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Fleetwood Mac
Glasgow SSE Hydro
October 3rd 2013
All photos by Stacey @ Music Box Unwinds.
Do not remove watermark/credit.
Mac kept seeing things in the forest, things that I couldn’t see or hear, and then he would run back towards me as if he had seen a big bull moose. There were no other people there, and a bear or mountain lion could have dispatched me with alarming alacrity (killed me), and my bones would never be discovered. Of course that could happen with other people there but it would be less likely.
Perhaps I need to grow a more sturdy backbone. Possibly Mac only saw a squirrel, though that wouldn’t explain his dashing back to me in obvious fear for his own skin. I love the solitude of a trail and mountain and forest to myself, the sound of my own footsteps and the birds chirping and singing. I also love another hiker around the next bend who might help in scaring off a big cat.
I admit I was a little nervous about encountering a bad man alone in the forest, too. Crazy thoughts? I suppose.
I’ll get a couple of walking poles and use them for self-defense. I’ll get a can of spray. I’ll take a martial arts class. I’ll get one of those loud horns that scares away dangerous animals, and I’ll leave Mac at home.
I really hope it ships in 24 hours.
*** HaHa... completely misread the shipping, just realized its referring to apple care not the mac pro.
You Me At Six, Mayday Parade, Pierce the Veil & All Time Low // Spring Fever Tour
April 27, 2013
The MAC at Monmouth University - NJ
MAC RABOY
Flash Gordon
Emmanuel "Mac" Raboy (April 9, 1914 – December 1967) was an American artist whose comic books and strips remain collectibles more than 40 years after his death. He was known for his work on Fawcett Comics' Captain Marvel Jr. and as the Sunday strip artist of Flash Gordon for over 20 years.
Born in New York City, Raboy began his art career with the Works Progress Administration during the Great Depression. In the 1940s he began working for comic books and gained fame as the illustrator for Captain Marvel, Jr. and the Green Lama. In the spring of 1946, King Features hired Raboy to continue the Sunday page adventures of Flash Gordon, which he continued to work on until his death.