[AT] OT don't take any Buffalo Nickels and weather.

HERBERT METZ metz-h.b at comcast.net
Sat Jun 29 09:12:24 PDT 2019


Warren, yes we had an enjoyable visit. And because of your recommendation Barbara and I enjoyed a special good observation of the lunar eclipse (at Clemson campus). Herb


> On June 28, 2019 at 10:52 PM Mogrits <mogrits at gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> 
>         > > 
> >         Farmer:
> > 
> >     >     I'm 5 days late but want to say I really enjoy the posts you make like this. You too, Cecil. And all the rest of you.
> 
>     I hope the ATIS list is well archived somewhere because there is a real wealth of information shared by all it's members.
> 
>     I still sorely miss George Willer and will never forget my visit with Herb Metz at his home.
> 
>     I  think I need to add Portland to my bucket list to meet you folks.
> 
>     Warren 
> 
>         > > 
> > 
> >         On 6/23/2019 2:52 AM, Indiana Robinson wrote:
> > 
> >             > > >             I find this discussion a little surprising... I was taught in about the 6th grade (in a small rural school in the 1950's) that what we all call buffalo are really scientifically true bison and that early explorers were just guessing as to what they were. It was much like them thinking at first that this was the far side of the world and them calling everybody "Indians". The name just stuck and so did buffalo.
> > >             Even back when I was in school it was understood that most people would probably always continue to call them buffalo in casual conservation and I still do. By the time I learned that they were really bison I had already learned the words dog, cat, cow etc. and bison was a strange sounding name to me.
> > >             Languages are funny things... Always evolving but not always in a good way. I have a few pet peeves from more recent years about how people butcher things. I watch a lot of DIY stuff and keep saying (mostly to the TV screen) "No, that is not ship-lap. Every old 8" board is not ship-lap!" or "No that is not a "cinder block! It is either a cement block or a concrete block... It is only a cinder block if it was produced using cinders for the aggregate and very few of those are being produced these days."
> > >             Rambling farther off track (not a cinder track).  :-)
> > >             When Diana and I got married in June 1963 we rented a small house at the edge of town for a year and a half that was on a full basement all made of actual cinder block. When that first winter came along I got a real shock. The cinders were quite coarse and the block walls were not even close to being air tight. When the winter winds began to howl you could not heat the basement. If you lit a candle (I really did) and held it next to the west wall on a high wind day it would blow the candle out.
> > >             Speaking of languages, we have become friends with a Greek family who have a local gyro based restaurant (pronounced ˈyērō). Really nice family. We were eating there a day or two ago and a lady and I believe her daughter sat a the booth behind me and were chatting. I wasn't sure what language they were speaking but it wasn't English. When things slowed down our friends came out to visit with them and I realized that that they had been chatting in Greek. It was a happy visit for the 4 of them and I had to chuckle a few times as they talked listening to them as all 4 of them flip-flopped from Greek to English over and over again. It was maybe about 60% Greek and 40% English. Our friends are quite good at English so it was funny hearing the sudden  shift from rapid fire Greek to a perfectly enunciated full sentence or more in English then instantly back to Greek. I can only assume that some thoughts just might be easier to express in English and some easier in Greek. We have some Chinese friends but they always speak all Chinese or all English. We also have Hispanic friends and family and they also speak mostly all one or the other. I have always wished I could learn other languages but while I have learned many thing in my time, other languages are just not a big part of my skill set. I do speak American English, British English, Australian English and a little New  Zealand English...  :-)  I do also speak a little dog, cat and horse.
> > >             .
> > >             Dang! I'm getting burned out on daily raining... Crops are all over the place in quality and some fields are still not planted and still standing water. One problem with a really wet spring here is that if the ground stays too wet too long the corn will not put down many deep roots then if it suddenly turns very dry it doesn't have a root system deep enough to get good moisture. If that happens the guys that use irrigation here may benefit from its use.
> > >             It's been "interesting" with these everyday rains going past the local Whitecastle joint in a down pour of rain and seeing their sprinkler system running. It must be under "corporate control".
> > > 
> > >         > > 
> >     > 
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