Hercule
Practically Family
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- Western Reserve (Cleveland)
The term for a roadside memorial is descanso
Been to Montana once some 4 decades ago to go downhill skiing at Big Sky. Beautiful country but would never live there due to their winter temps. Was there in February and the days I skied it was -39F without the wind factored in. Looking back on it I marvel how I handled that temp as now I can't hack it where I live in Kansas whenever it fall below 45.Montana is a favorite destination for the dewy-eyed bride and me. We’ve been several times.
She once observed that Montanans evidently preferred little white crosses alongside the road over guard rails.
Around here it's "Memorial de los Pendejos".The term for a roadside memorial is descanso
I take it that a “1 Euro shop” is pretty much the same thing as what we call a “dollar store” over this way?
These aren’t the same as the old 5 and dimes (or 5 and 10s), which proliferated as recently as my early years. Among the goods the dollar stores sell is lotsa “distressed” merchandise — the stuff other retailers don’t want, for various reasons.
This is the very reason I am so against the latest technologies in "auto safety", including the self-driving vehicles. Not because of the shock value when the alarms sound off, but because I don't want some p.o.s. computer program preventing me from controlling the vehicle....The car's onboard computer absolutely freaked out. The noise from the alarm sounded like a ship's fog horn, the brakes came on, the seat belt locked up and the computer screen lit up with the message: "Risk of Collision." Risk of collision, seriously? More like risk of bowel evacuation.
Back in the late '60s our family took a long vacation to visit family friends in western Montana. Driving there, we immediately noticed the small roadside crosses where traffic fatalities had occurred. (My dad, being a highway safety engineer, took a professional interest.) One I particularly remember was at a slight bend in the two-lane road with a large tree on the outside curve. There must have a dozen crosses of different vintages scattered about it.
In southern Germany stone roadside memorials, (some dating back centuries), are pretty common. They usually memorialize some fatality. In remote areas this was commonly murder by bandits. The ones on exposed hillsides were for usually for lightning strikes. The later continue to serve as a useful reminder to avoid such places during the rain.
That acronym DIY? You might believe it means Do It Yourself. No it doesn't as your chair canvass re-stretching clearly demonstrates. It means Don't Involve Yourself, which is why I use professionals.Why, oh why, I thought re-stretching chair canvass would be as straightforward as the article in Better Homes & Gardens made it look is one of those I-should-know-better-but-keep-hoping-anyway annoyances. For one thing, these D.I.Y. articles often suggest that you enlist the help of a friend, which I find wildly presumptuous on their part, and they assume that nothing unforeseen will spring up, or in this case, not spring down as much as one would like.
That acronym DIY? You might believe it means Do It Yourself. No it doesn't as your chair canvass re-stretching clearly demonstrates. It means Don't Involve Yourself, which is why I use professionals.
The reverse could also be true in some cases.....wasn't it in Denmark where they discovered eliminating 4 way stops radically decreased accidents at those intersections? People realized it was uncontrolled so became more alert rather than driving on human auto pilot. What other areas could this be applied to I wonder?I think I could listen for hours to a highway safety engineer riff on what makes for safer and less-safe roads. I suspect that their work over the decades has played no small part in the decline of traffic fatalities.