HOW I GOT MY HANDLE

I can't remember the name I used when I joined here. Several years ago we had a bad hurricane here and I was without power for close to three weeks. When power was restored I started trying to log back on to my sights. Everything went well except this site. I got a new password and logged back on with the name I was using and somehow this site logged me on with my correct name from my background info and I decided to keep it since I had had so much trouble getting signed back up.
 
I established mine in 1984.

That's right folks!
Before the Interwebs was a "thing."
No BS and no kidding!

I tie flies for (duh!) fly fishing.
Personal use for the last 25 years, but for my guide service before that.
Trout, Northwest salmon, and steelhead.

Plenty of imitators, and attempts to claim or mimic my moniker, over the decades.
Unfortunately... No real rights to original title on the internet, and copyright on the Internet is a joke.
 
After an excessively morbid shift back in the mid 70's. Being in a terrible state of mind, turned in my badge and model 10 to my Captain. Recognizing my need for some time away from the streets he suggested that I "bug out" to the lake. He told the other members of our detail that I was lake buggin for a day or two. Three days later he showed up at my boat with my shield and model 10, asking if the "lake bug" was ready to get back to work. Thus I became known as "Lake Bug" on the streets by my fellow officers. Lake Anna Bug. i.e. lkabug.
 
Easy, I joined the Corps in 1969.My initials are A.J., so I got the nickname of AJ. Other forums I use usmc69, but that was taken here IIRC.

Same thing happened to my older son when he joined the Army 17 years ago. Only the immediate family call him by his first name, to everyone else he's AJ lol.

My handle is kind of obvious, I was also surprised it wasn't taken when I joined in 2004. Plus I also don't have much of an imagination :D
 
I was born and raised in a county that is about as famous for producing white sand as for anything else. In a geographic area known as the Upper Coastal Plain, the ancient beach line.

However, there is an area of several thousand acres of very rich reddish black soil known locally as The Red Level. We owned a 170 acre farm. When I was just a young’un it was a point of pride with me that we farmed on the Red Level.

Several times people have asked me if I was from Red Level, Alabama. Nope.
 
I first started lurking here right after I bought my M&P1522. I was one of the "chosen" to get one that just did not function right and have the extractor blown off when the the gun fired out of battery.
When I decided to join so I could ask some specific questions, I didn't think I was going to stick around after I had my problem with the 1522 figured out. So I thought to myself "who am I to the others guys on this forum?" answer: Just another 22 shooter. Well, in the last two months, I have bought my 7th and 8th S&W branded guns since I signed up here....THANKS ALOT!!:cool::cool: And only one was a 22rf
 
In the 80's and 90's, we hosted 10 foreign exchange students, one a year, ten years in a row. They stayed with us for 10-11 months, arriving in August, going to high school here, had the usual teen baggage to one degree or another. Some were from wealthy families, some could barely scrape the airfare together, some had many siblings, some were an only child, some were boys, some were girls. They became family as we worked things out and bonded with each other by Christmas. For example, one of the boys gave us some troubles, blowing off his schoolwork saying it didn't matter because it didn't count, got into beer a few times, had to have a chat with some detectives once. I showed him how to shave, how to tie a necktie, taught him how to drive (a stick!), my wife helped him learn to dance a little and he went to his first prom. I kicked his butt over the school work and he finished the school year with good grades. A few months after he went home, we got a nice letter from his folks saying "We want to thank you very much for what you did for [him]. We sent you a boy, you sent us back a man. [He] attends to his affairs very well now."
It was amazing how well we bonded in just those few months, and there were almost always lots of tears at the airport in late June.
They've all been back to see us, their families have come to visit us, some multiple times, and we've been to visit them and never have hotel bills while there. We have "family" all over Europe. We stay in touch regularly, and they refer to me as their
"American daddy".

Hence "ameridaddy"
 
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I was born and raised in a county that is about as famous for producing white sand as for anything else. In a geographic area known as the Upper Coastal Plain, the ancient beach line.

However, there is an area of several thousand acres of very rich reddish black soil known locally as The Red Level. We owned a 170 acre farm. When I was just a young’un it was a point of pride with me that we farmed on the Red Level.

Several times people have asked me if I was from Red Level, Alabama. Nope.

This is a nice bit of state history I didn't know. Thanks for posting it.
 
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