jeeping in the clouds
#51
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: jeeping in the clouds
Earl, welcome back!
Tom
"Earle Horton" <earleh@direcway.com> wrote in message
news:314f5c449a0a63d72ed2469f2f969dd4@news.teranew s.com...
> You won't find me in the bars because the Lord Krishna frowns on those who
> alter their minds and pollute their bodies with poison. I don't want to
> live the next life as a parasitic worm or a Californian, so I live purely
in
> this one. Om shanti shanti shanti. You would have better luck simply
> looking me up in the phone book, but if you must go into those dens of
> iniquity...
>
> It is colder than last year, and they has been some rain, but not much.
In
> town we got a frost last week and the porch thermometer reads forty or
less
> every morning. I'll bet it's colder in the high country. It is not as
> dusty as last year, and there may not be fire restrictions, but it sure
can
> get windy in the afternoon. My preference for camping up here is
September
> or early October after the flatlanders start going home. The weather is
> usually clearer and more dependable then too. Right now I am spending
most
> of my time on home improvement and EMS. Hard Rock 100 (100 mile cross
> country run that starts and ends in Silverton) starts Friday. Now those
> guys are crazier than the folks in this newsgroup!
>
> Earle
Tom
"Earle Horton" <earleh@direcway.com> wrote in message
news:314f5c449a0a63d72ed2469f2f969dd4@news.teranew s.com...
> You won't find me in the bars because the Lord Krishna frowns on those who
> alter their minds and pollute their bodies with poison. I don't want to
> live the next life as a parasitic worm or a Californian, so I live purely
in
> this one. Om shanti shanti shanti. You would have better luck simply
> looking me up in the phone book, but if you must go into those dens of
> iniquity...
>
> It is colder than last year, and they has been some rain, but not much.
In
> town we got a frost last week and the porch thermometer reads forty or
less
> every morning. I'll bet it's colder in the high country. It is not as
> dusty as last year, and there may not be fire restrictions, but it sure
can
> get windy in the afternoon. My preference for camping up here is
September
> or early October after the flatlanders start going home. The weather is
> usually clearer and more dependable then too. Right now I am spending
most
> of my time on home improvement and EMS. Hard Rock 100 (100 mile cross
> country run that starts and ends in Silverton) starts Friday. Now those
> guys are crazier than the folks in this newsgroup!
>
> Earle
#52
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: jeeping in the clouds
Earl, welcome back!
Tom
"Earle Horton" <earleh@direcway.com> wrote in message
news:314f5c449a0a63d72ed2469f2f969dd4@news.teranew s.com...
> You won't find me in the bars because the Lord Krishna frowns on those who
> alter their minds and pollute their bodies with poison. I don't want to
> live the next life as a parasitic worm or a Californian, so I live purely
in
> this one. Om shanti shanti shanti. You would have better luck simply
> looking me up in the phone book, but if you must go into those dens of
> iniquity...
>
> It is colder than last year, and they has been some rain, but not much.
In
> town we got a frost last week and the porch thermometer reads forty or
less
> every morning. I'll bet it's colder in the high country. It is not as
> dusty as last year, and there may not be fire restrictions, but it sure
can
> get windy in the afternoon. My preference for camping up here is
September
> or early October after the flatlanders start going home. The weather is
> usually clearer and more dependable then too. Right now I am spending
most
> of my time on home improvement and EMS. Hard Rock 100 (100 mile cross
> country run that starts and ends in Silverton) starts Friday. Now those
> guys are crazier than the folks in this newsgroup!
>
> Earle
Tom
"Earle Horton" <earleh@direcway.com> wrote in message
news:314f5c449a0a63d72ed2469f2f969dd4@news.teranew s.com...
> You won't find me in the bars because the Lord Krishna frowns on those who
> alter their minds and pollute their bodies with poison. I don't want to
> live the next life as a parasitic worm or a Californian, so I live purely
in
> this one. Om shanti shanti shanti. You would have better luck simply
> looking me up in the phone book, but if you must go into those dens of
> iniquity...
>
> It is colder than last year, and they has been some rain, but not much.
In
> town we got a frost last week and the porch thermometer reads forty or
less
> every morning. I'll bet it's colder in the high country. It is not as
> dusty as last year, and there may not be fire restrictions, but it sure
can
> get windy in the afternoon. My preference for camping up here is
September
> or early October after the flatlanders start going home. The weather is
> usually clearer and more dependable then too. Right now I am spending
most
> of my time on home improvement and EMS. Hard Rock 100 (100 mile cross
> country run that starts and ends in Silverton) starts Friday. Now those
> guys are crazier than the folks in this newsgroup!
