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Jeff Miller FB post
Jeff is on the first day of his fishing vacation. Jeff, a friend and
MY dog went for a brief venture in his new boat. They found a small island, anchored, and walked ashore. (dog swam) Men fished, dog played and frolicked with other dog...s. After about 2 hours, they headed back to the boat.... found it sitting on dry land. It appears that Jeff was unaware that large bodies of water have things called "tides." Apparently, "tides" flow in and "tides" flow out and sometimes when the "tide" flows out.... well, you and your friend and your wife's dog are stuck in a boat on dry land for about 9 hours. And when the sun goes down, it gets a bit chilly. I hope he will be with you tomorrow. I also hope, for Jeff's sake, that MY dog is okay. This is his wife, Rachel, signing off. |
Jeff Miller FB post
On Oct 10, 6:20*pm, Frank Reid © 2010 wrote:
Jeff is on the first day of his fishing vacation. Jeff, a friend and MY dog went for a brief venture in his new boat. They found a small island, anchored, and walked ashore. (dog swam) Men fished, dog played and frolicked with other dog...s. After about 2 hours, they headed back to the boat.... found it sitting on dry land. It appears that Jeff was unaware that large bodies of water have things called "tides." Apparently, "tides" flow in and "tides" flow out and sometimes when the "tide" flows out.... well, you and your friend and your wife's dog are stuck in a boat on dry land for about 9 hours. And when the sun goes down, it gets a bit chilly. I hope he will be with you tomorrow. I also hope, for Jeff's sake, that MY dog is okay. This is his wife, Rachel, signing off. I'm thinking this beats the Millheim duck incident. Frank Reid |
Jeff Miller FB post
On Sun, 10 Oct 2010 16:20:00 -0700 (PDT), Frank Reid © 2010
wrote: Jeff is on the first day of his fishing vacation. Jeff, a friend and MY dog went for a brief venture in his new boat. They found a small island, anchored, and walked ashore. (dog swam) Men fished, dog played and frolicked with other dog...s. After about 2 hours, they headed back to the boat.... found it sitting on dry land. It appears that Jeff was unaware that large bodies of water have things called "tides." Um, wasn't our boy, ol' Jacques Clousteau, in the US Navy...? And where were they fishing? If you're on a small island, tidal change is a tough thing to miss...I mean, if at noon, you're standing at the water's edge casting to the water and an hour later, you haven't moved, but you're now standing 20 feet from the water, one would think a person (even a lawyer) would casually notice such goings-on, but, hey, YMMV... Apparently, "tides" flow in and "tides" flow out and sometimes when the "tide" flows out.... well, you and your friend and your wife's dog are stuck in a boat on dry land for about 9 hours. And when the sun goes down, it gets a bit chilly. I hope he will be with you tomorrow. I also hope, for Jeff's sake, that MY dog is okay. This is his wife, Rachel, signing off. Amused, R |
Jeff Miller FB post
Jeff was unaware that large bodies of water have things called
"tides." Apparently, "tides" flow in and "tides" flow out and sometimes when the "tide" flows out.... well, you and your friend and your wife's dog are stuck in a boat on dry land for about 9 hours. And when the sun goes down, it gets a bit chilly. I hope he will be with you tomorrow. I also hope, for Jeff's sake, that MY dog is okay. This is his wife, Rachel, signing off. now *that*, by god, is hilarious, and i mean at a level rarely attained by ordinary human beings. yfitp wayno |
Jeff Miller FB post
On 2010-10-11 15:17:16 -0400, Todd said:
On 10/10/2010 04:20 PM, Frank Reid © 2010 wrote: I also hope, for Jeff's sake, that MY dog is okay. This is his wife, Rachel, signing off. Hi Rachel, There is a little, tiny chance he did it on, well, purpose, to extend the fishing trip. Cold would not be a factor. (In "guy land" that is considered having a good time.) So, when he next stands before you trying to explain why he had to stay longer, you are allow to give him a incredulous look (rained eyebrow, tapping fingers) and secretly enjoy the yarn he spins. And remember, any woman that can love a dog, can also love a husband, for four reasons: 1) We are always hungry 2) We always want to play 3) We don't talk 4) We don't listen to a single word you say. -T My gawd you are an insufferable nitwit. |
Jeff Miller FB post
On Oct 10, 7:21*pm, Frank Reid © 2010 wrote:
