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Re: Kansas [message #69658 is a reply to message #69655] |
Sun, 25 June 2006 16:31 |
Paul Braun
Messages: 391 Registered: September 2005
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Senior Member |
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On Sun, 25 Jun 2006 15:50:26 -0600, "DJ"
<animix_spam-this-ahole_@animas.net> wrote:
>I have made quite a few long drives in my life. I thought that probably the
>most gruelling dirive I had ever made was back in 1972 when I drove nonstop
>from Austin to Chetumal. Yesterday I drove nonstop from Columbus Ohio to La
>Junta Colorado.
>I was on I70 and crossing the remainder of Ohio, Indiana and Missouri didn't
>really seem to take that long..........then I entered Kansas. I never
>thought it would end.......almost like there was some sort of time warp
>where I'd drive for 100 miles and the next road sign sould say that the next
>stop was 200 miles further away than I thought it was.
>Unbelieveable!!...........and flat.........I think the definition of flat in
>Websters should have a picture of I70 crossing Kansas. I wonder if the early
>pioneers who crossed Kansas in their covered wagons though that it was wierd
>to see endless miles of prarie occasionally interwspersed with anti-abortion
>signs which are strung out on incremental billboards along the highway sort
>of like old Burma shave ads, then absolutely nothing for the next 50 miles,
>then suddenly an adult sex toy/video superstore popping up out of the void,
>only to be followed 50 miles later by more burma shave-like anti abortion
>ads...........and I wonder if they got sick of hearing 70's music on every
>radio station. By the time I got out of Kansas about 9:00 last night, I felt
>like I had driven 20 years backward in time.
>
>Absolutely surreal, twilight zone kinda' day.
>
>Toto
>
Yep. The middle of the country be flat. Really flat.
It's kinda like Vegas, where you think that you can walk to Paris from
the Trop in something like 15 minutes because it doesn't look that
far, does it, dear?
37 hours later, when you've managed to make it to the Harley Cafe',
you realize that you need to drag your ass over to the monorail or
you're going to pass out somewhere before you hit Aladdin from the 112
degree heat.
pab
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Re: Kansas [message #69659 is a reply to message #69655] |
Sun, 25 June 2006 16:43 |
Dedric Terry
Messages: 788 Registered: June 2007
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Senior Member |
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When I moved out here from Nashville, I drove a moving truck all the way.
Not so bad out of Tennessee and Missouri, but then we hit Kansas.
Kansas is uphill all the way going west for anyone who's never driven that
stretch of I-70. To get near the speed limit (okay 15mph shy at 50), I had
to floor it and keep it there - it just poked along at 50, dead on, not a
wiggle, not a hint of 51 or 49. One stretch (between gas stops) was 4 hours
of nothing changing inside the truck or out. I almost thought of putting a
box on the accelerator and moving to the passenger seat to read a
book...just to be sure time hadn't stopped.
"There's no place like home. There's no place like home." Really? Was OZ
that bad?
The Tinman
On 6/25/06 3:50 PM, in article 449f057c@linux, "DJ"
<animix_spam-this-ahole_@animas.net> wrote:
> I have made quite a few long drives in my life. I thought that probably the
> most gruelling dirive I had ever made was back in 1972 when I drove nonstop
> from Austin to Chetumal. Yesterday I drove nonstop from Columbus Ohio to La
> Junta Colorado.
> I was on I70 and crossing the remainder of Ohio, Indiana and Missouri didn't
> really seem to take that long..........then I entered Kansas. I never
> thought it would end.......almost like there was some sort of time warp
> where I'd drive for 100 miles and the next road sign sould say that the next
> stop was 200 miles further away than I thought it was.
> Unbelieveable!!...........and flat.........I think the definition of flat in
> Websters should have a picture of I70 crossing Kansas. I wonder if the early
> pioneers who crossed Kansas in their covered wagons though that it was wierd
> to see endless miles of prarie occasionally interwspersed with anti-abortion
> signs which are strung out on incremental billboards along the highway sort
> of like old Burma shave ads, then absolutely nothing for the next 50 miles,
> then suddenly an adult sex toy/video superstore popping up out of the void,
> only to be followed 50 miles later by more burma shave-like anti abortion
> ads...........and I wonder if they got sick of hearing 70's music on every
> radio station. By the time I got out of Kansas about 9:00 last night, I felt
> like I had driven 20 years backward in time.
>
> Absolutely surreal, twilight zone kinda' day.
>
> Toto
>
>
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Re: Kansas [message #69670 is a reply to message #69655] |
Mon, 26 June 2006 01:12 |
Carl Amburn
Messages: 214 Registered: July 2005
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Senior Member |
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This is a funny post, because it's so true. I have done I-70 through Kansas
many many times - 3 times within the last year. I don't remember any
*without* the friggin' crosswind blowing 30 mph. I highly recommend the Red
Sun chinese buffet's Mongolian BBQ in Hays, it's by the Walmart off the
highway. If you're heading west during the daytime and it's clear, it's
kinda cool to look up and watch all of the airplane trails heading west....
rows of lines pointing to Denver.
-Carl
"DJ" <animix_spam-this-ahole_@animas.net> wrote in message
news:449f057c@linux...
> I have made quite a few long drives in my life. I thought that probably
the
> most gruelling dirive I had ever made was back in 1972 when I drove
nonstop
> from Austin to Chetumal. Yesterday I drove nonstop from Columbus Ohio to
La
> Junta Colorado.
> I was on I70 and crossing the remainder of Ohio, Indiana and Missouri
didn't
> really seem to take that long..........then I entered Kansas. I never
> thought it would end.......almost like there was some sort of time warp
> where I'd drive for 100 miles and the next road sign sould say that the
next
> stop was 200 miles further away than I thought it was.
> Unbelieveable!!...........and flat.........I think the definition of flat
in
> Websters should have a picture of I70 crossing Kansas. I wonder if the
early
> pioneers who crossed Kansas in their covered wagons though that it was
wierd
> to see endless miles of prarie occasionally interwspersed with
anti-abortion
> signs which are strung out on incremental billboards along the highway
sort
> of like old Burma shave ads, then absolutely nothing for the next 50
miles,
> then suddenly an adult sex toy/video superstore popping up out of the
void,
> only to be followed 50 miles later by more burma shave-like anti abortion
> ads...........and I wonder if they got sick of hearing 70's music on every
> radio station. By the time I got out of Kansas about 9:00 last night, I
felt
> like I had driven 20 years backward in time.
>
> Absolutely surreal, twilight zone kinda' day.
>
> Toto
>
>
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Re: Kansas [message #69671 is a reply to message #69668] |
Mon, 26 June 2006 01:11 |
Dubya Mark Wilson
Messages: 108 Registered: May 2006
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Senior Member |
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Bogota as I recall. And it wasn't trickery at play... it was an MCI
calling card number that ended in a sequence which confused KC local routing
for national domestic LD with international dialing, specifically, Columbia,
South America country code. That was a weird day. As Nic Cage said in Con
Air while that brand new corvette was dangling at 400 feet like an empty
cereal box off the back of that C-130, "On any other day, that would seem
entirely unusual" but that whole weekend was just odd, including the drive
through KS and CO the next day.
Hey, Rod you weren't with SW the night the old 20-ton straight truck gel'd
up diesel between LV and Reno, were you?
Mark
"Rod Lincoln" <rlincoln@kc.rr.com> wrote in message news:449f696f$1@linux...
>
> Hey Mark....remember when we accidently dialed Afganastan or somewhere
> like
> that when you were at my house? I think you were trying to show me some
> trick
> on the phone that had to do with counting a certain number of seconds
> before
> hitting the last number.
> Rod
>
> P.S Just got back from vacation, and am leaving for Vegas in the morn for
> a corperate gig. Back Tues night. Man.....I had some withdrawls from this
> place.
> "Dubya Mark Wilson" <mark.xspam@avidrecording.com> wrote:
>>And how is 70 anymore? The last time I traversed the country on 70 was
>
>>1990...R-coast to L-coast, stayed at Rod's place for a day in KC. I don't
>
>>know if they've spent any money on 70 since then but I'd say it was THE
>
>>WORST interstate ending in Zero we had at that time and had been that way
>
>>for 10 years.
>>
>>I'll add this positive aspect of Kansas; I enjoyed EVERY firework display
> in
>>the state Colorado on the evening of July 4, 1990 and I saw all of them
>
>>from, you guessed it, Kansas. Somewhere in that same trip, I was almost
>
>>sucked of the raod by a Tornado that wiped out a good bit of Limon area,
> CO.
>>
>>Dubya out
>>
>>
>
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Re: Kansas [message #69672 is a reply to message #69670] |
Mon, 26 June 2006 01:16 |
Dubya Mark Wilson
Messages: 108 Registered: May 2006
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Senior Member |
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Wasn't it Steven Wright, the comedian, whose dry one-liner it was that,
"Some people have a fear of heights.... I have a fear width.... Texas
terrifies me."
Oh, heck... I've started a whole new threads now... I can hear it coming
already
Dubya
"Carl Amburn" <carlamburn@hotNOSPAMmail.com> wrote in message
news:449f952a$1@linux...
> This is a funny post, because it's so true. I have done I-70 through
> Kansas
> many many times - 3 times within the last year. I don't remember any
> *without* the friggin' crosswind blowing 30 mph. I highly recommend the
> Red
> Sun chinese buffet's Mongolian BBQ in Hays, it's by the Walmart off the
> highway. If you're heading west during the daytime and it's clear, it's
> kinda cool to look up and watch all of the airplane trails heading
> west....
> rows of lines pointing to Denver.
>
> -Carl
>
>
> "DJ" <animix_spam-this-ahole_@animas.net> wrote in message
> news:449f057c@linux...
>> I have made quite a few long drives in my life. I thought that probably
> the
>> most gruelling dirive I had ever made was back in 1972 when I drove
> nonstop
>> from Austin to Chetumal. Yesterday I drove nonstop from Columbus Ohio to
> La
>> Junta Colorado.
>> I was on I70 and crossing the remainder of Ohio, Indiana and Missouri
> didn't
>> really seem to take that long..........then I entered Kansas. I never
>> thought it would end.......almost like there was some sort of time warp
>> where I'd drive for 100 miles and the next road sign sould say that the
> next
>> stop was 200 miles further away than I thought it was.
>> Unbelieveable!!...........and flat.........I think the definition of flat
> in
>> Websters should have a picture of I70 crossing Kansas. I wonder if the
> early
>> pioneers who crossed Kansas in their covered wagons though that it was
> wierd
>> to see endless miles of prarie occasionally interwspersed with
> anti-abortion
>> signs which are strung out on incremental billboards along the highway
> sort
>> of like old Burma shave ads, then absolutely nothing for the next 50
> miles,
>> then suddenly an adult sex toy/video superstore popping up out of the
> void,
>> only to be followed 50 miles later by more burma shave-like anti abortion
>> ads...........and I wonder if they got sick of hearing 70's music on
>> every
>> radio station. By the time I got out of Kansas about 9:00 last night, I
> felt
>> like I had driven 20 years backward in time.
>>
>> Absolutely surreal, twilight zone kinda' day.
>>
>> Toto
>>
>>
>
>
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Re: Kansas [message #69673 is a reply to message #69672] |
Mon, 26 June 2006 07:22 |
Deej [1]
Messages: 2149 Registered: January 2006
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Senior Member |
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I've driven across Texas north-to-south (Amarillo to Brownsville) and
east-to-west (both Texarkana to El Paso and Beaumont to El Paso) and
"perceptually", it didn't seem to take as long as driving across Kansas.
Perhaps it's because the terrain changes make it seem like you're actually
making some kind of progress rather than sitting in your car with the engine
running while moving backwards in time.
;o)
"Dubya Mark Wilson" <mark.xspam@avidrecording.com> wrote in message
news:449f968a$1@linux...
