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Penny S.
June 24th 03, 04:53 PM
I'm scoping a new ( to me) ride for this weekend, Liberty Lake Park. In the
guide books it's listed as
"strenuous" and the feedback I'm getting as inquire about it is everything
form "I've hiked but never biked it" to "yeah, there's a hike-a-bike
section" to, from someone who rides with me, "brutal but you'll be fine. I
guess there's a series of switchbacks that must be hiked, but it's rumored
to be totally worth it for the upper portion of the ride and the descent
which is on a different trail.

Oh, sure I could be in over my head, or way over my head, but if
**everyone** hikes a section or two it can't be that bad, and if people
regularly ride it, it can't be that bad. And even if there are cougar and
bear sightings, it can't been that bad. POtential bonuses include
waterfalls and old growth cedar.

I just get tired of the same old local trails and like to try new things.

I could be sorry, ya never know. RR to follow of course.

penny

just for grins, here's the trail description
"This challenging trial will be fun for those who are prepared for it. For
those who are not, this is not where you learn your trail skills. Lots of
steep ups and downs, lots of getting on and off your bike,and a rocky thick
forest trail makes this a sustained expert loop. There's even a waterfall or
two. Connections to Mica peak ( Idaho) and beyond are rewards for those who
have the gas to get there."


hmmm.

Stephen Baker
June 24th 03, 07:15 PM
Penny says:

<major snip>

>hmmm.

Hmmmmmm indeed - enjoy yourself, but be careful.....
you _are_ taking a buddy, right?

Steve

Stephen Baker
June 24th 03, 07:35 PM
Penny says:

>and the armor ;-)

Heh-heh!

>And the camera.

Gooooddd......

Steve "can't wait"

Shaun Rimmer
June 25th 03, 11:16 AM
Slacker > wrote in message
...

> and a cell phone cause you grrlz are going down!

...........OOoooOOOOO...........Hhhhmmmmmmm....... yeah............


Shaun aHhhhRe.....

Dave Stocker
June 25th 03, 08:19 PM
"Shaun Rimmer" > schrieb im Newsbeitrag
...
>
> Slacker > wrote in message
> ...
>
> > and a cell phone cause you grrlz are going down!
>
> ..........OOoooOOOOO...........Hhhhmmmmmmm.......y eah............
>

Speaking of "cell phone", what do you Brits call it? Over here, Gerry calls
it a "Handy" for some inexplicable reason. I am starting to use this stupid
Denglish word in place of "cell phone". Please tell me that it is used
somewhere by some native English speaker - and I don't care if it a only one
thong wearing guy in the South Pacific.

-Dave

Dave W
June 26th 03, 05:51 AM
On Wed, 25 Jun 2003 21:19:53 +0200, "Dave Stocker"
> wrote:

>"Shaun Rimmer" > schrieb im Newsbeitrag
...
>>
>> Slacker > wrote in message
>> ...
>>
>> > and a cell phone cause you grrlz are going down!
>>
>> ..........OOoooOOOOO...........Hhhhmmmmmmm.......y eah............
>>
>
>Speaking of "cell phone", what do you Brits call it? Over here, Gerry calls
>it a "Handy" for some inexplicable reason. I am starting to use this stupid
>Denglish word in place of "cell phone". Please tell me that it is used
>somewhere by some native English speaker - and I don't care if it a only one
>thong wearing guy in the South Pacific.
>
>-Dave

sorry dude, your on your own.

Dave W
>

Dave W
June 26th 03, 05:53 AM
On 25 Jun 2003 19:30:51 GMT, (Stephen Baker)
wrote:

>Dave Stocker asks:
>
>>Speaking of "cell phone", what do you Brits call it?
>
>I believe "mobile" is the generic term of choice. Works for my niece and
>nephew anyway.
>
>Steve

Yeah, used to be. But with sometimes poor signal quality the popular
term is POS!

bomba
June 26th 03, 08:42 AM
Dave Stocker wrote:

> Speaking of "cell phone", what do you Brits call it? Over here, Gerry calls
> it a "Handy" for some inexplicable reason.

Never quite worked that out either.

I am starting to use this stupid
> Denglish word in place of "cell phone".

Assimilation has begun...

Please tell me that it is used
> somewhere by some native English speaker - and I don't care if it a only one
> thong wearing guy in the South Pacific.

Nope, only restricted to Germans. In England it's just plain old
'mobile', whereas in France, they're called 'GSM' (pronounced JSM).

--
a.m-b FAQ: http://www.t-online.de/~jharris/ambfaq.htm

a.bmx FAQ: http://www.t-online.de/~jharris/bmx_faq.htm

Zilla
June 26th 03, 11:33 AM
GSM is a standard used for wireless...

--
- Zilla
Cary, NC
(Remove XSPAM)


"bomba" > wrote in message
...
> Dave Stocker wrote:
>
> > Speaking of "cell phone", what do you Brits call it? Over here, Gerry
calls
> > it a "Handy" for some inexplicable reason.
>
> Never quite worked that out either.
>
> I am starting to use this stupid
> > Denglish word in place of "cell phone".
>
> Assimilation has begun...
>
> Please tell me that it is used
> > somewhere by some native English speaker - and I don't care if it a only
one
> > thong wearing guy in the South Pacific.
>
> Nope, only restricted to Germans. In England it's just plain old
> 'mobile', whereas in France, they're called 'GSM' (pronounced JSM).
>
> --
> a.m-b FAQ: http://www.t-online.de/~jharris/ambfaq.htm
>
> a.bmx FAQ: http://www.t-online.de/~jharris/bmx_faq.htm
>

bomba
June 26th 03, 01:09 PM
Zilla wrote:
> GSM is a standard used for wireless...

Is it really? GSM originally comes from Groupe Spécial Mobile which was
created in 1982 to further wireless development. It was then
'backronymed' to mean Global System for Mobile communications.

--
a.m-b FAQ: http://www.t-online.de/~jharris/ambfaq.htm

a.bmx FAQ: http://www.t-online.de/~jharris/bmx_faq.htm

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