>
> Earle
#53
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: jeeping in the clouds
Earl, welcome back!
Tom
"Earle Horton" <earleh@direcway.com> wrote in message
news:314f5c449a0a63d72ed2469f2f969dd4@news.teranew s.com...
> You won't find me in the bars because the Lord Krishna frowns on those who
> alter their minds and pollute their bodies with poison. I don't want to
> live the next life as a parasitic worm or a Californian, so I live purely
in
> this one. Om shanti shanti shanti. You would have better luck simply
> looking me up in the phone book, but if you must go into those dens of
> iniquity...
>
> It is colder than last year, and they has been some rain, but not much.
In
> town we got a frost last week and the porch thermometer reads forty or
less
> every morning. I'll bet it's colder in the high country. It is not as
> dusty as last year, and there may not be fire restrictions, but it sure
can
> get windy in the afternoon. My preference for camping up here is
September
> or early October after the flatlanders start going home. The weather is
> usually clearer and more dependable then too. Right now I am spending
most
> of my time on home improvement and EMS. Hard Rock 100 (100 mile cross
> country run that starts and ends in Silverton) starts Friday. Now those
> guys are crazier than the folks in this newsgroup!
>
> Earle
Tom
"Earle Horton" <earleh@direcway.com> wrote in message
news:314f5c449a0a63d72ed2469f2f969dd4@news.teranew s.com...
> You won't find me in the bars because the Lord Krishna frowns on those who
> alter their minds and pollute their bodies with poison. I don't want to
> live the next life as a parasitic worm or a Californian, so I live purely
in
> this one. Om shanti shanti shanti. You would have better luck simply
> looking me up in the phone book, but if you must go into those dens of
> iniquity...
>
> It is colder than last year, and they has been some rain, but not much.
In
> town we got a frost last week and the porch thermometer reads forty or
less
> every morning. I'll bet it's colder in the high country. It is not as
> dusty as last year, and there may not be fire restrictions, but it sure
can
> get windy in the afternoon. My preference for camping up here is
September
> or early October after the flatlanders start going home. The weather is
> usually clearer and more dependable then too. Right now I am spending
most
> of my time on home improvement and EMS. Hard Rock 100 (100 mile cross
> country run that starts and ends in Silverton) starts Friday. Now those
> guys are crazier than the folks in this newsgroup!
>
> Earle
#54
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: jeeping in the clouds
Hi Nathan,
Aren't the Absaroka's (sp?) fantastic??!! Bear Tooth Pass is one of my favorite (no
4x4 required) spots on earth. Looking at your pictures sure brought back some great
memories for me. I spent a summer working at Wapiti, which is between the east gate
of Yellowstone and Cody, WY. One of the trips I took while I was there was up and
over the pass and on to Billings on one long weekend. Take the trip, give yourselves
lots of time. Spend some time in Red Lodge, its a neat town. If you have not
already, take the drive up the gravel road that is across the valley from the switch
backs up the pass. Its a whole new view. =)
You are so lucky to be living there!!!!
-jenn
On 06 Jul 2004 06:10:36 GMT, montanajeeper@aol.com (MontanaJeeper) wrote:
>>i took the rubicon into what i consider high altitude (10,979 feet) today and
>>was really pleased with its performance all the way around (handling, pulling
>>grades, etc.). i know there are higher places, but after spending over 30
>>years at 85 feet elevation this was a pretty big deal to me. see
>>http://tinyurl.com/3bgzf for pics and description.
Aren't the Absaroka's (sp?) fantastic??!! Bear Tooth Pass is one of my favorite (no
4x4 required) spots on earth. Looking at your pictures sure brought back some great
memories for me. I spent a summer working at Wapiti, which is between the east gate
of Yellowstone and Cody, WY. One of the trips I took while I was there was up and
over the pass and on to Billings on one long weekend. Take the trip, give yourselves
lots of time. Spend some time in Red Lodge, its a neat town. If you have not
already, take the drive up the gravel road that is across the valley from the switch
backs up the pass. Its a whole new view. =)
You are so lucky to be living there!!!!
-jenn
On 06 Jul 2004 06:10:36 GMT, montanajeeper@aol.com (MontanaJeeper) wrote:
>>i took the rubicon into what i consider high altitude (10,979 feet) today and
>>was really pleased with its performance all the way around (handling, pulling
>>grades, etc.). i know there are higher places, but after spending over 30
>>years at 85 feet elevation this was a pretty big deal to me. see
>>http://tinyurl.com/3bgzf for pics and description.
