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25 new of 95 responses total.
nharmon
response 39 of 95: Mark Unseen   Jan 31 19:31 UTC 2006

huh?
mcnally
response 40 of 95: Mark Unseen   Jan 31 19:39 UTC 2006

 They're the ones who are into Helo Kitty, and they have the *cutest*
 insignia patches..
tod
response 41 of 95: Mark Unseen   Jan 31 19:47 UTC 2006

Let's move the aviator discussion to another item.  We're dorking up
Ketchikan.
marcvh
response 42 of 95: Mark Unseen   Jan 31 19:48 UTC 2006

Also HELO pilots have a bad habit of falling in love with toasters.
edina
response 43 of 95: Mark Unseen   Jan 31 22:46 UTC 2006

Now that was fracking funny.
bhelliom
response 44 of 95: Mark Unseen   Feb 1 04:08 UTC 2006

ROTFL!
bhoward
response 45 of 95: Mark Unseen   Feb 1 05:09 UTC 2006

Just heard mention in some of the post state-of-the-union analysis
of the famous Kitchikan bridge to nowhere (mentioned as an example
of silly things that ought to be removed from the budget).
tod
response 46 of 95: Mark Unseen   Feb 1 05:56 UTC 2006

I just heard Cindy Sheehan was arrested because she wouldn't cover up her
t-shirt.

Seig Heil! Seig Heil!Seig Heil! Seig Heil!Seig Heil! Seig Heil!Seig Heil! Seig
Heil!Seig Heil! Seig Heil!Seig Heil! Seig Heil!Seig Heil! Seig Heil!Seig Heil!
Seig Heil!Seig Heil! Seig Heil!Seig Heil! Seig Heil!Seig Heil! Seig Heil!Seig
Heil! Seig Heil!Seig Heil! Seig Heil!Seig Heil! Seig Heil!Seig Heil! Seig
Heil!Seig Heil! Seig Heil!Seig Heil! Seig Heil!Seig Heil! Seig Heil!Seig Heil!
Seig Heil!Seig Heil! Seig Heil!Seig Heil! Seig Heil!Seig Heil! Seig Heil!Seig
Heil! Seig Heil!Seig Heil! Seig Heil!Seig Heil! Seig Heil!Seig Heil! Seig
Heil!Seig Heil! Seig Heil!Seig Heil! Seig Heil!Seig Heil! Seig Heil!Seig Heil!
Seig Heil!Seig Heil! Seig Heil!Seig Heil! Seig Heil!Seig Heil! Seig Heil!
mcnally
response 47 of 95: Mark Unseen   Feb 1 06:04 UTC 2006

 re #46:
 1)  *Sieg*
 2)  How about taking it to another item?
gull
response 48 of 95: Mark Unseen   Feb 1 08:35 UTC 2006

I've been hearing a lot about the "bridge to nowhere."  It's sort of 
become the poster child for pork. 
tod
response 49 of 95: Mark Unseen   Feb 1 17:01 UTC 2006

re #47
Das tut mir leid, Grammatik Spindel! ;)
mcnally
response 50 of 95: Mark Unseen   Feb 1 17:43 UTC 2006

 re #41: 
 >  I've been hearing a lot about the "bridge to nowhere." 
 >  It's sort of become the poster child for pork. 

 I wonder if that's more because of the gratuitously unnecessary
 nature of the project or because Senator Stevens doesn't even
 *pretend* to offer any justification for it (apart from "Alaska
 needs money.")

gull
response 51 of 95: Mark Unseen   Feb 2 00:55 UTC 2006

I think more the former.  It's a tangible thing everyone can grasp. 
mcnally
response 52 of 95: Mark Unseen   Feb 5 05:30 UTC 2006

 Today was a sunny Saturday (a rarity this time of year) and I've
 been flirting with seasonal burnout at work and at home, mostly
 due to not having enough time to unwind on the weekends.  The house
 renovation is making progress but I'm tired of it eating up half
 or more of every weekend..  So I chucked most of my house-related
 plans for the day, trimming back to just one dump run and a trip
 to the hardware store to pick up the click-together laminate
 flooring that's going on the floor in the kitchen in the rental
 unit.

 Instead, I went down to the library to return some books, then walked
 around downtown with my camera.  Some time ago someone (Mary, I think)
 asked for some pictures of what the town looks like and today was a
 pretty good day to be wandering around with a camera and no fixed
 agenda.

