Forum Discussion
40 Replies
- Boon_DockerExplorer III
Gjac wrote:
On my first trip after I retired I found a antler from a small deer in Canada, I made a clothes rack with it in my bedroom. Since then I found a cowboy stirrup in Montana that I cleaned up and displayed, a horseshoe in Alaska, a set of large deer antlers in Tenn., and butterflies in Florida. When I look at the items I think about the trips. Also found alligator teeth, a wild pigs tusk, seashells, agates and crystals in my travels and other items but they are not on display.
Don't let dars see you doing that. You could get a real tongue
lashing. :B - GjacExplorer IIIOn my first trip after I retired I found a antler from a small deer in Canada, I made a clothes rack with it in my bedroom. Since then I found a cowboy stirrup in Montana that I cleaned up and displayed, a horseshoe in Alaska, a set of large deer antlers in Tenn., and butterflies in Florida. When I look at the items I think about the trips. Also found alligator teeth, a wild pigs tusk, seashells, agates and crystals in my travels and other items but they are not on display.
- buckyExplorer IIIt's interesting that a personality profile my employer uses for new hires includes a question about how things make you feel. One of the examples involves another human breaking a "rule" and how angry that does or doesn't make you.
If you score that wrong you don't get hired. We are a public facing business, perhaps in manufacturing or ditch digging it wouldn't matter.
IE somebody needs a hug. - dewey02Explorer II
jwmII wrote:
darsben wrote:
Let me see a person who takes things that do not belong to them.
With the morals that state if you lose something or leave it in plain sight then I will take it and feel no remorse for you.
I will also take things that do not belong to me so others cannot have the joy of discovering it.and wondering how it got where it was and thinking about the history of it and talking with your children about it.
AS YOU SEE I OBJECT TO YOUR LACK OF CONSIDERATION OF OTHER PEOPLE ON THE PLANET.
My advice return it to where it has sat for the past 50-60 years or do you need the money that bad?
WOW!! Let me see a person with no room for imagination because he is so full of his definition of what is proper and improper that his mind split open and lost all of its marbles that are being further buried in the sand as lost artifacts.
Should you come across any of those lost marbles, be sure to leave them as they lay (or is that lie?) :) - jwmIIExplorer
darsben wrote:
Let me see a person who takes things that do not belong to them.
With the morals that state if you lose something or leave it in plain sight then I will take it and feel no remorse for you.
I will also take things that do not belong to me so others cannot have the joy of discovering it.and wondering how it got where it was and thinking about the history of it and talking with your children about it.
AS YOU SEE I OBJECT TO YOUR LACK OF CONSIDERATION OF OTHER PEOPLE ON THE PLANET.
My advice return it to where it has sat for the past 50-60 years or do you need the money that bad?
WOW!! Let me see a person with no room for imagination because he is so full of his definition of what is proper and improper that his mind split open and lost all of its marbles that are being further buried in the sand as lost artifacts. - buckyExplorer III wonder who collected them just to leave. Surprised scrappers haven't scavenged all of this stuff.
When scrap metal hit a high a few years ago a lot of old farm equipment and some pretty restorable cars and trucks in the woods around here went missing. - slickrock_steveExplorerLots of old places in the desert around here have "treasure piles", and are fun to pick at. I DO LEAVE it there, as what I might take, my Wife would promptly discard as an old can, or ugly bottle!
- x96mnnExplorerLMAO.
People amaze me! Guy finds an old rusty milk jug and there should be a morel delema about keeping it.
8 months back a guy post how he is going to clearly try and rip off a dealer where his RV which was on consignment was stolen, and that was no issue and defended.
World is messed up! - dewey02Explorer IIAbout 30 years ago whilst in the U.P., I was walking along an old logging railroad grade through the swamp. A USFS archaeologist was walking with me as we were using it as a convenient (and somewhat drier) path across the swamp. The grade no longer had rails, but did have old and rotten cedar logs that had been in place for probably 70 years, along with the occasional metal fasteners and rail spikes that once held the rails in place. The grade went on for many miles.
I bent down and picked up a railroad spike and was looking at it as we walked along. The archaeo finally noticed what I had done and began yelling at me for disturbing the spike and told me that I had to go and put it back exactly where I had found it.
Yeah, OK. Whatever. - Roy_LynneExplorerMother Nature in her finest.
About Campground 101
Recommendations, reviews, and the inside scoop from fellow travelers.14,730 PostsLatest Activity: Jul 03, 2025