Just out of curiosity, I pulled out my “Roget’s Thesaurus”.>>>>>>Vagabond, noun: hobo, tramp, vagrant, “wanderer”, idler, begger. collog. bum, knight of the road.>>>>>>See TRAVEL, POPULACE…….. Hmmm? I fit one of them.
Good morning Village People..Last day at Conference putting myself together, so I can pull out at noon. Lucky me three hours and three quarters till I pull into the drive..Hay, I have bluegrass in my CD player, if I told you that it was Lester & Earl, who am I talking about?.It’s breakfast time, gotta go and stuff my face..ttfn
Good morning Vagabonds. Off to CA today. We have a few errands we’ve been putting off, so we’re going to take care of them and have dinner at our absolute favorite place, “Mama Cozza’s” Italian restaurant in Anaheim. (If you look up their website – mamacozzas.com – you will see their link to the episode of “Diners, Drive-ins and Dives” in which they were featured.) Best pizza anywhere!
Good Afternoon Everyone!.Slim: I looked it up on dictionary.com: leading a nomadic lifestyle or a carefree lifesyle. I think I like these slightly more than Roget’s. :).I always made it a point that when I was stationed some place new to spend my weekends driving the country side. I spent the first six months in Missouri taking off on Saturday mornings and sometimes not returning until Sunday. After the first couple of months I got a friend to start traveling with me. I would drive down I-44, see a sign that drew my interest, and head on down the road, I would turn down other roads at a whim just to see where they would lead. After a couple of months she asked me how I always found my way back to post as I never used a map and traveled where the wind blew me. After I stopped laughing I asked her how she could get lost, I-44 cuts Missouri east to west, so it you take off south of I-44 you just had to travel north till you hit I-44 again. After that she seemed to relax and enjoy the trips a lot more..Gas prices being what they are I don’t do that as much these days, but it sure was fun. And yes we stopped at our share of diners, drive-ins and dives, almost always good food and a lot for your money..
shirttailslim almost 12 years ago
Good morning, Vagabonds.
shirttailslim almost 12 years ago
Just out of curiosity, I pulled out my “Roget’s Thesaurus”.>>>>>>Vagabond, noun: hobo, tramp, vagrant, “wanderer”, idler, begger. collog. bum, knight of the road.>>>>>>See TRAVEL, POPULACE…….. Hmmm? I fit one of them.
Dkram almost 12 years ago
Good morning Village People..Last day at Conference putting myself together, so I can pull out at noon. Lucky me three hours and three quarters till I pull into the drive..Hay, I have bluegrass in my CD player, if I told you that it was Lester & Earl, who am I talking about?.It’s breakfast time, gotta go and stuff my face..ttfn
davidf42 almost 12 years ago
Morning, Vagabonds!
This has nothing to do with Flatt and Scruggs, but it’s just One of my favorite songs .
JanLC almost 12 years ago
Good morning Vagabonds. Off to CA today. We have a few errands we’ve been putting off, so we’re going to take care of them and have dinner at our absolute favorite place, “Mama Cozza’s” Italian restaurant in Anaheim. (If you look up their website – mamacozzas.com – you will see their link to the episode of “Diners, Drive-ins and Dives” in which they were featured.) Best pizza anywhere!
chris.smith618 almost 12 years ago
Good Afternoon Everyone!.Slim: I looked it up on dictionary.com: leading a nomadic lifestyle or a carefree lifesyle. I think I like these slightly more than Roget’s. :).I always made it a point that when I was stationed some place new to spend my weekends driving the country side. I spent the first six months in Missouri taking off on Saturday mornings and sometimes not returning until Sunday. After the first couple of months I got a friend to start traveling with me. I would drive down I-44, see a sign that drew my interest, and head on down the road, I would turn down other roads at a whim just to see where they would lead. After a couple of months she asked me how I always found my way back to post as I never used a map and traveled where the wind blew me. After I stopped laughing I asked her how she could get lost, I-44 cuts Missouri east to west, so it you take off south of I-44 you just had to travel north till you hit I-44 again. After that she seemed to relax and enjoy the trips a lot more..Gas prices being what they are I don’t do that as much these days, but it sure was fun. And yes we stopped at our share of diners, drive-ins and dives, almost always good food and a lot for your money..