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Feeling nostalgic

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  • Member since
    July 2014
  • From: Franklin Wi
Posted by Bakster on Tuesday, March 30, 2021 11:56 PM

DM1975
Had yes. I've had a couple over the years and yeah they are a pain in the butt. They make vacations super stressfu. They can also crash overnight. Mine did. I had it going for years, coral growing strong, and then overnight there was some caulerpa in the live rock that went asexual. After that I could never get it stable again. 

You had... got it. Sorry about that. I salute you though. The little I know about them is they are expensive to have and a ton of work. But they are cool as all heck when it's set up and running nice. A buddy of mine had one and I remember the stories of his carrying buckets of water for changes and all the special gear for the tank that he had to get. He had some issues too. Some issues with the equipment and something too with some sort of growth. He eventually gave it up.

Well. Now you have a screensaver that's inexpensive and no maintenance. Yes

 

  • Member since
    December 2020
  • From: Kansas
Posted by DM1975 on Tuesday, March 30, 2021 11:39 PM

Bakster

 

 
DM1975
I love it! The TV is actajacent to where My old 125 gallon reef tank was set up so it's a nice touch. I've had a Roku for years now. Since they first came out actually. I have two for upstairs and downstairs and bought one for my daughter also. 

 

Lol. I am a slow starter. It took me years but I finally pulled the trigger.

You have a reef tank? Dude! I'd love one of them. Too much work for my blood but I envy anyone that has one. Reef tanks are serious business, not for the faint of heart. 

 

Had yes. I've had a couple over the years and yeah they are a pain in the butt. They make vacations super stressfu. They can also crash overnight. Mine did. I had it going for years, coral growing strong, and then overnight there was some caulerpa in the live rock that went asexual. After that I could never get it stable again. 

  • Member since
    July 2014
  • From: Franklin Wi
Posted by Bakster on Tuesday, March 30, 2021 11:02 PM

DM1975
I love it! The TV is actajacent to where My old 125 gallon reef tank was set up so it's a nice touch. I've had a Roku for years now. Since they first came out actually. I have two for upstairs and downstairs and bought one for my daughter also. 

Lol. I am a slow starter. It took me years but I finally pulled the trigger.

You have a reef tank? Dude! I'd love one of them. Too much work for my blood but I envy anyone that has one. Reef tanks are serious business, not for the faint of heart. 

  • Member since
    July 2014
  • From: Franklin Wi
Posted by Bakster on Tuesday, March 30, 2021 10:58 PM

And speaking of nostalgia. The other night I came across this Johnny Carson episode. I was crying from laughing so much. A true classic. If you watch it, watch it to the very end.  



  • Member since
    July 2014
  • From: Franklin Wi
Posted by Bakster on Tuesday, March 30, 2021 10:55 PM

Hmm. Link is not working properly. Bummer.

Lets try this...

 

  • Member since
    December 2020
  • From: Kansas
Posted by DM1975 on Tuesday, March 30, 2021 10:54 PM

Bakster

 

 
DM1975
I love my Roku. I watch YouTube on a 62" screen now. Talk about a difference!!! And Pluto TV is awesome

 

Yea! Great to hear I am not talking out of my hat. Lol. Thanks for chiming in.

When I first thought about buying the Roku I was figuring it will end up being another toy destined to collect dust. In the end, a big not so. It's the best $80 I spent in a long time. I have never watched so much TV in my life. 

PS: How do you like the aquarium screensaver? It's like having a massive aquarium in the house. And you don't have to clean the tank. Surprise

 

I love it! The TV is actajacent to where My old 125 gallon reef tank was set up so it's a nice touch. I've had a Roku for years now. Since they first came out actually. I have two for upstairs and downstairs and bought one for my daughter also. 

  • Member since
    July 2014
  • From: Franklin Wi
Posted by Bakster on Tuesday, March 30, 2021 10:50 PM

Speaking of good content.