On Oct 10, 6:20*pm, Frank Reid © 2010 wrote: Jeff is on the first day of his fishing vacation. Jeff, a friend and MY dog went for a brief venture in his new boat. They found a small island, anchored, and walked ashore. (dog swam) Men fished, dog played and frolicked with other dog...s. After about 2 hours, they headed back to the boat.... found it sitting on dry land. It appears that Jeff was unaware that large bodies of water have things called "tides." Apparently, "tides" flow in and "tides" flow out and sometimes when the "tide" flows out.... well, you and your friend and your wife's dog are stuck in a boat on dry land for about 9 hours. And when the sun goes down, it gets a bit chilly. I hope he will be with you tomorrow. I also hope, for Jeff's sake, that MY dog is okay. This is his wife, Rachel, signing off. I'm thinking this beats the Millheim duck incident. Frank Reid yup, i'd agree frank. running down pilchards, terns, and sand crabs is much more difficult...and punishing...than a highway-waddling duck. they're much craftier too. if the damn ducks had lured me to a building, i'd probably just now be getting out of the pa jails. and for all those with sage advice...i'm well aware of tides. sometimes they move a bit quicker than one who is distracted by schools of red drum from the distant side of the island appreciates. also, made the mistake of thinking my fellow manunkind might move the anchors and boats if necessary while we were away. still, if one has to be stranded on a sandy island for 6 hours, i reckon it wasn't so bad. of course, ginger or maryanne would have been preferable companions. joe was none too happy...until i reminded him he was a co- defendant. nice sunset though. to top things off, my nav lights didn't work (i don't go out in the dark) and the trip in to harkers island doesn't have as many zigs and zags around buoys at night as are required in the daytime. G. Photos to follow...at some point. anyway, it was another adventure and couldn't have been a better location to be stuck. i am familiar with the deep water, the tides, the sloughs, and most of the grains of sand on shark island now though...so, another lesson learned without any injury except to my pride, and that quit functioning long ago. jeff |
Jeff Miller FB post
On 2010-10-12 08:27:39 -0400, jeff miller said:
On Oct 10, 7:21*pm, Frank Reid © 2010 wrote: On Oct 10, 6:20*pm, Frank Reid © 2010 wrote: Jeff is on the first day of his fishing vacation. Jeff, a friend and MY dog went for a brief venture in his new boat. They found a small island, anchored, and walked ashore. (dog swam) Men fished, dog played and frolicked with other dog...s. After about 2 hours, they headed back to the boat.... found it sitting on dry land. It appears that Jeff was unaware that large bodies of water have things called "tides." Apparently, "tides" flow in and "tides" flow out and sometimes when the "tide" flows out.... well, you and your friend and your wife's dog are stuck in a boat on dry land for about 9 hours. And when the sun goes down, it gets a bit chilly. I hope he will be with you tomorrow. I also hope, for Jeff's sake, that MY dog is okay. This is his wife, Rachel, signing off. I'm thinking this beats the Millheim duck incident. Frank Reid yup, i'd agree frank. running down pilchards, terns, and sand crabs is much more difficult...and punishing...than a highway-waddling duck. they're much craftier too. if the damn ducks had lured me to a building, i'd probably just now be getting out of the pa jails. and for all those with sage advice...i'm well aware of tides. sometimes they move a bit quicker than one who is distracted by schools of red drum from the distant side of the island appreciates. also, made the mistake of thinking my fellow manunkind might move the anchors and boats if necessary while we were away. still, if one has to be stranded on a sandy island for 6 hours, i reckon it wasn't so bad. of course, ginger or maryanne would have been preferable companions. joe was none too happy...until i reminded him he was a co- defendant. nice sunset though. to top things off, my nav lights didn't work (i don't go out in the dark) and the trip in to harkers island doesn't have as many zigs and zags around buoys at night as are required in the daytime. G. Photos to follow...at some point. anyway, it was another adventure and couldn't have been a better location to be stuck. i am familiar with the deep water, the tides, the sloughs, and most of the grains of sand on shark island now though...so, another lesson learned without any injury except to my pride, and that quit functioning long ago. jeff To hell with you and Joe and the boat and the fish. d;o) How's the *dog*? Dave |
Jeff Miller FB post
On Tue, 12 Oct 2010 05:27:39 -0700 (PDT), jeff miller
