2nd time here, still as pretty as the first time. Will post up some buffalo pics tomorrow as they’re out by the thousands down in the Gardiner area. That’s Emigrant Peak in the background.
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Nice, but what kind of oil is in that tractor … ?2nd time here, still as pretty as the first time. Will post up some buffalo pics tomorrow as they’re out by the thousands down in the Gardiner area. That’s Emigrant Peak in the background.
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Quaker StateNice, but what kind of oil is in that tractor … ?
SRR,2nd time here, still as pretty as the first time. Will post up some buffalo pics tomorrow as they’re out by the thousands down in the Gardiner area. That’s Emigrant Peak in the background.
If by crispy, you mean wind chill factors of 40 below, then yesSRR,
Looked awesome- until I saw the snow on the mountains......... GGGRRRRRRR. I am sure mornings in Paradise Valley are very crispy.
26-39*F today… nowhere near as bone-chilling cold as a few weeks ago!SRR,
Looked awesome- until I saw the snow on the mountains......... GGGRRRRRRR. I am sure mornings in Paradise Valley are very crispy.
I grew up on a farm with no electricity and no running water. But we had a telephone, a battery powered radio, a good (hand pumped) well and a sauna for weekly bathing. The roads were completely blown-in for 2 - 3 months a year but we could still "get out" by tractor or horse drawn sleigh over the fields. My cousins and uncles were big into hunting and fishing - for almost free food.More natural beauty & freecycled materials. I don’t care how “convenient” city life may be, this is how I want to live.
Rotella 15w40Nice, but what kind of oil is in that tractor … ?
When I was a kid an elderly lady from our church told me that the "good old days" were mostly just a lot of back breaking hard work. It put a different perspective on watching shows like Little House on the Prairie and romantic ideas I picked up reading historical fiction.I grew up on a farm with no electricity and no running water. But we had a telephone, a battery powered radio, a good (hand pumped) well and a sauna for weekly bathing. The roads were completely blown-in for 2 - 3 months a year but we could still "get out" by tractor or horse drawn sleigh over the fields. My cousins and uncles were big into hunting and fishing - for almost free food.
Life in the country is simple but it isn't easy.