![]() Stop the Pinon Canyon Expansion ![]() Join Wetpaint.com! ![]() Join the Glorious Republic of Bob on Wetpaint.com! (Carter and I are working on a logo.) My Blogroll is back! The newest within the last 24 hours are first:
Carter's New blog! Which he's been updating more.
especially my granddaughter!
In case you are interested, these are some of my favorite entries or entries that tell a lot about me:
Intro Pt. 2 Big Herbie, Little Herbie Evil Boy Scouts Job Hunting Pronghorn Antelope 1984 How and When to Ban Books 100 Things How We Got Roo Dead Drunk Resolutions Reiterator '06 Carter gets BLOWN UP!
Books I love:
1) The King James Bible – God 2) Have Spacesuit, Will Travel – Robert Heinlein 3) The Moon is a Harsh Mistress – Robert Heinlein 4) Hitchiker’s Guide to the Galaxy(all 5 books in the trilogy) – Douglas Adams 5) Ride the Dark Trail – Louis L’Amour 6) Fahrenheit 451 – Ray Bradbury 7) North to the Rails – Louis L’Amour *) A book I hated but think everyone in the world ought to read is 1984 – George Orwell.
http://www.feministsforlife.org/
Check out the attacks that the Boy Scouts of America receive because of what they believe and teach! ![]() Scarbrough's Garden. These are the kind folks that are going to help me grow a Savannah Melody Daylily! Scarbroughs Garden
My second award from Daveman looks just like five asterisks:
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Herb Thiel
Another of my daughter's, Abigail, has started a blog also. It is the Panther Pad. Also, here's a link to a story about hero. Not for an empty stomach, though. http://www.marines.mil/marinelink/mcn2000.nsf/lookupstoryref/2006217183923 Okay, first let me apologize for not writing to you guys all week, but sometimes life gets busy and thinks you should be busy along with it. As I have said before, I do have a life outside of the blogosphere even though some of you don't even believe in an "Out-of-Doors" experience. Here are the tidbits of news I have for you: My daughter Lizzy, aka, Belas, who has stopped by here on and off, has started her own blog! It is http://belascorner.blogdrive.com/ and she started her blog off with an introduction to the cast and characters. Anyway, please make sure and stop by. I also discovered http://www.soldiersangels.com/ which is an organization that lets you "adopt" a soldier or a whole unit. There is a lot to check out and see. I had received an e-mail from a friend who wanted to know (I abbreviate) how her kids could help the soldiers and had read about Carter on my blogs. I e-mailed Carter and he asked around and found that this group is doing the most good and it was recommended to him. If you have ever had friends or relatives in the military they can tell you how meaningful a letter or package can be. They have a big site and there is something for almost everyone to do. Finally, our pastor's wife has started a "Red Hat" society chapter. I don't know the name of the club or the club members "club names" but I did put up some pix. Janet had a hat made for Grandma Pike by a milliner especially for the occasion! It's beautiful. The gallery link is http://herbthiel.blogdrive.com/galleries?g=20 and I tried to make the files as small as possible so they would load quickly on any connection. In case you have not heard of this organization they are at http://www.redhatsociety.org/ and very loosely based on the poem by Jenny Joseph, called "Warning." Sorry this is so short, but if you had the week I had you might just throw the computer out the window. No, the computer is fine, it's just me that's frustrated and/or frustrating. Remember, the good book says, "Gobble up samples in shops." *Runs in at full tilt, Guido Jr chasing him with a fine Italian Salame. Panting.* Okay. Okay. Guido Jr. has convinced me to update. I told him I didn’t want to. I was feeling sorry for myself because I only had 8 people comment on my little de-lurking experiment. I suppose Sam is right and that I could update more often, that would probably help. BTW, the good book I use is sometimes THE Good Book (in different versions and paraphrases) and sometimes it is just the book of Herb. A big thanks to you guys that did/do comment. Anyhow, Guido has shown me the error of my blogging ways and I have seen the light. One of these entries will be about how the Blog Police and the Blog mafia are all in cahoots. But not this entry. I don’t like getting smacked with a Salame, no matter how high quality and tasty it is. And I don’t want my wittle hobby horse to have anything happen to him, either. Anyway, we had enough of a break for lunch yesterday that we were able to go and sit down to eat. Usually it is fast food or 7-11 specials, but every once in a while we get a chance like this. Now a lot of times, due to where we are in town, we wind going to one of the big chain restaurants, and their food is just fine. Predictable from franchise to franchise, you can order what you know you like and it is fairly similar. But that is not my favorite experience. I love Mom & Pop diners. They are truly the finest eating in the land as a general rule of thumb. If they have a meatloaf