do it now
Nope - too wrecked after soccer and haven't eaten yet.Red Forman wrote:
do it now
It was a slow news day and a cheap shot.CameronPoe wrote:
Bit critical on the old Euros there ATG, you seem oblivious to the fact that European settlers had 10 million square kilometres of pristine land to exploit while Europe bore the heavy weight of overpopulation, lack of free land and thousands of years of incremental political development, constrained by aforementioned factors.ATG wrote:
Wallace Stegner, wrote that national parks were “the best idea we ever had. Absolutely American, absolutely democratic, they reflect us at our best rather than our worst.” America’s only other comparable idea, perhaps, was philanthropy—another great invention that was unknown to wealthy Europeans (reluctant alms-givers at best, and their only “parks” were private hunting estates, where the entry fee for commoners was, oh, death). Europe had the Quakers to protest slavery, and the suffragettes to demand the vote for women, but the United States led the way in every cause you can think of where rich people helped poor people, willingly and generously. The roots of the word philanthropy are “love” and “mankind,” and the concept also reflected a “morality of wealth,” as expressed by maybe the first and greatest of philanthropists, Andrew Carnegie: “To die rich is to die disgraced.”
I think back, and many of my best memories and sights have been in Americas National Parks.
whatiyathink?
Red Forman wrote:
go to downing street and tell them thatCameronPoe wrote:
They should give them back then.Red Forman wrote:
Used to. Euros stole it.
Anywho, in the UK Lake District is
i've been watching Ken Burns series.
forgot to say i'm getting the blu-rays
forgot to say i'm getting the blu-rays
Last edited by burnzz (2009-10-10 17:57:08)
national parks fucking rock, cheers USA for leading the charge on that one. yellowstone i think it was.
we have the national trust, which -sort of- works the same way, and then we have SSI, AONB areas also.
weird fact, the lake district is protected, but the Fermanagh Lakelands arent. wiki/google em to see what i mean.
we have the national trust, which -sort of- works the same way, and then we have SSI, AONB areas also.
weird fact, the lake district is protected, but the Fermanagh Lakelands arent. wiki/google em to see what i mean.
Small hourglass island
Always raining and foggy
Use an umbrella
Always raining and foggy
Use an umbrella
When I was 11 my parents took me to Yellowstone. I threw tantrums and gave bored expressions and rolled my eyes at my parents. I didn't appreciate nature and took it for granted.
Starting in highschool, I would spend as much time outside, running, walking trails as much as I could.
When I went on vacation with my family, I always want to go to the available trails, and forests.
Starting in highschool, I would spend as much time outside, running, walking trails as much as I could.
When I went on vacation with my family, I always want to go to the available trails, and forests.
First public park in Great Britain was open in 1637 was formerly royal hunting park called Hyde Park. The first park in USA was 1864, so you stole our idea.
http://www.icons.org.uk/theicons/collec … blic-parks
http://www.icons.org.uk/theicons/collec … blic-parks
Quote of the year so far "Fifa 11 on the other hand... shiny things for mongos "-mtb0minime


chattahoochee-oconee national forest
There is a neighborhood/town in Queens/Long Island called New Hyde Park.smuder201 wrote:
First public park in Great Britain was open in 1637 was formerly royal hunting park called Hyde Park. The first park in USA was 1864, so you stole our idea.
http://www.icons.org.uk/theicons/collec … blic-parks
Stop thief.Superior Mind wrote:
There is a neighborhood/town in Queens/Long Island called New Hyde Park.smuder201 wrote:
First public park in Great Britain was open in 1637 was formerly royal hunting park called Hyde Park. The first park in USA was 1864, so you stole our idea.
http://www.icons.org.uk/theicons/collec … blic-parks
Quote of the year so far "Fifa 11 on the other hand... shiny things for mongos "-mtb0minime


Behold my home for two years. If merry old England can top that, i will learn to drive on the wrong side of the road.
I've faught a few fires in Glacier and Yellowstone National Park.. and as a kid my family would go to Yellowstone every year
got these - some of the best TV is still free (even tho the blu-rays aren't) and PBS does a helluva job . . .

Your thoughts, insights, and musings on this matter intrigue meburnzz wrote:
got these - some of the best TV is still free (even tho the blu-rays aren't) and PBS does a helluva job . . .
http://static.bf2s.com/files/user/21025 … 6001dt.jpg
Small hourglass island
Always raining and foggy
Use an umbrella
Always raining and foggy
Use an umbrella
Is Necrobumping back in style?
Yep.Narupug wrote:
Is Necrobumping back in style?
how is it necroposting if it's relevant?
would you rather see a new thread for everything - ffs, it's a thread, and if it was out of place it'd be necroposting.
would you rather see a new thread for everything - ffs, it's a thread, and if it was out of place it'd be necroposting.
In this case it was actually relevant ...burnzz wrote:
how is it necroposting if it's relevant?
would you rather see a new thread for everything - ffs, it's a thread, and if it was out of place it'd be necroposting.
@Everyone: ... however the necroposting bump game has been noticed and if continued the staff are considering a 3 day ban pr. incident ...
Wait behind the line ..............................................................
should be at least 3 years since the last post to be considered necrobumping tbh
this Wednesday i'm going to see another of our National Parks - Zions, in southwest Utah.

We'll be staying outside the park itself. apparently they've done here like they have in Yosemite, which is restricting the auto traffic.

We'll be staying outside the park itself. apparently they've done here like they have in Yosemite, which is restricting the auto traffic.
yeah but where are the swings?
That whole area is pretty crazy. I went biking in Grand Staircase/Escalante National Park (big name for the middle of fuckin nowhere) and it was great. Camped on the side of a mountain, an hour from the nearest paved road, in the middle of summer haha.
Thank the Masons of which Teddy was one.
The US economy is a giant Ponzi scheme. And 'to big to fail' is code speak for 'niahnahniahniahnah 99 percenters'
Southern Utah is awesome.burnzz wrote:
this Wednesday i'm going to see another of our National Parks - Zions, in southwest Utah.
http://clairesmallwood.files.wordpress. … l_park.jpg
We'll be staying outside the park itself. apparently they've done here like they have in Yosemite, which is restricting the auto traffic.
There are places I know where shards of indian pottery are so thick it is like a pavement made of it. Near Kodachrome you can run your fingers through the rock near the formations and it is challenging to come up with a handful of dirt that does not contain either petrified wood or dinosaur bone.
Colorado City, near the Arizona border is a surreal place to visit. The town graveyard is one of those that is littered with small shards of painted pottery. The pligs have mostly moved on to law trouble in Texas, and the town stands as a testament to the man smacking down people who just want to be left alone to their cousins and wives and religion.
Zion is awesome and while I want to spend more time there, it is Yosemitted out. I prefer more rural places like Bryce Canyon, where my mom grew up. In fact, the gateway to Kodachrome ( where kodak film took the name because the colors are so amazing ) is Cannonville. The visitors center in Cannonville has a awesome display on how the pioneers settled the town. My kin folk.