Quote:
Originally Posted by To_be_Quite_Honest
So basically during those three generations, its safe to say you weren't a part of all three right?
You couldn't have seen EVERYTHING that the wind did during those three generations and to be quite honest I highly doubt that you have documentation of anything NOT happening? The funny thing is I said this happened in the winter, while the town was empty... except for you i guess, watching what the wind does.
I dated a girl who's grandmother has a cabin in waterton. In the spring I would go out there and take the boards off the windows and help get it ready for cabin season. When asking about the boards, that was the answer i got... I am truly sorry... my info must be dead wrong, maybe grandma was only a one or two generation resident.
I thought this was a thread about sharing simple tidbits and anecdotes about waterton, not discrediting simple comments.
on another note
The RCMP barracks is a cool rustic building. I was lucky to party with some off duty guys who had an after thirsty bear party inside the RC barracks. Their kitchen cupboards were full of booze, 60 pounders of every type of alcohol. those guys could drink...
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Claiming that "huge rocks end up whipping right through town" is not a simple comment, it's a completely false statement that is misleading. We go there in the winter all the time and the rocks are covered in about four feet of snow. So unless the wind is picking up huge rocks covered in four feet of snow and whipping them through town and I'm not seeing any reciprocal damage then I guess you could be right.
Quote:
Originally Posted by icarus
You know how in deserted mining towns the tumbleweed blows down the main street? Well that's what is like in Waterton, except instead of tumbleweed it's boulders ferried along by the breeze.
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LOL