> Wasn't it Steven Wright, the comedian, whose dry one-liner it was that,
> "Some people have a fear of heights.... I have a fear width.... Texas
> terrifies me."
>
> Oh, heck... I've started a whole new threads now... I can hear it coming
> already
>
> Dubya
>
> "Carl Amburn" <carlamburn@hotNOSPAMmail.com> wrote in message
> news:449f952a$1@linux...
> > This is a funny post, because it's so true. I have done I-70 through
> > Kansas
> > many many times - 3 times within the last year. I don't remember any
> > *without* the friggin' crosswind blowing 30 mph. I highly recommend the
> > Red
> > Sun chinese buffet's Mongolian BBQ in Hays, it's by the Walmart off the
> > highway. If you're heading west during the daytime and it's clear, it's
> > kinda cool to look up and watch all of the airplane trails heading
> > west....
> > rows of lines pointing to Denver.
> >
> > -Carl
> >
> >
> > "DJ" <animix_spam-this-ahole_@animas.net> wrote in message
> > news:449f057c@linux...
> >> I have made quite a few long drives in my life. I thought that probably
> > the
> >> most gruelling dirive I had ever made was back in 1972 when I drove
> > nonstop
> >> from Austin to Chetumal. Yesterday I drove nonstop from Columbus Ohio
to
> > La
> >> Junta Colorado.
> >> I was on I70 and crossing the remainder of Ohio, Indiana and Missouri
> > didn't
> >> really seem to take that long..........then I entered Kansas. I never
> >> thought it would end.......almost like there was some sort of time warp
> >> where I'd drive for 100 miles and the next road sign sould say that the
> > next
> >> stop was 200 miles further away than I thought it was.
> >> Unbelieveable!!...........and flat.........I think the definition of
flat
> > in
> >> Websters should have a picture of I70 crossing Kansas. I wonder if the
> > early
> >> pioneers who crossed Kansas in their covered wagons though that it was
> > wierd
> >> to see endless miles of prarie occasionally interwspersed with
> > anti-abortion
> >> signs which are strung out on incremental billboards along the highway
> > sort
> >> of like old Burma shave ads, then absolutely nothing for the next 50
> > miles,
> >> then suddenly an adult sex toy/video superstore popping up out of the
> > void,
> >> only to be followed 50 miles later by more burma shave-like anti
abortion
> >> ads...........and I wonder if they got sick of hearing 70's music on
> >> every
> >> radio station. By the time I got out of Kansas about 9:00 last night, I
> > felt
> >> like I had driven 20 years backward in time.
> >>
> >> Absolutely surreal, twilight zone kinda' day.
> >>
> >> Toto
> >>
> >>
> >
> >
>
>
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Re: Kansas [message #69675 is a reply to message #69659] |
Mon, 26 June 2006 08:30 |
Sound Dog
Messages: 44 Registered: October 2005
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Member |
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I've heard that OZ is actually worse. If you're talking about crossing the
middle of Australia that is. 52 degrees (don't know what that is in
fahrenheit) and the occasional motel / petrol pump, and the likelhood of a
kangaroo jumping out in front of you and introducing your front suspension
to your firewall.
So I've heard anyway...
Kansas, now that sounds like fun. Or hey, Nevada, in a supercharged
Challenger. Just like in the movie, except without the cops and the dying
and the car exploding and stuff.
Stewart.
Dedric Terry wrote in message ...
>When I moved out here from Nashville, I drove a moving truck all the way.
>Not so bad out of Tennessee and Missouri, but then we hit Kansas.
>
>Kansas is uphill all the way going west for anyone who's never driven that
>stretch of I-70. To get near the speed limit (okay 15mph shy at 50), I had
>to floor it and keep it there - it just poked along at 50, dead on, not a
>wiggle, not a hint of 51 or 49. One stretch (between gas stops) was 4
hours
>of nothing changing inside the truck or out. I almost thought of putting a
>box on the accelerator and moving to the passenger seat to read a
>book...just to be sure time hadn't stopped.
>
>"There's no place like home. There's no place like home." Really? Was OZ
>that bad?
>
>The Tinman
>
>On 6/25/06 3:50 PM, in article 449f057c@linux, "DJ"
><animix_spam-this-ahole_@animas.net> wrote:
>
>> I have made quite a few long drives in my life. I thought that probably
the
>> most gruelling dirive I had ever made was back in 1972 when I drove
nonstop
>> from Austin to Chetumal. Yesterday I drove nonstop from Columbus Ohio to
La
>> Junta Colorado.
>> I was on I70 and crossing the remainder of Ohio, Indiana and Missouri
didn't
>> really seem to take that long..........then I entered Kansas. I never
>> thought it would end.......almost like there was some sort of time warp
>> where I'd drive for 100 miles and the next road sign sould say that the
next
>> stop was 200 miles further away than I thought it was.
>> Unbelieveable!!...........and flat.........I think the definition of flat
in
>> Websters should have a picture of I70 crossing Kansas. I wonder if the
early
>> pioneers who crossed Kansas in their covered wagons though that it was
wierd
>> to see endless miles of prarie occasionally interwspersed with
anti-abortion
>> signs which are strung out on incremental billboards along the highway
sort
>> of like old Burma shave ads, then absolutely nothing for the next 50
miles,
>> then suddenly an adult sex toy/video superstore popping up out of the
void,
>> only to be followed 50 miles later by more burma shave-like anti abortion
>> ads...........and I wonder if they got sick of hearing 70's music on
every
>> radio station. By the time I got out of Kansas about 9:00 last night, I
felt
>> like I had driven 20 years backward in time.
>>
>> Absolutely surreal, twilight zone kinda' day.
>>
>> Toto
>>
>>
>
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Re: Kansas [message #69680 is a reply to message #69659] |
Mon, 26 June 2006 09:52 |
Deej [1]
Messages: 2149 Registered: January 2006
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Senior Member |
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Kansas is uphill all the way going west for anyone who's never driven that
stretch of I-70.
I had a feeling like I was struggling with some unknown force the whole
time..........and now I know what..........gravity!! It makes sense. Heading
west, you're definitely slowly climbing toward the foothills of the Rocky
Mountains..........soooo........I guess if I was seaded east, I could put
the car in neutral and just coast across Kansas?
;o)
"Dedric Terry" <dterry@keyofd.net> wrote in message
news:C0C47BCD.16A2%dterry@keyofd.net...
> When I moved out here from Nashville, I drove a moving truck all the way.
> Not so bad out of Tennessee and Missouri, but then we hit Kansas.
>
> Kansas is uphill all the way going west for anyone who's never driven that
> stretch of I-70. To get near the speed limit (okay 15mph shy at 50), I
had
> to floor it and keep it there - it just poked along at 50, dead on, not a
> wiggle, not a hint of 51 or 49. One stretch (between gas stops) was 4
hours
> of nothing changing inside the truck or out. I almost thought of putting
a
> box on the accelerator and moving to the passenger seat to read a
> book...just to be sure time hadn't stopped.
>
> "There's no place like home. There's no place like home." Really? Was
OZ
> that bad?
>
> The Tinman
>
> On 6/25/06 3:50 PM, in article 449f057c@linux, "DJ"
> <animix_spam-this-ahole_@animas.net> wrote:
>
> > I have made quite a few long drives in my life. I thought that probably
the
> > most gruelling dirive I had ever made was back in 1972 when I drove
nonstop
> > from Austin to Chetumal. Yesterday I drove nonstop from Columbus Ohio to
La
> > Junta Colorado.
> > I was on I70 and crossing the remainder of Ohio, Indiana and Missouri
didn't
> > really seem to take that long..........then I entered Kansas. I never
> > thought it would end.......almost like there was some sort of time warp
> > where I'd drive for 100 miles and the next road sign sould say that the
next
> > stop was 200 miles further away than I thought it was.
> > Unbelieveable!!...........and flat.........I think the definition of
flat in
> > Websters should have a picture of I70 crossing Kansas. I wonder if the
early
> > pioneers who crossed Kansas in their covered wagons though that it was
wierd
> > to see endless miles of prarie occasionally interwspersed with
anti-abortion
> > signs which are strung out on incremental billboards along the highway
sort
> > of like old Burma shave ads, then absolutely nothing for the next 50
miles,
> > then suddenly an adult sex toy/video superstore popping up out of the
void,
> > only to be followed 50 miles later by more burma shave-like anti
abortion
> > ads...........and I wonder if they got sick of hearing 70's music on
every
> > radio station. By the time I got out of Kansas about 9:00 last night, I
felt
> > like I had driven 20 years backward in time.
> >
> > Absolutely surreal, twilight zone kinda' day.
> >
> > Toto
> >
> >
>
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Re: Kansas [message #69682 is a reply to message #69658] |
Mon, 26 June 2006 10:12 |
Tony Benson
Messages: 453 Registered: June 2006
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Senior Member |
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Oh man, I hear ya about Vegas. It's forced perspective in reverse. They make
everything so huge it looks closer together! Sure honey. Let's just walk
over to the Hard Rock. It doesn't look that far. Ha! We almost died! "Drinks
in the snack-a-teria, on me." ;>)
Tony
"Paul Braun" <cygnus_nospam@ctgonline.org> wrote in message
news:vu6u921qtb0gg4ie3m8bn8t34fu3vv92ed@4ax.com...
> On Sun, 25 Jun 2006 15:50:26 -0600, "DJ"
> <animix_spam-this-ahole_@animas.net> wrote:
>
>>I have made quite a few long drives in my life. I thought that probably
>>the
>>most gruelling dirive I had ever made was back in 1972 when I drove
>>nonstop
>>from Austin to Chetumal. Yesterday I drove nonstop from Columbus Ohio to
>>La
>>Junta Colorado.
>>I was on I70 and crossing the remainder of Ohio, Indiana and Missouri
>>didn't
>>really seem to take that long..........then I entered Kansas. I never
>>thought it would end.......almost like there was some sort of time warp
>>where I'd drive for 100 miles and the next road sign sould say that the
>>next
>>stop was 200 miles further away than I thought it was.
>>Unbelieveable!!...........and flat.........I think the definition of flat
>>in
>>Websters should have a picture of I70 crossing Kansas. I wonder if the
>>early
>>pioneers who crossed Kansas in their covered wagons though that it was
>>wierd
>>to see endless miles of prarie occasionally interwspersed with
>>anti-abortion
>>signs which are strung out on incremental billboards along the highway
>>sort
>>of like old Burma shave ads, then absolutely nothing for the next 50
>>miles,
>>then suddenly an adult sex toy/video superstore popping up out of the
>>void,
>>only to be followed 50 miles later by more burma shave-like anti abortion
>>ads...........and I wonder if they got sick of hearing 70's music on every
>>radio station. By the time I got out of Kansas about 9:00 last night, I
>>felt
>>like I had driven 20 years backward in time.
>>
>>Absolutely surreal, twilight zone kinda' day.
>>
>>Toto
>>
>
> Yep. The middle of the country be flat. Really flat.
>
> It's kinda like Vegas, where you think that you can walk to Paris from
> the Trop in something like 15 minutes because it doesn't look that
> far, does it, dear?
>
> 37 hours later, when you've managed to make it to the Harley Cafe',
> you realize that you need to drag your ass over to the monorail or
> you're going to pass out somewhere before you hit Aladdin from the 112
> degree heat.
>
> pab
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Re: Kansas [message #69683 is a reply to message #69655] |
Mon, 26 June 2006 10:19 |
Tony Benson
Messages: 453 Registered: June 2006
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Senior Member |
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It sounds like Nebraska. On one trip to visit my uncle in Snowmass Village,
CO, I left Iowa on I-80, got West of Omaha, set the cruise, and went to
sleep. I woke up six hours later to the welcome to Colorado sign! Talk about
a straight, flat road! ;>)
Tony
"DJ" <animix_spam-this-ahole_@animas.net> wrote in message
news:449f057c@linux...
