Ruth,
Not that I disagree, but between too cold, Black Fly and mosquito
season, you've probably only got about 30 minutes!
-jc
On Sunday, August 3, 2003, at 12:51 AM, Ruth Barton wrote:
> Hi John, I don't know about the others but the headwaters of the
> Connecticut river are the Connecticut lakes in northern New Hampshire.
> I
> have never been up there but would like to go sometime when it's not
> mosquito or black fly season. But I don't want it to be cold either.
> Ain't I picky. Ruth
>
>
>
> At 2:26 PM -0500 8/2/03, John Callan wrote:
> Please Ralph. Spare me the details. Normally covered anotomical
> parts and
> geometric shapes don't belong in the same sentence, let alone
> hyphenated
> into a single word.
>
> Some exhibit I saw up Nort pointed out that no one seems to make much
> of a
> fuss about the headwaters of the Ohio, or the Missouri...both of which
> are
> arguably more significant than the Mississippi, in terms of volume or
> commerce, beyond the points where they seperate from the lower
> Mississippi.
> So I got to wondering...where ARE the headwaters of the Ohio, the
> Missouri,
> the Hudson, the Connecticut and them other big rivers? Can you have
> your
> picture taken sitting in the middle? Are they small enough that if
> Ralph
> were to sit in the middle it would wreck the downstream economy?
>
> --
> Ruth Barton
> [log in to unmask]
> Dummerston, VT
>
> --
> To terminate puerile preservation prattling among pals and the
> uncoffee-ed, or to change your settings, go to:
> <http://maelstrom.stjohns.edu/archives/bullamanka-pinheads.html>
>
>
John Callan, Architect, Inc.
Historic Preservation and Museum Services
784 Deerwood Circle
Lino Lakes, Minnesota 55014-5433
(651) 486-0890
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