special, you know you are going to get a treat, even though the meatloaf is different at each place. Same with open-faced sandwiches. Roast beef on white bread with mashed potatoes smothered in dark brown gravy. There are a number of both chains and Mom & Pops here in We were downtown near the old courthouse, which is now the Pioneer’s Museum, by the CSHP doctor’s office. The name of the place is Detz Café and it is at 211 E Cucharras. We were there at a busy time of the day, but the service was still adequate. The thing that caught our attention, however, was a menu item. After you have looked at all different menus from all over, items kind of run into a sort of sameness, so I was surprised when Margaret said, “I think I’ll try this Grilled Swiss & Black Olive sandwich.” Yeah, really, a grilled Swiss & black olive sandwich; I had never heard of that before and I have been a few places in my time. She ordered that on wheat with a cup of soup and I ordered the more standard, typical-greasy-spoon-fare, grilled ham & Swiss on rye. When the food came we quartered the sandwiches as we are often wont to do for sharing and cross-tasting (a process quite unlike cross-dressing), and sure enough, piled in the center of the sandwich and throughout was a copious amount of sliced black olives melted into the Swiss cheese. It looked like about a third of a can or so, maybe a little more, I’m not a real good judge of measurements like that; I just know that there appeared to be approximately one boatload full. The real test was about to take place now. Neither of us ever having seen or heard of such a sandwich, but yet it sounding at least intriguing, we both took a bite at the same time. Well, let me tell you fellers and gals that it was great. Fantastic. Wonderful. I have never had anything quite like it. If you want to try something new and unusual, try that, except I would have had it on rye instead. Now, before you make travel plans, even those who live in the Springs, let alone in other states and countries, I would not say to make a special trip to go to this diner unless you really, really, really like trying new places and want to have this sandwich and can’t make it at home. While I do plan to go to this place again, maybe on an off-time when I can see the true quality of service they offer (Not that it was bad, it just…was, that’s all) and I will absolutely order this sandwich again from there. It was great. The coffee was good and fresh and strong as well. The restaurant that had been there before, actually it was two restaurants ago, had really great breakfasts, but the coffee tasted like poorly brewed, weak tea, strained through a tube sock, and a good cup of coffee is essential to diner dining in my book. Anyway, the coffee was good when we could get some (they were busy) but one thing lacked. People who eat out a lot may have noticed a trend toward the retro fashion, restaurants wanting to make you feel like you are getting that 50’s – 60’s dining experience. I can tell you how to figure out how good they really are at it. Besides the coffee and refillings of the coffee there is another item that is essential to an authentic diner experience. Soda fountains, diners and the ice cream shop that Carter and I used to hang out at all had one thing in common: the malt. Properly called a malted milk, it’s NOT a shake, which is mere ice cream and milk. A malt is made with generous amounts of malt powder added to the milk and ice cream. It is properly made in a stainless steel cup that attaches to a special blender. Scoop a bunch of ice cream in, pour in some milk and spoon heaping amounts of malt powder in. Then it is blended and the stainless steel becomes cold to the touch. The waitress bring the frozen cup along with a glass (or two, if you are sharing with someone), a straw (or two) and pours the drink into the glass, LEAVING THE STAINLESS STEEL MIXING CUP BEHIND so you can clean out every last drop. If your “malt” is not made and served in this way, then you have not had the real soda fountain/malt shop/ice cream shop/diner experience. The restaurant either doesn’t have anyone there who is old enough to remember how to do it or they are trying to cut corners, taking advantage of the retro fashion. I’m not sure what it was in this case. I asked the gal if they served real malts or just shakes, and she told me malts. Having had the amazing sandwich and good coffee, if somewhat mediocre service, I thought I would give it a try. What a bummer. I should have left a good experience alone. The malt came (I order vanilla malts so I can taste the malt) in a regular sized glass, topped with whipped cream, which was a nice touch, and a straw. Not even a “here ya go, hon.” Bland. Like a shake with a little malt sprinkled in. No malt texture and almost no malt taste. Icky. When we checked out she said, “How was that malt?” I actually said, “I’ve had better, but it wasn’t the worst I ever had.” I left the requisite (In America) 15% tip and we left. Since it was so busy and since I have never seen a grilled swiss & black olive sandwich anywhere else, I will probably