View allAll Photos Tagged 141:
Motorola V66, Motorola SLVR, Blackberry Flip, HTC G1, HTC G2
it's interesting to note that i haven't actually purchased any of these phones until the G2. Everything was either given to me, free, or borrowed.
Damn! Here it is clone week and I've lost track of my remote. The last time I used it was at ohanami. I don't know if I dropped it there or if I've just misplaced it under the clutter. It's really not easy doing a close clone without a remote. Each time I trigger the self-timer everything moves. I hope I'll come up with a better one before the week is up.
My first official trip to the new gym today and as I enter the machine gym I'm confronted with about 50 middle-aged and older women in Hawaiian garb waiting for their hula class to start. I'm starting to fear that the target audience for this place is rich old housewives. So much for my fantasy of hot young women in skimpy costumes sweating on the machines.
141/365 - November 17, 2009
Margaret cut her thumb while prepping dinner tonight. Poor, sad Sunshine. :(
Castillejo Añover 21/08/2010: 334.004.9 con la rama de coches 4B4 del tren Talgo 271, Almería – Madrid Chamartin.
English:
Castillejo Añover (Madrid, Spain) August 21 2010: Locomotive 334.004.9 with the branch of cars 4B4 of the train Talgo 271, coming from Almería and destination Madrid Chamartin.
May 21, 2021
Big Fish was the movie of the night In Cabbagetown Park. Hung with all my favorite neighbors.
Searcy Hospital was a state-owned and operated psychiatric hospital in Mount Vernon, Alabama. It was situated on the grounds of the former Mount Vernon Arsenal, a former United States Army munitions depot dating back to 1828. It closed permanently on October 31, 2012.
In 2010 Searcy Hospital had approximately 400 extended-care beds and a 124-bed intermediate care unit for patients with severe mental illness. Patients were housed in modern buildings. It also served the female forensic in-patient psychiatric center for the southern one-third of Alabama. It was announced on February 15, 2012 that the Alabama Department of Mental Health would close Searcy and all but two of its other state-run mental health facilities in a move to transition all but its forensic and geriatric patients to community-based treatment. All admissions to Searcy were stopped in September, with the entire facility closing on October 31, 2012.