04-14-2013, 21:48
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#1006
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Guerrilla Chief
Join Date: Jun 2011
Location: NYC Area
Posts: 828
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Congratulations BryanK!
I am welcoming my 3rd at the end of July and 2 nephews/nieces in May  Also starting a new job in May. Thank the good Lord, I got a lot to look forward to.
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"Crime is an extension of business through illegal means, politics is an extension of crime through *legal* means."
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BOfH is offline
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04-14-2013, 21:54
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#1007
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Flagstaff, AZ
Posts: 315
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Quote:
Originally Posted by GratefulCitizen
Spent the early evening watching the kids play in the back yard.
Even the dog and young cat were playing (but not the old cat - she's a grump).
5 y/o tried to imitate stunts he'd seen on YouTube (I'm a terrible father...), jumped on the trampoline, and spotted jets illuminated by the setting sun.
7 y/o climbed the cherry tree and played on the swing set.
10 y/o chased the younger ones around the yard on her electric scooter.
12 y/o mainly shot baskets a taught the others some basketball.
Seems like just yesterday I was swinging them in my arms inside the house.
Now the 12 y/o stands not quite 5'11" barefoot and has a higher reach than I do (at 6'2").
Weather's getting warmer, Lake Powell will start rising, and vacation starts in June (and lasts for 5 weeks!).
Trying to make the time count; children grow up fast.
Feel very blessed to live when, where, and how I do.
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Great stuff.
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A great pleasure in life is doing what others say you can't. - Recent fortune cookie
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adal is offline
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04-15-2013, 11:22
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#1008
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Area Commander
Join Date: Aug 2007
Location: Page/Lake Powell, Arizona
Posts: 3,434
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Quote:
Originally Posted by adal
Great stuff.
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You need to come up to the lake this summer.
Here's some temptation:
http://youtu.be/tOkusaVj9mQ
__________________
__________________
Waiting for the perfect moment is a fruitless endeavor.
Make a decision, and then make it the right one through your actions.
"Whoever watches the wind will not plant; whoever looks at the clouds will not reap." -Ecclesiastes 11:4 (NIV)
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GratefulCitizen is offline
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04-16-2013, 07:17
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#1009
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Aug 2004
Location: NorCal
Posts: 15,370
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I went outside to let the dog out this morning - there was no moon, the sky was absolutely clear, and the cellestial constellations were vivid.
Here's something to ponder.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ehulHtKfpuM
Richard
__________________
“Sometimes the Bible in the hand of one man is worse than a whisky bottle in the hand of (another)… There are just some kind of men who – who’re so busy worrying about the next world they’ve never learned to live in this one, and you can look down the street and see the results.” - To Kill A Mockingbird (Atticus Finch)
“Almost any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.” - Robert Heinlein
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Richard is offline
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04-16-2013, 11:19
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#1010
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Guerrilla
Join Date: Jan 2013
Location: Maryland
Posts: 450
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Absolutely all happy thoughts read here.
Mine are: Birthday celebration for one daughter, Our anniversary
and buying a Ruger LCR for my wife last week.
Now the fun, shooting and buying ammo for a 38 special.
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pcfixer is offline
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04-16-2013, 11:44
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#1011
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Guerrilla
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Oregon
Posts: 200
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Richard
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Thanks Richard
I’ve never seen a Southern Moon rising…
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cc-out
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Chris Cram is offline
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04-19-2013, 20:48
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#1012
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Guerrilla Chief
Join Date: Oct 2009
Location: Driving the Texas highways
Posts: 672
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Old dude turned 31 today...
I think back to when I first came across him back in 1990. He was owned by a wealthy man who had too many animals. When this horse came up lame and never got better, he didn't want to deal with it, and wanted to put the horse down. I was there when the country vet said, "This horse should be shit-canned." Literally his words. I didn't even know what that expression meant, just that it was very unprofessional.
I knew little about horses back then, but for some reason was sure a second medical opinion was needed. I convinced the wealthy guy to give me the horse. I told him I would get another opinion, and if the second vet said he shouldn't be saved, I would put the horse down at my expense. He thought I was crazy and was getting in over my head, but agreed.
I don't remember how I was referred to this second vet, but he was completely professional and unflustered by the lameness. His x-rays showed negative for navicular, and he believed it was a bad case of laminitis. He injected the front leg lower joints with hyaluronic acid, suggested some seaweed-based supplements for joint support, and sent me on my way.
I had to make him stand with both front feet in buckets with warm water and epsom salts every day for 30 minutes. Getting him to stand in buckets, and not kick them over, was a real chore. We did that for months. The horse and I bonded, he gradually got better, but was not rideable for a little over 6 months.