 After about an hour of wandering around downtown I'd filled the
 remaining space on my camera's memory card but hadn't had my fill
 of walking so I strolled back to the car and drove out to Ward Lake
 to make the circuit around the small lake in the fading afternoon
 light.  With clear skies and snow on the mountains it was scenic
 enough to make me regret the other Saturdays I've spent indoors
 this winter.

 Down towards the end of the lake opposite the parking lot I stopped
 to admire a trio of trumpeter swans feeding in the shallows.  As I
 stood relatively motionless on the trail by the lakeside a heron
 swooped in and landed on the bank just below me, giving me a splendid
 show in the process.  Alas, I'd left my camera in the car on account
 of the memory card being full, so no photos, but it's quite something
 when a bird with a wingspan as big you are, oblivious to your presence,
 lands only a few feet away.  And I have a soft spot for the herons.
 Eagles and ravens get all the attention up here but I think I like
 watching the herons best -- they're elegant and poised one minute
 and comical the next depending on what they're doing.  Anyway I think
 they're seriously underrated and I can always spare a few minutes to
 admire one but they're pretty vigilant birds and I don't usually manage
 to get so close.

 Anyway, had a nice afternoon in the sunshine and then stopped at the
 grocery store for a bit of shopping on the way home.  Consequently I
 didn't make it back to the house until a little after 5:00 PM but I
 was delighted to note that the last of our twilight this evening 
 didn't disappear until well after 5:00, which is a vast improvement
 over a month and a half ago when things were usually pitch black 
 not much after 4:00..  Winter is halfway to spring and the days are
 getting noticably longer.  I keep wondering when the crocus bulbs I
 planted are going to show themselves but we're probably due for a
 another couple of weeks of occasional frost and cold; hopefully they'll
 come in due time.
 
mcnally
response 53 of 95: Mark Unseen   Feb 5 10:29 UTC 2006

Photos from my walk around downtown Ketchikan today at:
http://www.dfred.net/~mcnally/Around_Town.html
slynne
response 54 of 95: Mark Unseen   Feb 5 14:45 UTC 2006

Nice photos. Ketchikan certainly seems like a town with a lot of
character. 
mcnally
response 55 of 95: Mark Unseen   Feb 5 19:37 UTC 2006

 That's certainly true of the older parts, which are where I live
 and what I photographed.  There are some more recently built-up
 residential neighborhoods that aren't very exciting architecturally
 but even in neighborhoods with 70s-era construction the terrain
 still leads to some interesting choices.
tod
response 56 of 95: Mark Unseen   Feb 5 20:07 UTC 2006

Looks like a nice retirment place.
mcnally
response 57 of 95: Mark Unseen   Feb 5 21:35 UTC 2006

re #56: 
>  Looks like a nice retir[e]ment place.

Not so much, I'd think, for most people, though retirees who can afford to
do so seem to enjoy spending summers in Ketchikan and winters somewhere drier.
charcat
response 58 of 95: Mark Unseen   Feb 5 22:38 UTC 2006

Very nice pictures Mike, you make it seem like I was just there on a
tour of your town! =^o.o^=
tod
response 59 of 95: Mark Unseen   Feb 6 17:23 UTC 2006

re #57
Well, yea.  I was thinking when we're not at our chalet in Nice, France. ;)
mcnally
response 60 of 95: Mark Unseen   Feb 6 18:10 UTC 2006

 I was sort of picturing you as a mountaintop-castle high in the Carpathians
 type..
tod
response 61 of 95: Mark Unseen   Feb 6 18:24 UTC 2006

re #60
Speaking of the hounds of baskerville, did you hear about the japanese
businessman that got killed by the stray dogs in Romania?
mcnally
response 62 of 95: Mark Unseen   Feb 6 19:04 UTC 2006

 No.  One of the creepiest places I've ever camped was a campground in
 Canyon de Chelly (on the Navajo reservation in east-central Arizona.)
 There was a pack of dogs roaming the campground and I really didn't
 feel safe going to sleep there.  I love dogs, but feral dogs roaming
 in packs are definitely *NOT* a good thing..
tod
response 63 of 95: Mark Unseen   Feb 6 19:17 UTC 2006

Yea, that's the Carpathians for you.  Plenty of fog and dog.  A real
"retreat"!  I wouldn't wish that place on any retiree.

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