Thread: Ramblings From The USA - 1
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09-20-2015 08:15 AM #151
This sounds like a great roadtrip! You've hit some unique and cool spots on your journey. I'd love to explore the north east. Are you getting in alot of fall colors with trees turning, or is it a bit early yet? It's getting cool at night in California, but still hot day times" "No matter where you go, there you are!" Steve.
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09-20-2015 11:36 AM #152
Rrumbler, Aka: Hey you, "Old School", Hairy, and other unsavory monickers.
Twistin' and bangin' on stuff for about sixty or so years; beat up and busted, but not entirely dead - yet.
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09-20-2015 01:38 PM #153
johnboy
Mountain man. (Retired.)
Some mistakes are too much fun to be made only once.
I don't know everything about anything, and I don't know anything about lots of things.
'47 Ford sedan. 350 -- 350, Jaguar irs + ifs.
'49 Morris Minor. Datsun 1500cc, 5sp manual, Marina front axle, Nissan rear axle.
'51 Ford school bus. Chev 400 ci Vortec 5 sp manual + Gearvendors 2sp, 2000 Chev lwb dually chassis and axles.
'64 A.C. Cobra replica. Ford 429, C6 auto, Torana ifs, Jaguar irs.
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09-20-2015 01:43 PM #154
johnboy
Mountain man. (Retired.)
Some mistakes are too much fun to be made only once.
I don't know everything about anything, and I don't know anything about lots of things.
'47 Ford sedan. 350 -- 350, Jaguar irs + ifs.
'49 Morris Minor. Datsun 1500cc, 5sp manual, Marina front axle, Nissan rear axle.
'51 Ford school bus. Chev 400 ci Vortec 5 sp manual + Gearvendors 2sp, 2000 Chev lwb dually chassis and axles.
'64 A.C. Cobra replica. Ford 429, C6 auto, Torana ifs, Jaguar irs.
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09-20-2015 01:53 PM #155
In light of what you said I went out this morning, found me some goldenrod, pulled it, (it has a fibrous root system as against a tap root like a carrot,) crushed it, (flowers and leaves,) smelt it, and yes; it's not the most salubrious of smells.
Not too bad when done like that, but when concentrated, as in honey...yuck!johnboy
Mountain man. (Retired.)
Some mistakes are too much fun to be made only once.
I don't know everything about anything, and I don't know anything about lots of things.
'47 Ford sedan. 350 -- 350, Jaguar irs + ifs.
'49 Morris Minor. Datsun 1500cc, 5sp manual, Marina front axle, Nissan rear axle.
'51 Ford school bus. Chev 400 ci Vortec 5 sp manual + Gearvendors 2sp, 2000 Chev lwb dually chassis and axles.
'64 A.C. Cobra replica. Ford 429, C6 auto, Torana ifs, Jaguar irs.
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09-20-2015 04:08 PM #156
Sunday 20th September.
A bit slow getting away this morning; it’s like trying to push water uphill with a rake with this lot.
But we were on the road a bit after nine…crikey, I’d been up and about since 5:15.
If I’d been on my own I would’ve been away by 7:00 at the latest.
Headed for Cape Cod and the Sandwich Glass Museum, 129 Main St. Sandwich MA 02563
Coming out of Groton at Clarks Falls I noticed where someone had been clearing some light bush with a digger (what the locals in their lack of knowledge apparently call a track-hoe,) and had gone about it all wrong.
Limbs had been torn off before the stump was out, and there had been no effort made to windrow at all.
It’s a bit of a blow to the pride to realise you’re an anachronism…something from the past with skills that are just not known today.
And not often needed.
Got to Sandwich at lunch-time, so ate at the restaurant just past the Glass Museum.
A good feed at a reasonable price…recommended.
Then to the Dexters Grist Mill, a water-wheel powered mill that has been in this spot since the late 1600s.
Rebuilt in the 60s – 70s with period correct (but not original) timbers.
It’s an undershot, with an extremely short (8 – 10ft?) race from the mill pond, so there was very little (if any,) control of the flow and therefore the speed of the wheel.
But his is a good place!
They set it running, and allowed me to crawl around seeing just exactly which does what and what does which.
I seem to remember it was $6 per head; money well spent.
Scoring an 8+
So…across the road to the Glass Museum.
This is purely get-‘em-in-and-gut-’em.
You pay to enter the place to peruse their wares…the prices are well out of the range of these poor peasants from the bush…for sure there was stuff available for relatively low prices but it was tat.
Sideshow tat you’d find at the fair.
Although there was a glass-blowing exhibition thrown in with the entry fee.
That turned in to a debacle…okay; so perhaps he had a bad hair day…we all do occasionally.
