Jeep Grand Cherokee headlights
#121
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Jeep Grand Cherokee headlights
Hi Earle,
I use "pedacito" seems to soften them up as if I'm willing to try
to understand them.
Yup first thing I do is get a ticket and time for a tour bus, works
great to help orient yourself so you may go back and really look at the
places that interest me. I do the same thing on vacation trips through
America. Or boat: http://www.----------.com/temp/amsterdam.jpg
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:--------------------
Earle Horton wrote:
>
> Prehistoric peoples, probably our ancestors or closely related, put their
> dead, and belongings to take with them to the other world, under the
> dolmens. We don't really know much about the people who put them together.
> Whatever these people believed, they must have felt pretty strongly about
> it, to move rocks like that around. I suppose I could teach Spanish, or
> write for one of the bilingual publications around Colorado, or just travel
> some more. You get treated different, when you don't try to speak English
> to everyone. The bad part is that after two words of Spanish, they assume
> you are fluent. That is why it is good to know "Despacio, repita por
> favor."
>
> Not to worry. For the first two weeks you will be too busy looking at
> museums, sampling the local food, looking at the sights, to realize that big
> cities don't just look like prisons, they are prisons. As a tourist, it is
> time to go to the next city when that happens. Go on a guided tour, like
> the ones where they ferry tourists up to Silverton on buses and the train.
> Buy souvenirs, stay in hotels, eat in restaurants. You will have a good
> time. Or talk to your travel agent about "turismo rural" like they have in
> Spain. Work on a farm in Galicia, and pay for the privilege. Or go to
> Athens, look at the Parthenon, and pretend that it is all good. Seen the
> news from France?
>
> Earle
I use "pedacito" seems to soften them up as if I'm willing to try
to understand them.
Yup first thing I do is get a ticket and time for a tour bus, works
great to help orient yourself so you may go back and really look at the
places that interest me. I do the same thing on vacation trips through
America. Or boat: http://www.----------.com/temp/amsterdam.jpg
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:--------------------
Earle Horton wrote:
>
> Prehistoric peoples, probably our ancestors or closely related, put their
> dead, and belongings to take with them to the other world, under the
> dolmens. We don't really know much about the people who put them together.
> Whatever these people believed, they must have felt pretty strongly about
> it, to move rocks like that around. I suppose I could teach Spanish, or
> write for one of the bilingual publications around Colorado, or just travel
> some more. You get treated different, when you don't try to speak English
> to everyone. The bad part is that after two words of Spanish, they assume
> you are fluent. That is why it is good to know "Despacio, repita por
> favor."
>
> Not to worry. For the first two weeks you will be too busy looking at
> museums, sampling the local food, looking at the sights, to realize that big
> cities don't just look like prisons, they are prisons. As a tourist, it is
> time to go to the next city when that happens. Go on a guided tour, like
> the ones where they ferry tourists up to Silverton on buses and the train.
> Buy souvenirs, stay in hotels, eat in restaurants. You will have a good
> time. Or talk to your travel agent about "turismo rural" like they have in
> Spain. Work on a farm in Galicia, and pay for the privilege. Or go to
> Athens, look at the Parthenon, and pretend that it is all good. Seen the
> news from France?
>
> Earle
#122
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Jeep Grand Cherokee headlights
Hi Earle,
I use "pedacito" seems to soften them up as if I'm willing to try
to understand them.
Yup first thing I do is get a ticket and time for a tour bus, works
great to help orient yourself so you may go back and really look at the
places that interest me. I do the same thing on vacation trips through
America. Or boat: http://www.----------.com/temp/amsterdam.jpg
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:--------------------
Earle Horton wrote:
>
> Prehistoric peoples, probably our ancestors or closely related, put their
> dead, and belongings to take with them to the other world, under the
> dolmens. We don't really know much about the people who put them together.
> Whatever these people believed, they must have felt pretty strongly about
> it, to move rocks like that around. I suppose I could teach Spanish, or
> write for one of the bilingual publications around Colorado, or just travel
> some more. You get treated different, when you don't try to speak English
> to everyone. The bad part is that after two words of Spanish, they assume
> you are fluent. That is why it is good to know "Despacio, repita por
> favor."
>
> Not to worry. For the first two weeks you will be too busy looking at
> museums, sampling the local food, looking at the sights, to realize that big
> cities don't just look like prisons, they are prisons. As a tourist, it is
> time to go to the next city when that happens. Go on a guided tour, like
> the ones where they ferry tourists up to Silverton on buses and the train.