wrote: On Oct 10, 7:21*pm, Frank Reid © 2010 wrote: On Oct 10, 6:20*pm, Frank Reid © 2010 wrote: Jeff is on the first day of his fishing vacation. Jeff, a friend and MY dog went for a brief venture in his new boat. They found a small island, anchored, and walked ashore. (dog swam) Men fished, dog played and frolicked with other dog...s. After about 2 hours, they headed back to the boat.... found it sitting on dry land. It appears that Jeff was unaware that large bodies of water have things called "tides." Apparently, "tides" flow in and "tides" flow out and sometimes when the "tide" flows out.... well, you and your friend and your wife's dog are stuck in a boat on dry land for about 9 hours. And when the sun goes down, it gets a bit chilly. I hope he will be with you tomorrow. I also hope, for Jeff's sake, that MY dog is okay. This is his wife, Rachel, signing off. I'm thinking this beats the Millheim duck incident. Frank Reid yup, i'd agree frank. running down pilchards, terns, and sand crabs is much more difficult...and punishing...than a highway-waddling duck. they're much craftier too. if the damn ducks had lured me to a building, i'd probably just now be getting out of the pa jails. and for all those with sage advice...i'm well aware of tides. sometimes they move a bit quicker than one who is distracted by schools of red drum from the distant side of the island appreciates. Ah, so this was one of those sneaky small islands with vastly differing tides on each side...maybe next time you should beach the boat on the downhill side of the island... TC, R also, made the mistake of thinking my fellow manunkind might move the anchors and boats if necessary while we were away. still, if one has to be stranded on a sandy island for 6 hours, i reckon it wasn't so bad. of course, ginger or maryanne would have been preferable companions. joe was none too happy...until i reminded him he was a co- defendant. nice sunset though. to top things off, my nav lights didn't work (i don't go out in the dark) and the trip in to harkers island doesn't have as many zigs and zags around buoys at night as are required in the daytime. G. Photos to follow...at some point. anyway, it was another adventure and couldn't have been a better location to be stuck. i am familiar with the deep water, the tides, the sloughs, and most of the grains of sand on shark island now though...so, another lesson learned without any injury except to my pride, and that quit functioning long ago. jeff |
Jeff Miller FB post
"jeff miller" wrote and for all those with sage advice...i'm well aware of tides. sometimes they move a bit quicker than one who is distracted by schools of red drum from the distant side of the island appreciates. also, made the mistake of thinking my fellow manunkind might move the anchors and boats if necessary while we were away. (snip) the grains of sand on shark island now though...so, another lesson learned without any injury except to my pride, and that quit functioning long ago. jeff ahh, shark oi-land, i know it well. jim, plaintiff #2, the kids, and i roamed all over the damned thing, years ago. very instructive, very wild. but, as i recall, pretty darn small. i could swear i could see the entire circumference. oh, well, maybe that was at hoigh toide. isn't it right smack in the middle of very rough seas amongst the shoals? anyways, thanks for a new high water mark for "hilarious"... yfitp wayno(wow, i wish i were there) |
Jeff Miller FB post
On Tue, 12 Oct 2010 05:27:39 -0700 (PDT), jeff miller
wrote: On Oct 10, 7:21*pm, Frank Reid © 2010 wrote: On Oct 10, 6:20*pm, Frank Reid © 2010 wrote: Jeff is on the first day of his fishing vacation. Jeff, a friend and MY dog went for a brief venture in his new boat. They found a small island, anchored, and walked ashore. (dog swam) Men fished, dog played and frolicked with other dog...s. After about 2 hours, they headed back to the boat.... found it sitting on dry land. It appears that Jeff was unaware that large bodies of water have things called "tides." Apparently, "tides" flow in and "tides" flow out and sometimes when the "tide" flows out.... well, you and your friend and your wife's dog are stuck in a boat on dry land for about 9 hours. And when the sun goes down, it gets a bit chilly. I hope he will be with you tomorrow. I also hope, for Jeff's sake, that MY dog is okay. This is his wife, Rachel, signing off. I'm thinking this beats the Millheim duck incident. Frank Reid yup, i'd agree frank. running down pilchards, terns, and sand crabs is much more difficult...and punishing...than a highway-waddling duck. they're much craftier too. if the damn ducks had lured me to a building, i'd probably just now be getting out of the pa jails. and for all those with sage advice...i'm well aware of tides. sometimes they move a bit quicker than one who is distracted by schools of red drum from the distant side of the island appreciates. also, made the mistake of thinking my fellow manunkind might move the anchors and boats if necessary while we were away. still, if one has to be stranded on a sandy island for 6 hours, i reckon it wasn't so bad. of course, ginger or maryanne would