bajadock
Super Nomad
Posts: 1219
Registered: 12-20-2006
Location: Punta sur de \'Nada
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Real, Silicone or other?
What is your preferred Christmas tree material and why?
Fleece Navy Dad.
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Al G
Ultra Nomad
Posts: 2647
Registered: 12-19-2004
Location: Todos Santos/Full time for now...
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Mood: Wondering what is next???
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Pacifico!!!!!!
Albert G
Remember, if you haven\'t got a smile on your face and laughter in your heart, then you are just a sour old fart!....
The most precious thing we have is life, yet it has absolutely no trade-in value.
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DENNIS
Platinum Nomad
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Registered: 9-2-2006
Location: Punta Banda
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Nice laminate flooring but, the tree looks like a cake. Hmmm....baseboard heating, foliage in preparation for winter. There must be a real tree
growing somewhere in the vicinity.
There's nothing like a real tree that can be returned, alive, to nature after Christmas use which, by the way, can be done with the Pacifico Albert
mentioned.
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PabloS
Nomad
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Location: North central AZ
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That looks like my grandfathers house across the street, in Massachusetts.
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Paulina
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My dad brought home a giant tumbleweed one year for Christmas. He sprayed it with flocking, set it up on a card table in front of the bay window, hung
red ornaments on it, and shoved our presents waaay under it so we couldn't pry.
We weren't very impressed.
My favorite tree he brought home once was an aluminum tree that he found in the trash behind the automotive parts store in which he worked. I got to
have it set up in my room. That tree, along with the Christmas with the Chipmunks record made for a memoriable year.
P<*)))><
\"Well behaved women rarely make history.\" Laurel Thatcher Ulrich
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vandenberg
Elite Nomad
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Real, silicone or ?
Must be my dirty mind, but I pictured a different picture before I opened it.
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capt. mike
Elite Nomad
Posts: 8085
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Mood: Sling time!
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yeah me too.........i thot this was going to be about preferred cauking supplies as well.
formerly Ordained in Rev. Ewing\'s Church by Mail - busted on tax fraud.......
Now joined L. Ron Hoover\'s church of Appliantology
\"Remember there is a big difference between kneeling down and bending over....\"
www.facebook.com/michael.l.goering
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tripledigitken
Ultra Nomad
Posts: 4848
Registered: 9-27-2006
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I really have got to pull off and visit Punta Banda next time down. From the picture it really has changed. Nice to see the new homes.
Ken
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Sharksbaja
Elite Nomad
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That is soooooooooooo college.
DON\'T SQUINT! Give yer eyes a break!
Try holding down [control] key and toggle the [+ and -] keys
Viva Mulege!
Nomads\' Sunsets
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vandenberg
Elite Nomad
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Registered: 6-21-2005
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Quote: | Originally posted by Sharksbaja
That is soooooooooooo college. |
And to think that I never finished grade school.
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bajadock
Super Nomad
Posts: 1219
Registered: 12-20-2006
Location: Punta sur de \'Nada
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SB, college? thanks for the age/maturity identification.
I had a 15'(it's a guy thing) artificial tree for 10 years and gave it away when selling my Colorado home last year. It looked great, but, whatapain
to erect.
My Colorado neighborhood was the kind that hired Christmas decoration staging companies to do the decorating. Per Vandenberg's other post, that is
opulence....geez! No wonder my irish white trash butt left that neighborhood.
Still lots of silicone flying around as I button up the house, Cap Mike.
Christmas trees and decorations stir childhood memories, like Paulina's post. My favorite tree belonged to my h.s. sweetheart Mary Ann's family back
in Cleveland. Guesses why that late night scene was so special?
My bro in Denver sent me the Grolsch? tree pic and his colleague remarked how expensive it was due to the # of bottles and the glass layers.
Also tried to guess which city on the photo. Those are new big windows for that architecture, eh? Looks like E. 143rd Cleveland house where I was
born.
Chose poinsettias and candles this year for simplicity.
[Edited on 12-11-2007 by bajadock]
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DENNIS
Platinum Nomad
Posts: 29510
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Location: Punta Banda
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Jeezo...That shows just how observant I am. I didn't see the bottles for the tree.
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Sharksbaja
Elite Nomad
Posts: 5814
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Location: Newport, Mulege B.C.S.
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Quote: |
Those are new big windows for that architecture, eh? Looks like E. 143rd Cleveland house where I was born.
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Whoa, I thought it was Torrance circa 2007
DON\'T SQUINT! Give yer eyes a break!
Try holding down [control] key and toggle the [+ and -] keys
Viva Mulege!
Nomads\' Sunsets
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pappy
Senior Nomad
Posts: 679
Registered: 12-10-2003
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tecate cans hang quite nicely from any branch on the tree....
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Oso
Ultra Nomad
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Location: on da border
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Mood: wait and see
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I did a tumbleweed one year. spray painted white with tiny blue lights, it was kinda classy, actually. Did a live evergreen in a pot one year but it
didn't survive here in the desert. I like Costanza's Dad's idea of "Festivus" (Seinfeld) with a bare aluminum pole. We don't always do a tree, but
here in the Southwest, my Catholic wife always sets up a "natividad" or creche.
All my childhood I wanted to be older. Now I\'m older and this chitn sucks.
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vandenberg
Elite Nomad
Posts: 5118
Registered: 6-21-2005
Location: Nopolo
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Mood: mellow
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Quote: | Originally posted by bajadock
I had a 15'(it's a guy thing) artificial tree for 10 years and gave it away when selling my Colorado home last year. It looked great, but, whatapain
to erect.
] |
Have the same artificial tree now for around 25 years.
Never discombubilate it. Too lazy for that and Christmas not that important. After the 1st, put it on the downstairs patio. Leave it there for rest of
the year. Birds seem to like it and often nest in it. Come Thanksgiving, I hose the sucker down, haul it upstairs and the better half put her
decorations in it. And lo and behold, the thing looks like it was bought yesterday
Pics may follow, if I ever get around to downloading them . Don't hold your breath.
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Paulina
Ultra Nomad
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Not quite a tree, but here is a Baja snow man we made one year out of tumble weeds:
We used to use the dead tops of the Century plants for our tree in Bahia. Herman and I would go out "Christmas tree shopping" the day after
Thanksgiving, and bring one back for each of us. Sometimes we would have orders for one or two extra, so we would set up the lot in front of his
place.
Our tree:
Herman's tree:
Good times.
P<*)))><
\"Well behaved women rarely make history.\" Laurel Thatcher Ulrich
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Paula
Super Nomad
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torote
This is our tree from last year. We kept it in a pot on the patio all year to bring in this year, but it didn't leaf out, so we planted it in the
ground a month ago, not wanting it to die.
Still deciding what to do this year, as we don't think it's OK to keep digging these guys up, and we now have 3 planted on our lot. I like the
century plant, but don't see them around here.
Also like Edinnopolo's idea-- anyone have a vintage aluminum for sale?
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SDRonni
Nomad
Posts: 481
Registered: 8-28-2006
Location: Serra Mesa/Rosarito
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Absolutely LOVE the century plant idea! Our neighbor has one on the canyon. When it blooms, it is covered with bees and hummingbirds!
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