Jeeps Canada - Jeep Forums

Jeeps Canada - Jeep Forums (https://www.jeepscanada.com/)
-   Jeep Mailing List (https://www.jeepscanada.com/jeep-mailing-list-32/)
-   -   Jeep Grand Cherokee headlights (https://www.jeepscanada.com/jeep-mailing-list-32/jeep-grand-cherokee-headlights-32808/)

L.W.(=?iso-8859-1?Q?=DFill?=) Hughes III 11-08-2005 06:52 PM

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


L.W.(=?iso-8859-1?Q?=DFill?=) Hughes III 11-08-2005 06:52 PM

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


L.W.(=?iso-8859-1?Q?=DFill?=) Hughes III 11-08-2005 06:52 PM

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


Billzz 11-08-2005 08:35 PM

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" <----------@cox.net> wrote in message
news:43713151.5619AC45@cox.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" <----------@cox.net> wrote in message
>> news:4370F06F.394BE8D1@cox.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.




Billzz 11-08-2005 08:35 PM

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" <----------@cox.net> wrote in message
news:43713151.5619AC45@cox.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" <----------@cox.net> wrote in message
>> news:4370F06F.394BE8D1@cox.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.




Billzz 11-08-2005 08:35 PM

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" <----------@cox.net> wrote in message
news:43713151.5619AC45@cox.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" <----------@cox.net> wrote in message
>> news:4370F06F.394BE8D1@cox.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.




L.W.(=?iso-8859-1?Q?=DFill?=) Hughes III 11-08-2005 09:13 PM

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!


L.W.(=?iso-8859-1?Q?=DFill?=) Hughes III 11-08-2005 09:13 PM

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!


L.W.(=?iso-8859-1?Q?=DFill?=) Hughes III 11-08-2005 09:13 PM

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!


Earle Horton 11-09-2005 02:52 AM

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 willies. 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" <----------@cox.net> wrote in message
news:43713A3E.D50A25BC@cox.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

>




Earle Horton 11-09-2005 02:52 AM

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 willies. 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" <----------@cox.net> wrote in message
news:43713A3E.D50A25BC@cox.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

>




Earle Horton 11-09-2005 02:52 AM

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 willies. 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" <----------@cox.net> wrote in message
news:43713A3E.D50A25BC@cox.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

>




L.W.(=?iso-8859-1?Q?=DFill?=) Hughes III 11-09-2005 03:13 AM

Re: Jeep Grand Cherokee headlights
 
Hi Earle,
I see it means small piece, I thought I was saying little bit, it
still worked.
We miss the picture of yourself on your front lawn of weeds you
call wild flowers, you ever going to put that up again?
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/

Earle Horton wrote:
>
> 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 willies. 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.(=?iso-8859-1?Q?=DFill?=) Hughes III 11-09-2005 03:13 AM

Re: Jeep Grand Cherokee headlights
 
Hi Earle,
I see it means small piece, I thought I was saying little bit, it
still worked.
We miss the picture of yourself on your front lawn of weeds you
call wild flowers, you ever going to put that up again?
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/

Earle Horton wrote:
>
> 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 willies. 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.(=?iso-8859-1?Q?=DFill?=) Hughes III 11-09-2005 03:13 AM

Re: Jeep Grand Cherokee headlights
 
Hi Earle,
I see it means small piece, I thought I was saying little bit, it
still worked.
We miss the picture of yourself on your front lawn of weeds you
call wild flowers, you ever going to put that up again?
God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/

Earle Horton wrote:
>
> 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 willies. 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


Earle Horton 11-09-2005 06:53 AM

Re: Jeep Grand Cherokee headlights
 
"Poquito". (Pronounced "poe-kee-toe" because of insane Spanish spelling
rules.) If you ask for "pedacito" in the wrong settings, it is hard to tell
what you are going to get.

I have a new lawn now, but the neighbors don't care. They use the proper
term for it, "wildflowers". ;o)

Earle

"L.W. (ßill) ------ III" <----------@cox.net> wrote in message
news:4371AFBA.1132B37C@cox.net...
> Hi Earle,
> I see it means small piece, I thought I was saying little bit, it
> still worked.
> We miss the picture of yourself on your front lawn of weeds you
> call wild flowers, you ever going to put that up again?
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> Earle Horton wrote:
> >
> > 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 willies. 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

>




Earle Horton 11-09-2005 06:53 AM

Re: Jeep Grand Cherokee headlights
 
"Poquito". (Pronounced "poe-kee-toe" because of insane Spanish spelling
rules.) If you ask for "pedacito" in the wrong settings, it is hard to tell
what you are going to get.

I have a new lawn now, but the neighbors don't care. They use the proper
term for it, "wildflowers". ;o)

Earle

"L.W. (ßill) ------ III" <----------@cox.net> wrote in message
news:4371AFBA.1132B37C@cox.net...
> Hi Earle,
> I see it means small piece, I thought I was saying little bit, it
> still worked.
> We miss the picture of yourself on your front lawn of weeds you
> call wild flowers, you ever going to put that up again?
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> Earle Horton wrote:
> >
> > 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 willies. 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

>




Earle Horton 11-09-2005 06:53 AM

Re: Jeep Grand Cherokee headlights
 
"Poquito". (Pronounced "poe-kee-toe" because of insane Spanish spelling
rules.) If you ask for "pedacito" in the wrong settings, it is hard to tell
what you are going to get.

I have a new lawn now, but the neighbors don't care. They use the proper
term for it, "wildflowers". ;o)

Earle

"L.W. (ßill) ------ III" <----------@cox.net> wrote in message
news:4371AFBA.1132B37C@cox.net...
> Hi Earle,
> I see it means small piece, I thought I was saying little bit, it
> still worked.
> We miss the picture of yourself on your front lawn of weeds you
> call wild flowers, you ever going to put that up again?
> God Bless America, Bill O|||||||O
> mailto:-------------------- http://www.----------.com/
>
> Earle Horton wrote:
> >
> > 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 willies. 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

>




Whitehair 02-10-2009 08:52 PM

Re: Jeep Grand Cherokee headlights
 
Hi All,
The headlights on my GTA 2002 Grand Cherokee are not what they once were.(neither are my legs).Repair people have suggested sandblasting the lenses (not convinced that would work).Should I buythe lens assembly,both passenger and driver (with lamps therein),and be done with it?.I'll keep the Jeep for years yet,with some 160,000 on it now.

Whitehair (code name)

Whitehair 02-10-2009 08:57 PM

Re: Jeep Grand Cherokee headlights
 
Engine misfiring,

My 2002 Grand Cherokee had a history of engine misfiring.At least 5 dealers had a crack at it,as I travel a lot.
A young mechanic at Craig Hind Chrysler in Scarborough diagnosed it at an inorrect splicing of the connection to the remote starter.

After 6 months,I may not have a remote starter,but my 4.0L engine has never run better.

Whitehair


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 03:41 AM.


© 2024 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands

Page generated in 0.08385 seconds with 5 queries