that's a lot!CAA Flagship wrote:So that would be.......um......40,000,000,000,000 people?houndawg wrote:
CA also has 40,000,000 million people
Its SD Hornet's crowd, breeding like rabbits...
that's a lot!CAA Flagship wrote:So that would be.......um......40,000,000,000,000 people?houndawg wrote:
CA also has 40,000,000 million people
But IL needs someone in the mansion saying no to Madigan. It's really going to go to sh!t when his biotch JB wins the governor's race.houndawg wrote:Rauner isn't tough enough for the job even if he gave a **** about anything other than tax cuts for plutocrats. Unlike JB in CA.UNI88 wrote:
Rauner's no peach but he isn't running illinois. Mike Madigan is the Khan of Madiganistan and is much more responsible for its many woes.
Take out "Joshua Trees" (as they're only found in that one small area) and Oregon and Washington are close. It would be like me asking in how many states can you catch a spring run chinook and see a petrified ginkgo forest in the same afternoon?Chizzang wrote:Name all the states where you can
Snow Ski
Surf
Class 4/5 River Raft
World class mountain bike
Stand on a 10,800 foot peak
Hike a true desert trail with thousand year old Joshua Trees
Scuba dive (in a kelp forest)
and have a choice of any of those in the same afternoon
California by a light year... and 2nd place ain't even close
Look I love this country a lot and have lived from North Carolina Texas to Hawaii and more..
and travel all over this country over 100 days a year for the last 20 years
California by a LIGHT YEAR in this contest
I don't disagree but Madigan has been whooping Rauner's ass with metronomic regularity from day one.UNI88 wrote:But IL needs someone in the mansion saying no to Madigan. It's really going to go to sh!t when his biotch JB wins the governor's race.houndawg wrote:
Rauner isn't tough enough for the job even if he gave a **** about anything other than tax cuts for plutocrats. Unlike JB in CA.
kalm wrote:Take out "Joshua Trees" (as they're only found in that one small area) and Oregon and Washington are close. It would be like me asking in how many states can you catch a spring run chinook and see a petrified ginkgo forest in the same afternoon?Chizzang wrote:Name all the states where you can
Snow Ski
Surf
Class 4/5 River Raft
World class mountain bike
Stand on a 10,800 foot peak
Hike a true desert trail with thousand year old Joshua Trees
Scuba dive (in a kelp forest)
and have a choice of any of those in the same afternoon
California by a light year... and 2nd place ain't even close
Look I love this country a lot and have lived from North Carolina Texas to Hawaii and more..
and travel all over this country over 100 days a year for the last 20 years
California by a LIGHT YEAR in this contest
Chizzang wrote:kalm wrote:
Take out "Joshua Trees" (as they're only found in that one small area) and Oregon and Washington are close. It would be like me asking in how many states can you catch a spring run chinook and see a petrified ginkgo forest in the same afternoon?
Washington's on my list of places to see (well, really the whole Pacific Northwest). I was only in Oregon on a business trip but got out to the coast and even did a hike and I loved it. Gorgeous country.kalm wrote:Take out "Joshua Trees" (as they're only found in that one small area) and Oregon and Washington are close. It would be like me asking in how many states can you catch a spring run chinook and see a petrified ginkgo forest in the same afternoon?Chizzang wrote:Name all the states where you can
Snow Ski
Surf
Class 4/5 River Raft
World class mountain bike
Stand on a 10,800 foot peak
Hike a true desert trail with thousand year old Joshua Trees
Scuba dive (in a kelp forest)
and have a choice of any of those in the same afternoon
California by a light year... and 2nd place ain't even close
Look I love this country a lot and have lived from North Carolina Texas to Hawaii and more..
and travel all over this country over 100 days a year for the last 20 years
California by a LIGHT YEAR in this contest
Yes, the WC(b) is amazingly diverse compared to the rest of the country (except of course Alaska and its unmatched ecoregions. )
I also like Ganny's point.
A couple beaches still further south (technically west). The coast of NC actually curves so much down by SC that the last couple beaches face almost due south.houndawg wrote:By Oak Island?89Hen wrote: Ocean Isle. Next to last beach in NC.
I've only driven onto it once but it's a very strange island. The vast majority of the homes are separated from the beach by a creek. There are only a couple of streets parallel to the beach that actually have easy access to it. OIB is our favorite of the chain. Used to be only one high rise for condos, but they put a bunch of three story ones down on our end of the island. We've stayed in the same two homes for 20 years. There's very little commercial space on the island, but it's an easy drive over the causeway to get anything you need (other than Saturday moving day).93henfan wrote:I spent a long weekend on Oak Island for my ex-SIL’s wedding. Meh. It was OK.
I liked my ex-BIL’s wedding festivities in Wilmington and Wrightsville Beach much more.