> Buy souvenirs, stay in hotels, eat in restaurants. You will have a good
> time. Or talk to your travel agent about "turismo rural" like they have in
> Spain. Work on a farm in Galicia, and pay for the privilege. Or go to
> Athens, look at the Parthenon, and pretend that it is all good. Seen the
> news from France?
>
> Earle
I use "pedacito" seems to soften them up as if I'm willing to try
to understand them.
Yup first thing I do is get a ticket and time for a tour bus, works
great to help orient yourself so you may go back and really look at the
places that interest me. I do the same thing on vacation trips through
America. Or boat: http://www.----------.com/temp/amsterdam.jpg
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:--------------------
Earle Horton wrote:
>
> Prehistoric peoples, probably our ancestors or closely related, put their
> dead, and belongings to take with them to the other world, under the
> dolmens. We don't really know much about the people who put them together.
> Whatever these people believed, they must have felt pretty strongly about
> it, to move rocks like that around. I suppose I could teach Spanish, or
> write for one of the bilingual publications around Colorado, or just travel
> some more. You get treated different, when you don't try to speak English
> to everyone. The bad part is that after two words of Spanish, they assume
> you are fluent. That is why it is good to know "Despacio, repita por
> favor."
>
> Not to worry. For the first two weeks you will be too busy looking at
> museums, sampling the local food, looking at the sights, to realize that big
> cities don't just look like prisons, they are prisons. As a tourist, it is
> time to go to the next city when that happens. Go on a guided tour, like
> the ones where they ferry tourists up to Silverton on buses and the train.
> Buy souvenirs, stay in hotels, eat in restaurants. You will have a good
> time. Or talk to your travel agent about "turismo rural" like they have in
> Spain. Work on a farm in Galicia, and pay for the privilege. Or go to
> Athens, look at the Parthenon, and pretend that it is all good. Seen the
> news from France?
>
> Earle
#123
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Jeep Grand Cherokee headlights
Hi Earle,
I use "pedacito" seems to soften them up as if I'm willing to try
to understand them.
Yup first thing I do is get a ticket and time for a tour bus, works
great to help orient yourself so you may go back and really look at the
places that interest me. I do the same thing on vacation trips through
America. Or boat: http://www.----------.com/temp/amsterdam.jpg
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:--------------------
Earle Horton wrote:
>
> Prehistoric peoples, probably our ancestors or closely related, put their
> dead, and belongings to take with them to the other world, under the
> dolmens. We don't really know much about the people who put them together.
> Whatever these people believed, they must have felt pretty strongly about
> it, to move rocks like that around. I suppose I could teach Spanish, or
> write for one of the bilingual publications around Colorado, or just travel
> some more. You get treated different, when you don't try to speak English
> to everyone. The bad part is that after two words of Spanish, they assume
> you are fluent. That is why it is good to know "Despacio, repita por
> favor."
>
> Not to worry. For the first two weeks you will be too busy looking at
> museums, sampling the local food, looking at the sights, to realize that big
> cities don't just look like prisons, they are prisons. As a tourist, it is
> time to go to the next city when that happens. Go on a guided tour, like
> the ones where they ferry tourists up to Silverton on buses and the train.
> Buy souvenirs, stay in hotels, eat in restaurants. You will have a good
> time. Or talk to your travel agent about "turismo rural" like they have in
> Spain. Work on a farm in Galicia, and pay for the privilege. Or go to
> Athens, look at the Parthenon, and pretend that it is all good. Seen the
> news from France?
>
> Earle
I use "pedacito" seems to soften them up as if I'm willing to try
to understand them.
Yup first thing I do is get a ticket and time for a tour bus, works
great to help orient yourself so you may go back and really look at the
places that interest me. I do the same thing on vacation trips through
America. Or boat: http://www.----------.com/temp/amsterdam.jpg
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:--------------------
Earle Horton wrote:
>
> Prehistoric peoples, probably our ancestors or closely related, put their
> dead, and belongings to take with them to the other world, under the
> dolmens. We don't really know much about the people who put them together.
> Whatever these people believed, they must have felt pretty strongly about
> it, to move rocks like that around. I suppose I could teach Spanish, or
> write for one of the bilingual publications around Colorado, or just travel
> some more. You get treated different, when you don't try to speak English
> to everyone. The bad part is that after two words of Spanish, they assume
> you are fluent. That is why it is good to know "Despacio, repita por
> favor."
