To all:
Thank you very much for your positive comments about the getting started
page. Please direct your salutations to Erik for content. I just
copied it onto the web. I will take credit for the layout though.
Getting Started afterthought:
I'm wondering if the very first item ought to be for the letterbox
searcher rather than the the letterbox creator. I think we're kinda
focused on the creation of boxes right now because we are in the early
stages of the hobby and feel that we need to promote the creation of
boxes in order to keep the game going. But certainly at some point we
will want to focus more on the searching aspect and perhaps then a
"search kit" description.
I want to thank those of you who are creating boxes. Its a lot more
involved to create a box than to just go find one. I don't think its
less exciting though.
Kid's Corner:
I saw at least one positive comment on the Kid's Corner idea. I wonder
if it should be a separate site or page mnaybe. I wonder if it should
be separate to discourage kids from wandering into some of the clues on
this page that may take you into remote and/or hazardous places. Or
would it be good to just put a note on the clue like "Good for Kids."
Perhaps the kids corner could represent special instructions geared for
kids and then point them only to the "Good for Kids" clues??? I'm just
thinking out loud.
Miscellaneous note:
You can now click on the mailbox on the mail page or the main page to
send a note to the talk list.
The mail page is at:
http://www.pclink.com/elf/mail.htm
The main page is at:
http://www.pclink.com/elf
Thank you,
Dan'l
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Thank you
16 messages in this thread |
Started on 1998-10-19
[L-USA] Thank you
From: Daniel Servatius (elf@pclink.com) |
Date: 1998-10-19 19:16:11 UTC-05:00
Thank you
From: MARTEL (martel@downeast.net) |
Date: 2002-08-11 17:27:17 UTC-04:00
A sincere thank you to all who have posted welcoming those of us who qualify
as newbies. That encouragement is greatly appreciated. And thank you also
for the qualification from Mr. Butt regarding his original post. I can
understand frustration when it appears new people want to change things,
but I think we all need to be careful not to make generalizations. (Imagine
if people were judging the entire letterboxing community based on the posts
of the last week or so!)
Memlili
as newbies. That encouragement is greatly appreciated. And thank you also
for the qualification from Mr. Butt regarding his original post. I can
understand frustration when it appears new people want to change things,
but I think we all need to be careful not to make generalizations. (Imagine
if people were judging the entire letterboxing community based on the posts
of the last week or so!)
Memlili
Thank you
From: hallelujah_hoyden (hallelujah_hoyden@yahoo.com) |
Date: 2003-07-29 01:26:02 UTC
Thank you to all who have given us a warm welcome, both on this list
and to our email. What a nice group! We look forward to getting out
again, likely it will again be next Sunday after church. I'm still
wondering about the status of the Wild Flower and Wild Butterfly
boxes in Harrisonburg, VA. Can anyone tell me if they are there? If
so, we'll go look again. Our next mission is to go to the craft
store in search of a sign-in stamp. It was fun to read the books in
the letterboxes we found, and see all the different stamps and
comments.
Does anyone in the group subscribe to Family Fun Magazine?
Rev. Aloysius "Hallelujah" Hoyden & family
I Corinthians 3:11 For other foundation can no man lay than that is
laid, which is Jesus Christ.
and to our email. What a nice group! We look forward to getting out
again, likely it will again be next Sunday after church. I'm still
wondering about the status of the Wild Flower and Wild Butterfly
boxes in Harrisonburg, VA. Can anyone tell me if they are there? If
so, we'll go look again. Our next mission is to go to the craft
store in search of a sign-in stamp. It was fun to read the books in
the letterboxes we found, and see all the different stamps and
comments.
Does anyone in the group subscribe to Family Fun Magazine?
Rev. Aloysius "Hallelujah" Hoyden & family
I Corinthians 3:11 For other foundation can no man lay than that is
laid, which is Jesus Christ.
RE: [LbNA] Thank you
From: krp (kerripaul@peoplepc.com) |
Date: 2003-07-28 21:44:44 UTC-04:00
I subscribe to family fun, and have my nose out of joint as I have yet to
receive my issue with letterboxing in it! LOL! We are also in VA, but
further south in the tidewater region. I was glad to find such a great
family hobby too. I wish you a good evening, and good hunting! Kerri
-----Original Message-----
From: hallelujah_hoyden [mailto:hallelujah_hoyden@yahoo.com]
Sent: Monday, July 28, 2003 9:26 PM
To: letterbox-usa@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [LbNA] Thank you
Thank you to all who have given us a warm welcome, both on this list
and to our email. What a nice group! We look forward to getting out
again, likely it will again be next Sunday after church. I'm still
wondering about the status of the Wild Flower and Wild Butterfly
boxes in Harrisonburg, VA. Can anyone tell me if they are there? If
so, we'll go look again. Our next mission is to go to the craft
store in search of a sign-in stamp. It was fun to read the books in
the letterboxes we found, and see all the different stamps and
comments.