>I have made quite a few long drives in my life. I thought that probably the
> most gruelling dirive I had ever made was back in 1972 when I drove
> nonstop
> from Austin to Chetumal. Yesterday I drove nonstop from Columbus Ohio to
> La
> Junta Colorado.
> I was on I70 and crossing the remainder of Ohio, Indiana and Missouri
> didn't
> really seem to take that long..........then I entered Kansas. I never
> thought it would end.......almost like there was some sort of time warp
> where I'd drive for 100 miles and the next road sign sould say that the
> next
> stop was 200 miles further away than I thought it was.
> Unbelieveable!!...........and flat.........I think the definition of flat
> in
> Websters should have a picture of I70 crossing Kansas. I wonder if the
> early
> pioneers who crossed Kansas in their covered wagons though that it was
> wierd
> to see endless miles of prarie occasionally interwspersed with
> anti-abortion
> signs which are strung out on incremental billboards along the highway
> sort
> of like old Burma shave ads, then absolutely nothing for the next 50
> miles,
> then suddenly an adult sex toy/video superstore popping up out of the
> void,
> only to be followed 50 miles later by more burma shave-like anti abortion
> ads...........and I wonder if they got sick of hearing 70's music on every
> radio station. By the time I got out of Kansas about 9:00 last night, I
> felt
> like I had driven 20 years backward in time.
>
> Absolutely surreal, twilight zone kinda' day.
>
> Toto
>
>
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Re: Kansas [message #69684 is a reply to message #69683] |
Mon, 26 June 2006 12:16 |
Jamie K
Messages: 1115 Registered: July 2006
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Senior Member |
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In Nebraska I-80 follows the Platte river valley, a long gentle descent
bringing Rocky Mountain runnoff to the Missouri river. The route is a
part of the Oregon trail. It became a logical place to put a relatively
safe, easy driving interstate. You could ALMOST drive it on auto-pilot
but there are a few curves here and there. :^)
Since many folks only experience Nebraska by driving through on I-80, a
common misconception is to equate Nebraska with that drive.
Nebraska has other terrain. For example, there are vast sandhill areas
in the west. In the North East you'll find hills left behind by
glaciation from the last ice age. The East has interesting river bluff
country along the Missouri river and its tributaries. Nebraska,
birthplace of Arbor Day, also has a large man-made national forest.
I like the open spaces in the West. We have some incredible areas. With
our demanding, busy lives it's often hard not to just blaze through them
with this or that destination in mind, but sometimes it's worth slowing
down and exploring along the way.
Cheers,
-Jamie
http://www.JamieKrutz.com
Tony Benson wrote:
> It sounds like Nebraska. On one trip to visit my uncle in Snowmass Village,
> CO, I left Iowa on I-80, got West of Omaha, set the cruise, and went to
> sleep. I woke up six hours later to the welcome to Colorado sign! Talk about
> a straight, flat road! ;>)
>
> Tony
>
> "DJ" <animix_spam-this-ahole_@animas.net> wrote in message
> news:449f057c@linux...
>> I have made quite a few long drives in my life. I thought that probably the
>> most gruelling dirive I had ever made was back in 1972 when I drove
>> nonstop
>> from Austin to Chetumal. Yesterday I drove nonstop from Columbus Ohio to
>> La
>> Junta Colorado.
>> I was on I70 and crossing the remainder of Ohio, Indiana and Missouri
>> didn't
>> really seem to take that long..........then I entered Kansas. I never
>> thought it would end.......almost like there was some sort of time warp
>> where I'd drive for 100 miles and the next road sign sould say that the
>> next
>> stop was 200 miles further away than I thought it was.
>> Unbelieveable!!...........and flat.........I think the definition of flat
>> in
>> Websters should have a picture of I70 crossing Kansas. I wonder if the
>> early
>> pioneers who crossed Kansas in their covered wagons though that it was
>> wierd
>> to see endless miles of prarie occasionally interwspersed with
>> anti-abortion
>> signs which are strung out on incremental billboards along the highway
>> sort
>> of like old Burma shave ads, then absolutely nothing for the next 50
>> miles,
>> then suddenly an adult sex toy/video superstore popping up out of the
>> void,
>> only to be followed 50 miles later by more burma shave-like anti abortion
>> ads...........and I wonder if they got sick of hearing 70's music on every
>> radio station. By the time I got out of Kansas about 9:00 last night, I
>> felt
>> like I had driven 20 years backward in time.
>>
>> Absolutely surreal, twilight zone kinda' day.
>>
>> Toto
>>
>>
>
>
|
|
|
Re: Kansas [message #69688 is a reply to message #69684] |
Mon, 26 June 2006 14:05 |
Tony Benson
Messages: 453 Registered: June 2006
|
Senior Member |
|
|
I've driven thorough Western Nebraska many times when I was touring and it
does have some interesting topology. I was just being facetious. It's an old
joke with my family how boring that I-80 drive is as we've made the trip a
hundred times.
You sound a little like Alice Cooper in Wayne's World, explaining the
history of Milwaukee!
"Nebraska, birthplace of Arbor Day . . ." I'm not worthy! ;>)
Tony
"Jamie K" <Meta@Dimensional.com> wrote in message news:44a03140$1@linux...
>
> In Nebraska I-80 follows the Platte river valley, a long gentle descent
> bringing Rocky Mountain runnoff to the Missouri river. The route is a part
> of the Oregon trail. It became a logical place to put a relatively safe,
> easy driving interstate. You could ALMOST drive it on auto-pilot but there
> are a few curves here and there. :^)
>
> Since many folks only experience Nebraska by driving through on I-80, a
> common misconception is to equate Nebraska with that drive.
>
> Nebraska has other terrain. For example, there are vast sandhill areas in
> the west. In the North East you'll find hills left behind by glaciation
> from the last ice age. The East has interesting river bluff country along
> the Missouri river and its tributaries. Nebraska, birthplace of Arbor Day,
> also has a large man-made national forest.
>
> I like the open spaces in the West. We have some incredible areas. With
> our demanding, busy lives it's often hard not to just blaze through them
> with this or that destination in mind, but sometimes it's worth slowing
> down and exploring along the way.
>
> Cheers,
> -Jamie
> http://www.JamieKrutz.com
>
>
> Tony Benson wrote:
>> It sounds like Nebraska. On one trip to visit my uncle in Snowmass
>> Village, CO, I left Iowa on I-80, got West of Omaha, set the cruise, and
>> went to sleep. I woke up six hours later to the welcome to Colorado sign!
>> Talk about a straight, flat road! ;>)
>>
>> Tony
>>
>> "DJ" <animix_spam-this-ahole_@animas.net> wrote in message
>> news:449f057c@linux...
>>> I have made quite a few long drives in my life. I thought that probably
>>> the
>>> most gruelling dirive I had ever made was back in 1972 when I drove
>>> nonstop
>>> from Austin to Chetumal. Yesterday I drove nonstop from Columbus Ohio to
>>> La
>>> Junta Colorado.
>>> I was on I70 and crossing the remainder of Ohio, Indiana and Missouri
>>> didn't
>>> really seem to take that long..........then I entered Kansas. I never
>>> thought it would end.......almost like there was some sort of time warp
>>> where I'd drive for 100 miles and the next road sign sould say that the
>>> next
>>> stop was 200 miles further away than I thought it was.
>>> Unbelieveable!!...........and flat.........I think the definition of
>>> flat in
>>> Websters should have a picture of I70 crossing Kansas. I wonder if the
>>> early
>>> pioneers who crossed Kansas in their covered wagons though that it was
>>> wierd
>>> to see endless miles of prarie occasionally interwspersed with
>>> anti-abortion
>>> signs which are strung out on incremental billboards along the highway
>>> sort
>>> of like old Burma shave ads, then absolutely nothing for the next 50
>>> miles,
>>> then suddenly an adult sex toy/video superstore popping up out of the
>>> void,
>>> only to be followed 50 miles later by more burma shave-like anti
>>> abortion
>>> ads...........and I wonder if they got sick of hearing 70's music on
>>> every
>>> radio station. By the time I got out of Kansas about 9:00 last night, I
>>> felt
>>> like I had driven 20 years backward in time.
>>>
>>> Absolutely surreal, twilight zone kinda' day.
>>>
>>> Toto
>>>
>>>
>>
|
|
|
Re: Kansas [message #69695 is a reply to message #69688] |
Mon, 26 June 2006 20:36 |
Jamie K
Messages: 1115 Registered: July 2006
|
Senior Member |
|
|
Tony Benson wrote:
> I've driven thorough Western Nebraska many times when I was touring and it
> does have some interesting topology. I was just being facetious. It's an old
> joke with my family how boring that I-80 drive is as we've made the trip a
> hundred times.
>
> You sound a little like Alice Cooper in Wayne's World, explaining the
> history of Milwaukee!
Heh. Yeah, if Alice grew up in Nebraska. Sorry I went all pedantic on ya
Tony.
I've made the drive a zillion times, too. Did I mention the many clean
Nebraska rest stops, with maps, weather/road reports and abstract
sculpture displays. I, uh, oh, sorry. :^)
I've also spent a fair amount of time going to and from to New Mexico,
Arizona, Southern California, Northern California, Oregon and
Washington. Lots of great country along the way. I really like the drive
through Deej's four corners area. And the vast stretches of I-80 through
Utah and Nevada. Wyoming, Montana, Idaho, great country. And of course,
Colorado.
OK, now I'm itchin' for a road trip!
Cheers,
-Jamie
http://www.JamieKrutz.com
> "Nebraska, birthplace of Arbor Day . . ." I'm not worthy! ;>)
>
> Tony
>
>
> "Jamie K" <Meta@Dimensional.com> wrote in message news:44a03140$1@linux...
>> In Nebraska I-80 follows the Platte river valley, a long gentle descent
>> bringing Rocky Mountain runnoff to the Missouri river. The route is a part
>> of the Oregon trail. It became a logical place to put a relatively safe,
>> easy driving interstate. You could ALMOST drive it on auto-pilot but there
>> are a few curves here and there. :^)
>>
>> Since many folks only experience Nebraska by driving through on I-80, a
>> common misconception is to equate Nebraska with that drive.
>>
>> Nebraska has other terrain. For example, there are vast sandhill areas in
>> the west. In the North East you'll find hills left behind by glaciation
>> from the last ice age. The East has interesting river bluff country along
>> the Missouri river and its tributaries. Nebraska, birthplace of Arbor Day,
>> also has a large man-made national forest.
>>
>> I like the open spaces in the West. We have some incredible areas. With
>> our demanding, busy lives it's often hard not to just blaze through them
>> with this or that destination in mind, but sometimes it's worth slowing
>> down and exploring along the way.
>>
>> Cheers,
>> -Jamie
>> http://www.JamieKrutz.com
>>
>>
>> Tony Benson wrote:
>>> It sounds like Nebraska. On one trip to visit my uncle in Snowmass
>>> Village, CO, I left Iowa on I-80, got West of Omaha, set the cruise, and
>>> went to sleep. I woke up six hours later to the welcome to Colorado sign!
>>> Talk about a straight, flat road! ;>)
>>>
>>> Tony
>>>
>>> "DJ" <animix_spam-this-ahole_@animas.net> wrote in message
>>> news:449f057c@linux...
>>>> I have made quite a few long drives in my life. I thought that probably
>>>> the
>>>> most gruelling dirive I had ever made was back in 1972 when I drove
>>>> nonstop
>>>> from Austin to Chetumal. Yesterday I drove nonstop from Columbus Ohio to
>>>> La
>>>> Junta Colorado.
>>>> I was on I70 and crossing the remainder of Ohio, Indiana and Missouri
>>>> didn't
>>>> really seem to take that long..........then I entered Kansas. I never
>>>> thought it would end.......almost like there was some sort of time warp
>>>> where I'd drive for 100 miles and the next road sign sould say that the
>>>> next
>>>> stop was 200 miles further away than I thought it was.