CAA Flagship wrote:Easier? Salt it difficult (read costly) to remove. Louisiana can draw fresh water from the Mississippi River. They just have to filter out the piss, shit, and homeless people that float down from St. Louis.dbackjon wrote:
So does Louisiana - and California's is much easier to fix
But it hasn't yet lost the part with JSO on it.dbackjon wrote:CAA Flagship wrote: Easier? Salt it difficult (read costly) to remove. Louisiana can draw fresh water from the Mississippi River. They just have to filter out the piss, ****, and homeless people that float down from St. Louis.
Louisiana's water problem is that the state is sinking into it. It is losing an area the size of a football field every hour. Since 1939 it has lost an area 1.25 times the size of Rhode Island to the Gulf.
Ivytalk wrote:But it hasn't yet lost the part with JSO on it.dbackjon wrote:
Louisiana's water problem is that the state is sinking into it. It is losing an area the size of a football field every hour. Since 1939 it has lost an area 1.25 times the size of Rhode Island to the Gulf.
We met up with friends and family there a couple of years ago and it took me a couple of days to get used to the sun coming up from the "wrong" direction. Felt like I should have been looking straight at the rising sun but it was over my left shoulder89Hen wrote:A couple beaches still further south (technically west). The coast of NC actually curves so much down by SC that the last couple beaches face almost due south.houndawg wrote:
By Oak Island?
It actually helps with sleeping in.houndawg wrote:We met up with friends and family there a couple of years ago and it took me a couple of days to get used to the sun coming up from the "wrong" direction. Felt like I should have been looking straight at the rising sun but it was over my left shoulder
CA has a leftist problem. The leftist envirowakos won't allow for water storage systems to be built, hence the man made water problem. If Gov Moonbeam gets his tunnels, a good chunk of SoCal's water problem is fixed.dbackjon wrote:JohnStOnge wrote:California has a water problem. And a water problem is a big problem.
So does Louisiana - and California's is much easier to fix
houndawg wrote:Actually CA is doing very well compared to IL and Jerry Brown is doing a much better job than tired old Bruce Rauner. But I couldn't pave my driveway in CA for what we paid for 25 acres with a house, barn, and pool. And this corner of IL is a hidden gem.Ivytalk wrote: Except Illinois. Where you choose to live.
SD is pretty much LA2 these days.Ivytalk wrote:San Diego is my favorite Cal city. San Fran in October comes close.
houndawg wrote:We met up with friends and family there a couple of years ago and it took me a couple of days to get used to the sun coming up from the "wrong" direction. Felt like I should have been looking straight at the rising sun but it was over my left shoulder89Hen wrote: A couple beaches still further south (technically west). The coast of NC actually curves so much down by SC that the last couple beaches face almost due south.
Louisiana does not have a water problem. I Googled and was able to find a GAO report at https://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-14-430 suggesting it might but there's no way. There is water everywhere. The average annual rainfall at New Orleans is 62 inches. If you go up the the northern end of the State at Shreveport it's 51 inches. To put that into pespective: Seattle has a reputation for being rainy and its average annual rainfall is 34 inches. And while Washington has inland areas that are not so rainy Louisiana does not. New Orleans and Shreveport are in the Southeast and Northwest corners. If you go to the Southwest corner the annual Lake Charles average is 58 inches. If you got to the Northeast corner the Monroe average is 54 inches. If you go the middle of the State the Alexandria average is 61 inches. It's rainy EVERYWHERE.dbackjon wrote:JohnStOnge wrote:California has a water problem. And a water problem is a big problem.
So does Louisiana - and California's is much easier to fix
Oh, OK. Yes. That sort of thing is happening largely because the rivers have been confined. So historically rivers were unconfined and distributed sediments to build the deltas and now they have been confined by levees so that the sediments get transported out into the Gulf. But that is not as bad as the problem California has with availability of fresh water. Not nearly. Louisiana has to worry about stuff like losing fisheries production. California has to worry, at some point, about having enough fresh water for people to drink.dbackjon wrote:CAA Flagship wrote: Easier? Salt it difficult (read costly) to remove. Louisiana can draw fresh water from the Mississippi River. They just have to filter out the piss, ****, and homeless people that float down from St. Louis.
Louisiana's water problem is that the state is sinking into it. It is losing an area the size of a football field every hour. Since 1939 it has lost an area 1.25 times the size of Rhode Island to the Gulf.
Ivytalk wrote:But it hasn't yet lost the part with JSO on it.dbackjon wrote:
Louisiana's water problem is that the state is sinking into it. It is losing an area the size of a football field every hour. Since 1939 it has lost an area 1.25 times the size of Rhode Island to the Gulf.
St. Louis, Nashville, Memphis, Indianapolis....all hours closer. Most of Kentucky is north of here.css75 wrote:houndawg wrote:
Actually CA is doing very well compared to IL and Jerry Brown is doing a much better job than tired old Bruce Rauner. But I couldn't pave my driveway in CA for what we paid for 25 acres with a house, barn, and pool. And this corner of IL is a hidden gem.
If that is the case, you must be a long way from Chicago.
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