But when I’m paying to watch you create something…and you don’t…not good.
Score 4-
And on to Orleans to book in to ‘Olde (sic) Tavern Motel’ for a couple of nights while we explore the area.
While I typed this up SWMBO and Rick went shopping.
She came back with three bottles of Arrogant Bastard for me.
I think She’s a keeper.
Rang Mike, 34_40 from CHR, and have arranged to meet to-morrow.
All good.Last edited by johnboy; 09-20-2015 at 04:33 PM.
johnboy
Mountain man. (Retired.)
Some mistakes are too much fun to be made only once.
I don't know everything about anything, and I don't know anything about lots of things.
'47 Ford sedan. 350 -- 350, Jaguar irs + ifs.
'49 Morris Minor. Datsun 1500cc, 5sp manual, Marina front axle, Nissan rear axle.
'51 Ford school bus. Chev 400 ci Vortec 5 sp manual + Gearvendors 2sp, 2000 Chev lwb dually chassis and axles.
'64 A.C. Cobra replica. Ford 429, C6 auto, Torana ifs, Jaguar irs.
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09-20-2015 07:33 PM #157
It's a bit late to be mentioning it at this point, but since you're all family an alternative to booking two rooms at every stop might be to move up to something like Comfort Inn & Suites, and book a suite that has a separate bedroom with a sleeper couch out in the common area, along with a bit more of a kitchenette. Might not save much in total cost if you're saying that the Quality Inn was twice the cost of what you've been paying. Just a thought, and this is after I had the experience of paying more than 2X normal rates in Ottawa, $140/night all in with a two night minimum just because they knew they could get it for the big car show weekend.... I'm still fuming a bit with that turn.Roger
Enjoy the little things in life, and you may look back one day and realize that they were really the BIG things.
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09-21-2015 11:19 AM #158
Johnboy, it's a trackhoe everywhere in the US. If it's on the back of a tractor, it's a backhoe. If I had asked my pipeline contractor to bring out a digger, he probably would have showed up with a laborer and a spade.Jack
Gone to Texas
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09-21-2015 05:19 PM #159
Johnboy, I just discovered that gooseberry ranches are legal in NZ! Wow, that explains why everyone I meet from NZ is always smiling.
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09-21-2015 07:28 PM #160
bad when done like that, but when concentrated, as in honey...yuck!
On another note I love your journal you are writing, it gives us a great take on what some of us are to familiar with and never have looked at through "visitors' eyes. You have also refrained from letting us know how egotistical and arrogant our culture and people can be as i have heard from other tourist in the past!Why is mine so big and yours so small, Chrysler FirePower
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09-22-2015 05:04 AM #161
Monday 21st September.
Meandered around a bit first thing this morning; primarily looking for a set of side-cutters (me, toe and fingernail clippers,) and a car phone charger. (Rick.) But at the same time taking in the scenery if the opportunity presented.
Had a good look at some of the eastern beaches…a pretty wild and exposed coastline.
Finally found a hardware store, and asked for side-cutters.
And got a blank look in response.
“Side-cutters; wee snippy things for wire and stuff.”
A light came on…”Go over there where the paint aisle is, down the far end are all the gardening tools.”
Sheesh.
I finally found them at the exact opposite side and end of the store.
Couldn’t find a charger for Rick though.
So headed off, ultimately for Acushnet, but initially for lunch at Centreville, where someone has set up a pie shop making real pies the way Kiwis do, with meat in them, not fruit; but bacon and egg, liver and bacon, steak and kidney, mince…yum!
Only to find when we got there that the restaurant that served portion sized pieces was closed after their summer season, and the shop sold only family sized pies…enough for ten or twelve people.
Which would be A) too big, B) would need a micro-wave to heat, and C) would need a large fridge to save the excess.
So we crossed the road and ate Chinese.
While we were waiting for it to be served I wandered outside for a ciggy, and got talking to a woman who’d come out of a nearby office for the same thing.
She asked me for my thoughts as an outsider what I thought of the state of America.
“Quite frankly; it’s in the doldrums.”
She agreed.
Turns out she’s a land agent, and went on to say that the shonky financial dealings of the banks and sub-prime markets four or so years ago had hit the middle and lower classes of America really hard.
“But there is recovery,” she said,:it may not yet be too obvious; but as a land agent I’m seeing it.”
She also said that the people (bankers etc,) who instigated the whole sorry mess should never be allowed to breed…and she had a quick and simple way of ensuring that…
So on to Acushnet.
And saw one of the funniest things ever.
A gaggle of forty – fifty geese decided to cross the main road through the village,
So they did.
Solemnly.
And in single file.