>>>> Unbelieveable!!...........and flat.........I think the definition of
>>>> flat in
>>>> Websters should have a picture of I70 crossing Kansas. I wonder if the
>>>> early
>>>> pioneers who crossed Kansas in their covered wagons though that it was
>>>> wierd
>>>> to see endless miles of prarie occasionally interwspersed with
>>>> anti-abortion
>>>> signs which are strung out on incremental billboards along the highway
>>>> sort
>>>> of like old Burma shave ads, then absolutely nothing for the next 50
>>>> miles,
>>>> then suddenly an adult sex toy/video superstore popping up out of the
>>>> void,
>>>> only to be followed 50 miles later by more burma shave-like anti
>>>> abortion
>>>> ads...........and I wonder if they got sick of hearing 70's music on
>>>> every
>>>> radio station. By the time I got out of Kansas about 9:00 last night, I
>>>> felt
>>>> like I had driven 20 years backward in time.
>>>>
>>>> Absolutely surreal, twilight zone kinda' day.
>>>>
>>>> Toto
>>>>
>>>>
>
|
|
|
Re: Kansas [message #69699 is a reply to message #69673] |
Mon, 26 June 2006 23:15 |
Tom Bruhl
Messages: 1368 Registered: June 2007
|
Senior Member |
|
|
This is a multi-part message in MIME format.
------=_NextPart_000_0041_01C6998F.8E627CB0
Content-Type: text/plain;
charset="iso-8859-1"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
Pennsylvania ain't no bargain either. . .
"DJ" <animix_spam-this-ahole_@animas.net> wrote in message =
news:449fee07@linux...
I've driven across Texas north-to-south (Amarillo to Brownsville) and
east-to-west (both Texarkana to El Paso and Beaumont to El Paso) and
"perceptually", it didn't seem to take as long as driving across =
Kansas.
Perhaps it's because the terrain changes make it seem like you're =
actually
making some kind of progress rather than sitting in your car with the =
engine
running while moving backwards in time.
;o)
"Dubya Mark Wilson" <mark.xspam@avidrecording.com> wrote in message
news:449f968a$1@linux...
> Wasn't it Steven Wright, the comedian, whose dry one-liner it was =
that,
> "Some people have a fear of heights.... I have a fear width.... =
Texas
> terrifies me."
>
> Oh, heck... I've started a whole new threads now... I can hear it =
coming
> already
>
> Dubya
>
> "Carl Amburn" <carlamburn@hotNOSPAMmail.com> wrote in message
> news:449f952a$1@linux...
> > This is a funny post, because it's so true. I have done I-70 =
through
> > Kansas
> > many many times - 3 times within the last year. I don't remember =
any
> > *without* the friggin' crosswind blowing 30 mph. I highly =
recommend the
> > Red
> > Sun chinese buffet's Mongolian BBQ in Hays, it's by the Walmart =
off the
> > highway. If you're heading west during the daytime and it's clear, =
it's
> > kinda cool to look up and watch all of the airplane trails heading
> > west....
> > rows of lines pointing to Denver.
> >
> > -Carl
> >
> >
> > "DJ" <animix_spam-this-ahole_@animas.net> wrote in message
> > news:449f057c@linux...
> >> I have made quite a few long drives in my life. I thought that =
probably
> > the
> >> most gruelling dirive I had ever made was back in 1972 when I =
drove
> > nonstop
> >> from Austin to Chetumal. Yesterday I drove nonstop from Columbus =
Ohio
to
> > La
> >> Junta Colorado.
> >> I was on I70 and crossing the remainder of Ohio, Indiana and =
Missouri
> > didn't
> >> really seem to take that long..........then I entered Kansas. I =
never
> >> thought it would end.......almost like there was some sort of =
time warp
> >> where I'd drive for 100 miles and the next road sign sould say =
that the
> > next
> >> stop was 200 miles further away than I thought it was.
> >> Unbelieveable!!...........and flat.........I think the definition =
of
flat
> > in
> >> Websters should have a picture of I70 crossing Kansas. I wonder =
if the
> > early
> >> pioneers who crossed Kansas in their covered wagons though that =
it was
> > wierd
> >> to see endless miles of prarie occasionally interwspersed with
> > anti-abortion
> >> signs which are strung out on incremental billboards along the =
highway
> > sort
> >> of like old Burma shave ads, then absolutely nothing for the next =
50
> > miles,
> >> then suddenly an adult sex toy/video superstore popping up out of =
the
> > void,
> >> only to be followed 50 miles later by more burma shave-like anti
abortion
> >> ads...........and I wonder if they got sick of hearing 70's music =
on
> >> every
> >> radio station. By the time I got out of Kansas about 9:00 last =
night, I
> > felt
> >> like I had driven 20 years backward in time.
> >>
> >> Absolutely surreal, twilight zone kinda' day.
> >>
> >> Toto
> >>
> >>
> >
> >
>
>
I choose Polesoft Lockspam to fight spam, and you?
http://www.polesoft.com/refer.html
------=_NextPart_000_0041_01C6998F.8E627CB0
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charset="iso-8859-1"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN">
<HTML><HEAD>
<META http-equiv=3DContent-Type content=3D"text/html; =
charset=3Diso-8859-1">
<META content=3D"MSHTML 6.00.2800.1400" name=3DGENERATOR>
<STYLE></STYLE>
</HEAD>
<BODY bgColor=3D#ffffff>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Pennsylvania ain't no bargain either. . =
..</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2></FONT> </DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<BLOCKQUOTE=20
style=3D"PADDING-RIGHT: 0px; PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; =
BORDER-LEFT: #000000 2px solid; MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px">
<DIV>"DJ" <<A=20
=
href=3D"mailto:animix_spam-this-ahole_@animas.net">animix_spam-this-ahole=
_@animas.net</A>>=20
wrote in message <A=20
href=3D"news:449fee07@linux">news:449fee07@linux</A>...</DIV>I've =
driven across=20
Texas north-to-south (Amarillo to Brownsville) and<BR>east-to-west =
(both=20
Texarkana to El Paso and Beaumont to El Paso) and<BR>"perceptually", =
it didn't=20
seem to take as long as driving across Kansas.<BR>Perhaps it's because =
the=20
terrain changes make it seem like you're actually<BR>making some kind =
of=20
progress rather than sitting in your car with the engine<BR>running =
while=20
moving backwards in time.<BR><BR>;o)<BR><BR><BR><BR>"Dubya Mark =
Wilson" <<A=20
=
href=3D"mailto:mark.xspam@avidrecording.com">mark.xspam@avidrecording.com=
</A>>=20
wrote in message<BR><A=20
href=3D"news:449f968a$1@linux">news:449f968a$1@linux</A>...<BR>> =
Wasn't it=20
Steven Wright, the comedian, whose dry one-liner it was that,<BR>> =
"Some=20
people have a fear of heights.... I have a fear width.... =
Texas<BR>>=20
terrifies me."<BR>><BR>> Oh, heck... I've started a whole new =
threads=20
now... I can hear it coming<BR>> already<BR>><BR>>=20
Dubya<BR>><BR>> "Carl Amburn" <<A=20
=
href=3D"mailto:carlamburn@hotNOSPAMmail.com">carlamburn@hotNOSPAMmail.com=
</A>>=20
wrote in message<BR>> <A=20
href=3D"news:449f952a$1@linux">news:449f952a$1@linux</A>...<BR>> =
> This is=20
a funny post, because it's so true. I have done I-70 through<BR>> =
>=20
Kansas<BR>> > many many times - 3 times within the last year. I =
don't=20
remember any<BR>> > *without* the friggin' crosswind blowing 30 =
mph. I=20
highly recommend the<BR>> > Red<BR>> > Sun chinese =
buffet's=20
Mongolian BBQ in Hays, it's by the Walmart off the<BR>> > =
highway. If=20
you're heading west during the daytime and it's clear, it's<BR>> =
> kinda=20
cool to look up and watch all of the airplane trails heading<BR>> =
>=20
west....<BR>> > rows of lines pointing to Denver.<BR>> =
><BR>>=20
> -Carl<BR>> ><BR>> ><BR>> > "DJ" <<A=20
=
href=3D"mailto:animix_spam-this-ahole_@animas.net">animix_spam-this-ahole=
_@animas.net</A>>=20
wrote in message<BR>> > <A=20
href=3D"news:449f057c@linux">news:449f057c@linux</A>...<BR>> =
>> I have=20
made quite a few long drives in my life. I thought that =
probably<BR>> >=20
the<BR>> >> most gruelling dirive I had ever made was back in =
1972=20
when I drove<BR>> > nonstop<BR>> >> from Austin to =
Chetumal.=20
Yesterday I drove nonstop from Columbus Ohio<BR>to<BR>> > =
La<BR>>=20
>> Junta Colorado.<BR>> >> I was on I70 and crossing =
the=20
remainder of Ohio, Indiana and Missouri<BR>> > didn't<BR>> =
>>=20
really seem to take that long..........then I entered Kansas. I =
never<BR>>=20
>> thought it would end.......almost like there was some sort of =
time=20
warp<BR>> >> where I'd drive for 100 miles and the next road =
sign=20
sould say that the<BR>> > next<BR>> >> stop was 200 =
miles=20
further away than I thought it was.<BR>> >>=20
Unbelieveable!!...........and flat.........I think the definition=20
of<BR>flat<BR>> > in<BR>> >> Websters should have a =
picture of=20
I70 crossing Kansas. I wonder if the<BR>> > early<BR>> =
>>=20
pioneers who crossed Kansas in their covered wagons though that it =
was<BR>>=20
> wierd<BR>> >> to see endless miles of prarie =
occasionally=20
interwspersed with<BR>> > anti-abortion<BR>> >> signs =
which are=20
strung out on incremental billboards along the highway<BR>> >=20
sort<BR>> >> of like old Burma shave ads, then absolutely =
nothing for=20
the next 50<BR>> > miles,<BR>> >> then suddenly an =
adult sex=20
toy/video superstore popping up out of the<BR>> > void,<BR>> =
>>=20
only to be followed 50 miles later by more burma shave-like=20
anti<BR>abortion<BR>> >> ads...........and I wonder if they =
got sick=20
of hearing 70's music on<BR>> >> every<BR>> >> radio =
station. By the time I got out of Kansas about 9:00 last night, =
I<BR>> >=20
felt<BR>> >> like I had driven 20 years backward in =
time.<BR>>=20
>><BR>> >> Absolutely surreal, twilight zone kinda'=20
day.<BR>> >><BR>> >> Toto<BR>> >><BR>>=20
>><BR>> ><BR>> =
><BR>><BR>><BR><BR></BLOCKQUOTE>
<DIV><FONT size=3D2><BR><BR>I choose Polesoft Lockspam to fight spam, =
and=20
you?<BR><A=20
href=3D"http://www.polesoft.com/refer.html">http://www.polesoft.com/refer=
..html</A> </FONT></DIV></BODY ></HTML>
------=_NextPart_000_0041_01C6998F.8E627CB0--
|
|
|
Re: Kansas [message #69700 is a reply to message #69695] |
Mon, 26 June 2006 23:46 |
Tony Benson
Messages: 453 Registered: June 2006
|
Senior Member |
|
|
I know what you meant Jamie. It's the same when people judge Iowa by the
I-80 drive only. They think the whole state is just gently rolling corn and
soybean fields. What a minute . . . It is! ;>) Naw, if you look hard enough
we have some pretty stuff too.
Tony
On 6/26/06 10:36 PM, in article 44a0a66d@linux, "Jamie K"
<Meta@Dimensional.com> wrote:
>
> Tony Benson wrote:
>> I've driven thorough Western Nebraska many times when I was touring and it
>> does have some interesting topology. I was just being facetious. It's an old
>> joke with my family how boring that I-80 drive is as we've made the trip a
>> hundred times.
>>
>> You sound a little like Alice Cooper in Wayne's World, explaining the
>> history of Milwaukee!
>
> Heh. Yeah, if Alice grew up in Nebraska. Sorry I went all pedantic on ya
> Tony.