>
> Not to worry. For the first two weeks you will be too busy looking at
> museums, sampling the local food, looking at the sights, to realize that big
> cities don't just look like prisons, they are prisons. As a tourist, it is
> time to go to the next city when that happens. Go on a guided tour, like
> the ones where they ferry tourists up to Silverton on buses and the train.
> Buy souvenirs, stay in hotels, eat in restaurants. You will have a good
> time. Or talk to your travel agent about "turismo rural" like they have in
> Spain. Work on a farm in Galicia, and pay for the privilege. Or go to
> Athens, look at the Parthenon, and pretend that it is all good. Seen the
> news from France?
>
> Earle
#124
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Jeep Grand Cherokee headlights
Yup. In fact we retired from Dallas to the Sierra Nevada, and like you say,
it's a short trip to a beach or a mountain. Your pic of Baumholder reminds
me that the old German barracks are still there but transferred back from
the US to German units! But I don't know why you say the trees are not
alive. Maybe there was some insect damage when you were there, but they
were all growing when I left!
"L.W. ("ßill") ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
news:43713151.5619AC45@***.net...
> I've lived a year in Texas City and driven through Dallas many
> times, very friendly people, but very boring land. I would think you
> may like the Sierras or Rocky Mountain states. And I've been to all the
> countries you listed via the forty five days the ARMY gave me during my
> year and a half I was stationed in Baumholder:
> http://www.----------.com/baumholder.jpg I liked seeing the very old
> homes, and how they dated the eve many with dates older than America,
> but there's not one view that I can't find within fifty miles of my home
> in Southern California, only our trees are alive.
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:--------------------
>
> Billzz wrote:
>>
>> "L.W. ("ßill") ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
>> news:4370F06F.394BE8D1@***.net...
>> > Where did you live seven years ago?
>>
>> Well, seven years ago we were in Dallas, Texas. But if you mean the
>> seven
>> years in Europe, we were in Mainz, Baumholder, and Heidelberg, Germany.
>> But
>> travelled to France, Belgium, Holland, Luxembourg, Italy, Austria,
>> Switzerland, even drove the car to the Calais-Dover Ferry, and drove
>> through
>> England.
it's a short trip to a beach or a mountain. Your pic of Baumholder reminds
me that the old German barracks are still there but transferred back from
the US to German units! But I don't know why you say the trees are not
alive. Maybe there was some insect damage when you were there, but they
were all growing when I left!
"L.W. ("ßill") ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
news:43713151.5619AC45@***.net...
> I've lived a year in Texas City and driven through Dallas many
> times, very friendly people, but very boring land. I would think you
> may like the Sierras or Rocky Mountain states. And I've been to all the
> countries you listed via the forty five days the ARMY gave me during my
> year and a half I was stationed in Baumholder:
> http://www.----------.com/baumholder.jpg I liked seeing the very old
> homes, and how they dated the eve many with dates older than America,
> but there's not one view that I can't find within fifty miles of my home
> in Southern California, only our trees are alive.
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:--------------------
>
> Billzz wrote:
>>
>> "L.W. ("ßill") ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
>> news:4370F06F.394BE8D1@***.net...
>> > Where did you live seven years ago?
>>
>> Well, seven years ago we were in Dallas, Texas. But if you mean the
>> seven
>> years in Europe, we were in Mainz, Baumholder, and Heidelberg, Germany.
>> But
>> travelled to France, Belgium, Holland, Luxembourg, Italy, Austria,
>> Switzerland, even drove the car to the Calais-Dover Ferry, and drove
>> through
>> England.
#125
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Jeep Grand Cherokee headlights
Yup. In fact we retired from Dallas to the Sierra Nevada, and like you say,
it's a short trip to a beach or a mountain. Your pic of Baumholder reminds
me that the old German barracks are still there but transferred back from
the US to German units! But I don't know why you say the trees are not
alive. Maybe there was some insect damage when you were there, but they
were all growing when I left!
"L.W. ("ßill") ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
news:43713151.5619AC45@***.net...
> I've lived a year in Texas City and driven through Dallas many
> times, very friendly people, but very boring land. I would think you
> may like the Sierras or Rocky Mountain states. And I've been to all the
> countries you listed via the forty five days the ARMY gave me during my
> year and a half I was stationed in Baumholder:
> http://www.----------.com/baumholder.jpg I liked seeing the very old
> homes, and how they dated the eve many with dates older than America,
> but there's not one view that I can't find within fifty miles of my home
> in Southern California, only our trees are alive.
