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Please, Please pray for
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Please, Please pray for
On 3/8/14, 12:29 PM, wrote:
On Sat, 08 Mar 2014 07:20:58 -0500, F*O*A*D wrote: On 3/8/14, 2:00 AM, wrote: On Fri, 07 Mar 2014 21:57:02 -0500, Wayne.B wrote: On Fri, 07 Mar 2014 21:48:47 -0500, wrote: On Fri, 7 Mar 2014 14:49:36 -0800 (PST), Tim wrote: On Friday, March 7, 2014 12:51:05 PM UTC-6, amdx wrote: It's so cold, I can't even tell a good story. :-) It's 49* now going to 43* tonight. I know compared to the rest of the country, that's not all that cold, but it is for here. Mikek Welcome to the club! Went for a boat ride tonight. Me and Ed were Ok but Judy wore a coat. === It was cool this afternoon by my standards. I put on a sweatshirt over my tee shirt when I went out to work on the varnish job. Temps were in the low 60s and windy. Judy said it was cold too. I thought it was fine. I guess I have a better resistance to temperature swings http://gfretwell.com/ftp/Oregon/Mt%2...0Mt%20Hood.jpg We spent nearly a week in Hollywood and then Ft. Lauderdale, and the temp was in the high 70's and low 80's during the day each day. Only noticed a spot of rain on one day. I hadn't been in Lauderdale proper since high school and of course the areas along and nearest the beach were almost totally developed with much higher end properties, although there were still a few smaller hotels from I'm guessing the 1950's. The beaches were clean and quite nice. Hollywood is almost entirely high-rise now along the east side of A1A, which is sort of sad, because you can barely catch a glimpse of the ocean between the buildings. Really ugly buildings -condos and hotels- for the most part, new, expensive, and dozens of stories tall. Ft. Lauderdale has done a better job keeping much of the construction on the west side of A1A, so you can drive long distances with unobstructed views of the beaches and the ocean. Several people told me the "real money" down there no longer is drug money, but coming in with South American real estate/development billionaires. We certainly heard a lot of Spanish and Portuguese being spoken everywhere we went. The Aventura Mall, an upscale shopping center, had many Jags, Porsches, and Rolls-Royces on display inside from various dealers. I saw the new Jag convertible. It's a pretty car, but the sticker price was over $100,000, and not far from it was a yellow Cayman-S Porsche, a superior car in every way, for a bit more than half the Jag's price. BMWs are the Fords and Chevys down there. Once you are away from the "glitz" districts, much of the rest of the areas look faded, old and tired. Not dirty, just weary. I suppose that hot sun beating down almost every day of the year fades out most structural colors. There's a hell of a lot of heavy construction going on immediately adjacent to the Ft. Lauderdale airport. Perhaps they are building a new facility...the current one just plain stinks. But the flights were good. U.S. Scare is being integrated into American Airlines, and at least the ice was cold for the can of drink you get back in steerage. We lucked out on seats on the Emergency Exit rows, which have more legroom than first class. Both National Airport in DC and Ft. Lauderdale now allow you to keep on your shoes and belt, and you don't have to take your laptops out of the carrying bags. The TSA'ers were friendly and pleasant in both directions. That coast is far to built up for me. We still have deserted areas of beach here where you can be 100 yards or more from the nearest other soul. In the summer you might not see anyone at all NE Florida is like that in many places, and a few of them are adjacent to heavily wooded areas and really are only accessible by boat. The beaches at Hollywood were empty, and the ones at Ft. Lauderdale were only mildly busy. I don't recall whether spring break is coming or has already happened. The bikinis were nice. :) When we lived in NE Florida, several young women were arrested for wearing bikinis that were too considered tooskimpy on one of the beaches just north of Jax Beach. I didn't see this, but it was in the papers and on local TV. It was at that point I concluded NE Florida was too conservative too survive. |
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