>
> I've made the drive a zillion times, too. Did I mention the many clean
> Nebraska rest stops, with maps, weather/road reports and abstract
> sculpture displays. I, uh, oh, sorry. :^)
>
> I've also spent a fair amount of time going to and from to New Mexico,
> Arizona, Southern California, Northern California, Oregon and
> Washington. Lots of great country along the way. I really like the drive
> through Deej's four corners area. And the vast stretches of I-80 through
> Utah and Nevada. Wyoming, Montana, Idaho, great country. And of course,
> Colorado.
>
> OK, now I'm itchin' for a road trip!
>
> Cheers,
> -Jamie
> http://www.JamieKrutz.com
>
>
>
>> "Nebraska, birthplace of Arbor Day . . ." I'm not worthy! ;>)
>>
>> Tony
>>
>>
>> "Jamie K" <Meta@Dimensional.com> wrote in message news:44a03140$1@linux...
>>> In Nebraska I-80 follows the Platte river valley, a long gentle descent
>>> bringing Rocky Mountain runnoff to the Missouri river. The route is a part
>>> of the Oregon trail. It became a logical place to put a relatively safe,
>>> easy driving interstate. You could ALMOST drive it on auto-pilot but there
>>> are a few curves here and there. :^)
>>>
>>> Since many folks only experience Nebraska by driving through on I-80, a
>>> common misconception is to equate Nebraska with that drive.
>>>
>>> Nebraska has other terrain. For example, there are vast sandhill areas in
>>> the west. In the North East you'll find hills left behind by glaciation
>>> from the last ice age. The East has interesting river bluff country along
>>> the Missouri river and its tributaries. Nebraska, birthplace of Arbor Day,
>>> also has a large man-made national forest.
>>>
>>> I like the open spaces in the West. We have some incredible areas. With
>>> our demanding, busy lives it's often hard not to just blaze through them
>>> with this or that destination in mind, but sometimes it's worth slowing
>>> down and exploring along the way.
>>>
>>> Cheers,
>>> -Jamie
>>> http://www.JamieKrutz.com
>>>
>>>
>>> Tony Benson wrote:
>>>> It sounds like Nebraska. On one trip to visit my uncle in Snowmass
>>>> Village, CO, I left Iowa on I-80, got West of Omaha, set the cruise, and
>>>> went to sleep. I woke up six hours later to the welcome to Colorado sign!
>>>> Talk about a straight, flat road! ;>)
>>>>
>>>> Tony
>>>>
>>>> "DJ" <animix_spam-this-ahole_@animas.net> wrote in message
>>>> news:449f057c@linux...
>>>>> I have made quite a few long drives in my life. I thought that probably
>>>>> the
>>>>> most gruelling dirive I had ever made was back in 1972 when I drove
>>>>> nonstop
>>>>> from Austin to Chetumal. Yesterday I drove nonstop from Columbus Ohio to
>>>>> La
>>>>> Junta Colorado.
>>>>> I was on I70 and crossing the remainder of Ohio, Indiana and Missouri
>>>>> didn't
>>>>> really seem to take that long..........then I entered Kansas. I never
>>>>> thought it would end.......almost like there was some sort of time warp
>>>>> where I'd drive for 100 miles and the next road sign sould say that the
>>>>> next
>>>>> stop was 200 miles further away than I thought it was.
>>>>> Unbelieveable!!...........and flat.........I think the definition of
>>>>> flat in
>>>>> Websters should have a picture of I70 crossing Kansas. I wonder if the
>>>>> early
>>>>> pioneers who crossed Kansas in their covered wagons though that it was
>>>>> wierd
>>>>> to see endless miles of prarie occasionally interwspersed with
>>>>> anti-abortion
>>>>> signs which are strung out on incremental billboards along the highway
>>>>> sort
>>>>> of like old Burma shave ads, then absolutely nothing for the next 50
>>>>> miles,
>>>>> then suddenly an adult sex toy/video superstore popping up out of the
>>>>> void,
>>>>> only to be followed 50 miles later by more burma shave-like anti
>>>>> abortion
>>>>> ads...........and I wonder if they got sick of hearing 70's music on
>>>>> every
>>>>> radio station. By the time I got out of Kansas about 9:00 last night, I
>>>>> felt
>>>>> like I had driven 20 years backward in time.
>>>>>
>>>>> Absolutely surreal, twilight zone kinda' day.
>>>>>
>>>>> Toto
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>
|
|
|
Re: Kansas [message #69702 is a reply to message #69699] |
Tue, 27 June 2006 00:10 |
Aaron Allen
Messages: 1988 Registered: May 2008
|
Senior Member |
|
|
This is a multi-part message in MIME format.
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Driving tulsa to enid is similar to this. Three hours you can see the =
dang town, it looks close enough to reach out and touch at arms length =
and yet it's still a 3 hour trip. What a visually mind bending trip man.
AA
"Tom Bruhl" <arpegio@comcast.net> wrote in message =
news:44a0cb7c@linux...
Pennsylvania ain't no bargain either. . .
"DJ" <animix_spam-this-ahole_@animas.net> wrote in message =
news:449fee07@linux...
I've driven across Texas north-to-south (Amarillo to Brownsville) =
and
east-to-west (both Texarkana to El Paso and Beaumont to El Paso) and
"perceptually", it didn't seem to take as long as driving across =
Kansas.
Perhaps it's because the terrain changes make it seem like you're =
actually
making some kind of progress rather than sitting in your car with =
the engine
running while moving backwards in time.
;o)
"Dubya Mark Wilson" <mark.xspam@avidrecording.com> wrote in message
news:449f968a$1@linux...
> Wasn't it Steven Wright, the comedian, whose dry one-liner it was =
that,
> "Some people have a fear of heights.... I have a fear width.... =
Texas
> terrifies me."
>
> Oh, heck... I've started a whole new threads now... I can hear it =
coming
> already
>
> Dubya
>
> "Carl Amburn" <carlamburn@hotNOSPAMmail.com> wrote in message
> news:449f952a$1@linux...
> > This is a funny post, because it's so true. I have done I-70 =
through
> > Kansas
> > many many times - 3 times within the last year. I don't remember =
any
> > *without* the friggin' crosswind blowing 30 mph. I highly =
recommend the
> > Red
> > Sun chinese buffet's Mongolian BBQ in Hays, it's by the Walmart =
off the
> > highway. If you're heading west during the daytime and it's =
clear, it's
> > kinda cool to look up and watch all of the airplane trails =
heading
> > west....
> > rows of lines pointing to Denver.
> >
> > -Carl
> >
> >
> > "DJ" <animix_spam-this-ahole_@animas.net> wrote in message
> > news:449f057c@linux...
> >> I have made quite a few long drives in my life. I thought that =
probably
> > the
> >> most gruelling dirive I had ever made was back in 1972 when I =
drove
> > nonstop
> >> from Austin to Chetumal. Yesterday I drove nonstop from =
Columbus Ohio
to
> > La
> >> Junta Colorado.
> >> I was on I70 and crossing the remainder of Ohio, Indiana and =
Missouri
> > didn't
> >> really seem to take that long..........then I entered Kansas. I =
never
> >> thought it would end.......almost like there was some sort of =
time warp
> >> where I'd drive for 100 miles and the next road sign sould say =
that the
> > next
> >> stop was 200 miles further away than I thought it was.
> >> Unbelieveable!!...........and flat.........I think the =
definition of
flat
> > in
> >> Websters should have a picture of I70 crossing Kansas. I wonder =
if the
> > early
> >> pioneers who crossed Kansas in their covered wagons though that =
it was
> > wierd
> >> to see endless miles of prarie occasionally interwspersed with
> > anti-abortion
> >> signs which are strung out on incremental billboards along the =
highway
> > sort
> >> of like old Burma shave ads, then absolutely nothing for the =
next 50
> > miles,
> >> then suddenly an adult sex toy/video superstore popping up out =
of the
> > void,
> >> only to be followed 50 miles later by more burma shave-like =
anti
abortion
> >> ads...........and I wonder if they got sick of hearing 70's =
music on
> >> every
> >> radio station. By the time I got out of Kansas about 9:00 last =
night, I
> > felt
> >> like I had driven 20 years backward in time.
> >>
> >> Absolutely surreal, twilight zone kinda' day.
> >>
> >> Toto
> >>
> >>
> >
> >
>
>
I choose Polesoft Lockspam to fight spam, and you?
http://www.polesoft.com/refer.html
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<STYLE></STYLE>
</HEAD>
<BODY bgColor=3D#ffffff>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Driving tulsa to enid is similar to=20
this. Three hours you can see the dang town, it looks close enough =
to reach=20
out and touch at arms length and yet it's still a 3 hour trip. What a =
visually=20
mind bending trip man.</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2><BR>AA</FONT></DIV>
<BLOCKQUOTE dir=3Dltr=20
style=3D"PADDING-RIGHT: 0px; PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; =
BORDER-LEFT: #000000 2px solid; MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px">
<DIV>"Tom Bruhl" <<A=20
href=3D"mailto:arpegio@comcast.net">arpegio@comcast.net</A>> wrote =
in message=20
<A href=3D"news:44a0cb7c@linux">news:44a0cb7c@linux</A>...</DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Pennsylvania ain't no bargain either. =
..=20
.</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2></FONT> </DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<BLOCKQUOTE=20
style=3D"PADDING-RIGHT: 0px; PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; =
BORDER-LEFT: #000000 2px solid; MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px">
<DIV>"DJ" <<A=20
=
href=3D"mailto:animix_spam-this-ahole_@animas.net">animix_spam-this-ahole=
_@animas.net</A>>=20
wrote in message <A=20
href=3D"news:449fee07@linux">news:449fee07@linux</A>...</DIV>I've =
driven=20
across Texas north-to-south (Amarillo to Brownsville) =
and<BR>east-to-west=20
(both Texarkana to El Paso and Beaumont to El Paso) =
and<BR>"perceptually",=20
it didn't seem to take as long as driving across Kansas.<BR>Perhaps =
it's=20
because the terrain changes make it seem like you're =
actually<BR>making some=20
kind of progress rather than sitting in your car with the =
engine<BR>running=20
while moving backwards in time.<BR><BR>;o)<BR><BR><BR><BR>"Dubya =
Mark=20
Wilson" <<A=20
=
href=3D"mailto:mark.xspam@avidrecording.com">mark.xspam@avidrecording.com=
</A>>=20
wrote in message<BR><A=20
href=3D"news:449f968a$1@linux">news:449f968a$1@linux</A>...<BR>> =
Wasn't it=20
Steven Wright, the comedian, whose dry one-liner it was =
that,<BR>> "Some=20
people have a fear of heights.... I have a fear width.... =
Texas<BR>>=20
terrifies me."<BR>><BR>> Oh, heck... I've started a whole new =
threads=20
now... I can hear it coming<BR>> already<BR>><BR>>=20
Dubya<BR>><BR>> "Carl Amburn" <<A=20
=
href=3D"mailto:carlamburn@hotNOSPAMmail.com">carlamburn@hotNOSPAMmail.com=
</A>>=20
wrote in message<BR>> <A=20
href=3D"news:449f952a$1@linux">news:449f952a$1@linux</A>...<BR>> =
> This=20
is a funny post, because it's so true. I have done I-70 =
through<BR>> >=20
Kansas<BR>> > many many times - 3 times within the last year. =
I don't=20
remember any<BR>> > *without* the friggin' crosswind blowing =
30 mph. I=20
highly recommend the<BR>> > Red<BR>> > Sun chinese =
buffet's=20
Mongolian BBQ in Hays, it's by the Walmart off the<BR>> > =
highway. If=20
you're heading west during the daytime and it's clear, it's<BR>> =
>=20
kinda cool to look up and watch all of the airplane trails =
heading<BR>>=20
> west....<BR>> > rows of lines pointing to Denver.<BR>> =
><BR>> > -Carl<BR>> ><BR>> ><BR>> > "DJ" =
<<A=20
=
href=3D"mailto:animix_spam-this-ahole_@animas.net">animix_spam-this-ahole=
_@animas.net</A>>=20
wrote in message<BR>> > <A=20
href=3D"news:449f057c@linux">news:449f057c@linux</A>...<BR>> =
>> I=20
have made quite a few long drives in my life. I thought that=20
probably<BR>> > the<BR>> >> most gruelling dirive I =
had ever=20
made was back in 1972 when I drove<BR>> > nonstop<BR>> =
>>=20
from Austin to Chetumal. Yesterday I drove nonstop from Columbus=20
Ohio<BR>to<BR>> > La<BR>> >> Junta Colorado.<BR>> =
>>=20
I was on I70 and crossing the remainder of Ohio, Indiana and=20
Missouri<BR>> > didn't<BR>> >> really seem to take =
that=20
long..........then I entered Kansas. I never<BR>> >> =
thought it=20
would end.......almost like there was some sort of time warp<BR>> =
>> where I'd drive for 100 miles and the next road sign sould =
say that=20
the<BR>> > next<BR>> >> stop was 200 miles further =
away than=20
I thought it was.<BR>> >> Unbelieveable!!...........and=20
flat.........I think the definition of<BR>flat<BR>> > =
in<BR>>=20
>> Websters should have a picture of I70 crossing Kansas. I =
wonder if=20
the<BR>> > early<BR>> >> pioneers who crossed Kansas =
in their=20
covered wagons though that it was<BR>> > wierd<BR>> =
>> to see=20
endless miles of prarie occasionally interwspersed with<BR>> > =
anti-abortion<BR>> >> signs which are strung out on =
incremental=20
billboards along the highway<BR>> > sort<BR>> >> of =
like old=20
Burma shave ads, then absolutely nothing for the next 50<BR>> =
>=20
miles,<BR>> >> then suddenly an adult sex toy/video =
superstore=20
popping up out of the<BR>> > void,<BR>> >> only to be =
followed 50 miles later by more burma shave-like =
anti<BR>abortion<BR>>=20
>> ads...........and I wonder if they got sick of hearing 70's =
music=20
on<BR>> >> every<BR>> >> radio station. By the =
time I got=20
out of Kansas about 9:00 last night, I<BR>> > felt<BR>> =
>>=20
like I had driven 20 years backward in time.<BR>> =
>><BR>>=20
>> Absolutely surreal, twilight zone kinda' day.<BR>>=20
>><BR>> >> Toto<BR>> >><BR>> =
>><BR>>=20
><BR>> ><BR>><BR>><BR><BR></BLOCKQUOTE>
<DIV><FONT size=3D2><BR><BR>I choose Polesoft Lockspam to fight spam, =
and=20
you?<BR><A=20
=
href=3D"http://www.polesoft.com/refer.html">http://www.polesoft.com/refer=
..html</A> </FONT></DIV></BLOCKQUOTE ></BODY></HTML>
------=_NextPart_000_0017_01C6998E.E3FD9390--
|
|
|
Re: Kansas [message #69709 is a reply to message #69699] |
Tue, 27 June 2006 07:11 |
Deej [1]
Messages: 2149 Registered: January 2006
|
Senior Member |
|
|
This is a multi-part message in MIME format.
