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The Great Outdoors

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  • Haykakan
    replied
    Re: The Great Outdoors

    Yeh this one i would not want to touch either if i was the guy who had to pull it out. The reason i wont get anyone to come is because they will not come if they see what the situation is. The road is narrow and either side of it is a drop off into much deeper snow. You cant stay on this road because it is higher then the sides and in that deep snow the truck keeps sliding into the softer shoulder no matter how hard you try to keep it on the road. Steering is useless in this deep snow and you always slide back into the lower shoulder. The truck is too deep into the mess to be reached by wench.

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  • Artashes
    replied
    Re: The Great Outdoors

    Originally posted by Haykakan View Post
    Boy i have never seen a winter like this before. We got another huge amount of snowfall today-work canceled, classes canceled. I took my truck to the lake to see what the roads were like there and got stuck. I had to walk back in two feet of snow across the frozen lake while 30 mph winds at 14 degrees were blowing in my face and i just had a sweatshirt on. I cant get my truck out and tow trucks wont even go in there. For the first time in a loong time i am looking forward to spring.
    Yesterday it was 46 above, and today the same even tough my "smart" phone says its only 20 above.
    Your getting our weather.
    Everyone up here is glad your getting it and and likes this surprising warmth.
    Such short sighted people.
    I used to do recovery & transport with a roll back flat bed. Had to shut down the Dalton hwy to get the correct angle to recover a car that flipped & rolled about 100 feet off the hwy into the woods. Think it was around pump station 3 of the pipeline, but can't remember. Don't know of any situation that would stop a tow/recovery up here. If one guy won't do it the next will.

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  • Haykakan
    replied
    Re: The Great Outdoors

    Boy i have never seen a winter like this before. We got another huge amount of snowfall today-work canceled, classes canceled. I took my truck to the lake to see what the roads were like there and got stuck. I had to walk back in two feet of snow across the frozen lake while 30 mph winds at 14 degrees were blowing in my face and i just had a sweatshirt on. I cant get my truck out and tow trucks wont even go in there. For the first time in a loong time i am looking forward to spring.

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  • bell-the-cat
    replied
    Re: The Great Outdoors

    Originally posted by Haykakan View Post
    Cooking underground is done in Armenia to it is called tonir and is a good way of baking lavash and cooking some other meats.
    But not done anymore in Nakhchivan - if this report is to be believed.

    FOREIGN MUSIC BANNED IN NAKHIJEVAN
    Panorama.am
    18:36 21/02/2014 >> SOCIETY

    Nakhijevan radio channels have got a rather strange ban, the
    Azerbaijani news portal "Haqqin.az" reports.

    According to information, the Nakhijevan TV and Radio broadcasts
    Committee has banned foreign music broadcast. Now exclusively
    Azerbaijani music sounds on Nakhijevan radio.

    "The ban includes also such genres as rock, rap, including the
    Azerbaijani language, and which is most surprising Turkish songs as
    well," writes the portal.

    The head of the Nakhijevan Autonomy Vasif Talibov, who was included
    in the list of the world's "predators of press" by the organization
    of "Reporters without Borders", is known for a number of extravagant
    bans. Thus, on November 2013 he banned giving foreign names to trade
    centers in Nakhijevan. In August Vasif Talibov forbade the women
    serving in governmental offices to wear nylon pantyhose.

    In August Talibov ordered to close all Internet cafes. Besides that,
    all possible places where people gather, like cafes, teahouses and
    hairdressing salons, are closed too. It is also forbidden to walk
    on the streets in groups, have evening walks, hang laundry on the
    balcony, bake bread in tonirs (a hole in a ground made for baking
    bread - Ed.) as well as mark feasts.

    In September 2012 Talibov arbitrarily banned abortions in Nakhijevan
    Autonomy.

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  • Siggie
    replied
    Re: The Great Outdoors

    Both are radiant cooking with stone/clay, but a tonir is more permanent/set "oven" lined in clay, but this is literally a hole in the ground covered with rocks and dirt...







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  • Siggie
    replied
    Re: The Great Outdoors

    Originally posted by Haykakan View Post
    That sounds pretty cool Siggie. Cooking underground is done in Armenia to it is called tonir and is a good way of baking lavash and cooking some other meats. How long was the flight to get there and where there any stopovers?
    No, no this wasn't like a tonir.
    You've got to connect in Lima at the very least before Cusco, but it's possible to get direct from LA to Lima and that's about 13 hours I think. I had a stop in Tx before Lima though because it wasn't gonna get me to Cusco any earlier (only 2 flights a day from Lima to Cusco) and it was $1000 per more to go direct from LAX to Lima.

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  • Haykakan
    replied
    Re: The Great Outdoors

    That sounds pretty cool Siggie. Cooking underground is done in Armenia to it is called tonir and is a good way of baking lavash and cooking some other meats. How long was the flight to get there and where there any stopovers?

    Leave a comment:


  • Siggie
    replied
    Re: The Great Outdoors

    Originally posted by Haykakan View Post
    No i don't mind at all - i kind of get lonely in there lol. I think it is sad that people are loosing interest in the outdoors. It works great for me since i have less competition but it is sad watching so many people lose the link with nature. How was the food there?
    I like the seclusion that comes without the crowding, but when people don't use the parks and trails that also means funds are diverted to other things and bad decisions made on the assumption that no one will notice/care.

    The food was okay. Cusco is like the gateway city to Machu Picchu so it's touristy enough to have a wide variety of restaurants to appeal to the mix of tourists. There was a lot of Italian and pizza in general. McDonalds and Starbucks of course. They had Japanese, Indian (Korma Sutra - name still cracks me up), Arabic (Shawerma!), etc.

    The Peruvian stuff was good too. Just meats, lots of barbeque, and either rice, quinoa, or starchy veggies (e.g. potatoes, corn, etc.). Plenty of seafood. Of course, they eat alpaca, cuy (guinea pig), llamma. They tried to incorporate these in fusion dishes too. Like alpaca curry and pizzas. In one method they cook food in a pit covered in banana leaves, topped with hot rocks, and buried under mound of dirt and that was pretty cool to see done. It was a lot faster than I thought. The food was done in like 30 minutes.

    Coca tea is the stuff; I'd love to drink that every morning instead of coffee. I didn't feel any noticeable buzz beyond the alertness from a strong coffee/espresso with it though. They make some sweet drink out of purple corn that was yum. We didn't try any of the corn beer, chicha, because we were told it would land us in the hospital with a host of unfriendly bacteria for sure because of the conditions under which it's fermented. Now Pisco! Excellent. I loved the pisco sours.

    The fruits and veggies there were enormous too. Avocados were the size of melons, corn kernels the size of US quarters, etc.

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  • Haykakan
    replied
    Re: The Great Outdoors

    No i don't mind at all - i kind of get lonely in there lol. I think it is sad that people are loosing interest in the outdoors. It works great for me since i have less competition but it is sad watching so many people lose the link with nature. How was the food there?

    Leave a comment:


  • Siggie
    replied
    Re: The Great Outdoors

    Originally posted by Haykakan View Post
    Not sure why you felt you needed to start a new thread since we have the outdoors thread already but i am glad you shared these beautiful pics. Looks like its about to storm in that last pic.
    Thanks. It was almost always on the verge of storming. I think it rained every night.

    You had created that thread for outdoor sports, so I didn't want to presume you'd be okay to expand it to all outdoor pursuits. If it's all the same to you, I don't mind merging.

    Leave a comment:

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