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-   -   Reasons to Come to America (http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=26885)

footfootfoot 02-18-2012 07:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by monster (Post 795995)
Never understood the Krispy kreme thing. Should't i get skinnier just typing that?

KK sucks. Visit us and we'll take you to the best donuts on earth

Sundae 02-19-2012 05:12 AM

I guess it's what you're used to (same with coffee?)
I'd never claim hot dougnuts in a bag are haute cuisine, but they are a taste of my childhood, and a million miles from Krispy Kreme.

Bro loves Krispy Kreme, but has been to America every year since he was in his early twenties - sometimes twice - and has a far sweeter tooth than I do besides. He used to empty a tube of Smarties onto a plate and call it dinner.

Griff 02-19-2012 07:39 AM

I think it is an acclamation thing. I like a lot of different coffees, everything from Turkish to Maxwell House. I'm not a fan of the ever present drip type coffee maker though, it can take quality coffee and ruin it. I use a press at home. Instant doesn't count as coffee unless you're at least 1 solar unit from home

footfootfoot 02-19-2012 09:16 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by footfootfoot (Post 796394)
KK sucks. Visit us and we'll take you to the best donuts on earth

Quote:

Originally Posted by Sundae (Post 796436)
Bro loves Krispy Kreme, but has been to America every year since he was in his early twenties - sometimes twice - and has a far sweeter tooth than I do besides. He used to empty a tube of Smarties onto a plate and call it dinner.

I rest my case.

footfootfoot 02-19-2012 09:19 AM


wolf 02-19-2012 09:46 AM

For some reason, when the Pakistanis took over the Dunkin Donuts concessions, they didn't get the coffee recipe handed over to them, or they just ignored it.

Consensus hereabout is that Wawa coffee is the best. I have never had a bad or burnt tasting cup (not the case at 7-11, CircleK Drunkin' Donuts, or an assortment of no-name gas station coffee pots). Yes, yes, I know most of you don't have the opportunity to sip this sweet nectar ... but there are more chances than there used to be ... expansion has put them in Jersey, Delaware, Maryland, and ... I heard yesterday that they are opening a store in Florida.

Lamplighter 10-07-2012 08:59 AM

1 Attachment(s)
I've read about the Pacific Coast Trail since I was a kid,
but never seriously thought about actually doing it.
Our family has done a bit of back-packing in the Canadian Rockies,
back when our girls were still willing to follow their parents wherever.

Here is a little article I enjoyed about a local resident's journey this past summer...

The Columbian

Susan Parrish
1-07/12

Vancouver [WA] woman tests her limits on Pacific Crest Trail
Quote:

Lena Sessions pulled off her shoes, then peeled off her socks and winced.
Blisters had formed on the bottoms of all 10 toes.
Putrid, yellowish skin was peeling off in big chunks. Walking was painful.
But not walking wasn't an option. She'd already hiked 200 miles, but another 2,433 miles
of the Pacific Crest Trail stretched ahead of her on a Mexico to Canada journey.

So she pulled a tube of Superglue from her backpack and glued her blistering toes.
Gingerly putting on her socks and shoes, she hoisted her pack onto her back and continued her trek north.<snip>

Attachment 41084

At least every seven days, the trail is near a town with a post office or a small store to purchase supplies.
She mailed herself resupply boxes along the trail, including four new pairs of hiking shoes.
Instead of carrying an entire trail guidebook, Sessions divided her books into sections
and mailed them to herself. Her parents and friends mailed her care packages along the trail.
<snip>
On Sept. 21, the new Vancouver resident completed the biggest
challenge of her life: thru-hiking the 2,663-mile Pacific Crest.
Hiking 25 to 30 miles a day, she completed the journey in 149 days, just under five months.<snip>

footfootfoot 10-07-2012 10:07 AM

Dayum. She's lucky she didn't develop Tolio or Kneasles.

But how was she hiking 25-30 miles a day if 2,663 ÷ 149 = 17.87? Did she take every other day off?

Griff 10-07-2012 12:01 PM

There is a lot of pot that needs smoked between Mexico and Canada. That is a odd Scranton conjugation, I felt compelled to use.

footfootfoot 10-07-2012 07:33 PM

;) care packages ;) ;)

ZenGum 10-07-2012 10:14 PM

Dammit, my bucket list just keeps getting longer.

BigV 10-08-2012 12:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lamplighter (Post 833315)
I've read about the Pacific Coast Trail since I was a kid,
but never ...--snip

WANT.

I want this too. Perhaps this other item on my bucket list would be a good warm up.

The Wonderland Trail.
Quote:

The Wonderland Trail is an approximately 93 mile (150 km)[1][2] hiking trail that circumnavigates Mount Rainier in Mount Rainier National Park, Washington, United States. The trail goes over many ridges of Mount Rainier for a cumulative 22,000 feet (6,700 m) of elevation gain.[1] The trail was built in 1915.[3] An estimated 200 to 250 people a year complete the entire trail[1] with several thousand others doing shorter sections of it. The average time taken to complete the entire trip is 10 to 14 days.[3]


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