------=_NextPart_000_017A_01C699C1.53C69960
Content-Type: text/plain;
charset="iso-8859-1"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
Yeah,
Pennsylvania was a pretty long stretch.........but at least there is =
some variety to the terrain. what I found annoying about Pennsylavnia =
was that apparently the highway department there assumes that everyone =
who is driving on the highways is familir with Pennsylvania. The =
interstate highway names change without any signs at these changes which =
tell you where the *new* highway goes. If you are driving on Interstate =
84W coming out of NY state, it just ends at Interstate 81 North or =
South. You have to know that interstate 81 N actually goes west and =
intersects Interstate 80 west or that interstate 81 south connects to =
Interstate 76 W, but if you're actually trying to find I70 West, there =
is no sign that says "Pittsburg........this way" so that you know that =
this will happen. It's pretty easy to end up taking an unexpected detour =
through the Poconos (which ain't bad, but can be annoying if you aren't =
really wanting to do this. Also, the Interstates in Pennsylvania, NY and =
Ohio are under construction for long stretches. I was driving through =
Pennsylvania and NY on Friday and the construction delays really sucked. =
There were lost of commuters around Pittsburgh on Friday afternoon who =
were going postal. At one point, I sat stock still on I 76 for over an =
hour. The line of cars in front of me was so long that by the time =
traffic started moving again, what ever had been delaying things had =
totally disappeared without a trace. No way to know if it was a wreck of =
what.
"Tom Bruhl" <arpegio@comcast.net> wrote in message =
news:44a0cb7c@linux...
Pennsylvania ain't no bargain either. . .
"DJ" <animix_spam-this-ahole_@animas.net> wrote in message =
news:449fee07@linux...
I've driven across Texas north-to-south (Amarillo to Brownsville) =
and
east-to-west (both Texarkana to El Paso and Beaumont to El Paso) and
"perceptually", it didn't seem to take as long as driving across =
Kansas.
Perhaps it's because the terrain changes make it seem like you're =
actually
making some kind of progress rather than sitting in your car with =
the engine
running while moving backwards in time.
;o)
"Dubya Mark Wilson" <mark.xspam@avidrecording.com> wrote in message
news:449f968a$1@linux...
> Wasn't it Steven Wright, the comedian, whose dry one-liner it was =
that,
> "Some people have a fear of heights.... I have a fear width.... =
Texas
> terrifies me."
>
> Oh, heck... I've started a whole new threads now... I can hear it =
coming
> already
>
> Dubya
>
> "Carl Amburn" <carlamburn@hotNOSPAMmail.com> wrote in message
> news:449f952a$1@linux...
> > This is a funny post, because it's so true. I have done I-70 =
through
> > Kansas
> > many many times - 3 times within the last year. I don't remember =
any
> > *without* the friggin' crosswind blowing 30 mph. I highly =
recommend the
> > Red
> > Sun chinese buffet's Mongolian BBQ in Hays, it's by the Walmart =
off the
> > highway. If you're heading west during the daytime and it's =
clear, it's
> > kinda cool to look up and watch all of the airplane trails =
heading
> > west....
> > rows of lines pointing to Denver.
> >
> > -Carl
> >
> >
> > "DJ" <animix_spam-this-ahole_@animas.net> wrote in message
> > news:449f057c@linux...
> >> I have made quite a few long drives in my life. I thought that =
probably
> > the
> >> most gruelling dirive I had ever made was back in 1972 when I =
drove
> > nonstop
> >> from Austin to Chetumal. Yesterday I drove nonstop from =
Columbus Ohio
to
> > La
> >> Junta Colorado.
> >> I was on I70 and crossing the remainder of Ohio, Indiana and =
Missouri
> > didn't
> >> really seem to take that long..........then I entered Kansas. I =
never
> >> thought it would end.......almost like there was some sort of =
time warp
> >> where I'd drive for 100 miles and the next road sign sould say =
that the
> > next
> >> stop was 200 miles further away than I thought it was.
> >> Unbelieveable!!...........and flat.........I think the =
definition of
flat
> > in
> >> Websters should have a picture of I70 crossing Kansas. I wonder =
if the
> > early
> >> pioneers who crossed Kansas in their covered wagons though that =
it was
> > wierd
> >> to see endless miles of prarie occasionally interwspersed with
> > anti-abortion
> >> signs which are strung out on incremental billboards along the =
highway
> > sort
> >> of like old Burma shave ads, then absolutely nothing for the =
next 50
> > miles,
> >> then suddenly an adult sex toy/video superstore popping up out =
of the
> > void,
> >> only to be followed 50 miles later by more burma shave-like =
anti
abortion
> >> ads...........and I wonder if they got sick of hearing 70's =
music on
> >> every
> >> radio station. By the time I got out of Kansas about 9:00 last =
night, I
> > felt
> >> like I had driven 20 years backward in time.
> >>
> >> Absolutely surreal, twilight zone kinda' day.
> >>
> >> Toto
> >>
> >>
> >
> >
>
>
I choose Polesoft Lockspam to fight spam, and you?
http://www.polesoft.com/refer.html
------=_NextPart_000_017A_01C699C1.53C69960
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charset="iso-8859-1"
Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN">
<HTML><HEAD>
<META http-equiv=3DContent-Type content=3D"text/html; =
charset=3Diso-8859-1">
<META content=3D"MSHTML 6.00.2800.1106" name=3DGENERATOR>
<STYLE></STYLE>
</HEAD>
<BODY bgColor=3D#ffffff>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Yeah,</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2></FONT> </DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Pennsylvania was a pretty long =
stretch.........but=20
at least there is some variety to the terrain. what I found annoying =
about=20
Pennsylavnia was that apparently the highway department there assumes =
that=20
everyone who is driving on the highways is familir with Pennsylvania. =
The=20
interstate highway names change without any signs at these changes which =
tell=20
you where the *new* highway goes. If you are driving on Interstate 84W =
coming=20
out of NY state, it just ends at Interstate 81 North or South. You =
have to=20
know that interstate 81 N actually goes west and intersects Interstate =
80 west=20
or that interstate 81 south connects to Interstate 76 W, but if you're =
actually=20
trying to find I70 West, there is no sign that says =
"Pittsburg........this way"=20
so that you know that this will happen. It's pretty easy to end up =
taking=20
an unexpected detour through the Poconos (which ain't bad, but can be =
annoying=20
if you aren't really wanting to do this. Also, the Interstates in =
Pennsylvania,=20
NY and Ohio are under construction for long stretches. I was driving =
through=20
Pennsylvania and NY on Friday and the construction delays really sucked. =
There=20
were lost of commuters around Pittsburgh on Friday afternoon who were =
going=20
postal. At one point, I sat stock still on I 76 for over an hour. The =
line of=20
cars in front of me was so long that by the time traffic started moving =
again,=20
what ever had been delaying things had totally disappeared without a =
trace. No=20
way to know if it was a wreck of what.</FONT></DIV>
<BLOCKQUOTE dir=3Dltr=20
style=3D"PADDING-RIGHT: 0px; PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; =
BORDER-LEFT: #000000 2px solid; MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px">
<DIV>"Tom Bruhl" <<A=20
href=3D"mailto:arpegio@comcast.net">arpegio@comcast.net</A>> wrote =
in message=20
<A href=3D"news:44a0cb7c@linux">news:44a0cb7c@linux</A>...</DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2>Pennsylvania ain't no bargain either. =
..=20
.</FONT></DIV>
<DIV><FONT face=3DArial size=3D2></FONT> </DIV>
<DIV> </DIV>
<BLOCKQUOTE=20
style=3D"PADDING-RIGHT: 0px; PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; =
BORDER-LEFT: #000000 2px solid; MARGIN-RIGHT: 0px">
<DIV>"DJ" <<A=20
=
href=3D"mailto:animix_spam-this-ahole_@animas.net">animix_spam-this-ahole=
_@animas.net</A>>=20
wrote in message <A=20
href=3D"news:449fee07@linux">news:449fee07@linux</A>...</DIV>I've =
driven=20
across Texas north-to-south (Amarillo to Brownsville) =
and<BR>east-to-west=20
(both Texarkana to El Paso and Beaumont to El Paso) =
and<BR>"perceptually",=20
it didn't seem to take as long as driving across Kansas.<BR>Perhaps =
it's=20
because the terrain changes make it seem like you're =
actually<BR>making some=20
kind of progress rather than sitting in your car with the =
engine<BR>running=20
while moving backwards in time.<BR><BR>;o)<BR><BR><BR><BR>"Dubya =
Mark=20
Wilson" <<A=20
=
href=3D"mailto:mark.xspam@avidrecording.com">mark.xspam@avidrecording.com=
</A>>=20
wrote in message<BR><A=20
href=3D"news:449f968a$1@linux">news:449f968a$1@linux</A>...<BR>> =
Wasn't it=20
Steven Wright, the comedian, whose dry one-liner it was =
that,<BR>> "Some=20
people have a fear of heights.... I have a fear width.... =
Texas<BR>>=20
terrifies me."<BR>><BR>> Oh, heck... I've started a whole new =
threads=20
now... I can hear it coming<BR>> already<BR>><BR>>=20
Dubya<BR>><BR>> "Carl Amburn" <<A=20
=
href=3D"mailto:carlamburn@hotNOSPAMmail.com">carlamburn@hotNOSPAMmail.com=
</A>>=20
wrote in message<BR>> <A=20
href=3D"news:449f952a$1@linux">news:449f952a$1@linux</A>...<BR>> =
> This=20
is a funny post, because it's so true. I have done I-70 =
through<BR>> >=20
Kansas<BR>> > many many times - 3 times within the last year. =
I don't=20
remember any<BR>> > *without* the friggin' crosswind blowing =
30 mph. I=20
highly recommend the<BR>> > Red<BR>> > Sun chinese =
buffet's=20
Mongolian BBQ in Hays, it's by the Walmart off the<BR>> > =
highway. If=20
you're heading west during the daytime and it's clear, it's<BR>> =
>=20
kinda cool to look up and watch all of the airplane trails =