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:--------------------
>
> Billzz wrote:
>>
>> "L.W. ("ßill") ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
>> news:4370F06F.394BE8D1@***.net...
>> > Where did you live seven years ago?
>>
>> Well, seven years ago we were in Dallas, Texas. But if you mean the
>> seven
>> years in Europe, we were in Mainz, Baumholder, and Heidelberg, Germany.
>> But
>> travelled to France, Belgium, Holland, Luxembourg, Italy, Austria,
>> Switzerland, even drove the car to the Calais-Dover Ferry, and drove
>> through
>> England.
it's a short trip to a beach or a mountain. Your pic of Baumholder reminds
me that the old German barracks are still there but transferred back from
the US to German units! But I don't know why you say the trees are not
alive. Maybe there was some insect damage when you were there, but they
were all growing when I left!
"L.W. ("ßill") ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
news:43713151.5619AC45@***.net...
> I've lived a year in Texas City and driven through Dallas many
> times, very friendly people, but very boring land. I would think you
> may like the Sierras or Rocky Mountain states. And I've been to all the
> countries you listed via the forty five days the ARMY gave me during my
> year and a half I was stationed in Baumholder:
> http://www.----------.com/baumholder.jpg I liked seeing the very old
> homes, and how they dated the eve many with dates older than America,
> but there's not one view that I can't find within fifty miles of my home
> in Southern California, only our trees are alive.
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:--------------------
>
> Billzz wrote:
>>
>> "L.W. ("ßill") ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
>> news:4370F06F.394BE8D1@***.net...
>> > Where did you live seven years ago?
>>
>> Well, seven years ago we were in Dallas, Texas. But if you mean the
>> seven
>> years in Europe, we were in Mainz, Baumholder, and Heidelberg, Germany.
>> But
>> travelled to France, Belgium, Holland, Luxembourg, Italy, Austria,
>> Switzerland, even drove the car to the Calais-Dover Ferry, and drove
>> through
>> England.
#126
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Jeep Grand Cherokee headlights
Yup. In fact we retired from Dallas to the Sierra Nevada, and like you say,
it's a short trip to a beach or a mountain. Your pic of Baumholder reminds
me that the old German barracks are still there but transferred back from
the US to German units! But I don't know why you say the trees are not
alive. Maybe there was some insect damage when you were there, but they
were all growing when I left!
"L.W. ("ßill") ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
news:43713151.5619AC45@***.net...
> I've lived a year in Texas City and driven through Dallas many
> times, very friendly people, but very boring land. I would think you
> may like the Sierras or Rocky Mountain states. And I've been to all the
> countries you listed via the forty five days the ARMY gave me during my
> year and a half I was stationed in Baumholder:
> http://www.----------.com/baumholder.jpg I liked seeing the very old
> homes, and how they dated the eve many with dates older than America,
> but there's not one view that I can't find within fifty miles of my home
> in Southern California, only our trees are alive.
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:--------------------
>
> Billzz wrote:
>>
>> "L.W. ("ßill") ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
>> news:4370F06F.394BE8D1@***.net...
>> > Where did you live seven years ago?
>>
>> Well, seven years ago we were in Dallas, Texas. But if you mean the
>> seven
>> years in Europe, we were in Mainz, Baumholder, and Heidelberg, Germany.
>> But
>> travelled to France, Belgium, Holland, Luxembourg, Italy, Austria,
>> Switzerland, even drove the car to the Calais-Dover Ferry, and drove
>> through
>> England.
it's a short trip to a beach or a mountain. Your pic of Baumholder reminds
me that the old German barracks are still there but transferred back from
the US to German units! But I don't know why you say the trees are not
alive. Maybe there was some insect damage when you were there, but they
were all growing when I left!
"L.W. ("ßill") ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
news:43713151.5619AC45@***.net...
> I've lived a year in Texas City and driven through Dallas many
> times, very friendly people, but very boring land. I would think you
> may like the Sierras or Rocky Mountain states. And I've been to all the
> countries you listed via the forty five days the ARMY gave me during my
> year and a half I was stationed in Baumholder:
> http://www.----------.com/baumholder.jpg I liked seeing the very old
> homes, and how they dated the eve many with dates older than America,
> but there's not one view that I can't find within fifty miles of my home
> in Southern California, only our trees are alive.
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:--------------------
>
> Billzz wrote:
>>
>> "L.W. ("ßill") ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
>> news:4370F06F.394BE8D1@***.net...