#55
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: jeeping in the clouds
Hi Nathan,
Aren't the Absaroka's (sp?) fantastic??!! Bear Tooth Pass is one of my favorite (no
4x4 required) spots on earth. Looking at your pictures sure brought back some great
memories for me. I spent a summer working at Wapiti, which is between the east gate
of Yellowstone and Cody, WY. One of the trips I took while I was there was up and
over the pass and on to Billings on one long weekend. Take the trip, give yourselves
lots of time. Spend some time in Red Lodge, its a neat town. If you have not
already, take the drive up the gravel road that is across the valley from the switch
backs up the pass. Its a whole new view. =)
You are so lucky to be living there!!!!
-jenn
On 06 Jul 2004 06:10:36 GMT, montanajeeper@aol.com (MontanaJeeper) wrote:
>>i took the rubicon into what i consider high altitude (10,979 feet) today and
>>was really pleased with its performance all the way around (handling, pulling
>>grades, etc.). i know there are higher places, but after spending over 30
>>years at 85 feet elevation this was a pretty big deal to me. see
>>http://tinyurl.com/3bgzf for pics and description.
Aren't the Absaroka's (sp?) fantastic??!! Bear Tooth Pass is one of my favorite (no
4x4 required) spots on earth. Looking at your pictures sure brought back some great
memories for me. I spent a summer working at Wapiti, which is between the east gate
of Yellowstone and Cody, WY. One of the trips I took while I was there was up and
over the pass and on to Billings on one long weekend. Take the trip, give yourselves
lots of time. Spend some time in Red Lodge, its a neat town. If you have not
already, take the drive up the gravel road that is across the valley from the switch
backs up the pass. Its a whole new view. =)
You are so lucky to be living there!!!!
-jenn
On 06 Jul 2004 06:10:36 GMT, montanajeeper@aol.com (MontanaJeeper) wrote:
>>i took the rubicon into what i consider high altitude (10,979 feet) today and
>>was really pleased with its performance all the way around (handling, pulling
>>grades, etc.). i know there are higher places, but after spending over 30
>>years at 85 feet elevation this was a pretty big deal to me. see
>>http://tinyurl.com/3bgzf for pics and description.
#56
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: jeeping in the clouds
Hi Nathan,
Aren't the Absaroka's (sp?) fantastic??!! Bear Tooth Pass is one of my favorite (no
4x4 required) spots on earth. Looking at your pictures sure brought back some great
memories for me. I spent a summer working at Wapiti, which is between the east gate
of Yellowstone and Cody, WY. One of the trips I took while I was there was up and
over the pass and on to Billings on one long weekend. Take the trip, give yourselves
lots of time. Spend some time in Red Lodge, its a neat town. If you have not
already, take the drive up the gravel road that is across the valley from the switch
backs up the pass. Its a whole new view. =)
You are so lucky to be living there!!!!
-jenn
On 06 Jul 2004 06:10:36 GMT, montanajeeper@aol.com (MontanaJeeper) wrote:
>>i took the rubicon into what i consider high altitude (10,979 feet) today and
>>was really pleased with its performance all the way around (handling, pulling
>>grades, etc.). i know there are higher places, but after spending over 30
>>years at 85 feet elevation this was a pretty big deal to me. see
>>http://tinyurl.com/3bgzf for pics and description.
Aren't the Absaroka's (sp?) fantastic??!! Bear Tooth Pass is one of my favorite (no
4x4 required) spots on earth. Looking at your pictures sure brought back some great
memories for me. I spent a summer working at Wapiti, which is between the east gate
of Yellowstone and Cody, WY. One of the trips I took while I was there was up and
over the pass and on to Billings on one long weekend. Take the trip, give yourselves
lots of time. Spend some time in Red Lodge, its a neat town. If you have not
already, take the drive up the gravel road that is across the valley from the switch
backs up the pass. Its a whole new view. =)
You are so lucky to be living there!!!!
-jenn
On 06 Jul 2004 06:10:36 GMT, montanajeeper@aol.com (MontanaJeeper) wrote:
>>i took the rubicon into what i consider high altitude (10,979 feet) today and
>>was really pleased with its performance all the way around (handling, pulling
>>grades, etc.). i know there are higher places, but after spending over 30
>>years at 85 feet elevation this was a pretty big deal to me. see
>>http://tinyurl.com/3bgzf for pics and description.
