

It was an interesting holiday to say the least!įor books I recommend “The Wright Brothers” by David McCullough.Īdam, totally agree on Raiders and Galaxy Quest- definitely two of the most perfect films ever. Luckily my wife was able to get him another phone from a friend before I had to take him to the airport at 3:00am. To top it off my oldest son was selected for an exchange student program to visit Mexico City for three weeks and two days before his flight out our dog ate his iPhone. It only had 2500 miles on it! We were pretty lucky all things considered. Our car is pretty messed up but it’ll be fine once it’s repaired.
#Beatrix kill bill driver#
The driver wasn’t wearing his seat belt… Scared the crap out of my three kids but not a scratch on them. The driver hit his head against the windshield and was unconscious- he was taken to the hospital on a stretcher but the fire dept. His car then careened off to the side, went through the intersection and rolled across three lanes before ending up on a curb. We were stopped at an intersection waiting for a left turn signal when he hit us.

68 year old man driving a late model Malibu rammed us going somewhere north of 40mph. Luckily it still worked fine and the chip is at the back so I sealed it with silicone so no one would cut their finger on it (like I did) while cleaning it.įast forward to New Year’s Eve- I was out with my wife and kids having dinner and got rear ended on the way home. We purchased a new range the next day and promptly dropped it getting it into the house, chipping the glass top. All was not lost for Christmas dinner as we were watching our neighbor’s house while he was out of town and he let us use his oven. Will, our oven also died on Christmas day! The heating element in ours burned in half and caught on fire, which was quite spectacular. it has the sort of focussed lean-ness that doesn’t get in the way of your enthusiasm for making things. if you want to research other artefacts and recreate those, it arms you with enough knowledge to be versed and oriented in the subject matter. if you want to replicate basketmaker artefacts, you get all you need. if all you want is build a set of equipment, go out and throw darts, you get more info than you strictly need. the narrow focus on basketmaker (southwestern US, 1500BC–AD500) artefacts allows it to be both short AND detailed/accurate.
#Beatrix kill bill how to#
What i like about the book is that it’s practical – it informs you about how these things work, how to make a set of equipment, and how to use it – it’s solidly rooted in archaeology, and it’s really accessible. they’re a damn old technology, as in paleolithic europe old.

atlatls are spear-throwers – practically another forearm that you hold in your hand to throw 5+ feet long darts with. it’s a small book, only ~120ish pages, but it’s a surprisingly potent package for nerdy and making sensibilities. Just today i received a joyful little book: practical atlatlry of the four corners by justin garnett.