Does anyone in the group subscribe to Family Fun Magazine?
Rev. Aloysius "Hallelujah" Hoyden & family
I Corinthians 3:11 For other foundation can no man lay than that is
laid, which is Jesus Christ.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
receive my issue with letterboxing in it! LOL! We are also in VA, but
further south in the tidewater region. I was glad to find such a great
family hobby too. I wish you a good evening, and good hunting! Kerri
-----Original Message-----
From: hallelujah_hoyden [mailto:hallelujah_hoyden@yahoo.com]
Sent: Monday, July 28, 2003 9:26 PM
To: letterbox-usa@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [LbNA] Thank you
Thank you to all who have given us a warm welcome, both on this list
and to our email. What a nice group! We look forward to getting out
again, likely it will again be next Sunday after church. I'm still
wondering about the status of the Wild Flower and Wild Butterfly
boxes in Harrisonburg, VA. Can anyone tell me if they are there? If
so, we'll go look again. Our next mission is to go to the craft
store in search of a sign-in stamp. It was fun to read the books in
the letterboxes we found, and see all the different stamps and
comments.
Does anyone in the group subscribe to Family Fun Magazine?
Rev. Aloysius "Hallelujah" Hoyden & family
I Corinthians 3:11 For other foundation can no man lay than that is
laid, which is Jesus Christ.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Thank you
From: Heather Long (malongtx@earthlink.net) |
Date: 2005-08-24 19:09:34 UTC-04:00
Ok after I posted I went a searched all the link,databases,and files... I have some understanding now.....
Now a question how many of you homeschool? I think this is a great idea for us. We homeschool,and we like to hike often,and to younger children just going for going is tedious.But I think that if they know the will be something cool like a stamp for their very own book it will make all the more desireious to go!
So do family have family stamp or do each of your children have there verey own hand made stamp? I am so into this....
Now a question how many of you homeschool? I think this is a great idea for us. We homeschool,and we like to hike often,and to younger children just going for going is tedious.But I think that if they know the will be something cool like a stamp for their very own book it will make all the more desireious to go!
So do family have family stamp or do each of your children have there verey own hand made stamp? I am so into this....
Re: Thank you
From: aintnorock19 (cdf19@comcast.net) |
Date: 2005-08-24 23:17:50 UTC
I'm pretty new, too, but it seems like groups or families that box
together each stamp in. My wife and I box together and we each have
our own name and signature stamp - mine is hand carved, hers is store
bought. Just remember, the #1 rule around here is that there are no
rules. Do what turns you on as long as it's respectful.
aintnorock and angelsweetie
--- In letterbox-usa@yahoogroups.com, Heather Long
wrote:
> Ok after I posted I went a searched all the link,databases,and
files... I have some understanding now.....
>
>
> Now a question how many of you homeschool? I think this is a great
idea for us. We homeschool,and we like to hike often,and to younger
children just going for going is tedious.But I think that if they
know the will be something cool like a stamp for their very own book
it will make all the more desireious to go!
>
> So do family have family stamp or do each of your children have
there verey own hand made stamp? I am so into this....
together each stamp in. My wife and I box together and we each have
our own name and signature stamp - mine is hand carved, hers is store
bought. Just remember, the #1 rule around here is that there are no
rules. Do what turns you on as long as it's respectful.
aintnorock and angelsweetie
--- In letterbox-usa@yahoogroups.com, Heather Long
wrote:
> Ok after I posted I went a searched all the link,databases,and
files... I have some understanding now.....
>
>
> Now a question how many of you homeschool? I think this is a great
idea for us. We homeschool,and we like to hike often,and to younger
children just going for going is tedious.But I think that if they
know the will be something cool like a stamp for their very own book
it will make all the more desireious to go!
>
> So do family have family stamp or do each of your children have
there verey own hand made stamp? I am so into this....
Re: [LbNA] Thank you
From: Val Aylesworth (val_aylesworth@comcast.net) |
Date: 2005-08-24 19:37:11 UTC-04:00
We homeschool! We use a family stamp.
- aylesfam
----- Original Message -----
From: Heather Long
To: letterbox-usa@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Wednesday, August 24, 2005 7:09 PM
Subject: [LbNA] Thank you
Ok after I posted I went a searched all the link,databases,and files... I have some understanding now.....
