Moderation Questions
The last iteration of the moderation discussion thread was a complete disaster. Numerous attempts to keep it on topic fa
You don't beat your wife because you ridicule mono dog, you beat your wife because you have anger issues.
It's amazing to see Crossnerd moderate her "friend". He constantly dishes it out but if someone replies with something benign she will ban them (me) because she knows raining men is a delicate flower with rages issues. It's not the content, it's how the local maniac will receive it.
I’ve noticed a very common trend among the manly men incel army of MAGAStep 1: espouse their beliefs of absolute bileStep 2: get relentlessly trolled on their beliefs of absolute bileStep 3: feeling deeply hurt that they’re being insulted and lacking the emotional maturity or basic intelligence to comprehend what’s happening, arrive at the conclusion that they
Oh that's nice and on brand. Just sit there and listen everyone. Snowflake doesn't react well to feedback
The only thing I'm left wondering, does mondo have to paint again before his next daterape attempt?
Spoiler
And FU SRM for tricking me into reading this pile of ****!
Everyone gets their own set of rules
So glad we have the child prodigy to sort through this. Lol
Highest point in Colorado Mt Elbert and the 2nd highest in the lower 48 behind Mt. Whitney in California. I thought it was going to be rough because I don't think I was fully recovered from the last mountain on Wednesday but they're getting easier. Dog did well. I do keep her on a leash until above the tree line for those wondering.
I get a bit puffed at altitude. Never been higher than 8,000ft, at Jakhu Hill in Simla, and that was bad enough -- no oxygen, a hundred-yard-walk and you feel like a lie-down -- quite apart from the monkeys stealing anything you didn't positively keep your hand on. The locals were fine, of course, being hillmen, and could carry heavy loads up the road at implausible speed, because their hearts and respiratory systems are genetically adapted -- but they tend not to be very long-lived. You can see some of the Himalayas pretty well from up there, but you can't see Everest herself, because at 600 miles even that 29,000ft peak, viewed from 8,000, is hidden round the curve of the Earth.
I get a bit puffed at altitude. Never been higher than 8,000ft, at Jakhu Hill in Simla, and that was bad enough -- no oxygen, a hundred-yard-walk and you feel like a lie-down -- quite apart from the monkeys stealing anything you didn't positively keep your hand on. The locals were fine, of course, being hillmen, and could carry heavy loads up the road at implausible speed, beca
My place currently is at 10,500. I can find myself out of breath shaving or doing totally random things. Never imagined that I would live at this sort of altitude and I think around 6,000 to 7,000 is the sweet spot
I’m trying to find a cabin to go to over thanksgiving and Fairplay has completely jumped the shark
Iām trying to find a cabin to go to over thanksgiving and Fairplay has completely jumped the shark
This one is in my neighborhood and looks super nice. Not exactly cheap but seems at least in line with expectations.
You're right about it not being cheap - $250/night for a log cabin?
Calling that a "log cabin" undersells it a bit, don't you think?
It's a house with fake siding to give it the appeal. It's not logs stacked on each other with the bathroom being the woods.
Im a 100-150$ Airbnb kind of guy. I’m not prepared to spend nearly 1k for 3 nights 2 hours from where I live
There are a ton of nice spots in FairPlay, they just used to be half the price
There used to be sub 100$ condos in silverthorne available daily
Who needs a kitchen when you've got the breakfast and dining rooms, and room service?
People looking for a cabin in the woods!
It's a house with fake siding to give it the appeal. It's not logs stacked on each other with the bathroom being the woods.
Whether that is one idk but there are plenty of homes around here that are actual log cabins. They can still have plumbing. I think this one I'm still sits on a concrete foundation but then it's logs after that.
Whether that is one idk but there are plenty of homes around here that are actual log cabins. They can still have plumbing. I think this one I'm still sits on a concrete foundation but then it's logs after that.
Yeah, they are everywhere. Around Mt Shasta, you're walking distance away from cabins that can be 5k square ft to cabins that can be the size of a 6 person tent.
About 15 years ago, I stayed in a triangular ācabinā that seemed cobbled together from uneven sheets of plywood of different colors. The panels didnāt line up, leaving tiny gaps where the wind blew through, and the floorboards felt like they were about to cave in. They put a log out in front as a steppingstone for a bit of character or something but even that was a tripping hazard because it would roll when you put you foot on it.
I have no idea if those cabins are still in service but I would have been fine with just pitching a tent.
Y'all will be thrilled and delighted to know that I have returned from my "vacation."
I'll refrain from mansplaining my temp-ban unless asked about it.
