oh yes! Debian is defenitely rock solid distro!Very good, and welcome! Although I've been using Linux for most of 3 decades, I eventually plan on installing Arch just to have a little variety. It's a very good distro, as is Debian which I use.
oh yes! Debian is defenitely rock solid distro!Very good, and welcome! Although I've been using Linux for most of 3 decades, I eventually plan on installing Arch just to have a little variety. It's a very good distro, as is Debian which I use.
Here is the real story:My pleasure. I once heard a legend about a statue of a Confederate soldier somewhere in downtown Augusta, Maine. It got mixed up with one for Augusta, Georgia. Supposedly nobody noticed until after they had both been installed and they decided to leave them that way. For some strange reason I just remembered that, probably a campfire story.
ooo thank you, I was looking for it but couldn't find!Here is the real story:
Folk Lore | York, ME
The Folk Lore Associated with the Soldier's Monument in York Villagewww.yorkmaine.org
yup, a campfire story!!!
ooo thank you, I was looking for it but couldn't find!
I am going to check those out. I love folklore. One of my favorite YouTube channels is called Dime Store Adventures. It's a guy from Mass that creates folklore videos focused on (mostly) New England. You might like some of that stuff! Here's a recent, rather enjoyable one about an incident in the White Mountains.You might also enjoy the Pork and Beans War, or the Aroostook War.
Actually, let me find you a sane link. I was going to link to Wikipedia, but there's no need for something that in-depth.
Yup. Maine went to war with Canada, sort of...
It's a hot one today. It's 75° up here on the mountain. Fortunately, it'll cool down. We had a frost the other night. It got down to 28° at my house. It was lovely, though we did have to cover a bunch of the garden to keep the heat in. That's an ordeal in and of itself, especially if it's windy. It was not windy.
I don't really care for the heat, but it is inevitable. 65° to 75° is lovely summer temperatures.
There are a whole lot of layers you can add in the cold, but there are only so many that you can remove when it's hot (and still be fit to go in public). The folks in the village would be a bit upset if I stripped down to my birthday suit and meandered into the convenience store for a drink.
Southern Indiana
I like it up there..
As you likely don't know of the channel, it's suitable for binge-watching.
If you're here long enough, we might just have to meet up for coffee.
If you listen carefully, there are even different accents among Mainers.
In PA at the moment.
Where we went was Bar Harbor.
Where about? I'm in the Pittsburgh area.In PA at the moment.
This IS Just about where I was at! Once I get my Mac' in I'll see if I can send some of mine! Almost looks cut/paste!Here are some pics of Bar Harbor, Acadia, and Cadillac!
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As you can see, my parents loved it.
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SE PA. Concrete everywhere in some areas.Where about? I'm in the Pittsburgh area.
If it was by the Delaware, It was probably 611. Beautiful area, but the road's still a toothpick lol.For the life of me, I haven't got a clue where I was in PA at the time. I'd just come down through the mountains, except the roads were supposedly being worked on. They had Jersey barriers on the inside and a railing on the outside. Sometimes, it was Jersey barriers on both sides.
Very nice, bit worried about the body in picture 3? lol
This IS Just about where I was at! Once I get my Mac' in I'll see if I can send some of mine! Almost looks cut/paste!
SE PA. Concrete everywhere in some areas.
less than a mile to Philadelphia.
Augusta
I was pronouncing Sebago wrong for a long time...
If it was by the Delaware, It was probably 611
For me, it would Probably wind up Raingly as I still can't spell to save my life most the timeAlso, many people pronounce it as 'Rangely' instead of as 'Rangeley'.
I would hope to experience lake-effect snow!
Ooof. Clearly I aint got not culture. I've always, on the rare occasions that I say it, said it like "Stratford-upon-Ay-von". Not like the microwave uh-von.But, it should be pronounced 'uh-von'. Like, how you pronounce the river where Shakespeare was born (Stratford-upon-Avon).