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I was KC2PKG and he knows the lay of the land and me well enough to know that I have to be somewhere I can do the net. So Monday, we won't be coming back until Tuesday and usually it takes us two days to get there because I like to stop. I don't want to drive for eight, nine hours. I'm not, you know, when I was younger and you had to get back to work and you, you know, you drove like a rape date and to get wherever you're going and then relax, relax, relax, okay, time to go home. And we do everything in one shot, but I'm not like that anymore. So we go down, get about halfway, stay in a hotel, go for a nice dinner, you know, get up the next morning refreshed and get back in the car again and try to arrive at a decent time. And we do this trip all the time, but like I said, it depends on everybody being healthy. If people aren't healthy, then we're become very, very good at suddenly changing plans and restructuring our movements. So a good question though. KJ5IRQ, this is KC2PKG. This is repeater station kilo, kilo seven. Well my mind is a bit blown. I really figured that you got a lot of snow. So I figured with you living next to the lake and not too terribly far from the coast, I figured you got a lot of like lake effect or something like that. So guess what? Although it sounds like, you know, you were the harbinger of stopping the snow, 170 inches and then you all haven't had it since. That's pretty impressive, my friend, being able to stop that much snow. New York, New York. I'm assuming it's a city and I love the city. I like to go there, visit for a short amount of time and leave. But man, when I'm there, it's fascinating. I'll tell you a quick funny story that happened to me in New York City. In 2004, I had been back from Iraq. I got back from Iraq sometime in late January or February, I don't remember exactly, 2004. And then we spent a few weeks, you know, a month or so cleaning up our weapons, putting everything away, doing some avials and stuff like that after you get back from something like that. And then you get to go and leave. And of course, you know, we got a lot of leaves saved up. We were overseas for a year, plus the time that you had before that saved up. So I had a bunch of time saved up. And we burnt a couple of weeks of it and we spent one entire week, I'm talking eight days, seven nights in Manhattan. And of course, we were young and dumb. Let's see, I would have been around 23 or 24 at the time. No, I would have been 24 or 25 at the time. Anyhow, I was a little intimidated by the subway, never, you know, coming from a little rest Texas town going to the big city. So anyhow, we get off of the train at Penn Station. My in-laws lived up in Esperance, which is closer to Albany. So we took the train from Albany down to Penn Station and got off. Man, I got all the luggage. We walked out of Penn Station. I'm feeling, you know, 10-foot tall, bulletproof, you know. And I see taxis running down the street. And man, I do what I've seen on every dang movie. I put my hand up in the air and I started raving it like a fool, yelling, Taxi, taxi! Man, sure enough, one pulls up. And I'm like, man, this is shitty. They need this stuff in my town. And just as we were fixing to put stuff into the taxi, this little bitty short dude, I mean, he was short. He didn't come up to my armpits at the time. And he was in some kind of uniform, come running up and yelling at me, putting his finger in my face. I couldn't understand a word he said and I was just about to lay into him. I mean, I was about to tear this dude up. And a cop showed up right then. Well, the little short dude called the cops. Apparently, I'm within a loading area of Penn Station that you can't catch a cab in. But the cop was really cool, asked me who I was, where I was from. You know, I gave him a military ID. We were taught that. And I told him, I said, get back on the rack. We're here to, you know, to have a good time. And the cop was really cool. He looks at me and smiles. He goes, you see that pole down there? And it was probably about, I don't know, 20 feet away. I'm going to take a real quick break. Yeah, he points at this pole and he goes, you see that pole down there about 20 feet away? And I was like, yes, sir. He goes, hide the cab he meets you there. That's outside the loading dock and you can't get in any trouble. Man, I almost, almost went to jail within five minutes of being in New York City. I mean, I was fixing to tear this dude up. I didn't know if he was attacking us, what he was, who he was. It's just me and my wife. Anyhow, that's my, my wife likes telling this story. She tells it a whole lot better than I do. But anyhow, that was my first entrance to New York. And then seeing the skyscrapers when you come out of Penn Station, I was just blown away. That's what happens when you come from a little bitty West Texas town, I suppose. Bill, I'm sure you've seen bigger and grander things than that. What's your Labor Day plans? Are you going to be on the truck? And if you are, what are you going to do special inside the truck to make it a special Labor Day? The mic is yours, buddy.

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