Congrats on the cool gig.
Thanks man!
Congrats on the cool gig.
Been there yo.$411.00 fare , pith helmet in the back seat , that's a drug addled Hunter S. Thompson adventure game ?
Been there yo.
Lynn, Ma.Oh i believe it , were you working in NYC on 911 ?
The full DeVito .I was running a now defunct call center.
You find any "natural resources"? Bumpers? Fenders? 1987 Blaupunkt stereo units?This morning's ration of physical fitness training involved hiking the junkyard trails with a backpack full of tools and water.
It was pretty good.
Yup. Multiple side dents r bad.Got a tail light to replace the one I smashed getting that boat off the truck.
Plan was good. Everything seemed to be lined up good. Missed it by that much.
Got a handle/latch for the tailgate so I don't have to reach around inside and pull the rods together anymore.
Got a windshield washer pump so I don't have to slosh my water bottle out the window anymore but forgot the little squirty things that stick in the hood. I took those off sometime to work on something and lost them, so still in sloshing water bottle mode.
Then I strolled around checking out the inventory since the last time I was there. Working trucks get picked over pretty quick.
They have several Buick luxury cars like mine. Couple even in the same color. Although mine spent a lot of its life in a garage in Minnesota and the ones here have been roasting and fading in the sun so they're really not the same color anyways.
Also, in addition to grandparents, golf enthusiasts, and people of refined tastes such as myself, these things also seem to be popular with the type of people that enjoy $3000 wheels and boom boom stereo systems but really eschew basic maintenance. Gotta use your powers of deductive reasoning along with your psychological profiling skills to assess which of the above owned the donor car and thus how it was treated.
That reminds me I also forgot I was gonna grab the electronic bits off the fuel sending unit in one of those Buicks. The gauge in mine can't be trusted anymore.
Fill up the tank and reset the trip odometer. When it gets to 200 miles, fill it up and reset the miles again.
Maybe I'll go back tomorrow. Get that stuff and probably a couple other odds and ends I forgot.
It's posts like this that make me think of you when I hear this song.Got a tail light to replace the one I smashed getting that boat off the truck.
Plan was good. Everything seemed to be lined up good. Missed it by that much.
Got a handle/latch for the tailgate so I don't have to reach around inside and pull the rods together anymore.
Got a windshield washer pump so I don't have to slosh my water bottle out the window anymore but forgot the little squirty things that stick in the hood. I took those off sometime to work on something and lost them, so still in sloshing water bottle mode.
Then I strolled around checking out the inventory since the last time I was there. Working trucks get picked over pretty quick.
They have several Buick luxury cars like mine. Couple even in the same color. Although mine spent a lot of its life in a garage in Minnesota and the ones here have been roasting and fading in the sun so they're really not the same color anyways.
Also, in addition to grandparents, golf enthusiasts, and people of refined tastes such as myself, these things also seem to be popular with the type of people that enjoy $3000 wheels and boom boom stereo systems but really eschew basic maintenance. Gotta use your powers of deductive reasoning along with your psychological profiling skills to assess which of the above owned the donor car and thus how it was treated.