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OT - Eye-Oh-Wuh
On 3/19/2011 4:45 PM, SMS wrote:
On 3/19/2011 4:54 AM, Peter Cole wrote: Yes, but you also find Iowa pleasant. There's no accounting for taste, but you seem to be in a minority. I have many relatives in Iowa and it's not a question of pleasantness or unpleasantness, it's where their livelihood (farming) is. They also live in the town that boasts one of Iowa's biggest tourist attractions, http://www.roadchix.com/iowa/cheeto.htm. That is not too far from where Ed Dolan lives. -- Tºm Shermªn - 42.435731,-83.985007 I am a vehicular cyclist. |
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#2
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OT - Eye-Oh-Wuh
"Tºm Shermªn™ °_°" " wrote in
message ... On 3/19/2011 4:45 PM, SMS wrote: On 3/19/2011 4:54 AM, Peter Cole wrote: Yes, but you also find Iowa pleasant. There's no accounting for taste, but you seem to be in a minority. I have many relatives in Iowa and it's not a question of pleasantness or unpleasantness, it's where their livelihood (farming) is. They also live in the town that boasts one of Iowa's biggest tourist attractions, http://www.roadchix.com/iowa/cheeto.htm. That is not too far from where Ed Dolan lives. The Upper Midwest is a paradise on this earth. One day it will be as populated as the plains of India. The winters are not pleasant, but it is possible to keep warm if you tend to your furnace. The small towns of Iowa are a miracle. It is what make RAGBRAI the sensation that it is every year. Folks come from all over the US and other countries to experience this small town friendliness. Even the few large cities of Iowa retain this friendliness. I live only 11 miles from the Iowa border and consider myself as much Iowan as I do Minnesotan. Mr. Sherman is fortunate indeed to have relatives that are living in Iowa. How many of us can ever visit a farm these days. -- Ed Dolan the Great - Minnesota aka Saint Edward the Great - Order of the Perpetual Sorrows - Minnesota |
#3
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OT - Eye-Oh-Wuh
On 3/19/2011 6:36 PM, Edward Dolan wrote:
"T�m Sherm�n� " wrote in message ... On 3/19/2011 4:45 PM, SMS wrote: On 3/19/2011 4:54 AM, Peter Cole wrote: Yes, but you also find Iowa pleasant. There's no accounting for taste, but you seem to be in a minority. I have many relatives in Iowa and it's not a question of pleasantness or unpleasantness, it's where their livelihood (farming) is. They also live in the town that boasts one of Iowa's biggest tourist attractions, http://www.roadchix.com/iowa/cheeto.htm. That is not too far from where Ed Dolan lives. The Upper Midwest is a paradise on this earth. One day it will be as populated as the plains of India. The winters are not pleasant, but it is possible to keep warm if you tend to your furnace. The Upper Midwest will stop being a paradise if that many people move here. The small towns of Iowa are a miracle. It is what make RAGBRAI the sensation that it is every year. Folks come from all over the US and other countries to experience this small town friendliness. Even the few large cities of Iowa retain this friendliness. Indeed. Almost every rude driver I encounter has Illinois plates. However, Iowa has no large cities: http://www.maps-n-stats.com/us_ia_population.html. I live only 11 miles from the Iowa border and consider myself as much Iowan as I do Minnesotan. Mr. Sherman is fortunate indeed to have relatives that are living in Iowa. How many of us can ever visit a farm these days. Uh Ed, *I* live in Iowa. And have a view of a corn/bean [1] field out my back window. It is Steven M. Scharf (SMS) who reports having relatives that live in Algona. [1] Depending on crop rotation. -- Tºm Shermªn - 42.435731,-83.985007 I am a vehicular cyclist. |
#4
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OT - Eye-Oh-Wuh
"Tºm ShermªnT °_°" " wrote in
message ... On 3/19/2011 6:36 PM, Edward Dolan wrote: "T?m Sherm?n? " wrote in message ... On 3/19/2011 4:45 PM, SMS wrote: On 3/19/2011 4:54 AM, Peter Cole wrote: Yes, but you also find Iowa pleasant. There's no accounting for taste, but you seem to be in a minority. I have many relatives in Iowa and it's not a question of pleasantness or unpleasantness, it's where their livelihood (farming) is. They also live in the town that boasts one of Iowa's biggest tourist attractions, http://www.roadchix.com/iowa/cheeto.htm. That is not too far from where Ed Dolan lives. The Upper Midwest is a paradise on this earth. One day it will be as populated as the plains of India. The winters are not pleasant, but it is possible to keep warm if you tend to your furnace. The Upper Midwest will stop being a paradise if that many people move here. Yes, of course it will, but such will be the case in less than a hundred years I predict. Worthington is already being flooded by Hispanics from Mexico and Central America. The small towns of Iowa are a miracle. It is what make RAGBRAI the sensation that it is every year. Folks come from all over the US and other countries to experience this small town friendliness. Even the few large cities of Iowa retain this friendliness. Indeed. Almost every rude driver I encounter has Illinois plates. However, Iowa has no large cities: http://www.maps-n-stats.com/us_ia_population.html. I consider any metro over 100,000 to be large. Sioux Falls, the nearest metro to Worthington, used to have a population of around 50,000 back in the 1950's. Now it is twice that. I live only 11 miles from the Iowa border and consider myself as much Iowan as I do Minnesotan. Mr. Sherman is fortunate indeed to have relatives that are living in Iowa. How many of us can ever visit a farm these days. Uh Ed, *I* live in Iowa. And have a view of a corn/bean [1] field out my back window. It is Steven M. Scharf (SMS) who reports having relatives that live in Algona. [1] Depending on crop rotation. I cannot keep up with your constant moving about the landscape. I thought you were born and bred a Wisconsinite. -- Ed Dolan the Great - Minnesota aka Saint Edward the Great - Order of the Perpetual Sorrows - Minnesota |
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