Awesome donatella! I chatted with who I assume was Dane when I was there. Really nice guy. I totally would have bought something but everything I liked was over $1,000!! Good to hear he’s doing what he loves!
DIY bluestone is o.k. for patios, etc. where the pieces are small & you can keep infilling sand, etc. The big pavers for sidewalks are too heavy for amateurs. Pros know when it’s truly set & underlayment isn’t going to leach out in the first rain.
Does anyone else have peak architectural moments? I get these most often at night, and/or a cloudy day; winter is best for them: you’re looking at an old building, or stretch of old buildings, and nothing in view makes it obvious what year it is. And suddenly, time (the epoch) disappears (or history washes over you). It’s very cool. I’ve only had these in Brooklyn, Boston, and Paris.
Well, *rob*, now that you mention it, you and Cathy do have a lot in common. Don’t know that I’d call you frumpy, but you certainly tend to be grumpy lately.
rf, that was me asking about openoffice. reading up on IBM’s free lotus symphony now – too bad it’s missing the database piece but is supposed to be more refined version of openoffice. love FREE FREE FREE apps
“DH, grow up and get yourself a M5 already”
No way! Don’t want that shit to get smashed by a ninja hipster!!
DH, grow up and get yourself a M5 already
Awesome donatella! I chatted with who I assume was Dane when I was there. Really nice guy. I totally would have bought something but everything I liked was over $1,000!! Good to hear he’s doing what he loves!
I don’t even like bike lanes, per se. It’s just the outrage that drivers get when they are installed that’s annoying.
DIY bluestone is o.k. for patios, etc. where the pieces are small & you can keep infilling sand, etc. The big pavers for sidewalks are too heavy for amateurs. Pros know when it’s truly set & underlayment isn’t going to leach out in the first rain.
Does anyone else have peak architectural moments? I get these most often at night, and/or a cloudy day; winter is best for them: you’re looking at an old building, or stretch of old buildings, and nothing in view makes it obvious what year it is. And suddenly, time (the epoch) disappears (or history washes over you). It’s very cool. I’ve only had these in Brooklyn, Boston, and Paris.
Well, *rob*, now that you mention it, you and Cathy do have a lot in common. Don’t know that I’d call you frumpy, but you certainly tend to be grumpy lately.
rf, that was me asking about openoffice. reading up on IBM’s free lotus symphony now – too bad it’s missing the database piece but is supposed to be more refined version of openoffice. love FREE FREE FREE apps
Bike lanes provide a false sense to security, kind of like the rhythm method.