go back and give them another try, but I won’t recommend anyone go out of their way, unless they absolutely have to try this sandwich and I certainly will not EVER order a Vanilla malted there again. The Good Book says, “Feed me with food convenient for me” First, thanks FTS, for adding me to your blogroll. In my opinion it is always an honor to be added to someone's but to be added to a writer's is the bigtime for me. I have added a blogroll. There are 33 entries there so far and I know I missed a couple. If I did, I am sorry, and this would be a great time to segue into my birthday request. Yes, I am 46 today and there is a present each one of you can give me, if you will. I saw Scott at http://husbands.blogdrive.com/ do this one time before the old computer crashed and I thought it was a cool idea and know others have done it since. We read people's blogs and websites for a wide variety of reasons and don't feel the need, every single time, to make a comment and oftentimes just sort of lurk in the shadows and never comment for one reason or another. For my birthday present, I would like to know how many people actually do stop by here, so I would like to ask everyone that reads this to leave a comment. Put your name and website in the appropriate boxes so everyone can see your link, too. Thanks a lot, this will be the greatest B-day present ever! Oh, and the good book says, "Thou shalt make Herb's birthday happy by leaving a comment." Well, I didn't say WHICH good book... It all started with a couple of friends telling me that if I had a blog I could keep family and friends up-to-date on all the goings on and I could practice writing. That sounded good, I thought, and I had a friend here on Blogdrive that had been blogging for a while and wahoo, this blog was born. I had already written a website in HTML (which I have since taken down. The free server I used kept adding so many pop-ups and banners and click-heres that it was getting ridiculous. Sure, I was getting the server space for free but they were making good money off of me. I was proud of it, though because I wrote it in Notepad and Word. People here at Blogdrive that whine about having one little banner on their site should be glad that that's all. Well, now there is always some "dating" one on the comments page which are often nothing like what I would choose to allow, but that's another parenthetical comment for a different entry. Anyway, I pay $5.00 a month and have no banner and an unlimited photo gallery.) so this blogging thing seemed a natural progression. Since that initial entry, there have been some changes in my thoughts about what this blog should be and what it should contain, so let me introduce to you, My Blog. The Cast of Characters: Savannah Melody, Grandbaby as beautiful as a rare flower. Ben, my son, Savannah's daddy Isabel, Ben's wife Elizabeth, or Lizzy, my daughter Troy, her husband Douglas Bartholomew, their baby-to-be Tabitha, sometimes known as "Tab-the-Bad-Cat." teenage daughter and former Vet Assistant extraordinaire. Abigail, other teenage daughter and straight A high school student Margaret, my tolerant wife, Home Health Care CNA who does not like to be in the spotlight or put on the spot Grandma Pike, Margaret's mother, who lives with us Janet or Aunt Janet, Margaret's sister who also lives with us Carter, an old (I mean OOOOOLllddd) High School buddy who is a Cav warhorse supreme Snoopy, the dog, part Border Collie, part whatever-jumped-the-fence, maybe Chow. All black, sometimes 50 pounds of super dog and sometimes 50 pounds of stupid dog. Four mighty and heroic hunters, commonly called cats: Fee-foe, the gentle giant, who is the smallest of them all, but definitely the top cat Fraidy Cat, her brother Bagheera, a sleek, all black cat that we inherited from friends who is the only one that not only hates Snoopy but is just as willing to fight with her as run away from her. And Cookie, a full-blooded "La Perm" which has tightly curled hair all over, even its whiskers are curly and is by far the most intelligent of them all since she not only likes me, but loves me. We inherited her also. Professor Whiz and Professor Clearwater, parakeets and Roo Boom-Boom Thiel, the giant white rabbit. Not "Harvey" giant white rabbit, just a really heavy, really big rabbit. He was given to Abigail when she was a little girl and I, under duress, agreed and now have the weekly chore of cleaning his cage. Another character (not really a pet) that comes around sometimes now but used to be a more regular part of the furniture is Ashley, who comes around and plays games with Janet and has been sort of a fixture for a long time. It is directly because of her father's Christian attitude that we are all still in church today. I announced early on when I started blogging that I did not want to stick to just one subject or theme. Since it is my blog, it is about me and whatever strikes my fancy to write about. I told my church friends that I did not plan to write only about church related things, I told my other friends I would not be only writing about secular things. It is my blog and I