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In article , dump-on-
says... On 1/5/12 10:01 AM, iBoaterer wrote: In , dump-on- says... On 1/5/12 8:51 AM, iBoaterer wrote: In , dump-on- says... On 1/4/12 9:30 PM, Tim wrote: http://www.metro.us/newyork/life/art...ing-affordable ?Boats are a great investment for a family because it?s a way to socialize and spend time together,? says Ellen Hopkins, a spokes*woman for Discover Boating. ?A lot of my friends who grew up boating said that one of their best memories was going out with their dads on Sundays and fishing ? it?s a unique way to bond. It?s like a minivacation, even just being on a kayak on the water.? Yeah, beats driving 120 miles to 6 flags and paying $50 bucks each to get in then end up standing on hot asphalt waiting an hr to ride some whirlie-gig and eat $5.00 hotdogs.... Those $5.00 dogs will kill you, sooner or later! I was chatting with some old friends about an amusement park with lots of rides we used to frequent as kids. The park had no admission fee, and all rides were 25 cents, and you could buy a lobster roll...a buttered hot dog bun filled with real lobster meat, overfilled, really, for fifty cents. Hot dogs were ten cents. Oh, and gasoline for our outboards was .19 a gallon. Obviously, it all went wrong somewhere. But if you compare, more of the average paycheck went for that 19 cents a gallon gas than today's paycheck goes for 3 buck gas. I don't know what the average paycheck was back then. But as a nine year old kid working weekends for my dad at his boat store and marina, I made $2 an hour and I got tips from the boat owners whose boats I gassed or washed. I had a boat with two six gallon tanks that would do for an entire day of boating. About $2.50 for gas, a little more than an hour's pay for weekend marina work. Of course, if my dad wasn't looking, I'd fill up my boat gas tanks at his gas dock and "borrow" the two cycle oil from the shop supply drum. In other words, it was pretty close to free. Fifty cent lobster rolls. I miss those the most. :) Growing up in potato farm country, we got a lot of gas for next to nothing as well for our dirt bikes and snowmobiles. Our fair food was hot dogs, hamburgers and Italian sausages on a sub roll with grilled onions and peppers, my favorite! We were pretty removed from civilization, so food there wasn't really an adventure, just farm food. I love Italian sausage with onions and peppers on a good crusty Italian sub roll. Real Italian food was very common in my hometown while I was growing up there. New Haven had a huge Italian population. Yeah, I've heard about New Haven Apizza, and would like to try some. |
#3
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On 1/5/12 11:15 AM, iBoaterer wrote:
In articleiqKdnYTI0K2iXpjSnZ2dnUVZ_tydnZ2d@earthlink .com, dump-on- says... On 1/5/12 10:01 AM, iBoaterer wrote: In , dump-on- says... On 1/5/12 8:51 AM, iBoaterer wrote: In , dump-on- says... On 1/4/12 9:30 PM, Tim wrote: http://www.metro.us/newyork/life/art...ing-affordable ?Boats are a great investment for a family because it?s a way to socialize and spend time together,? says Ellen Hopkins, a spokes*woman for Discover Boating. ?A lot of my friends who grew up boating said that one of their best memories was going out with their dads on Sundays and fishing ? it?s a unique way to bond. It?s like a minivacation, even just being on a kayak on the water.? Yeah, beats driving 120 miles to 6 flags and paying $50 bucks each to get in then end up standing on hot asphalt waiting an hr to ride some whirlie-gig and eat $5.00 hotdogs.... Those $5.00 dogs will kill you, sooner or later! I was chatting with some old friends about an amusement park with lots of rides we used to frequent as kids. The park had no admission fee, and all rides were 25 cents, and you could buy a lobster roll...a buttered hot dog bun filled with real lobster meat, overfilled, really, for fifty cents. Hot dogs were ten cents. Oh, and gasoline for our outboards was .19 a gallon. Obviously, it all went wrong somewhere. But if you compare, more of the average paycheck went for that 19 cents a gallon gas than today's paycheck goes for 3 buck gas. I don't know what the average paycheck was back then. But as a nine year old kid working weekends for my dad at his boat store and marina, I made $2 an hour