>> > Where did you live seven years ago?
>>
>> Well, seven years ago we were in Dallas, Texas. But if you mean the
>> seven
>> years in Europe, we were in Mainz, Baumholder, and Heidelberg, Germany.
>> But
>> travelled to France, Belgium, Holland, Luxembourg, Italy, Austria,
>> Switzerland, even drove the car to the Calais-Dover Ferry, and drove
>> through
>> England.
#127
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Jeep Grand Cherokee headlights
Acid rain from diesel cars:
http://www.lehigh.edu/~kaf3/books/reporting/acid.html
http://users.rcn.com/jkimball.ma.ult.../AcidRain.html
http://www.biologie.uni-hamburg.de/b-online/e55/55a.htm
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Billzz wrote:
>
> Yup. In fact we retired from Dallas to the Sierra Nevada, and like you say,
> it's a short trip to a beach or a mountain. Your pic of Baumholder reminds
> me that the old German barracks are still there but transferred back from
> the US to German units! But I don't know why you say the trees are not
> alive. Maybe there was some insect damage when you were there, but they
> were all growing when I left!
http://www.lehigh.edu/~kaf3/books/reporting/acid.html
http://users.rcn.com/jkimball.ma.ult.../AcidRain.html
http://www.biologie.uni-hamburg.de/b-online/e55/55a.htm
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Billzz wrote:
>
> Yup. In fact we retired from Dallas to the Sierra Nevada, and like you say,
> it's a short trip to a beach or a mountain. Your pic of Baumholder reminds
> me that the old German barracks are still there but transferred back from
> the US to German units! But I don't know why you say the trees are not
> alive. Maybe there was some insect damage when you were there, but they
> were all growing when I left!
#128
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Jeep Grand Cherokee headlights
Acid rain from diesel cars:
http://www.lehigh.edu/~kaf3/books/reporting/acid.html
http://users.rcn.com/jkimball.ma.ult.../AcidRain.html
http://www.biologie.uni-hamburg.de/b-online/e55/55a.htm
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Billzz wrote:
>
> Yup. In fact we retired from Dallas to the Sierra Nevada, and like you say,
> it's a short trip to a beach or a mountain. Your pic of Baumholder reminds
> me that the old German barracks are still there but transferred back from
> the US to German units! But I don't know why you say the trees are not
> alive. Maybe there was some insect damage when you were there, but they
> were all growing when I left!
http://www.lehigh.edu/~kaf3/books/reporting/acid.html
http://users.rcn.com/jkimball.ma.ult.../AcidRain.html
http://www.biologie.uni-hamburg.de/b-online/e55/55a.htm
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Billzz wrote:
>
> Yup. In fact we retired from Dallas to the Sierra Nevada, and like you say,
> it's a short trip to a beach or a mountain. Your pic of Baumholder reminds
> me that the old German barracks are still there but transferred back from
> the US to German units! But I don't know why you say the trees are not
> alive. Maybe there was some insect damage when you were there, but they
> were all growing when I left!
#129
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Jeep Grand Cherokee headlights
Acid rain from diesel cars:
http://www.lehigh.edu/~kaf3/books/reporting/acid.html
http://users.rcn.com/jkimball.ma.ult.../AcidRain.html
http://www.biologie.uni-hamburg.de/b-online/e55/55a.htm
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Billzz wrote:
>
> Yup. In fact we retired from Dallas to the Sierra Nevada, and like you say,
> it's a short trip to a beach or a mountain. Your pic of Baumholder reminds
> me that the old German barracks are still there but transferred back from
> the US to German units! But I don't know why you say the trees are not
> alive. Maybe there was some insect damage when you were there, but they
> were all growing when I left!
http://www.lehigh.edu/~kaf3/books/reporting/acid.html
http://users.rcn.com/jkimball.ma.ult.../AcidRain.html
http://www.biologie.uni-hamburg.de/b-online/e55/55a.htm
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
Billzz wrote:
>
> Yup. In fact we retired from Dallas to the Sierra Nevada, and like you say,
> it's a short trip to a beach or a mountain. Your pic of Baumholder reminds
> me that the old German barracks are still there but transferred back from
> the US to German units! But I don't know why you say the trees are not
> alive. Maybe there was some insect damage when you were there, but they
> were all growing when I left!
