Annoyed at thread drift

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This was one of my favorite rides:



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At the last company I worked for in Florida, we modified CAT skid steers into these. Saw videos of them in use by the State Troopers in PA. Awesome piece of equipment...could be fitted with a claw attachment that had actually been used to remove a perp from a house....after they bashed in the wall.
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Good morning fellow drifters! Hoping everyone is having a good day so far! ;)
Hey it's sunny and 65 degrees here,,,,,about time we get out of this crummy weather funk! :cool:
I was up to the campsite late yesterday, it got stoned! :D Of course I had to rake it out and it rained! :rolleyes: But it's done! :cool: Need to go back and wash down the stone dust, the rain didn't do it. Another step closer of getting the Motorhome there for the holiday weekend. ;)
Geoff I hope you soon get you coach issues ironed out and get that thing on the road for a real roadtrip! ;) Mine will soon be parked up at the campground for the season and the only trip in the foreseable future might be a trip to Myrtle Beach in the fall.
Interesting operation going on in the back of my house, sees they are inspecting the high tension lines and towers by helicopter. There is actually a guy riding the runner of the chopper doing this! :eek: Wonder what for air turbulence that guy feels while riding out there? I was watching through binoculars, couldn't pay me enough to do that! :)

Have a great day out there and be safe! :cool:
 
Mr. Roebling was incapacitated by caisson disease during the building of the bridge. Caisson disease is the early name for decompression sickness, or as popularly known 'bends'.
Talk about a study of family sacrifice and determination. The Roebling who suffered the bends, was Washington, the son of the original designer, who had assumed the father's duties after his untimely death from a workplace accident.
His father John, while doing bridge site work, had his foot crushed, then amputated, and died of tetanus.
Washington's wife Emily, who was a self-taught bridge specialist, cared for her husband's bends symptoms and took over his duties as chief engineer, and supervised the project to completion.

[ame]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lufCsVrlx-o[/ame]
 
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At the last company I worked for in Florida, we modified CAT skid steers into these. Saw videos of them in use by the State Troopers in PA. Awesome piece of equipment...could be fitted with a claw attachment that had actually been used to remove a perp from a house....after they bashed in the wall.
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A tracked armored outhouse. Perfect for deer hunting! I want one! I'd paint mine camo. :D
 
Talk about a study of family sacrifice and determination. The Roebling who suffered the bends, was Washington, the son of the original designer, who had assumed the father's duties after his untimely death from a workplace accident.
His father John, while doing site work, had his foot crushed, then amputated, and died of tetanus.
Washington's wife Emily, who was a self-taught bridge specialist, cared for her husband's bends symptoms and took over his duties as chief engineer, and supervised the project to completion.

Thanks for the reminder about Emily. I knew that, but the neurons were not connecting well this morning? The references I looked seemed to gloss over Emily, not unheard of during that timeframe, you know barefoot and.....! 😛
Sidestep ahead !!!!! 😋
Ironically a!most all of the physicians I see now are women, by my choice!
The neurologist I see now is male and very good, see him next week. Almost clairvoyant after walking out to greet you in the waiting room and observing the patient walking ahead him to the exam room. He left the practice I was seeing him at, moved to the county hospital of my county. Actually closer and rural roads, also near the shooting range! Sometimes the path is easy to follow!
My previous neurologist was a woman, and also very good, but she moved back to NYC for ease of airline connections in caring for aging parents in Spain.
 
Since the onset of my neuropathy, I've had a heck of a time getting the weight off.
My condition's sensitive to temperature and I usually gain some weight back every winter.
We joined the YMCA to help with that.
After our truck was totaled last October by a young idiot that ran a stop sign and smashed into it, we had a bit of a set back. We spent so much time dealing with doctors, insurance companies, used car salesmen trying to replace our truck and with all the stress involved that we didn't have much time to take care of ourselves.
I ended up gaining 22 pounds.
My wife's knee was smashed and she had to take a lot of time off work, going to physical therapy trying to get her knee healthy again. She also gained weight.
Now that warmer weather's here and most of that stuff's been resolved, we've been trying to get the extra weight off.
At the YMCA, we do the spin classes, weight lifting and jogging laps in the indoor pool.
Also, my wife and I go hiking in the mountains as often as we can.

I've set a series of weight lose goals. My main goal being to get back down to my pre-neuropathy weight of 170 pounds.
Right now I'm at 192 pounds.
I'm down 8 pounds from this years starting point.
I refuse to go on any kind of fad diet. Instead concentrating on consuming lean protein, fruits and vegetables. When I have carbohydrates, it's whole wheat instead of bleached white wheat. Eating healthy.
My dilemma? problem?
I'm stuck at 192.
Recently, the spin instructor asked if I've been lifting weights. Then one of the personal trainers commented on how I've been getting results and bulking up. "Looking good!"
I've been using the scale as a gauge rather than mirrors or actually anything else. I figured, they're just being nice to a gimpy Injun.

In the past, when I exercised, I'd tighten up, lose weight and get lean. Now I seem to be increasing bulk and strength and not losing much weight.
Could it be the meds and supplements I'm taking to help keep me mobile?
They're designed to increase peripheral blood flow which seems to help the motor neurons fire.
Could this also be helping to increase muscle mass?
I'm only 5'8", 192 pounds seems a bit much. My wife tells me I'm getting more solid but and I've got more squishy jiggly stuff than I'm comfortable with.
But my belt's in two notches since I started. I know it hasn't stretched, It's a double layer, hand stitched gun belt.

I'm thinking of just going with it and seeing where it takes me as long as there's no detrimental side effects.

Come to think of it, my time to the top of the mountain ridge today was 21:21, a full minute better than last years best when I weighed 178 pounds.


This article was in my email this morning. Explains your original riddle.

https://blog.myfitnesspal.com/how-o..._content=scale_button&utm_campaign=newsletter
 
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This is kind of what I'm watching out behind my house this morning, guys don't have those suits on though, I'm sure there are safety harnesses though,and now there are two of them!....Not me! :eek:
 
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Good morning drifters, it's 78 sunny degrees in the desert this morning. Supposed to remain below 100 for the rest of the week if you can believe the weatherman/woman/person. Of all the local TV stations that I have here they seem to be unable to give the same temps during their weather forecasts.

No hordes were spotted during the night and it leaves me to believe they have gone to the beach for the upcoming holiday weekend. Or maybe they just went camping to enjoy the weather.
 
In Pinal County, AZ they are advising people going camping to carry a firearm due to the various cartel members coming across the border from Mexico. The TV station I heard this on this morning said armed groups have been seen coming across the border. Why they have not been arrested I don't know.
 
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