Here is a separate link.https://youtu.be/wmtZw2XS-uQ

 

 

 

  • Member since
    July 2014
  • From: Franklin Wi
Posted by Bakster on Tuesday, March 30, 2021 10:47 PM

DM1975
I love my Roku. I watch YouTube on a 62" screen now. Talk about a difference!!! And Pluto TV is awesome

Yea! Great to hear I am not talking out of my hat. Lol. Thanks for chiming in.

When I first thought about buying the Roku I was figuring it will end up being another toy destined to collect dust. In the end, a big not so. It's the best $80 I spent in a long time. I have never watched so much TV in my life. 

PS: How do you like the aquarium screensaver? It's like having a massive aquarium in the house. And you don't have to clean the tank. Surprise

  • Member since
    December 2020
  • From: Kansas
Posted by DM1975 on Tuesday, March 30, 2021 9:52 PM

Bakster

 

 
Rob Gronovius
I found a cable channel called Epix Drive In that basically plays all those old drive in movies that were filler shows. I watched a couple of late 70s early 80s sci-fi monster flicks. They were terrible but fun to watch.
 

 

 

Sounds good. I found one called PlutoTV that is available for free on Roku devices. They have all kinds of old shows too. Right now I am watching Mystery Science Theatre

I purchased the Roku for my TV about three months ago. I am hooked on YouTube. Watching model builds on the big screen brings a whole new dimension to it. Much of it is recorded in hidefinition, so the picture quality is fantastic. You can see fantastic detail from the comfort of your couch. I rarely watch cable now, and I should cancel it. And if model builds doesn't do it for ya, there is so much more to choose from. I guess my point is this. YouTube did little for me when viewed on my tablet or phone. Viewing it on the TV was a game changer. It's like cable on steroids.

Wink

 

I love my Roku. I watch YouTube on a 62" screen now. Talk about a difference!!! And Pluto TV is awesome!!!

  • Member since
    July 2014
  • From: Franklin Wi
Posted by Bakster on Tuesday, March 30, 2021 8:27 PM

Rob Gronovius
I found a cable channel called Epix Drive In that basically plays all those old drive in movies that were filler shows. I watched a couple of late 70s early 80s sci-fi monster flicks. They were terrible but fun to watch.
 

Sounds good. I found one called PlutoTV that is available for free on Roku devices. They have all kinds of old shows too. Right now I am watching Mystery Science Theatre

I purchased the Roku for my TV about three months ago. I am hooked on YouTube. Watching model builds on the big screen brings a whole new dimension to it. Much of it is recorded in hidefinition, so the picture quality is fantastic. You can see fantastic detail from the comfort of your couch. I rarely watch cable now, and I should cancel it. And if model builds doesn't do it for ya, there is so much more to choose from. I guess my point is this. YouTube did little for me when viewed on my tablet or phone. Viewing it on the TV was a game changer. It's like cable on steroids.

Wink

  • Member since
    October 2019
  • From: New Braunfels, Texas
Posted by Tanker-Builder on Tuesday, March 30, 2021 3:33 PM

Hi;

 You also have a group there in Pennslyvania that call all outsiders " Englishers" Too!

  • Member since
    September 2006
  • From: Bethlehem PA
Posted by the Baron on Tuesday, March 30, 2021 2:24 PM

Yeah, but see, that's my point.  It wasn't uncommon to call someone of German descent, "Dutch".  Nothing to do with the Netherlands.  A more famous example was the mobster "Dutch" Schultz.  His parents were Germans, German Jews, to be more specific.  And his nickname was "Dutch".

The bigger the government, the smaller the citizen.

 

 

  • Member since
    August 2019
  • From: Central Oregon
Posted by HooYah Deep Sea on Tuesday, March 30, 2021 1:11 PM

Out in Arizona, everybody knows about the Lost Dutchman and his gold mine. He was also a victim of the Dutch vs Deutsch situation, as he was actually of German descent, mit das deutschen namen von 'Jacob Waltzer'.

"Why do I do this? Because the money's good, the scenery changes and they let me use explosives, okay?"