Totally oblivious to the absolute chaos they were creating to traffic, which was brought to a complete standstill.
It just looked so very, very funny.
And so on to find Mike (34_40) and Chris…and couldn’t. The street address we had didn’t make sense to us or Lucy.
“There’s a local cop refuelling his car, quick; pull in and I’ll ask him!”
So we did and I did.
Had him confused for a bit; but he finally worked it out, told us to follow him, and he’d point us in the right direction.
Which he proceeded to do; thank you Acushnet constabulary!
And so, eventually, we got to meet Mike and Chris, Mr and Mrs 34_40, along with Fiona and Meowmeow.
Also got to meet the car Mike calls ‘Citation’; ‘cos that’s what he gets virtually every time he takes it out!
A beautiful machine and a credit to him and his attitude and philosophy, which is much the same as ours; cars are built to be driven, and if they get stone-chipped, so be it. Those aren’t imperfections, they’re mile medals; medals for being driven, not trailered.
Driving around here over the last couple of days I had noticed some paddocks that had me confused as to why they were contoured as they were, dead flat and border-dyked.
Today it was explained; they’re contoured for cranberries. But there’s no money to be made out of them at the moment. The big corporations are controlling the market to the detriment of the little guy.
It’s the same the whole world over ain’t it?
Thanks for a great afternoon people, meeting with great people, gawking at great machinery…what else could ya want?
And so headed back to our motel, a beer, and bed.
A good day.johnboy
Mountain man. (Retired.)
Some mistakes are too much fun to be made only once.
I don't know everything about anything, and I don't know anything about lots of things.
'47 Ford sedan. 350 -- 350, Jaguar irs + ifs.
'49 Morris Minor. Datsun 1500cc, 5sp manual, Marina front axle, Nissan rear axle.
'51 Ford school bus. Chev 400 ci Vortec 5 sp manual + Gearvendors 2sp, 2000 Chev lwb dually chassis and axles.
'64 A.C. Cobra replica. Ford 429, C6 auto, Torana ifs, Jaguar irs.
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09-22-2015 05:09 AM #162
johnboy
Mountain man. (Retired.)
Some mistakes are too much fun to be made only once.
I don't know everything about anything, and I don't know anything about lots of things.
'47 Ford sedan. 350 -- 350, Jaguar irs + ifs.
'49 Morris Minor. Datsun 1500cc, 5sp manual, Marina front axle, Nissan rear axle.
'51 Ford school bus. Chev 400 ci Vortec 5 sp manual + Gearvendors 2sp, 2000 Chev lwb dually chassis and axles.
'64 A.C. Cobra replica. Ford 429, C6 auto, Torana ifs, Jaguar irs.
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09-22-2015 05:13 AM #163
johnboy
Mountain man. (Retired.)
Some mistakes are too much fun to be made only once.
I don't know everything about anything, and I don't know anything about lots of things.
'47 Ford sedan. 350 -- 350, Jaguar irs + ifs.
'49 Morris Minor. Datsun 1500cc, 5sp manual, Marina front axle, Nissan rear axle.
'51 Ford school bus. Chev 400 ci Vortec 5 sp manual + Gearvendors 2sp, 2000 Chev lwb dually chassis and axles.
'64 A.C. Cobra replica. Ford 429, C6 auto, Torana ifs, Jaguar irs.
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09-22-2015 05:36 AM #164
Another fine example of the drastic differences in our slang terms! "Taking the wee-wee" in some parts of the world is to be faceetious, or to make fun of something in a non-offensive manner; but around here folks will think immediately of a parent asking their small toddler if he/she needs to "go potty", or use the toilet facilities - "Do you need to go wee-wee, Billy?" They shoulda' put that one on the shirt, jb! Taking The Wee-Wee!Roger
Enjoy the little things in life, and you may look back one day and realize that they were really the BIG things.
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09-22-2015 05:45 AM #165
johnboy
Mountain man. (Retired.)
Some mistakes are too much fun to be made only once.
I don't know everything about anything, and I don't know anything about lots of things.
'47 Ford sedan. 350 -- 350, Jaguar irs + ifs.
'49 Morris Minor. Datsun 1500cc, 5sp manual, Marina front axle, Nissan rear axle.
'51 Ford school bus. Chev 400 ci Vortec 5 sp manual + Gearvendors 2sp, 2000 Chev lwb dually chassis and axles.
'64 A.C. Cobra replica. Ford 429, C6 auto, Torana ifs, Jaguar irs.
Welcome to CHR. I think that you need to hook up your vacuum advance. At part throttle when cruising you have less air and fuel in each cylinder, and the air-fuel mixture is not as densely packed...
MSD 8360 distributor vacuum advance