heading<BR>>=20
> west....<BR>> > rows of lines pointing to Denver.<BR>> =
><BR>> > -Carl<BR>> ><BR>> ><BR>> > "DJ" =
<<A=20
=
href=3D"mailto:animix_spam-this-ahole_@animas.net">animix_spam-this-ahole=
_@animas.net</A>>=20
wrote in message<BR>> > <A=20
href=3D"news:449f057c@linux">news:449f057c@linux</A>...<BR>> =
>> I=20
have made quite a few long drives in my life. I thought that=20
probably<BR>> > the<BR>> >> most gruelling dirive I =
had ever=20
made was back in 1972 when I drove<BR>> > nonstop<BR>> =
>>=20
from Austin to Chetumal. Yesterday I drove nonstop from Columbus=20
Ohio<BR>to<BR>> > La<BR>> >> Junta Colorado.<BR>> =
>>=20
I was on I70 and crossing the remainder of Ohio, Indiana and=20
Missouri<BR>> > didn't<BR>> >> really seem to take =
that=20
long..........then I entered Kansas. I never<BR>> >> =
thought it=20
would end.......almost like there was some sort of time warp<BR>> =
>> where I'd drive for 100 miles and the next road sign sould =
say that=20
the<BR>> > next<BR>> >> stop was 200 miles further =
away than=20
I thought it was.<BR>> >> Unbelieveable!!...........and=20
flat.........I think the definition of<BR>flat<BR>> > =
in<BR>>=20
>> Websters should have a picture of I70 crossing Kansas. I =
wonder if=20
the<BR>> > early<BR>> >> pioneers who crossed Kansas =
in their=20
covered wagons though that it was<BR>> > wierd<BR>> =
>> to see=20
endless miles of prarie occasionally interwspersed with<BR>> > =
anti-abortion<BR>> >> signs which are strung out on =
incremental=20
billboards along the highway<BR>> > sort<BR>> >> of =
like old=20
Burma shave ads, then absolutely nothing for the next 50<BR>> =
>=20
miles,<BR>> >> then suddenly an adult sex toy/video =
superstore=20
popping up out of the<BR>> > void,<BR>> >> only to be =
followed 50 miles later by more burma shave-like =
anti<BR>abortion<BR>>=20
>> ads...........and I wonder if they got sick of hearing 70's =
music=20
on<BR>> >> every<BR>> >> radio station. By the =
time I got=20
out of Kansas about 9:00 last night, I<BR>> > felt<BR>> =
>>=20
like I had driven 20 years backward in time.<BR>> =
>><BR>>=20
>> Absolutely surreal, twilight zone kinda' day.<BR>>=20
>><BR>> >> Toto<BR>> >><BR>> =
>><BR>>=20
><BR>> ><BR>><BR>><BR><BR></BLOCKQUOTE>
<DIV><FONT size=3D2><BR><BR>I choose Polesoft Lockspam to fight spam, =
and=20
you?<BR><A=20
=
href=3D"http://www.polesoft.com/refer.html">http://www.polesoft.com/refer=
..html</A> </FONT></DIV></BLOCKQUOTE ></BODY></HTML>
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Re: Kansas [message #69718 is a reply to message #69671] |
Tue, 27 June 2006 12:46 |
Rod Lincoln
Messages: 883 Registered: September 2005
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Senior Member |
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I don't think I was there during that time period. I can't believe you remember
all that stuff in that much detail.
I'm in Vegas right now. I'll be back home late tonight.
Rod
"Dubya Mark Wilson" <mark.xspam@avidrecording.com> wrote:
>Bogota as I recall. And it wasn't trickery at play... it was an MCI
>calling card number that ended in a sequence which confused KC local routing
>for national domestic LD with international dialing, specifically, Columbia,
>South America country code. That was a weird day. As Nic Cage said in
Con
>Air while that brand new corvette was dangling at 400 feet like an empty
>cereal box off the back of that C-130, "On any other day, that would seem
>entirely unusual" but that whole weekend was just odd, including the drive
>through KS and CO the next day.
>
>Hey, Rod you weren't with SW the night the old 20-ton straight truck gel'd
>up diesel between LV and Reno, were you?
>
>Mark
>
>"Rod Lincoln" <rlincoln@kc.rr.com> wrote in message news:449f696f$1@linux...
>>
>> Hey Mark....remember when we accidently dialed Afganastan or somewhere
>> like
>> that when you were at my house? I think you were trying to show me some
>> trick
>> on the phone that had to do with counting a certain number of seconds
>> before
>> hitting the last number.
>> Rod
>>
>> P.S Just got back from vacation, and am leaving for Vegas in the morn
for
>> a corperate gig. Back Tues night. Man.....I had some withdrawls from this
>> place.
>> "Dubya Mark Wilson" <mark.xspam@avidrecording.com> wrote:
>>>And how is 70 anymore? The last time I traversed the country on 70 was
>>
>>>1990...R-coast to L-coast, stayed at Rod's place for a day in KC. I don't
>>
>>>know if they've spent any money on 70 since then but I'd say it was THE
>>
>>>WORST interstate ending in Zero we had at that time and had been that
way
>>
>>>for 10 years.
>>>
>>>I'll add this positive aspect of Kansas; I enjoyed EVERY firework display
>> in
>>>the state Colorado on the evening of July 4, 1990 and I saw all of them
>>
>>>from, you guessed it, Kansas. Somewhere in that same trip, I was almost
>>
>>>sucked of the raod by a Tornado that wiped out a good bit of Limon area,
>> CO.
>>>
>>>Dubya out
>>>
>>>
>>
>
>
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Re: Kansas [message #69757 is a reply to message #69700] |
Wed, 28 June 2006 16:25 |
Dubya Mark Wilson
Messages: 108 Registered: May 2006
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Senior Member |
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I remember 20 years or so ago driving through Iowa (where THE most prolific
signage pertains to the travel of deer) and noticing the backwards antlers
on ALL of the signs. Yep... major foul-up. The antlers ran from the middle
of their foreheads, backwards over their ears and then up. Hilarious. It
made national news a few days later.
W. Mark Wilson
"Tony Benson" <tony@standinghampton.com> wrote in message
news:C0C63E6E.CCED%tony@standinghampton.com...
>I know what you meant Jamie. It's the same when people judge Iowa by the
> I-80 drive only. They think the whole state is just gently rolling corn
> and
> soybean fields. What a minute . . . It is! ;>) Naw, if you look hard
> enough
> we have some pretty stuff too.
>
> Tony
>
> On 6/26/06 10:36 PM, in article 44a0a66d@linux, "Jamie K"
> <Meta@Dimensional.com> wrote:
>
>>
>> Tony Benson wrote:
>>> I've driven thorough Western Nebraska many times when I was touring and
>>> it
>>> does have some interesting topology. I was just being facetious. It's an
>>> old
>>> joke with my family how boring that I-80 drive is as we've made the trip
>>> a
>>> hundred times.
>>>
>>> You sound a little like Alice Cooper in Wayne's World, explaining the
>>> history of Milwaukee!
>>
>> Heh. Yeah, if Alice grew up in Nebraska. Sorry I went all pedantic on ya
>> Tony.
>>
>> I've made the drive a zillion times, too. Did I mention the many clean
>> Nebraska rest stops, with maps, weather/road reports and abstract
>> sculpture displays. I, uh, oh, sorry. :^)
>>
>> I've also spent a fair amount of time going to and from to New Mexico,
>> Arizona, Southern California, Northern California, Oregon and
>> Washington. Lots of great country along the way. I really like the drive
>> through Deej's four corners area. And the vast stretches of I-80 through
>> Utah and Nevada. Wyoming, Montana, Idaho, great country. And of course,
>> Colorado.
>>
>> OK, now I'm itchin' for a road trip!
>>
>> Cheers,
>> -Jamie
>> http://www.JamieKrutz.com
>>
>>
>>
>>> "Nebraska, birthplace of Arbor Day . . ." I'm not worthy! ;>)
>>>
>>> Tony
>>>
>>>
>>> "Jamie K" <Meta@Dimensional.com> wrote in message
>>> news:44a03140$1@linux...
>>>> In Nebraska I-80 follows the Platte river valley, a long gentle descent
>>>> bringing Rocky Mountain runnoff to the Missouri river. The route is a
>>>> part
>>>> of the Oregon trail. It became a logical place to put a relatively
>>>> safe,
>>>> easy driving interstate. You could ALMOST drive it on auto-pilot but
>>>> there
>>>> are a few curves here and there. :^)
>>>>
>>>> Since many folks only experience Nebraska by driving through on I-80, a
>>>> common misconception is to equate Nebraska with that drive.
>>>>
>>>> Nebraska has other terrain. For example, there are vast sandhill areas
>>>> in
>>>> the west. In the North East you'll find hills left behind by glaciation
>>>> from the last ice age. The East has interesting river bluff country
>>>> along
>>>> the Missouri river and its tributaries. Nebraska, birthplace of Arbor
>>>> Day,
>>>> also has a large man-made national forest.
>>>>
>>>> I like the open spaces in the West. We have some incredible areas. With
>>>> our demanding, busy lives it's often hard not to just blaze through
>>>> them
>>>> with this or that destination in mind, but sometimes it's worth slowing
>>>> down and exploring along the way.
>>>>
>>>> Cheers,
>>>> -Jamie
>>>> http://www.JamieKrutz.com
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Tony Benson wrote:
>>>>> It sounds like Nebraska. On one trip to visit my uncle in Snowmass
>>>>> Village, CO, I left Iowa on I-80, got West of Omaha, set the cruise,
>>>>> and
>>>>> went to sleep. I woke up six hours later to the welcome to Colorado
>>>>> sign!
>>>>> Talk about a straight, flat road! ;>)
>>>>>
>>>>> Tony
>>>>>
>>>>> "DJ" <animix_spam-this-ahole_@animas.net> wrote in message
>>>>> news:449f057c@linux...
>>>>>> I have made quite a few long drives in my life. I thought that
>>>>>> probably
>>>>>> the
>>>>>> most gruelling dirive I had ever made was back in 1972 when I drove
>>>>>> nonstop
>>>>>> from Austin to Chetumal. Yesterday I drove nonstop from Columbus Ohio
>>>>>> to
>>>>>> La
>>>>>> Junta Colorado.
>>>>>> I was on I70 and crossing the remainder of Ohio, Indiana and Missouri
>>>>>> didn't
>>>>>> really seem to take that long..........then I entered Kansas. I never
>>>>>> thought it would end.......almost like there was some sort of time
>>>>>> warp
>>>>>> where I'd drive for 100 miles and the next road sign sould say that
>>>>>> the
>>>>>> next
>>>>>> stop was 200 miles further away than I thought it was.
