the same complaints about Americans in Germany, Croatia, Czech etc: we refuse to learn any new languages or honor the native language. You can spot American tourons a mile off: they'll be the ones speaking loudly but slowly--in english--to the locals thinking that somehow volume and cadence will magically turn a non-english speaker into one. Have fun!
  14. You must live in outer NE portland. In addition to that listed by others I might add the following: rock=carver ice=freezer hiking=clackamas gorge biking=oaks bottom running=my favorite loops is waterfront park through oaks bottom and back through johns landing bars=depends on your flava.
  15. Gee, any guesses on who is succubus? Rather appropriate choice of avatars Sphinx.
  16. rbw1966

    mmm britney

    control-alt-delete then "end task" on iexplorer. I am weak. Kill me now.
  17. See you in hell.
  18. How do you do that? Sounds like fun! Ask and ye shall receive: Order your copy today!
  19. I trashed my shoulder recently and the doc gave me Bextra. I don't know whats in it but man does it work. Aside from some stiffness it feels a lot better. I've done accupressure for back pain before and it worked quite well. There is a local naturopathic college that gives treatment on a discount which was nice since insurance diddn't cover it. They'd rather pay for PT, drugs and doctor visits all of which resulted in no relief. One accupressure treatment and I was symptom free. I am sure I will do the same after my shoulder has quieted down. Best of luck to you.
  20. I bet that piece gets fixed easily.
  21. rbw1966

    Good Government

    Some states have repealed their helmet laws. You can choose to live in those states. The wonderful thing about choice is it works both ways--I can choose to live in a place that makes helmet use mandatory or I can choose to not care about the subject, or even choose to move to a state that allows me to ride without a helmet. Another choice is to do something to change the laws I don't like. If enough like-minded folks choose to feel the same way then my choice may become a law. We live in a dynamic political system and change occurs constantly reflecting changes in social values and concerns.
  22. Get a living will. Make sure your family, friends and doctor know about it.
  23. rbw1966

    Dark Ages

    See attachment
  24. Stoic philosophers such as Seneca felt that suicide was the penultimate expression of freedom. I think that if one is suffering from a terminal illness, one should be able to choose to end the suffering at will. Ultimately it is an individual choice. What I find incredibly dissonant is the republican emphasis on state rights, individual freedoms and limited government yet their interference in a measure that was popularly elected by the citizens of Oregon.
  25. Uhh. . .maybe because you wrote this:
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