and I got tips from the boat owners whose boats I gassed or washed. I had a boat with two six gallon tanks that would do for an entire day of boating. About $2.50 for gas, a little more than an hour's pay for weekend marina work. Of course, if my dad wasn't looking, I'd fill up my boat gas tanks at his gas dock and "borrow" the two cycle oil from the shop supply drum. In other words, it was pretty close to free. Fifty cent lobster rolls. I miss those the most. :) Growing up in potato farm country, we got a lot of gas for next to nothing as well for our dirt bikes and snowmobiles. Our fair food was hot dogs, hamburgers and Italian sausages on a sub roll with grilled onions and peppers, my favorite! We were pretty removed from civilization, so food there wasn't really an adventure, just farm food. I love Italian sausage with onions and peppers on a good crusty Italian sub roll. Real Italian food was very common in my hometown while I was growing up there. New Haven had a huge Italian population. Yeah, I've heard about New Haven Apizza, and would like to try some. There's four fairly famous pizza places in the New Haven area. I frequented two of them, Pepe's and Sally's, on Wooster Street in the downtown area. There's an Italian ice shop right next door and I recall a bakery there, too. |
#4
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posted to rec.boats
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In article , dump-on-
says... On 1/5/12 10:01 AM, iBoaterer wrote: In , dump-on- says... On 1/5/12 8:51 AM, iBoaterer wrote: In , dump-on- says... On 1/4/12 9:30 PM, Tim wrote: http://www.metro.us/newyork/life/art...ing-affordable ?Boats are a great investment for a family because it?s a way to socialize and spend time together,? says Ellen Hopkins, a spokes*woman for Discover Boating. ?A lot of my friends who grew up boating said that one of their best memories was going out with their dads on Sundays and fishing ? it?s a unique way to bond. It?s like a minivacation, even just being on a kayak on the water.? Yeah, beats driving 120 miles to 6 flags and paying $50 bucks each to get in then end up standing on hot asphalt waiting an hr to ride some whirlie-gig and eat $5.00 hotdogs.... Those $5.00 dogs will kill you, sooner or later! I was chatting with some old friends about an amusement park with lots of rides we used to frequent as kids. The park had no admission fee, and all rides were 25 cents, and you could buy a lobster roll...a buttered hot dog bun filled with real lobster meat, overfilled, really, for fifty cents. Hot dogs were ten cents. Oh, and gasoline for our outboards was .19 a gallon. Obviously, it all went wrong somewhere. But if you compare, more of the average paycheck went for that 19 cents a gallon gas than today's paycheck goes for 3 buck gas. I don't know what the average paycheck was back then. But as a nine year old kid working weekends for my dad at his boat store and marina, I made $2 an hour and I got tips from the boat owners whose boats I gassed or washed. I had a boat with two six gallon tanks that would do for an entire day of boating. About $2.50 for gas, a little more than an hour's pay for weekend marina work. Of course, if my dad wasn't looking, I'd fill up my boat gas tanks at his gas dock and "borrow" the two cycle oil from the shop supply drum. In other words, it was pretty close to free. Fifty cent lobster rolls. I miss those the most. :) Growing up in potato farm country, we got a lot of gas for next to nothing as well for our dirt bikes and snowmobiles. Our fair food was hot dogs, hamburgers and Italian sausages on a sub roll with grilled onions and peppers, my favorite! We were pretty removed from civilization, so food there wasn't really an adventure, just farm food. I love Italian sausage with onions and peppers on a good crusty Italian sub roll. Real Italian food was very common in my hometown while I was growing up there. New Haven had a huge Italian population. Our food was influenced alot by Penn. Dutch. Just good farm food with lots of veggies. And yes, I love scrapple. One thing that always got my friends that came to the area was that when you had raw ground beef, it was "hamburg" without the er. It was only "hamburger" when it was shaped into a patty and cooked! |
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