have been preferable companions. joe was none too happy...until i reminded him he was a co- defendant. nice sunset though. to top things off, my nav lights didn't work (i don't go out in the dark) and the trip in to harkers island doesn't have as many zigs and zags around buoys at night as are required in the daytime. G. Photos to follow...at some point. anyway, it was another adventure and couldn't have been a better location to be stuck. i am familiar with the deep water, the tides, the sloughs, and most of the grains of sand on shark island now though...so, another lesson learned without any injury except to my pride, and that quit functioning long ago. jeff s**it happens! You can plan for the best but... When we lived in NH I went to a restaurant by boat in Southern Maine I had to wait at least 4 hours for the tides to let me out I have also put my boat in the water TWICE w/o the plug Once OK! But twice??? Fred |
Jeff Miller FB post
I have never gone into the water with the plug out and never had tides
strand me. Then again, my inflatable giraffe without the plug gets kinda limp and I can always walk. Frank Reid |
Jeff Miller FB post
On Oct 12, 7:27*am, jeff miller wrote:
On Oct 10, 7:21*pm, Frank Reid © 2010 wrote: On Oct 10, 6:20*pm, Frank Reid © 2010 wrote: Jeff is on the first day of his fishing vacation. Jeff, a friend and MY dog went for a brief venture in his new boat. They found a small island, anchored, and walked ashore. (dog swam) Men fished, dog played and frolicked with other dog...s. After about 2 hours, they headed back to the boat.... found it sitting on dry land. It appears that Jeff was unaware that large bodies of water have things called "tides." Apparently, "tides" flow in and "tides" flow out and sometimes when the "tide" flows out.... well, you and your friend and your wife's dog are stuck in a boat on dry land for about 9 hours. And when the sun goes down, it gets a bit chilly. I hope he will be with you tomorrow. I also hope, for Jeff's sake, that MY dog is okay. This is his wife, Rachel, signing off. I'm thinking this beats the Millheim duck incident. Frank Reid yup, i'd agree frank. running down pilchards, terns, and sand crabs is much more difficult...and punishing...than a highway-waddling duck. they're much craftier too. if the damn ducks had lured me to a building, i'd probably just now be getting out of the pa jails. and for all those with sage advice...i'm well aware of tides. sometimes they move a bit quicker than one who is distracted by schools of red drum from the distant side of the island appreciates. also, made the mistake of thinking my fellow manunkind might move the anchors and boats if necessary while we were away. *still, if one has to be stranded on a sandy island for 6 hours, i reckon it wasn't so bad. of course, ginger or maryanne would have been preferable companions. joe was none too happy...until i reminded him he was a co- defendant. *nice sunset though. *to top things off, my nav lights didn't work (i don't go out in the dark) and the trip in to harkers island doesn't have as many zigs and zags around buoys at night as are required in the daytime. G. *Photos to follow...at some point. anyway, it was another adventure and couldn't have been a better location to be stuck. *i am familiar with the deep water, the tides, the sloughs, and most of the grains of sand on shark island now though... Same thing happened to me at Grandfather Rapids a few years ago. Tides come up FAST in rivers! And the fukkers leave ya for dead. :( so, another lesson learned without any injury except to my pride, and that quit functioning long ago. Pride. Overpriced and grossly overrated. I have found no use for it. Reminds me of dignity.....or calf brains. giles |
Jeff Miller FB post
On Tue, 12 Oct 2010 18:06:07 -0700 (PDT), Frank Reid © 2010
wrote: I have never gone into the water with the plug out and never had tides strand me. Then again, my inflatable giraffe without the plug Opulence...you has it... gets kinda limp and I can always walk. I bet walking is much easier if your giraffe is limp... TC, R Frank Reid |
Jeff Miller FB post
On Oct 12, 9:14*pm, wrote:
On Tue, 12 Oct 2010 18:06:07 -0700 (PDT), Frank Reid © 2010 wrote: I have never gone into the water with the plug out and never had tides strand me. *Then again, my inflatable giraffe without the plug Opulence...you has it... gets kinda limp and I can always walk. I bet walking is much easier if your giraffe is limp... One of the global truisms. Frank Reid |
Jeff Miller FB post
On Oct 13, 10:27*am, Frank Reid © 2010 wrote:
On Oct 12, 9:14*pm, wrote: On Tue, 12 Oct 2010 18:06:07 -0700 (PDT), Frank Reid © 2010 wrote: I have never gone into the water with the plug out and never had tides strand me. *Then again, my inflatable giraffe without the plug Opulence...you has it... gets kinda limp and I can always walk. I bet walking is much easier if your giraffe is limp... One of the global truisms. Frank Reid Like "Its hard to climb a ladder with a hat on"? --riverman (Much more meaningful with a Maine accent) |