  • Member since
    September 2006
  • From: Bethlehem PA
Posted by the Baron on Tuesday, March 30, 2021 12:46 PM

GMorrison

The Pennsylvania Dutch are in fact not Dutch. They are descended from Germans (Deutsch or Deitsch) and that got misappropriated in the usual way we Americans do things to be "Dutch".

True, the Pennsylvania Dutch are Germans, not Netherlanders.  But the name has nothing to do with any American custom or habit.  "Dutch" has a long history in English, and originally, it meant any Europeans living in the lands beyond the old borders of the Roman provinces there, from what is now Flanders and the rest of the Low Countries ("Netherlands", "low lands"), east of the Meuse and Rhein, and north of the Alps.  Only later did the meaning become more specific to mean "Netherlanders".  So, we British called the German colonists in our midst, who came mostly from the upper Rhein valley and the Palatinate, "Dutch".

And those settlers called us the "English", even after independence.

Their dialect is still pretty much the same as the "Pelzer" dialect spoken in the Pfalz today.  Though they have adopted a lot of English words, and even some grammar.  Natural, considering that they're surround by and interact with the "English" around them.

And here in PA, we pay tribute to the Dutchmen's shrewd sense for frugality and saving by saying someone is "being Dutchy".

The bigger the government, the smaller the citizen.

 

 

  • Member since
    December 2002
  • From: Fort Knox
Posted by Rob Gronovius on Tuesday, March 30, 2021 11:02 AM
I found a cable channel called Epix Drive In that basically plays all those old drive in movies that were filler shows. I watched a couple of late 70s early 80s sci-fi monster flicks. They were terrible but fun to watch.
  • Member since
    July 2014
  • From: Franklin Wi
Posted by Bakster on Thursday, March 25, 2021 5:08 PM

Tanker-Builder
No fun going alone and these modern films are a bloody bore to me.

Yeah--the latter is the biiger issue for me. In the early 80s I went to a movie every weekend with my GF. It was amazing because they were good flicks. Now? There is nothing I want to see and it's been that way for a long time. 

 

Tanker-Builder
First one I ever built I lived on a farm and bought a 10 cent Comet Piper Cub Flying Model. Big Prop and square bodied balsa Fuselage. I painted it with Oil Paints from MOM. It took forever to dry but flew alright when it did.

Is that the rubberband model? If so-- I think I built that too. It's funny. You spend all that time building the frame, papering it, maybe painting, then most often the first flight breaks it. It was fun to build but I remember thinking-- why am I doing this. It is gonna break.

Tanker-Builder
I believe that being a loner a lot of my childhood had something to do with my love of Science Fiction.

That is interesting and there may be something to that. I was a loner too and loved the genre. 

 

 

  • Member since
    October 2019
  • From: New Braunfels, Texas
Posted by Tanker-Builder on Thursday, March 25, 2021 10:54 AM

Ah!

      Drive -Ins! There's one not to far from me. Everytime I go to get gas I can see it. Never been there though. No fun going alone and these modern films are a bloody bore to me.  Now I never liked Super-Heros either, Unless they wore Military uniforms. The Military that made it possible to be an American, Before I knew what that meant!

      I believe that being a loner a lot of my childhood had something to do with my love of Science Fiction. A lot which has come true to a degree. After All, C.T. scanners and Magnetic Resonance Imagers were in that realm back in the forties!So were lasers for anything. Cell phones? The closest I think was Detective Richard (Nickname-***) Tracy's Wrist Phone!

      Oops ! I think I gave a clue of my age. It shows as In the early forties, but the way they kept records back then, I think I might be a couple of actual years older, because of what I remember or I could be younger. Who knows? Adoption records were sealed back then, Eventually being lost or destroyed. Models? First one I ever built I lived on a farm and bought a 10 cent Comet Piper Cub Flying Model. Big Prop and square bodied balsa Fuselage. I painted it with Oil Paints from MOM. It took forever to dry but flew alright when it did.

  • Member since
    July 2014
  • From: Franklin Wi
Posted by Bakster on Thursday, March 25, 2021 10:32 AM

DM1975
The store I'm talking about had almost half of it devoted to sewing. My mom and grandma would spend forever there so I spent that time looking at the models.

