
https://youtu.be/mzixL7Ef-bI" target="_blank" target="_blank
An imperfect analogy, but I always come back to it -- very few people marry one of the first people they date. Dating 10 people in 10 years is not unusual, and it's also not unusual to jump into the relationship all-in and have wild expectations and thoughts of the future. But eventually, there is a turning point, and you just know it's different. You've been through and seen enough to know that it's time to stop looking around, and keep what you've got.bloke wrote:I used to take Brett's routine announcements of holy-grail tuba acquisitions about as seriously as a sneeze...cjk wrote:BREAKING (good) NEWS: Bort likes his new tuba and thinks that he has found the one.
...but (well...) sneezes are now taken seriously, so...
Yessir... Maybe when you get to 50k posts you can be "high profile."bloke wrote:I’ve gone through more tubas than you, but not as high profile.
If this tuba and I split up, the tuba is going to have to leave ME!kingrob76 wrote:Breaking News:
By the end of the year there will be a Alex 163 CC in silver with a funky leadpipe for sale here. Rumor has it that it's a great horn!
I'm familiar with that disease. I'm not good enough to be good, mind you, but I'm picky enough to keep at it until I've worked through my badness. (I think I got that right.)bloke wrote:Thanks for the nice remarks.nworbekim wrote:that looks really good... we're talking about doing that to our outside boundary but in vinyl. i'm not much good at maintenance. there's an art to building a curved fence... i did it once.
I actually hand-selected a certain percentage of CURVED boards (which others might reject), which helped (at the junctures, as well as overall appearance) in building a curved fence.
my problems:
>too much attention to detail
> too picky to contract stuff out (or hire helpers for stuff) done on my own property (Only Mrs. bloke's pickiness equals/exceeds my own, so...)
As you may be aware, railroad ties are falling out of fashion in some places for that very reason - the creosote, a brew of a variety of toxic chemicals. EPA, etc.Rick Denney wrote:Eventually, even treated lumber will rot below ground level, though. I have a pallet of railroad ties waiting for warmer weather to use to replace the existing ties that line a part of our gravel driveway. The old ones are nearly no more, but they were installed in 1980 and have lasted a long time. The new ones are creosoted under pressure and heat, and will last longer than more modern pressure treatment.
What happens if the rocket ship explodes shortly after takeoff and all of the asbestos is released into the atmosphere?bloke wrote:I’m hoping that – in 2020 - a person will eventually emerge who is sensible. One thing that I would like to see done – as it is horribly cancerous – is to mine all of the world’s asbestos (while we are busily printing quadrillions of dollars anyway), and send it all away from the earth in rocket ships.
bort wrote:What happens if the rocket ship explodes shortly after takeoff and all of the asbestos is released into the atmosphere?
At least nothing will burn where it lands!bort wrote:What happens if the rocket ship explodes shortly after takeoff and all of the asbestos is released into the atmosphere?bloke wrote:I’m hoping that – in 2020 - a person will eventually emerge who is sensible. One thing that I would like to see done – as it is horribly cancerous – is to mine all of the world’s asbestos (while we are busily printing quadrillions of dollars anyway), and send it all away from the earth in rocket ships.
Yes, they are falling out of fashion, but the chemicals used to replace them aren't always much better. And the main problem with the coal tar used to make creosote is when the materials sits in an aquatic environment.Donn wrote:As you may be aware, railroad ties are falling out of fashion in some places for that very reason - the creosote, a brew of a variety of toxic chemicals. EPA, etc.Rick Denney wrote:Eventually, even treated lumber will rot below ground level, though. I have a pallet of railroad ties waiting for warmer weather to use to replace the existing ties that line a part of our gravel driveway. The old ones are nearly no more, but they were installed in 1980 and have lasted a long time. The new ones are creosoted under pressure and heat, and will last longer than more modern pressure treatment.
As requested!Ok, you're going to need to post a photo of that...