Gradually he healed, and eventually went back into conditioning and training. I moved him to a professional training farm that had world class Paint and Quarter Horses (he's a QH). He is not world class, and has confirmation issues, but he had a world class work ethic. We learned a lot together, and he had many years of showing at the local levels.
The lameness came back in 1998 when he was 16. I retired him, pulled off his shoes, put him in a large pasture, and thought he probably wouldn't live to see 20. Instead he got better with the rest. On good days I would take him on a casual trail ride. His last ride was at the age of 22.
In the years since then he has plugged along with hardly an issue. He had a nasty eye cut in 2002 and a colic in 2005. He was kicked hard by a pasture-mate in 2012 and was seriously injured. I thought that was it. But the vet convinced me to wait. He said the recovery would be long, but I'd know pretty quickly if he was going to improve. He did. By the end of 2012 he was back to "normal," although he's old and has all the typical old guy stuff - saggy back, creaky legs, foggy eyes.
My happy thought of the day is not that my old guy has turned 31, it comes from thinking back to all the lessons I learned from standing by him. I don't want him to live forever, nor do I want him to suffer, but his time has not yet come. Why do some animals live forever and others die as foals? I don't know, but I'm so grateful for what he's taught me along the way.
I took this pic today. It looks like a halo is over his head, which was pretty funny to me. He is well-loved, but an "angel" he is not.
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orion5 is offline
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04-19-2013, 20:59
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#1013
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Area Commander
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: The Black Hills of SD
Posts: 5,944
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Quote:
Originally Posted by orion5
Old dude turned 31 today...
I think back to when I first came across him back in 1990. He was owned by a wealthy man who had too many animals. When this horse came up lame and never got better, he didn't want to deal with it, and wanted to put the horse down. I was there when the country vet said, "This horse should be shit-canned." Literally his words. I didn't even know what that expression meant, just that it was very unprofessional.
I knew little about horses back then, but for some reason was sure a second medical opinion was needed. I convinced the wealthy guy to give me the horse. I told him I would get another opinion, and if the second vet said he shouldn't be saved, I would put the horse down at my expense. He thought I was crazy and was getting in over my head, but agreed.
I don't remember how I was referred to this second vet, but he was completely professional and unflustered by the lameness. His x-rays showed negative for navicular, and he believed it was a bad case of laminitis. He injected the front leg lower joints with hyaluronic acid, suggested some seaweed-based supplements for joint support, and sent me on my way.
I had to make him stand with both front feet in buckets with warm water and epsom salts every day for 30 minutes. Getting him to stand in buckets, and not kick them over, was a real chore. We did that for months. The horse and I bonded, he gradually got better, but was not rideable for a little over 6 months.
Gradually he healed, and eventually went back into conditioning and training. I moved him to a professional training farm that had world class Paint and Quarter Horses (he's a QH). He is not world class, and has confirmation issues, but he had a world class work ethic. We learned a lot together, and he had many years of showing at the local levels.
The lameness came back in 1998 when he was 16. I retired him, pulled off his shoes, put him in a large pasture, and thought he probably wouldn't live to see 20. Instead he got better with the rest. On good days I would take him on a casual trail ride. His last ride was at the age of 22.
In the years since then he has plugged along with hardly an issue. He had a nasty eye cut in 2002 and a colic in 2005. He was kicked hard by a pasture-mate in 2012 and was seriously injured. I thought that was it. But the vet convinced me to wait. He said the recovery would be long, but I'd know pretty quickly if he was going to improve. He did. By the end of 2012 he was back to "normal," although he's old and has all the typical old guy stuff - saggy back, creaky legs, foggy eyes.
My happy thought of the day is not that my old guy has turned 31, it comes from thinking back to all the lessons I learned from standing by him. I don't want him to live forever, nor do I want him to suffer, but his time has not yet come. Why do some animals live forever and others die as foals? I don't know, but I'm so grateful for what he's taught me along the way.
I took this pic today. It looks like a halo is over his head, which was pretty funny to me. He is well-loved, but an "angel" he is not. 
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GREAT STORY !!!
Happy B-day old man.
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Non Sibi Sed Suis
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It's Good To Be Da King !!!! Just ask NDD !!!!
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Sdiver is offline
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04-20-2013, 08:20
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#1014
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Sep 2012
Location: central Florida
Posts: 352
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Able to find 5.56 & 7.62x39 ammo today at $5.00 / box.