Now a question how many of you homeschool? I think this is a great idea for us. We homeschool,and we like to hike often,and to younger children just going for going is tedious.But I think that if they know the will be something cool like a stamp for their very own book it will make all the more desireious to go!
So do family have family stamp or do each of your children have there verey own hand made stamp? I am so into this....
SPONSORED LINKS Great outdoors Alaska outdoors Great outdoors gas grill
The great outdoors
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
YAHOO! GROUPS LINKS
a.. Visit your group "letterbox-usa" on the web.
b.. To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
letterbox-usa-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com
c.. Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of Service.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
- aylesfam
----- Original Message -----
From: Heather Long
To: letterbox-usa@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Wednesday, August 24, 2005 7:09 PM
Subject: [LbNA] Thank you
Ok after I posted I went a searched all the link,databases,and files... I have some understanding now.....
Now a question how many of you homeschool? I think this is a great idea for us. We homeschool,and we like to hike often,and to younger children just going for going is tedious.But I think that if they know the will be something cool like a stamp for their very own book it will make all the more desireious to go!
So do family have family stamp or do each of your children have there verey own hand made stamp? I am so into this....
SPONSORED LINKS Great outdoors Alaska outdoors Great outdoors gas grill
The great outdoors
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
YAHOO! GROUPS LINKS
a.. Visit your group "letterbox-usa" on the web.
b.. To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
letterbox-usa-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com
c.. Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of Service.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Re: Thank you
From: wpastfarm (ckanaa@netscape.net) |
Date: 2005-08-24 23:42:49 UTC
We box as a family. We each have our own stamps but they are small
enough that we can fit everyone's stamp plus a little handwritten
note on one logbook page (so we don't hog up the logbook with one
stamp per page). We also have a family mini-stamp that we use for
microboxes, just one little stamp to represent all of us.
We started out with separate logbooks but quickly found it to be too
much of a pain. It can be difficult enough stamping in discretely
without trying to juggle multiple books on the trail. All kids
agreed that we would just keep one for the entire family and no one
has a problem with that (amazing...)
I think this would be great for homeschooling! It gets you out to so
many cool sites, and you learn so much incidental information along
the way (especially when trying to figure out mystery boxes). Have
fun!
~ the b's
--- In letterbox-usa@yahoogroups.com, Heather Long
wrote:
> Ok after I posted I went a searched all the link,databases,and
files... I have some understanding now.....
>
>
> Now a question how many of you homeschool? I think this is a great
idea for us. We homeschool,and we like to hike often,and to younger
children just going for going is tedious.But I think that if they
know the will be something cool like a stamp for their very own book
it will make all the more desireious to go!
>
> So do family have family stamp or do each of your children have
there verey own hand made stamp? I am so into this....
enough that we can fit everyone's stamp plus a little handwritten
note on one logbook page (so we don't hog up the logbook with one
stamp per page). We also have a family mini-stamp that we use for
microboxes, just one little stamp to represent all of us.
We started out with separate logbooks but quickly found it to be too
much of a pain. It can be difficult enough stamping in discretely
without trying to juggle multiple books on the trail. All kids
agreed that we would just keep one for the entire family and no one
has a problem with that (amazing...)
I think this would be great for homeschooling! It gets you out to so
many cool sites, and you learn so much incidental information along
the way (especially when trying to figure out mystery boxes). Have
fun!
~ the b's
--- In letterbox-usa@yahoogroups.com, Heather Long
wrote:
> Ok after I posted I went a searched all the link,databases,and
files... I have some understanding now.....
>
>
> Now a question how many of you homeschool? I think this is a great
idea for us. We homeschool,and we like to hike often,and to younger
children just going for going is tedious.But I think that if they
know the will be something cool like a stamp for their very own book
it will make all the more desireious to go!
>
> So do family have family stamp or do each of your children have
there verey own hand made stamp? I am so into this....
Re: [LbNA] Thank you
From: Jennifer (jennifree@gmail.com) |
Date: 2005-08-24 18:17:38 UTC-07:00
We homeschool too. We have seperate stamps and books, but we're talking
about a family stamp. My husband has volunteered to be the master carver. I
don't think I could get the kids to give up their log books, but it is a
little tedious to make sure everyone gets stamped. Plus we have to stamp my
toddler somewhere. She doesn't have a book, but is happy if she gets stamped
somewhere on her person. :-)
--
Jennifer Miller
Beadguiling Designs
Handmade glass beads and jewelry
On 8/24/05, Heather Long wrote:
>
> Ok after I posted I went a searched all the link,databases,and files... I
> have some understanding now.....