Lol. A similar journey!

Yeah, drive ins was a big thing for us too. Parents piled us in the wagon and off we'd go. Years later, into the late 70s and early 80s I took dates there. Not a lot of movie watching going on. Lol.

I loved comic books but I was into science fiction and horror stuff. I still have them packed in plastic containers. Probably not worth much though. The super hero stuff is where the money is and I didnt get into that. I am still not a fan, not even of the movies.

  • Member since
    December 2020
  • From: Kansas
Posted by DM1975 on Thursday, March 25, 2021 10:16 AM

The store I'm talking about had almost half of it devoted to sewing. My mom and grandma would spend forever there so I spent that time looking at the models. We never had a movie theater, just an old drive in theater that opened sporadically and shut down for good in the very early 80's. As for comic books, I'd only get those from the dime store but they never could hold my attention long. I always had to be moving and doing back then. 

  • Member since
    July 2014
  • From: Franklin Wi
Posted by Bakster on Thursday, March 25, 2021 9:41 AM

That is a cool journey, DM. Except for being scolded about the glue smell! Glad you carried on with the hobby!

I was just recently thinking on this again and on how much joy the hobby gave me as a kid. Similar to you with the grocery shopping, many of the models at that time were for me, purchased from a variety store. My mom made her own cloths back then and the store carried fabric and patterns. It was not unusual for women to do this then. Clothing was expensive. Anyhow, the store was a kids wonderland. Toys, games, candy, you name it. Matchbox was a fan favorite and later they expanded to slot car stuff. But most of the models purchased in my youth came out of that store. And most of them cost only a few dollars, some small ones less than a dollar. I miss the place. Many great memories of the place. When I got a little older I rode my bike there. Probably a 7 mile round trip. I'd meet my cousin that lived near there. Those were good days. It'd be a day of being mesmerized by the cool toys, candy, and the area even had a icecream place we'd ride to. A few more years down the road my comic book journey started. It's humble beginnings started at the village drug store located across the street of the variety store. That same area even had a small movie theater. I had seen two movies in that theater that to this day, I still enjoy. They were Flight of the Phoenix and Robinson Crusoe on Mars. Either one could make for a cool diorama. 

Anyhow, good times.

  • Member since
    December 2020
  • From: Kansas
Posted by DM1975 on Wednesday, March 24, 2021 6:59 PM

My uncle started me building models in probably 1979 or 1980. I watched him work on a B24. I would sneak into his room at my grandmas house and just stare at all of his models. Then he went into the Army and moved away. 

My first model was a snap tite P-40 that I got as a present. After that my mom would let me buy a model once a month or so at the variety store on the way back from grocery shoppin. We only lived about a mile from the store but I'd have the model built in the car half the time before we would get home. Stickers on and all. 

Later on when we first got a Walmart they would carry nice model kits that the old variety store wouldn't. Still only Monogram and Revell and an AMT here or there. All the old store carried was the white box monogram models of WWII planes, a Revell sub and a few boats and cars along with the Rat Fink type car models with the crazy looking characters driving them. In fact I think the only jet they ever carried was the F-16 in the red white and blue. That was my first jet model I think. 

I still got my glue from the old store though. Until one of the check out ladies started cussing me out and telling me I was smelling it to get high and a bunch of other rude comments. Back then I was a sensitive little nerd and not some little trouble starter. Who'd have thought I'd end up making a carrier out of being an Infantryman back then right? Lol

  • Member since
    September 2012
Posted by GMorrison on Tuesday, February 9, 2021 12:53 AM

GMorrison

Now for the trivia question: Which American President did not speak English as his native language, and what language did he originally speak?

 

Martin Van Buren, and his first language was dutch, "Nederlands".

 Modeling is an excuse to buy books.

 

  • Member since
    July 2014
  • From: Franklin Wi
Posted by Bakster on Monday, February 8, 2021 11:10 PM

I came across some informative and nostalgic videos. If you have not seen them, you might find them intertaining. Links below.