#57
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: jeeping in the clouds
Hi Nathan,
Aren't the Absaroka's (sp?) fantastic??!! Bear Tooth Pass is one of my favorite (no
4x4 required) spots on earth. Looking at your pictures sure brought back some great
memories for me. I spent a summer working at Wapiti, which is between the east gate
of Yellowstone and Cody, WY. One of the trips I took while I was there was up and
over the pass and on to Billings on one long weekend. Take the trip, give yourselves
lots of time. Spend some time in Red Lodge, its a neat town. If you have not
already, take the drive up the gravel road that is across the valley from the switch
backs up the pass. Its a whole new view. =)
You are so lucky to be living there!!!!
-jenn
On 06 Jul 2004 06:10:36 GMT, montanajeeper@aol.com (MontanaJeeper) wrote:
>>i took the rubicon into what i consider high altitude (10,979 feet) today and
>>was really pleased with its performance all the way around (handling, pulling
>>grades, etc.). i know there are higher places, but after spending over 30
>>years at 85 feet elevation this was a pretty big deal to me. see
>>http://tinyurl.com/3bgzf for pics and description.
Aren't the Absaroka's (sp?) fantastic??!! Bear Tooth Pass is one of my favorite (no
4x4 required) spots on earth. Looking at your pictures sure brought back some great
memories for me. I spent a summer working at Wapiti, which is between the east gate
of Yellowstone and Cody, WY. One of the trips I took while I was there was up and
over the pass and on to Billings on one long weekend. Take the trip, give yourselves
lots of time. Spend some time in Red Lodge, its a neat town. If you have not
already, take the drive up the gravel road that is across the valley from the switch
backs up the pass. Its a whole new view. =)
You are so lucky to be living there!!!!
-jenn
On 06 Jul 2004 06:10:36 GMT, montanajeeper@aol.com (MontanaJeeper) wrote:
>>i took the rubicon into what i consider high altitude (10,979 feet) today and
>>was really pleased with its performance all the way around (handling, pulling
>>grades, etc.). i know there are higher places, but after spending over 30
>>years at 85 feet elevation this was a pretty big deal to me. see
>>http://tinyurl.com/3bgzf for pics and description.
#58
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: jeeping in the clouds
>On 06 Jul 2004 06:10:36 GMT, montanajeeper@aol.com (MontanaJeeper) wrote:
>
>>>i took the rubicon into what i consider high altitude (10,979 feet) today and
>>>was really pleased with its performance all the way around (handling, pulling
>>>grades, etc.). i know there are higher places, but after spending over 30
>>>years at 85 feet elevation this was a pretty big deal to me. see
>>>http://tinyurl.com/3bgzf for pics and description.
"we reached a height of almost 11,000 feet (gps said 10,979) and the
jeep ran as strong as it did at 3200 feet."
Sure - you installed a supercharger on your Rubi?
Other than that typo, great pics. I want to go to that area.
John Davies
http://home.comcast.net/~johnedavies/
'96 Lexus LX450
'00 Audi A4 1.8T quattro
Spokane WA USA
#59
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: jeeping in the clouds
>On 06 Jul 2004 06:10:36 GMT, montanajeeper@aol.com (MontanaJeeper) wrote:
>
>>>i took the rubicon into what i consider high altitude (10,979 feet) today and
>>>was really pleased with its performance all the way around (handling, pulling
>>>grades, etc.). i know there are higher places, but after spending over 30
>>>years at 85 feet elevation this was a pretty big deal to me. see
>>>http://tinyurl.com/3bgzf for pics and description.
"we reached a height of almost 11,000 feet (gps said 10,979) and the
jeep ran as strong as it did at 3200 feet."
Sure - you installed a supercharger on your Rubi?
Other than that typo, great pics. I want to go to that area.
John Davies
http://home.comcast.net/~johnedavies/
'96 Lexus LX450
'00 Audi A4 1.8T quattro
Spokane WA USA
#60
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: jeeping in the clouds
>On 06 Jul 2004 06:10:36 GMT, montanajeeper@aol.com (MontanaJeeper) wrote:
>
>>>i took the rubicon into what i consider high altitude (10,979 feet) today and
>>>was really pleased with its performance all the way around (handling, pulling
>>>grades, etc.). i know there are higher places, but after spending over 30
>>>years at 85 feet elevation this was a pretty big deal to me. see
>>>http://tinyurl.com/3bgzf for pics and description.
"we reached a height of almost 11,000 feet (gps said 10,979) and the
jeep ran as strong as it did at 3200 feet."
Sure - you installed a supercharger on your Rubi?
Other than that typo, great pics. I want to go to that area.
John Davies
http://home.comcast.net/~johnedavies/
'96 Lexus LX450
'00 Audi A4 1.8T quattro
Spokane WA USA