>
>
> Now a question how many of you homeschool? I think this is a great idea
> for us. We homeschool,and we like to hike often,and to younger children just
> going for going is tedious.But I think that if they know the will be
> something cool like a stamp for their very own book it will make all the
> more desireious to go!
>
> So do family have family stamp or do each of your children have there
> verey own hand made stamp? I am so into this....
>
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
about a family stamp. My husband has volunteered to be the master carver. I
don't think I could get the kids to give up their log books, but it is a
little tedious to make sure everyone gets stamped. Plus we have to stamp my
toddler somewhere. She doesn't have a book, but is happy if she gets stamped
somewhere on her person. :-)
--
Jennifer Miller
Beadguiling Designs
Handmade glass beads and jewelry
On 8/24/05, Heather Long
>
> Ok after I posted I went a searched all the link,databases,and files... I
> have some understanding now.....
>
>
> Now a question how many of you homeschool? I think this is a great idea
> for us. We homeschool,and we like to hike often,and to younger children just
> going for going is tedious.But I think that if they know the will be
> something cool like a stamp for their very own book it will make all the
> more desireious to go!
>
> So do family have family stamp or do each of your children have there
> verey own hand made stamp? I am so into this....
>
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Re: [LbNA] Thank you
From: Kathy Atkinson (cruzandkathy@yahoo.com) |
Date: 2005-08-24 20:15:58 UTC-07:00
We are also new to letterboxing. We homeschool and found out about letterboxing on a homeschooling loop. I think it's great because we go to all the parks etc...for science and history lessons and now theres a little bit of bonus when it comes to our field trips..the kids are loving it!
Heather Long wrote:Ok after I posted I went a searched all the link,databases,and files... I have some understanding now.....
Now a question how many of you homeschool? I think this is a great idea for us. We homeschool,and we like to hike often,and to younger children just going for going is tedious.But I think that if they know the will be something cool like a stamp for their very own book it will make all the more desireious to go!
So do family have family stamp or do each of your children have there verey own hand made stamp? I am so into this....
SPONSORED LINKS
Great outdoors gas grill Alaska outdoors Great outdoors The great outdoors
---------------------------------
YAHOO! GROUPS LINKS
Visit your group "letterbox-usa" on the web.
To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
letterbox-usa-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com
Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of Service.
---------------------------------
---------------------------------
Start your day with Yahoo! - make it your home page
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Heather Long
Now a question how many of you homeschool? I think this is a great idea for us. We homeschool,and we like to hike often,and to younger children just going for going is tedious.But I think that if they know the will be something cool like a stamp for their very own book it will make all the more desireious to go!
So do family have family stamp or do each of your children have there verey own hand made stamp? I am so into this....
SPONSORED LINKS
Great outdoors gas grill Alaska outdoors Great outdoors The great outdoors
---------------------------------
YAHOO! GROUPS LINKS
Visit your group "letterbox-usa" on the web.
To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
letterbox-usa-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com
Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of Service.
---------------------------------
---------------------------------
Start your day with Yahoo! - make it your home page
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Re: [LbNA] Thank you
From: (Stellabaker123@aol.com) |
Date: 2005-08-25 21:10:09 UTC-04:00
I have been letterboxing for about two years and the stamps I have seen in
the books are one for each person in the family. Sometimes they all try to
stamp on the same page, and sometimes they have a family theme. Whatever is best
for you. If you all cave a stamp it could turn out to be an art lesson.
STAR:W+S=DRR
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
the books are one for each person in the family. Sometimes they all try to
stamp on the same page, and sometimes they have a family theme. Whatever is best
for you. If you all cave a stamp it could turn out to be an art lesson.
STAR:W+S=DRR
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Re: [LbNA] Thank you
From: Deborah (fivebal4s@yahoo.com) |
Date: 2005-08-26 03:39:36 UTC
I can't believe my kids haven't asked to be stamped. I guess they are
just so excited to get their book stamped they weren't thinking about
their bodys. My four year old is usually stamped with something at
all times.
We all have our own stamps and books and it is near impossible to be
discrete. However with 5 people it really wouldn't matter because
there is always a crowd. :-) We do have a family stamp, but
haven't used it yet.
just so excited to get their book stamped they weren't thinking about
their bodys. My four year old is usually stamped with something at
all times.
We all have our own stamps and books and it is near impossible to be
discrete. However with 5 people it really wouldn't matter because
there is always a crowd. :-) We do have a family stamp, but
haven't used it yet.