 

  • Member since
    July 2014
  • From: Franklin Wi
Posted by Bakster on Thursday, October 10, 2019 10:19 AM

There is something about the Fall season that gets my creative juices flowing. I suppose it's that inward journey as we hunker down for the inevitable onslaught of winter. That said, I feel the need to write something, so here is another memory: 

I grew up in an old farmhouse in an area that was at that time, very rural. When I was about 7 years old the city embarked on a massive road construction project that spanned miles, and some of that work was right in front of our house. What fun it was to see earth movers cutting swaths of dirt for what would become a major inlet towards the city of Milwaukee. Huge piles of dirt were created leaving us a fantastic place to climb and play.

One winter, my brother, the inventor of cool things to a 7 year old, had hatched a plan. The road in front of our house was still under construction and open only to local traffic. As luck would have it we had a huge ice storm that glazed the road with sheer ice. What does he do? He grabs his sled and constructs a makeshift sail using a wood pole and plastic sheeting taken from none other than the construction site in front our house.

The story goes that he sailed down that road for several miles and at a terrific speed. I was not there to witness it but I have no doubt that what he said is true. Hearing about his great adventure I say to him--can I try? He obliged. It was windy and bitter cold that day, I was dressed not unlike Randy the tick in A Christmas Story. I had another piece of equipment to help fend off the cold, and that was a scuba divers facemask. LOL. What a sight that must have been, very much like my wedding photo that Gamera just posted to my Icarus thread.

I climbed onboard my brothers fantastic craft and away I went. Let me tell you, that thing moved, so much so, I had to cut the journey short because as good as this medieval vessel was, it had no brakes. It was using your feet--which did not work well on slick ice, or jump off for your dear life. 

  • Member since
    July 2014
  • From: Franklin Wi
Posted by Bakster on Thursday, March 14, 2019 8:20 PM

The new/old hobby shop I recently found has a slot car layout. Apparently they have racing on certain times of the month.

http://modelempireusa.com/?page_id=204

  • Member since
    September 2012
Posted by GMorrison on Thursday, March 14, 2019 8:06 PM

The Pennsylvania Dutch are in fact not Dutch. They are descended from Germans (Deutsch or Deitsch) and that got misappropriated in the usual way we Americans do things to be "Dutch".

Now for the trivia question: Which American President did not speak English as his native language, and what language did he originally speak?

 Modeling is an excuse to buy books.

 

  • Member since
    September 2012
Posted by GMorrison on Thursday, March 14, 2019 7:52 PM

It was a really old time neighborhood. Ocean Beach is consistently about 55 deg. and foggy, but it is the ocean and there's a lot around the area, like the zoo, Cliff House, the ruins of the Sutro Baths. There was a classic old California amusement park, Playland at the Beach, complete with a big white wooden roller coaster.

The last real hobby shop in SF wasn't too far from there either. Franciscan Hobbies, in the same family for 45 years. Not the same as the one with the track. Franciscan gave up a couple of years ago.

 Modeling is an excuse to buy books.

 

  • Member since
    May 2013
  • From: Indiana, USA
Posted by Greg on Thursday, March 14, 2019 7:31 PM

GMorrison
Greg, if you were a student traveling in Amsterdam back when, you lived on Satay.

I had no idea of the Indonesian/Dutch connection. As I understand it, my background is mostly Pensylvania (I don't even know how to spell it!!!) Dutch, and I don't have a clue what that means......if it is a connection to real Nederland Dutch or more Amish sort of thing.

Rob, your history post is enlightening. Thanks.

  • Member since
    May 2013
  • From: Indiana, USA
Posted by Greg on Thursday, March 14, 2019 7:26 PM

GMorrison
One in particular that's really a thing long past. Hobby shops had large slot car tracks in the back. The one I went to a lot had probably 8-10 slots. You'd find a spot to open the shoe box, get out your cars, brush cleaner and oil. Tools. Tires.

Holy cow does that bring back memories. We had a place called 'The Copper Groove", a dedicated slot car place. Rode our bikes there.

Slot car track near the beach sounds like a little bit of heaven.

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