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Wilko, fer crying out loud!!
"Charlie Choc" wrote in message ... On Thu, 15 Jun 2006 23:05:38 +0800, "riverman" wrote: Hey thanks, Charlie. I forgot that you lurk here, its nice to hear from you. Are you out on the road right now, or back in Atlanta? Just got back from a 4 week camping trip last weekend. Still sorting through the pictures I took. -- Charlie... http://www.chocphoto.com Indian Joe states--damm Charlie , you turn up everywhere !Will be in your town next Thursday on the way to Lake Lanier to bid on a new Levitt home and would enjoy joining you for a meal, but damm if I'm fighting y our style traffic just to eat at McDonalds. What side of town is your tepee??? I'll be in Decatur [?] Any suggestions appreciated ij |
Wilko, fer crying out loud!!
On Fri, 16 Jun 2006 23:14:07 GMT, "Joe McIntosh"
wrote: Indian Joe states--damm Charlie , you turn up everywhere !Will be in your town next Thursday on the way to Lake Lanier to bid on a new Levitt home and would enjoy joining you for a meal, but damm if I'm fighting y our style traffic just to eat at McDonalds. What side of town is your tepee??? I'll be in Decatur [?] Any suggestions appreciated ij I'm in East Cobb (near Roswell), I'm not sure you can get here from Decatur. g Actually, I'm pretty much straight up GA 400 from there, on the way to Lake Lanier. -- Charlie... http://www.chocphoto.com |
Wilko, fer crying out loud!!
riverman wrote:
I'm off for a couple of 10 day canoe trips in the wilds of Maine, leaving in about 12 hours, so I'm gonna miss all the fireworks until I get to read the backposts in mid June. But until then, TRY not to track this dogs**t all over the house. Hee hee hee --riverman Sounds like fun Riverman. I just got back from some ancestal homeland wanderings and hope to honor my promise to myself not to waste this summer (like too many in the past). I suspect there are still lots of formerly active r.b.p folks who still check the group. It is real easy to read these days since the number of posts are way down. Most of the real disruptors are known and the Google profile is an easy way to access posting histories. A couple of clicks easily reveals an individual's web persona. I have always believed that using signing with real life names keeps one honest and accountable. Maybe that is why there was such a solid core to r.b.p years back - we all used our IRL names. Hard to build relationships with phantoms. One my flight back to the US, I flew over Labrador and had my nose glued to the window. Looks like a very interesting place to paddle. Anyone with experience there? Blakely --- Blakely LaCroix Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA. "The best adventure is yet to come" |
Wilko, fer crying out loud!!
"Railtramp" wrote in
ups.com: riverman wrote: I'm off for a couple of 10 day canoe trips in the wilds of Maine, leaving in about 12 hours, so I'm gonna miss all the fireworks until I get to read the backposts in mid June. But until then, TRY not to track this dogs**t all over the house. Hee hee hee --riverman Sounds like fun Riverman. I just got back from some ancestal homeland wanderings and hope to honor my promise to myself not to waste this summer (like too many in the past). I suspect there are still lots of formerly active r.b.p folks who still check the group. It is real easy to read these days since the number of posts are way down. Most of the real disruptors are known and the Google profile is an easy way to access posting histories. A couple of clicks easily reveals an individual's web persona. I have always believed that using signing with real life names keeps one honest and accountable. Maybe that is why there was such a solid core to r.b.p years back - we all used our IRL names. Hard to build relationships with phantoms. FWIW, I've been participating on usenet for 21 years and have always posted under my RL name. One my flight back to the US, I flew over Labrador and had my nose glued to the window. Looks like a very interesting place to paddle. Anyone with experience there? Check out a book called "Rowing to Latitude". In it, the author and her husband row (he paddles a kayak for some of the trips) the coast of Labrador, as well as several other expediations including most of the coastline of Alaska, the Yukon river, a good portion of Greenland, the entire coastline of Norway, and a circumnavigation of Spitzbergen. Even though the author rows (a boat that was converted from a Necky Amaruk tandem kayak), the book is well written and it sounded like Labrador was one of the most enjoyable expeditions. |
Wilko, fer crying out loud!!
John Fereira wrote: FWIW, I've been participating on usenet for 21 years and have always posted under my RL name. One my flight back to the US, I flew over Labrador and had my nose glued to the window. Looks like a very interesting place to paddle. Anyone with experience there? Check out a book called "Rowing to Latitude". In it, the author and her husband row (he paddles a kayak for some of the trips) the coast of Labrador, as well as several other expediations including most of the coastline of Alaska, the Yukon river, a good portion of Greenland, the entire coastline of Norway, and a circumnavigation of Spitzbergen. Even though the author rows (a boat that was converted from a Necky Amaruk tandem kayak), the book is well written and it sounded like Labrador was one of the most enjoyable expeditions. I actually have the book and read it a couple of years back. Thanks for the reminder - I will go back and re-read it. I recall that they did not like Greenland very much because it was so trashy (who would've thought). And I loved the ToughLuckKabloona wedding vow. The interior of Labrador looked awesome. I also read the Davidson & Rugge book Great Heart. Of course, one would like to avoid the death by starvation experience. It does look like a place that someoe could go and get lost for a while. The ice was off most of Hudson Bay with some still in parts of James Bay (NW side mostly) and some off the NE coast of Labrador. ---- As for naming, you were actually one of a number of r.b.p people who inspired me to use my RL name in my usenet newbie days. I think it was the high number of "real people" who made the group as strong as it was for a while. On the flip side , it has to be remembered that both Scottt W. and Tim I. used their RL names too. Blakely --- Blakely LaCroix Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA The best adventure is yet to come |
Wilko, fer crying out loud!!
Some friends of mine paddled the Eagle River in Labrador recently, two
in kayaks and two in OC1's. There are lots of flies, and portages are difficult. Some other friends paddled the Pinware a few years ago. I think they ran more rapids -- they didn't have any OC1's. Same trouble with flies. Someone got sent to the hospital from bites. There's a river guide book written by Jim Price and another guy (can't remember the other author or the name of the book) that has some description of rivers in Labrador. An article in the most recent edition of Ebb and Flow magazine, the provincial kayaking association's magazine, is about a couple who paddled Ungava Bay and the coast of Labrador. You can view the article from http://www.kayakers.nf.ca/club_activ...e/ebb_flow.htm Andrew One my flight back to the US, I flew over Labrador and had my nose glued to the window. Looks like a very interesting place to paddle. Anyone with experience there? Blakely |
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