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  1. santaman2000

    Favourite Movie Scenes.

    @CLEM beat me to The Quiet Man scenes. That still,leaves these:
  2. santaman2000

    Old West Firearm question

    Regarding the 45LC I think my original post explained (more or less) that modern loadings for the caliber normally don’t exceed the power of the originals. Primarily because of the danger of those rounds being used in older guns (or modern replicas made to the same specs) To be completely honest...
  3. santaman2000

    Old West Firearm question

    Actually it was the opposite: you had a rifle available in a sidearm caliber. Still a,popular concept today as there are many rifles chambered for 44Magnum, 9mm, 357/38, etc. Likewise those calibers are quite popular for deer hunting with both the rifle or the handgun. At least all of them...
  4. santaman2000

    What did the fox say?

    We’re lucky and unlucky here regarding foxes. Unlucky I’m that the only times foxes are bold enough to let humans catch a glimpse it usually means they have rabies. On the other hand we’ve been lucky they haven’t been much of a nuisance since the coyotes arrived to eat them. Tuen again unlucky...
  5. santaman2000

    Been a while

    Welcome back!
  6. santaman2000

    Best way to store a food supply for the car kit

    @Toddy Yeah, I have a small squaddie stove, small Mora, an emergency blanket, some instant coffee, chocolate, and teabags, and a few other non food items as well
  7. santaman2000

    Old West Firearm question

    Right now I’m looking over the loading data in my reloaders’ manual, an older one put out by Speer (1979) Picking a typical caliber from the old West, the 45LC, yields the most useful comparisons for a reason I’ll mention further on. It doesn’t give the energy itself but you can take the data...
  8. santaman2000

    Best way to store a food supply for the car kit

    First the water. I have a 3 gallon water cooler and a 5 gallon one like these...
  9. santaman2000

    Degree

    Personally, not at all. See posts I made further upthread and you’ll see the Air Force paid for most of the last half of my degree and the first half was very inexpensive and and more than offset by the Soccial Security Widow’s pension Mama drew because of my staying in school. Likewise my...
  10. santaman2000

    Degree

    Thanks. I thought so. I finished my degree on a similar program; while most of my classes were traditional in person classes they were in what Emmy-Riddle called their “Worldwide Campus.” Basically a classes were offered in person at the individual military bases around the world in their...
  11. santaman2000

    Degree

  12. santaman2000

    Degree

    Be careful with that “healthy mix” though. Our system is supposedly such a mix but it doesn’t seem to have solved the problem. At the basic level the public universities are all ran by the individual states. The first subsidy (one that I very much agree with) is the level of tuition paid by...
  13. santaman2000

    Degree

    Regarding the “open university” mentioned in a few posts, I have a question: is that a sort of remote learning? A combination of online courses, correspondence courses, and a few in Edson classes?
  14. santaman2000

    Degree

    Seems a bit odd. Mama was educated in nursing to the RN level back in the 1940s. Back then there were two programs for the RN level: 1) a three year, non degree program (the one she took) and 2) a four year Bachelors’s degree program. Owadays there are still two programs for the RN level: 1)...
  15. santaman2000

    Degree

    A) I originally completed 2 years of study towards a B.S. In Civil Engineering (Normally Bachelors degrees here are a 4 year course of study but engineering fields frequently require 5 years) I was typical of many at that age in that I used those years more for expanding my social life more than...
  16. santaman2000

    Fish

    It would seem logical that natural predators would control the beavers. However we really don’t have any shortage of those either. Bears and alligators both prey on beavers and I believe in RV’s area the puma also do. The bears will actually swim out to the beaver lodge and tear it apart to gat...
  17. santaman2000

    Fish

    I’ve also never heard of fished lines due to beaver presence here although they do effect other animal life (usually land animals that lose habitat to the beaver ponds or depend on the same trees the beaver eat) Interesting though regarding the flooding: they usually cause floods here.
  18. santaman2000

    Perception, how do we look?

    Actually red and black cam o has been around much, much longer than the drab colors. We just call it plaid. I find it ironic that 50 people per kilometer is considered “rural” for me an area isn’t rural unless you reverse the terms to describe how many kilometers per person. @C_Claycomb I like...
  19. santaman2000

    Perception, how do we look?

    @Paul_B Color vision seems to have evolved around need. Most mammals apart from humans and apes don’t need it so they didn’t evolve it. Presumably to distinguish various fruits and berries that might be either toxic or safe. Likewise most birds seem to have color vision probably for similar...