write what I feel inspired to write. At Christmas time I wrote several pieces about the one true God coming to Earth as well as a couple about Santa. I have written a couple of political pieces as well. I guess I am conservative, although there are certain points of the libertarian agenda I find appealing. I think that there are even things I can agree with more moderate liberals on. I just write because I like to write. I had originally stated that I planned to write at least 350 words every single day as a writing exercise, but then was told it should be 1000 words a day. One contest I plan to enter this year has a 1500 word limit. That seems to be about the right word count for me and I generally try not to stray too far from that. And last, but not least, I end every entry with a remark, 'The Good Book says." This is in honor of Reb Tevye, from "Fiddler on the Roof." Sometimes it is a direct quote from the King James Version of the Bible, sometimes a quote from some other version and sometimes just some nonsense that I thought was relevant or hysterically funny at the moment. Remember, The good book says, "Verily, Verily I say unto thee, whosoever readeth Herb's blogs shall be counted wise." I'd been thinking about a lot of different things to write about and then I heard it was Edgar Alan Poe's(1809 – 1849) 197th birthday today ( >>>>> As always, my apologies to Daveman, who is a good sport and harbinger of nice wishes to people, to all of the readers who know the real poem and the real beauty of it and especially to my hero, E.A. Poe, who accomplished more in 40 years than I ever started and is likely, from all the ripoffs of him over the years, rolling over in his grave, evermore. May he roll there Nevermore. >>>>> The Craven Once upon old blogdrive dreary, while I pondered, weak and weary, O'er the topic I should choose to blog on as I'd done before. While I dozed off, plainly napping, quite suddenly there came a tapping As of someone gently rapping, rapping on my monitor. "'Tis some strange bird", I did mutter, as I drooled and I snored, "Probably some fowl raven, only this and nothing more." Ah, I think now it was kind of scary, being cold in January Crisp and cold that January night that I didst snooze and snore. I had no excuse of fog; I simply had not updated my blog. I could blame it on the dog if I updated nevermore. Then again I heard the tapping as of some loud caveman rapping Breaking down my monitor, leaving me alone no more. Would my writing ever make it? Did people read me or just fake it I didn't think that I could take it, I could not write anymore. Why, I thought now, should I bother, blogging about father mother And sometimes my younger brothers both of whom I did adore? Writing was hard work and who read it? And then even as I said it I heard that sound and began to dread it, that tapping on my monitor. Then from somewhere came a hobbling, as of some old fart a-toddling, One who might need mollycoddling, it was the Daveman to be sure. There bedraggled, bearded, sporting, he sat upon my davenport and Took my laptop and started sorting my messy desktop, messier than days of yore. "You've been too slack about updating and I've come to do some berating Besides I can't get any dating so I came to see this mess of lore." "Leave my messy desk aside and tell me where you had been hiding Who now come to me chiding, chiding me to update more. Writing I am going to give up, I have tried it from a young pup I was looking synonyms up and I don't not want to write nevermore." Confused he sat there staring, staring, little children he'd be scaring, If they saw how he was glaring, trying my double-negative to sort. "You'll be writing evermore?" Quoted Daveman, "Evermore? How can you type as you snore?" Quoth I, "I shall blog on nevermore." Soon then Daveman toddled closer and the smell grew gross and grosser Grosser than anything I had smelled before. He smelled like Carter evermore. This was worse than Ashley's sneakers, the picture growing bleaker, bleaker, Till my story to a corner bore. I wrote myself into a corner evermore. Then the Daveman stood there, chuckling, chortling, and laughing until he was snorting At my dilemma he was cavorting, jocularity evermore. "Be gone!" I cried out to the Daveman, "If'n you all don't behave man I'll borrow Abby Normal's frying pan, the one whereon she hath written Daveman That she chaseth you off with evermore." "Ya'll try it once you won't try it never more!" Quoth the Daveman, "nevermore!" And upon my once clean couch sat the being whose chewing gum he spat If you can imagine that he spat his gum out on my floor! "Begone!" again cried I as I tried him up to pry If Margaret found that gum we'd both die, chewing gum spat on the floor. Had he been invaded by alien spore? Had the true Daveman gone forevermore? "Daveman, Daveman are you in there? Are you in there anymore?" Quoth the Daveman, "Evermore. I am Daveman evermore." "I have had this pain in my foot and the drugs that I got were good And I've took more than I ever would just to be your harbinger" "My harbinger"? Questioned I, wondering what sort of