#16330 - 05/23/03 02:30 PM
Thanks
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Veteran
Registered: 12/18/02
Posts: 1320
Loc: France
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Since I have discovered the ETS web site and this forum, I cannot spend a day without checking for new posts.
And every day, I learn a little bit of information : from "how to crap in the wood" <img src="images/graemlins/grin.gif" alt="" /> to "is dog food good for you" (incidentally, I guess I will now upgrade my own cat's food to a better brand, just in case I have to share her meals .... <img src="images/graemlins/cool.gif" alt="" /> ), with "how to make fire with a pepsi bottle cap" in between ..... and so many others subjects I had not even thought about <img src="images/graemlins/confused.gif" alt="" /> .....
Thanks to Doug and Chris for maintaining this forum ... Thanks to all of you, for sharing your knowledge.
Alain
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Alain
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#16331 - 05/23/03 02:54 PM
Re: Thanks
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Veteran
Registered: 05/23/02
Posts: 1403
Loc: Brooklyn, New York
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If you are addicted, ETS Anonymous will hold it's anual meeting soon... Please check ETS forum more often for meeting times. Our 12 step program is designed to cure you from assumptions, cheap tools and faulty equipment. It teaches you how to cope with ignorant people. You will learn how to make sound decisions and right choices in many difficult situations. You will be equipped to survive and prepared to lead.
Hi my name is Matt and I'm an ETS junkie... It started slowly, first it was few extra items in my pockets, than a FAK, than PSK and than full blow bug out kit. I stole my mom's TV to pay for my Wave... How did it make me feel? It made me feel grandious (Wave carrying, not TV stealing). Now I'm better but I take my life one day at the time. (wipes a tear off).
Matt
Disclaimer: No I'm not making fun of AA, when I was in college part of the requirments for my degree (Forensic Psych) was to help run AA meetings. I think these people have more currage and will than some of the "normal" members of society.
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#16332 - 05/23/03 03:48 PM
Re: Thanks
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Anonymous
Unregistered
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... designed to cure you from assumptions, cheap tools and faulty equipment. It teaches you how to cope with ignorant people. Not to mention how to politely discuss controversial topics such as knives, guns and occasionally politics with fanatics who normally would rather use their equipment on each other than agree. <img src="images/graemlins/wink.gif" alt="" />
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#16333 - 05/26/03 05:24 PM
Re: Thanks
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Carpal Tunnel
Registered: 02/09/01
Posts: 3824
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Some of the other survival sites are even silly enough to debate the merits and alternate uses of a Swiss Army Knife's corkscrew <img src="images/graemlins/confused.gif" alt="" /> I've even seen them used to hold small firesteels. Any real survivalist carries one. I fully expect to someday collapse at some Canadien's cabin in the woods, only to find row on row of canned food and wine bottles. Then those who sneer at my P38 and corkscrew will hear about it <img src="images/graemlins/grin.gif" alt="" />
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#16334 - 05/26/03 05:34 PM
Re: Thanks
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Pooh-Bah
Registered: 04/08/02
Posts: 1821
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i have heard that wine bottle's with corkscrew are starting to become rare and in about 10 years it will be hard to find a wine bottle with a corkscrew. Apperently people realised that a twist cap, like one on a soda bottle does the same job, without affecting the taste or something. it's easyer to open and most importent for the manufacture: CHEAPER ! so proberbly not much or none, helping chicks with closed wine bottle's for me.. <img src="images/graemlins/tongue.gif" alt="" />
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#16335 - 05/27/03 03:20 AM
Re: Thanks
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Veteran
Registered: 12/10/01
Posts: 1272
Loc: Upper Mississippi River Valley...
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>>in about 10 years it will be hard to find a wine bottle with a corkscrew<<
Eeew! Not until plastic caps can breathe the same as corks. All good red wines improve with age after bottling (up to a point) and the breathing thru the cork is a critical part of that. I'll give up my SAK corkscrew when they pry it from my cold, dead fingers... seriously, I'm not even interested in SAKs that do not have a corkscrew.
Anyway, uncorking a bottle of good wine is part of a multi step ritual that heightens the anticipation of that first sip... just wouldn't be the same...
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#16336 - 05/27/03 05:57 AM
Re: Thanks
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@
Member
Registered: 09/07/01
Posts: 181
Loc: Dardanelles
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why not just cut the neck of the bottle with a kukri or parang <img src="images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />
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#16337 - 05/27/03 07:36 AM
Re: Thanks
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Veteran
Registered: 12/18/02
Posts: 1320
Loc: France
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You do that only with champagne bottles !!
Alain
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Alain
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#16338 - 05/27/03 09:06 AM
Re: Thanks
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@
Member
Registered: 09/07/01
Posts: 181
Loc: Dardanelles
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<img src="images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" /> a bottle is a bottle anyway <img src="images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />
burak
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#16339 - 05/27/03 09:50 AM
Re: Thanks
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Veteran
Registered: 12/18/02
Posts: 1320
Loc: France
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[a bottle is a bottle...] no, no, no ......... There are bottles and bottles. As there are different wines.
I guess you have never tasted a 1957 Port Wine, for instance ..... You would never even think of "opening" it with a Kukry .... you would get pieces of glass in the wine. And you would have to discard the bottle, a true scandal !!!!! <img src="images/graemlins/crazy.gif" alt="" /> Now, a bottle of champagne, being under pressure, is easy to "cut" open : simply slide the back of the kukry blade along the neck of the bottle and hit the bulge at the top, just below the cork. That's a classy way to open a champagne bottle ! <img src="images/graemlins/grin.gif" alt="" />
Alain
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Alain
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