Now, if I can find a brick of Remington 22LR, heaven.
m&c
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D-8450-L
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medic&commo is offline
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04-23-2013, 16:17
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#1015
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Area Commander
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: The Black Hills of SD
Posts: 5,944
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__________________
Non Sibi Sed Suis
_____________________________________________
It's Good To Be Da King !!!! Just ask NDD !!!!
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Sdiver is offline
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04-23-2013, 16:26
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#1016
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RIP Quiet Professional
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: The Ozarks
Posts: 10,072
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It's out in the open. Hillary blew Benghazi.
House Republicans have concluded that Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton was responsible for cutting security at the consulate in Benghazi ahead of last year’s attack there, and that the administration lied about why it downplayed terrorism as the cause of the assault.
A new report — the result of months of investigation by five different House committees — says there was plenty of intelligence that presaged the attack, but the State Department and President Obama failed to heed the warnings or give the Defense Department the authority to respond to such an attack.
The report exonerates the Pentagon itself, saying the military did what it could to respond once the attack began, but “was hindered on account of U.S. military forces not being properly postured” beforehand.
In the most damning finding, House Republicans said Mr. Obama and his team lied about the attacks afterward, first by blaming mob violence spawned by an anti-Muslim video, and then wrongly saying it had misled the public because it was trying to protect an FBI investigation.
“This progress report reveals a fundamental lack of understanding at the highest levels of the State Department as to the dangers presented in Benghazi, Libya, as well as a concerted attempt to insulate the Department of State from blame following the terrorist attacks,” the GOP investigation concluded in its 46-page report.
The Obama administration has acknowledged providing an inaccurate explanation for the attacks early on — even though officials at the Defense Department said they knew it was a terrorist assault from the beginning.
Read more: http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/...#ixzz2RKCHhIrR
Follow us: @washtimes on Twitter
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"There you go, again." Ronald Reagan
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Dusty is offline
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04-23-2013, 18:18
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#1017
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Area Commander
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: Midwest
Posts: 7,134
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No surprise there Dusty.
Orion...got a little something in my eye. Thanks for sharing Old Guy with us, HBD to him!
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My Heroes wear camouflage.
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Gypsy is offline
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04-24-2013, 17:14
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#1018
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Quiet Professional
Join Date: Jun 2004
Location: Occupied Pineland
Posts: 4,701
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Quote:
Originally Posted by orion5
Old dude turned 31 today...
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I took this pic today. It looks like a halo is over his head, which was pretty funny to me. He is well-loved, but an "angel" he is not. 
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And I'm sure he knows how lucky he is. Here's to every guy's dreams of a peaceful old age with a dedicated woman to see to our every need.
__________________
A nation can survive its fools, and even the ambitious. But it cannot survive treason from within. An enemy at the gates is less formidable, for he is known and carries his banner openly. But the traitor moves amongst those within the gate freely, his sly whispers rustling through all the alleys, heard in the very halls of government itself. For the traitor appears not a traitor; he speaks in accents familiar to his victims, and he wears their face and their arguments, he appeals to the baseness that lies deep in the hearts of all men. He rots the soul of a nation, he works secretly and unknown in the night to undermine the pillars of the city, he infects the body politic so that it can no longer resist. A murderer is less to fear.
~ Marcus Tullius Cicero (42B.C)
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Peregrino is offline
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04-24-2013, 17:30
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#1019
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Guerrilla
Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: USA
Posts: 471
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Quote:
Originally Posted by orion5
Old dude turned 31 today...
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What a wonderful day for you and "old dude".
I am glad your wait had a happy ending. I had an Arabian that did not have the storybook ending.
Some of my best memories and lessons were the days/times shared with my equine friends. Thanks for sharing... triggered happy thoughts of days gone by...
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"Sometimes the things that may or may not be true are the things a man needs to believe in the most. That people are basically good; that honor, courage, and virtue mean everything; that power and money, money and power mean nothing; that good always triumphs over evil; and I want you to remember this, that love... true love never dies. Doesn't matter if it's true or not.. a man should believe in those things, because those are the things worth believing in."~ Hub
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Stargazer is offline
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04-24-2013, 17:36
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#1020
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Area Commander
Join Date: Feb 2004
Location: The Black Hills of SD
Posts: 5,944
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Peregrino
And I'm sure he knows how lucky he is. Here's to every guy's dreams of a peaceful old age with a dedicated woman to see to our every need. 
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Well I'm sure it would help if one were Hung Like a ...... errrr ..... Never mind.
__________________
Non Sibi Sed Suis
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It's Good To Be Da King !!!! Just ask NDD !!!!
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Sdiver is offline
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