message that he bore "Yes a message give you I must before I explode or I bust And the message, I think, goes thus, Thou must blog on evermore!" Only this and nothing more. Quoth the Daveman, "evermore!" I stammered and I stuttered, "but how?" He just said, "I have to go now The drugs are beginning to take effect now, I just heard a purple cow now." So the Daveman tapped upon the monitor and there was a rapping, the tapping as before and I awoke with keyboard-face evermore So even though I am quite groggy I Know I must keep up all things bloggy Bloggier than e'er was blogged before I knew that I must update evermore. Instead of something from the good book, here is the first paragraph of "The Fall of the House of Usher": DURING the whole of a dull, dark, and soundless day in the autumn of the year, when the clouds hung oppressively low in the heavens, I had been passing alone, on horseback, through a singularly dreary tract of country ; and at length found myself, as the shades of the evening drew on, within view of the melancholy House of Usher. I know not how it was — but, with the first glimpse of the building, a sense of insufferable gloom pervaded my spirit. I say insufferable ; for the feeling was unrelieved by any of that half-pleasurable, because poetic, sentiment, with which the mind usually receives even the sternest natural images of the desolate or terrible. I looked upon the scene before me — upon the mere house, and the simple landscape features of the domain — upon the bleak walls — upon the vacant eye-like windows — upon a few rank sedges — and upon a few white trunks of decayed trees — with an utter depression of soul which I can compare to no earthly sensation more properly than to the after-dream of the reveller upon opium — the bitter lapse into everyday life — the hideous dropping off of the veil. There was an iciness, a sinking, a sickening of the heart — an unredeemed dreariness of thought which no goading of the imagination could torture into aught of the sublime. What was it — I paused to think — what was it that so unnerved me in the contemplation of the House of Usher ? It was a mystery all insoluble ; nor could I grapple with the shadowy fancies that crowded upon me as I pondered. I was forced to fall back upon the unsatisfactory conclusion, that while, beyond doubt, there are combinations of very simple natural objects which have the power of thus affecting us, still the analysis of this power lies among considerations beyond our depth. It was possible, I reflected, that a mere different arrangement of the particulars of the scene, of the details of the picture, would be sufficient to modify, or perhaps to annihilate its capacity for sorrowful impression ; and, acting upon this idea, I reined my horse to the precipitous brink of a black and lurid tarn that lay in unruffled lustre by the dwelling, and gazed down — but with a shudder even more thrilling than before — upon the remodelled and inverted images of the gray sedge, and the ghastly tree-stems, and the vacant and eye-like windows. Nevertheless, in this mansion of gloom I now proposed to myself a sojourn of some weeks. Its proprietor, Roderick Usher, had been one of my boon companions in boyhood; Since Tabitha “fixed” the laptop by checking to see if the power cord was plugged in all the way, I guess I have no excuse not to update. Well, I still have the usual one, procrastination. That’s a topic that can wait, however. Congratulations to my daughter, Abigail, who got her report card back with all A’s! That’s pretty wonderful. We didn’t push her to get all A’s, but I did tell her that I expected she would do the best job she could and work her hardest in all of her subjects. She did, too! She earned those grades. There were a couple of her classes that the teachers told the kids “don’t expect to get an ‘A’ in my class. I don’t give ‘A’s.’” Well, well, well. I am very proud of her diligence and hard work. I listed “love a liberal” in my resolutions this year. One of the radio stations I listen to frequently, KCMN, 1530 AM, which broadcasts in HD AM stereo and plays mostly big band and standards, has a frequent editorial from their owner, Don Crawford, every once in a while. Generally a conservative, he made a good sounding recommendation for a New Year’s resolution. “If you’re a liberal, love a conservative, if you’re a conservative, love a liberal.” His idea was that if people will actually talk to each other about their ideologies, there will be more intelligent dialogue and not just a bunch of mudslinging and name-calling. Our country will be a better place if we can have conscientious, thoughtful discussion and understand where each other comes from. This sounded like a really good idea, but I ran into a snag. Real people, not TV or Radio personalities don’t fit into boxes. Why anyone would care that a 78 yr old one-hit wonder praised the socialist revolution in Anyway, I said all of that to say that most people in real life are not that easy to box up. Most people are not completely fanatical right-wingers or totally far-out lefty looneys (except maybe in I call myself