#130
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: Jeep Grand Cherokee headlights
I'd like people to know that I don't like American cities either. I grew up
close to Boston, I spent lots of time in New York and Seattle, and the one
time I went to L.A. it just gave me the *******. There are places here I
like, but I have already moved all my stuff to Silverton, and bought the
empty lot next to mine, to keep Californicators and Texans from building
there. :-) (Although to be fair, the latest wave of refugees seems to be
from Indiana, Missouri, places like that, that I always used to think of as
rural too.)
Do they laugh a lot, when you say "pedacito"?
Earle
"L.W. (ßill) ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
news:43713A3E.D50A25BC@***.net...
> Hi Earle,
> I use "pedacito" seems to soften them up as if I'm willing to try
> to understand them.
> Yup first thing I do is get a ticket and time for a tour bus, works
> great to help orient yourself so you may go back and really look at the
> places that interest me. I do the same thing on vacation trips through
> America. Or boat: http://www.----------.com/temp/amsterdam.jpg
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:--------------------
>
> Earle Horton wrote:
> >
> > Prehistoric peoples, probably our ancestors or closely related, put
their
> > dead, and belongings to take with them to the other world, under the
> > dolmens. We don't really know much about the people who put them
together.
> > Whatever these people believed, they must have felt pretty strongly
about
> > it, to move rocks like that around. I suppose I could teach Spanish, or
> > write for one of the bilingual publications around Colorado, or just
travel
> > some more. You get treated different, when you don't try to speak
English
> > to everyone. The bad part is that after two words of Spanish, they
assume
> > you are fluent. That is why it is good to know "Despacio, repita por
> > favor."
> >
> > Not to worry. For the first two weeks you will be too busy looking at
> > museums, sampling the local food, looking at the sights, to realize that
big
> > cities don't just look like prisons, they are prisons. As a tourist, it
is
> > time to go to the next city when that happens. Go on a guided tour,
like
> > the ones where they ferry tourists up to Silverton on buses and the
train.
> > Buy souvenirs, stay in hotels, eat in restaurants. You will have a good
> > time. Or talk to your travel agent about "turismo rural" like they have
in
> > Spain. Work on a farm in Galicia, and pay for the privilege. Or go to
> > Athens, look at the Parthenon, and pretend that it is all good. Seen
the
> > news from France?
> >
> > Earle
>
close to Boston, I spent lots of time in New York and Seattle, and the one
time I went to L.A. it just gave me the *******. There are places here I
like, but I have already moved all my stuff to Silverton, and bought the
empty lot next to mine, to keep Californicators and Texans from building
there. :-) (Although to be fair, the latest wave of refugees seems to be
from Indiana, Missouri, places like that, that I always used to think of as
rural too.)
Do they laugh a lot, when you say "pedacito"?
Earle
"L.W. (ßill) ------ III" <----------@***.net> wrote in message
news:43713A3E.D50A25BC@***.net...
> Hi Earle,
> I use "pedacito" seems to soften them up as if I'm willing to try
> to understand them.
> Yup first thing I do is get a ticket and time for a tour bus, works
> great to help orient yourself so you may go back and really look at the
> places that interest me. I do the same thing on vacation trips through
> America. Or boat: http://www.----------.com/temp/amsterdam.jpg
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:--------------------
>
> Earle Horton wrote:
> >
> > Prehistoric peoples, probably our ancestors or closely related, put
their
> > dead, and belongings to take with them to the other world, under the
> > dolmens. We don't really know much about the people who put them
together.
> > Whatever these people believed, they must have felt pretty strongly
about
> > it, to move rocks like that around. I suppose I could teach Spanish, or
> > write for one of the bilingual publications around Colorado, or just
travel
> > some more. You get treated different, when you don't try to speak
English
> > to everyone. The bad part is that after two words of Spanish, they
assume
> > you are fluent. That is why it is good to know "Despacio, repita por
> > favor."
> >
> > Not to worry. For the first two weeks you will be too busy looking at
> > museums, sampling the local food, looking at the sights, to realize that
big
> > cities don't just look like prisons, they are prisons. As a tourist, it
is
> > time to go to the next city when that happens. Go on a guided tour,
like
> > the ones where they ferry tourists up to Silverton on buses and the
train.
> > Buy souvenirs, stay in hotels, eat in restaurants. You will have a good
> > time. Or talk to your travel agent about "turismo rural" like they have
in
> > Spain. Work on a farm in Galicia, and pay for the privilege. Or go to
> > Athens, look at the Parthenon, and pretend that it is all good. Seen
the
> > news from France?
> >
> > Earle
>