Jeff Miller FB post
On Wed, 13 Oct 2010 01:09:58 -0700 (PDT), --riverman wrote:
On Oct 13, 10:27*am, Frank Reid © 2010 wrote: On Oct 12, 9:14*pm, wrote: On Tue, 12 Oct 2010 18:06:07 -0700 (PDT), Frank Reid © 2010 wrote: I have never gone into the water with the plug out and never had tides strand me. *Then again, my inflatable giraffe without the plug Opulence...you has it... gets kinda limp and I can always walk. I bet walking is much easier if your giraffe is limp... One of the global truisms. Frank Reid Like "Its hard to climb a ladder with a hat on"? --riverman (Much more meaningful with a Maine accent) O-o-o-oh...so now Olympia Snowe going on and on about "Johnny always having a hat on...." makes sense... HTH, R ....and I just sorta figured he was going for some weird old yankee Bret Michaels thing.... |
Jeff Miller FB post
On Tue, 12 Oct 2010 19:27:51 -0700 (PDT), Frank Reid © 2010
wrote: On Oct 12, 9:14*pm, wrote: On Tue, 12 Oct 2010 18:06:07 -0700 (PDT), Frank Reid © 2010 wrote: I have never gone into the water with the plug out and never had tides strand me. *Then again, my inflatable giraffe without the plug Opulence...you has it... gets kinda limp and I can always walk. I bet walking is much easier if your giraffe is limp... One of the global truisms. Frank Reid Hey, sometimes, it's all just one big tent... HTH, R |
Jeff Miller FB post
"--riverman" wrote in message ... On Oct 13, 10:27 am, Frank Reid © 2010 wrote: On Oct 12, 9:14 pm, wrote: On Tue, 12 Oct 2010 18:06:07 -0700 (PDT), Frank Reid © 2010 wrote: I have never gone into the water with the plug out and never had tides strand me. Then again, my inflatable giraffe without the plug Opulence...you has it... gets kinda limp and I can always walk. I bet walking is much easier if your giraffe is limp... One of the global truisms. Frank Reid Like "Its hard to climb a ladder with a hat on"? Why on earth should a ladder be wearing a hat ???? Bill --riverman (Much more meaningful with a Maine accent) |
Jeff Miller FB post
On 2010-10-13 17:48:30 -0400, "Bill Grey" said:
"--riverman" wrote in message ... On Oct 13, 10:27 am, Frank Reid © 2010 wrote: On Oct 12, 9:14 pm, wrote: On Tue, 12 Oct 2010 18:06:07 -0700 (PDT), Frank Reid © 2010 wrote: I have never gone into the water with the plug out and never had tides strand me. Then again, my inflatable giraffe without the plug Opulence...you has it... gets kinda limp and I can always walk. I bet walking is much easier if your giraffe is limp... One of the global truisms. Frank Reid Like "Its hard to climb a ladder with a hat on"? Why on earth should a ladder be wearing a hat ???? Bill chuckle |
Jeff Miller FB post
"Frank Reid © 2010" wrote in message ... Jeff is on the first day of his fishing vacation. Jeff, a friend and MY dog went for a brief venture in his new boat. They found a small island, anchored, and walked ashore. (dog swam) Men fished, dog played and frolicked with other dog...s. After about 2 hours, they headed back to the boat.... found it sitting on dry land. It appears that Jeff was unaware that large bodies of water have things called "tides." Apparently, "tides" flow in and "tides" flow out and sometimes when the "tide" flows out.... well, you and your friend and your wife's dog are stuck in a boat on dry land for about 9 hours. And when the sun goes down, it gets a bit chilly. I hope he will be with you tomorrow. I also hope, for Jeff's sake, that MY dog is okay. This is his wife, Rachel, signing off. Can we safely assume the dog's name is not "Supper"? -- TL, Tim (Please tell me it's "Shawl") |
Jeff Miller FB post
On Oct 19, 11:22*am, "Tim J."
wrote: Can we safely assume the dog's name is not "Supper"? -- TL, Tim (Please tell me it's "Shawl") Hey! Wow! Look who's back! Don't be such a stranger. You are sorely missed around these parts. giles |
Jeff Miller FB post
"Giles" wrote in message ... On Oct 19, 11:22 am, "Tim J." wrote: Can we safely assume the dog's name is not "Supper"? -- TL, Tim (Please tell me it's "Shawl") Hey! Wow! Look who's back! Don't be such a stranger. You are sorely missed around these parts. giles "Don't get around much any more. . ." -- TL, Tim |
Jeff Miller FB post
On Oct 20, 10:00*pm, "Tim J."
wrote: "Giles" wrote in message ... On Oct 19, 11:22 am, "Tim J." wrote: Can we safely assume the dog's name is not "Supper"? -- TL, Tim (Please tell me it's "Shawl") Hey! *Wow! *Look who's back! Don't be such a stranger. *You are sorely missed around these parts. giles "Don't get around much any more. . ." -- TL, Tim Ditto... |
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