a Conservative but really, I wonder if I am? After thinking it over I wonder if I am not a Moderate Liberal Conservative Republican Democrat Libertarian Prohibitionist with stinky feet. Seriously, after looking at my views on a lot of things, I think it depends on the issue and I think that is true for most people. I may be a prohibitionist in the idea that all alcoholic beverages should be treated as controlled substances and only given out on prescription, but, since it is not likely that that will ever happen and we are not likely to outlaw cigarettes or booze anytime soon, then why not legalize Marijuana? Tax it the way cigs and booze are taxed, regulate it and make it readily available to anyone over the legal age. I know one person that I met when I worked at the bookstore (which at a high-up level promoted a liberal agenda) who is a pro-life enviro-vegan. Is she liberal or conservative? I don’t know. There are a lot of people who are like that. I read a book by a woman named Tammy Bruce http://www.tammybruce.com/ called, “The New Thought Police.” This woman was head of NOW and decided that she wanted to fight pornography so she enlisted the aid of several conservative Christian men’s groups. That got her in trouble and eventually fired, not because she chose to fight porn, but because of who she had helping her do it. Read her book. I haven’t read any of her other ones, but that one is a real eye-opener. I still recommend 1984 and Fahrenheit 451 if you haven’t read them yet. Make them your resolution this year. 1984 gave me goose bumps when I read the last sentence and still gives me the screaming heebie-jeebies to think about how real it could be. The second, Fahrenheit 451, (not to be confused with a lying, blathering fool’s movie of a similar title) is a book whose message has stayed with me since High School and again, when you read it and look around at our “civilization” you can easily envision it happening. Now I have found it’s so easy to rile people that don’t know what they believe in or why that I try not to purposely do it. It’s like shooting sitting ducks. I could walk up to a gaggle of libs when I worked in the bookstore and get them all worked into a nigh-murderous frenzy by simply saying, “George W. Bush is my hero.” After the fiery tirades ensued it turned out that they didn’t have such strongly held beliefs as they did a hatred for the man. This is not thought-provoking or challenging. “George Bush this about the environment! George Bush that about the environment!” “Why do you drive that big car 20 miles across town at a high rate of speed alone instead of using mass transit or carpooling?” “Sputter-sputter, it’s not about that.” “You’re going to preach to me about the environment when you could take simple steps on your own to help and you don’t? I drive the speed limit, at least.” “Sputter-sputter.” Anyway, I may have to modify my resolution to, “Find someone who doesn’t agree with me and Remember, the good book says, “If you cross your eyes like that they could stick and you could get eyecrosserosis.” What? Well, “Hank the Cowdog” is a good book. This is an old piece, but I am having trouble with the little dingus that sticks into the laptop to charge it up, so by the time I read everyone's blog's this morning I didn't have any time to update. So, we will sea how well Blogdrive's spell chequer does. Eye Halve A Spelling Chequer Eye halve a spelling chequer Eye strike a key and type a word As soon as a mist ache is maid Eye have run this poem threw it Sauce Unknown Here is the "fixed-up" version: This is an old piece, but I am having trouble with the little dingus that sticks into the laptop to charge it up, so by the time I read everyone's bloc's this morning I didn't have any time to update. So, we will sea how well Baldric's spell checker does. Eye Halve A Spelling Checker Eye halve a spelling checker Eye strike a key and type a word As soon as a mist ache is maid Eye have run this poem threw it Sauce Unknown Let’s don’t forget to pray for Carter and all the boys in the catbox. Got e-mail from him, “had to shepard a convoy through the other night.3 hour convoy took 11 hours.sent a terorist to meet allah(not me personally),and took some fire and IEDs.gotta go out again tonight” “…mebbe.Winston Churchill once opined that there is nothing as exhilarating as being fired upon by the enemy with absolutely no effect.he was right.” “…and yer ugly” I’m sure he meant me to forward that last remark to Daveman. No, it’s actually just to show he’s still his old self. IED is “Improvised Explosive Devices.” Roadside bombs. At some other point I will discuss my personal thoughts on the war, but this entry is not about that. It is about my friend, who, even though his feet stink and he’s uglier than sin (Fortunately his pretty little daughters didn’t get their looks from him) is a good soldier and a good man. Not perfect by any stretch of anyone’s imagination, except maybe his kids', but a good guy. Remember, The Good Book says, “Shall your brethren go to war, and shall ye sit here?” | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||