>>>>>> Unbelieveable!!...........and flat.........I think the definition of
>>>>>> flat in
>>>>>> Websters should have a picture of I70 crossing Kansas. I wonder if
>>>>>> the
>>>>>> early
>>>>>> pioneers who crossed Kansas in their covered wagons though that it
>>>>>> was
>>>>>> wierd
>>>>>> to see endless miles of prarie occasionally interwspersed with
>>>>>> anti-abortion
>>>>>> signs which are strung out on incremental billboards along the
>>>>>> highway
>>>>>> sort
>>>>>> of like old Burma shave ads, then absolutely nothing for the next 50
>>>>>> miles,
>>>>>> then suddenly an adult sex toy/video superstore popping up out of the
>>>>>> void,
>>>>>> only to be followed 50 miles later by more burma shave-like anti
>>>>>> abortion
>>>>>> ads...........and I wonder if they got sick of hearing 70's music on
>>>>>> every
>>>>>> radio station. By the time I got out of Kansas about 9:00 last night,
>>>>>> I
>>>>>> felt
>>>>>> like I had driven 20 years backward in time.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Absolutely surreal, twilight zone kinda' day.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Toto
>>>>>>
>>>>>>
>>>
>
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Re: Kansas [message #69774 is a reply to message #69757] |
Thu, 29 June 2006 09:58 |
Tony Benson
Messages: 453 Registered: June 2006
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Senior Member |
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That doesn't surprise me. Our DOT isn't what you'd call an organization of
geniuses. ;>)
Tony
"Dubya Mark Wilson" <mark.xspam@avidrecording.com> wrote in message
news:44a30e9b@linux...
>I remember 20 years or so ago driving through Iowa (where THE most prolific
>signage pertains to the travel of deer) and noticing the backwards antlers
>on ALL of the signs. Yep... major foul-up. The antlers ran from the
>middle of their foreheads, backwards over their ears and then up.
>Hilarious. It made national news a few days later.
>
> W. Mark Wilson
>
> "Tony Benson" <tony@standinghampton.com> wrote in message
> news:C0C63E6E.CCED%tony@standinghampton.com...
>>I know what you meant Jamie. It's the same when people judge Iowa by the
>> I-80 drive only. They think the whole state is just gently rolling corn
>> and
>> soybean fields. What a minute . . . It is! ;>) Naw, if you look hard
>> enough
>> we have some pretty stuff too.
>>
>> Tony
>>
>> On 6/26/06 10:36 PM, in article 44a0a66d@linux, "Jamie K"
>> <Meta@Dimensional.com> wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> Tony Benson wrote:
>>>> I've driven thorough Western Nebraska many times when I was touring and
>>>> it
>>>> does have some interesting topology. I was just being facetious. It's
>>>> an old
>>>> joke with my family how boring that I-80 drive is as we've made the
>>>> trip a
>>>> hundred times.
>>>>
>>>> You sound a little like Alice Cooper in Wayne's World, explaining the
>>>> history of Milwaukee!
>>>
>>> Heh. Yeah, if Alice grew up in Nebraska. Sorry I went all pedantic on ya
>>> Tony.
>>>
>>> I've made the drive a zillion times, too. Did I mention the many clean
>>> Nebraska rest stops, with maps, weather/road reports and abstract
>>> sculpture displays. I, uh, oh, sorry. :^)
>>>
>>> I've also spent a fair amount of time going to and from to New Mexico,
>>> Arizona, Southern California, Northern California, Oregon and
>>> Washington. Lots of great country along the way. I really like the drive
>>> through Deej's four corners area. And the vast stretches of I-80 through
>>> Utah and Nevada. Wyoming, Montana, Idaho, great country. And of course,
>>> Colorado.
>>>
>>> OK, now I'm itchin' for a road trip!
>>>
>>> Cheers,
>>> -Jamie
>>> http://www.JamieKrutz.com
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>> "Nebraska, birthplace of Arbor Day . . ." I'm not worthy! ;>)
>>>>
>>>> Tony
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> "Jamie K" <Meta@Dimensional.com> wrote in message
>>>> news:44a03140$1@linux...
>>>>> In Nebraska I-80 follows the Platte river valley, a long gentle
>>>>> descent
>>>>> bringing Rocky Mountain runnoff to the Missouri river. The route is a
>>>>> part
>>>>> of the Oregon trail. It became a logical place to put a relatively
>>>>> safe,
>>>>> easy driving interstate. You could ALMOST drive it on auto-pilot but
>>>>> there
>>>>> are a few curves here and there. :^)
>>>>>
>>>>> Since many folks only experience Nebraska by driving through on I-80,
>>>>> a
>>>>> common misconception is to equate Nebraska with that drive.
>>>>>
>>>>> Nebraska has other terrain. For example, there are vast sandhill areas
>>>>> in
>>>>> the west. In the North East you'll find hills left behind by
>>>>> glaciation
>>>>> from the last ice age. The East has interesting river bluff country
>>>>> along
>>>>> the Missouri river and its tributaries. Nebraska, birthplace of Arbor
>>>>> Day,
>>>>> also has a large man-made national forest.
>>>>>
>>>>> I like the open spaces in the West. We have some incredible areas.
>>>>> With
>>>>> our demanding, busy lives it's often hard not to just blaze through
>>>>> them
>>>>> with this or that destination in mind, but sometimes it's worth
>>>>> slowing
>>>>> down and exploring along the way.
>>>>>
>>>>> Cheers,
>>>>> -Jamie
>>>>> http://www.JamieKrutz.com
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Tony Benson wrote:
>>>>>> It sounds like Nebraska. On one trip to visit my uncle in Snowmass
>>>>>> Village, CO, I left Iowa on I-80, got West of Omaha, set the cruise,
>>>>>> and
>>>>>> went to sleep. I woke up six hours later to the welcome to Colorado
>>>>>> sign!
>>>>>> Talk about a straight, flat road! ;>)
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Tony
>>>>>>
>>>>>> "DJ" <animix_spam-this-ahole_@animas.net> wrote in message
>>>>>> news:449f057c@linux...
>>>>>>> I have made quite a few long drives in my life. I thought that
>>>>>>> probably
>>>>>>> the
>>>>>>> most gruelling dirive I had ever made was back in 1972 when I drove
>>>>>>> nonstop
>>>>>>> from Austin to Chetumal. Yesterday I drove nonstop from Columbus
>>>>>>> Ohio to
>>>>>>> La
>>>>>>> Junta Colorado.
>>>>>>> I was on I70 and crossing the remainder of Ohio, Indiana and
>>>>>>> Missouri
>>>>>>> didn't
>>>>>>> really seem to take that long..........then I entered Kansas. I
>>>>>>> never
>>>>>>> thought it would end.......almost like there was some sort of time
>>>>>>> warp
>>>>>>> where I'd drive for 100 miles and the next road sign sould say that
>>>>>>> the
>>>>>>> next
>>>>>>> stop was 200 miles further away than I thought it was.
>>>>>>> Unbelieveable!!...........and flat.........I think the definition of
>>>>>>> flat in
>>>>>>> Websters should have a picture of I70 crossing Kansas. I wonder if
>>>>>>> the
>>>>>>> early
>>>>>>> pioneers who crossed Kansas in their covered wagons though that it
>>>>>>> was
>>>>>>> wierd
>>>>>>> to see endless miles of prarie occasionally interwspersed with
>>>>>>> anti-abortion
>>>>>>> signs which are strung out on incremental billboards along the
>>>>>>> highway
>>>>>>> sort
>>>>>>> of like old Burma shave ads, then absolutely nothing for the next 50
>>>>>>> miles,
>>>>>>> then suddenly an adult sex toy/video superstore popping up out of
>>>>>>> the
>>>>>>> void,
>>>>>>> only to be followed 50 miles later by more burma shave-like anti
>>>>>>> abortion
>>>>>>> ads...........and I wonder if they got sick of hearing 70's music on
>>>>>>> every
>>>>>>> radio station. By the time I got out of Kansas about 9:00 last
>>>>>>> night, I
>>>>>>> felt
>>>>>>> like I had driven 20 years backward in time.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Absolutely surreal, twilight zone kinda' day.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Toto
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>
>>
>
>
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Re: Kansas [message #70145 is a reply to message #69675] |
Sun, 09 July 2006 10:46 |
Miguel Vigil [1]
Messages: 258 Registered: July 2005
|
Senior Member |
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> Kansas, now that sounds like fun. Or hey, Nevada, in a supercharged
> Challenger. Just like in the movie, except without the cops and the dying
> and the car exploding and stuff.
yeah, Vanishing Point...
That's what I'm talking about.
El Miguel *Kowowski* without the pills and that damn bulldozer thingy in the
road :)
"Sound Dog" <dogster@tpg.com.au> wrote in message news:449ffb3f$1@linux...
> I've heard that OZ is actually worse. If you're talking about crossing
the
> middle of Australia that is. 52 degrees (don't know what that is in
> fahrenheit) and the occasional motel / petrol pump, and the likelhood of
a
> kangaroo jumping out in front of you and introducing your front suspension
> to your firewall.
>
> So I've heard anyway...
>
> Kansas, now that sounds like fun. Or hey, Nevada, in a supercharged
> Challenger. Just like in the movie, except without the cops and the dying
> and the car exploding and stuff.
>
> Stewart.
>
>
> Dedric Terry wrote in message ...
> >When I moved out here from Nashville, I drove a moving truck all the way.
> >Not so bad out of Tennessee and Missouri, but then we hit Kansas.
> >
> >Kansas is uphill all the way going west for anyone who's never driven
that
> >stretch of I-70. To get near the speed limit (okay 15mph shy at 50), I
had
> >to floor it and keep it there - it just poked along at 50, dead on, not a
> >wiggle, not a hint of 51 or 49. One stretch (between gas stops) was 4
> hours
> >of nothing changing inside the truck or out. I almost thought of putting
a
> >box on the accelerator and moving to the passenger seat to read a
> >book...just to be sure time hadn't stopped.
> >
> >"There's no place like home. There's no place like home." Really? Was
OZ
> >that bad?
> >
> >The Tinman
> >
> >On 6/25/06 3:50 PM, in article 449f057c@linux, "DJ"
> ><animix_spam-this-ahole_@animas.net> wrote:
> >
> >> I have made quite a few long drives in my life. I thought that probably
> the
> >> most gruelling dirive I had ever made was back in 1972 when I drove
> nonstop
> >> from Austin to Chetumal. Yesterday I drove nonstop from Columbus Ohio
to
> La
> >> Junta Colorado.
> >> I was on I70 and crossing the remainder of Ohio, Indiana and Missouri
> didn't
> >> really seem to take that long..........then I entered Kansas. I never
> >> thought it would end.......almost like there was some sort of time warp
> >> where I'd drive for 100 miles and the next road sign sould say that the
> next
> >> stop was 200 miles further away than I thought it was.
> >> Unbelieveable!!...........and flat.........I think the definition of
flat
> in
> >> Websters should have a picture of I70 crossing Kansas. I wonder if the
> early
> >> pioneers who crossed Kansas in their covered wagons though that it was
> wierd
> >> to see endless miles of prarie occasionally interwspersed with
> anti-abortion
> >> signs which are strung out on incremental billboards along the highway
> sort
> >> of like old Burma shave ads, then absolutely nothing for the next 50
> miles,
> >> then suddenly an adult sex toy/video superstore popping up out of the
> void,
> >> only to be followed 50 miles later by more burma shave-like anti
abortion
> >> ads...........and I wonder if they got sick of hearing 70's music on
> every
> >> radio station. By the time I got out of Kansas about 9:00 last night, I
> felt
> >> like I had driven 20 years backward in time.
> >>
> >> Absolutely surreal, twilight zone kinda' day.
> >>
> >> Toto
> >>
> >>
> >
>
>
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