Re: [LbNA] Thank you
From: SKJJJK (col.one923@spwl.net) |
Date: 2005-08-29 11:41:40 UTC-05:00
We homeschool! We learned about letterboxing on an email homeschool
group. Someone just casually mentioned it as their family hobby and I
checked it out and we ran with it as a family. We have always been
day-trippers looking for interesting things to do and see, so
letterboxing was a perfect fit for us. This spring we took our first
letterboxing-camping vacation and had lots of fun; saw lots of
interesting things. One of our first few letterbox finds took us on a
very unexpected adventure.
We were looking for Pioneer Village near Saukville, WI. Upon entering
the park, we realized that the weekend we happened to search for that
box there was a Revolutionary War re-enactment taking place. While the
main part of the Pioneer Village was closed to visitors after a certain
hour, the rest of the park was not. We drove on past the encampment and
followed the gravel road to find the trail we were looking for. As we
drove along the gravel road, we came upon a company of Redcoats marching
down the road! What do we do?! We held back in the van a bit as the
soldiers marched on. They ignored us! As we hung back and inched
along, they eventually marched off into a clearing and we drove on.
Finding the trail, we parked and headed off on our search. The box was
easy to find, but the hike seemed all too short, so we decided to hike
further on. To our further surprise, we came upon a man dressed in
minuteman clothing. He greeted us cordially, asked if we were well and
if we had seen any Redcoats in the area. I tried to joke, suggesting
maybe we shouldn't be there at that time, to which he responded that he
didn't understand why we would think that. The thing was that he wasn't
going to break character and acknowledge we were not in the 1700's. We
caught on and we told him about the Redcoats on the road. He thanked
us, told us to stay safe and moved quietly on toward the road. By this
time the kids were a tad spooked, but we hiked a bit further and then
started to hear men shouting and gunfire in the distance. The kids were
really getting spooked and it was becoming too real for them.
We decided to turn back, but back on the road the Redcoats were swarming
all over the place. We stayed back until they cleared out and then made
a beeline to the van. As we drove out of the park, we saw one farm boy
captured and set down in a field with a guard and then two unsuspecting
farm women walking in that direction. Who knows what happened to them?!
You should have heard the conversation in our van all the way home! We
all have very fond memories of that letterboxing adventure! I can't
tell you how many cool things we have seen or done because of
letterboxing.
The Puddlejumpers
Heather Long wrote:
> Ok after I posted I went a searched all the link,databases,and
> files... I have some understanding now.....
>
>
> Now a question how many of you homeschool? I think this is a great
> idea for us. We homeschool,and we like to hike often,and to younger
> children just going for going is tedious.But I think that if they know
> the will be something cool like a stamp for their very own book it
> will make all the more desireious to go!
>
> So do family have family stamp or do each of your children have there
> verey own hand made stamp? I am so into this....
>
>
> SPONSORED LINKS
>
Great outdoors Alaska outdoors Great outdoors gas
grill
The great outdoors
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------
> YAHOO! GROUPS LINKS
>
> + Visit your group "letterbox-usa" on the web.
>
> + To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
> letterbox-usa-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com
>
> + Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to the Yahoo! Terms of
> Service.
>
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------
>
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
group. Someone just casually mentioned it as their family hobby and I
checked it out and we ran with it as a family. We have always been
day-trippers looking for interesting things to do and see, so
letterboxing was a perfect fit for us. This spring we took our first
letterboxing-camping vacation and had lots of fun; saw lots of
interesting things. One of our first few letterbox finds took us on a
very unexpected adventure.
We were looking for Pioneer Village near Saukville, WI. Upon entering
the park, we realized that the weekend we happened to search for that
box there was a Revolutionary War re-enactment taking place. While the
main part of the Pioneer Village was closed to visitors after a certain
hour, the rest of the park was not. We drove on past the encampment and
followed the gravel road to find the trail we were looking for. As we
drove along the gravel road, we came upon a company of Redcoats marching
down the road! What do we do?! We held back in the van a bit as the
soldiers marched on. They ignored us! As we hung back and inched
along, they eventually marched off into a clearing and we drove on.
Finding the trail, we parked and headed off on our search. The box was
easy to find, but the hike seemed all too short, so we decided to hike
further on. To our further surprise, we came upon a man dressed in
minuteman clothing. He greeted us cordially, asked if we were well and
if we had seen any Redcoats in the area. I tried to joke, suggesting
maybe we shouldn't be there at that time, to which he responded that he
didn't understand why we would think that. The thing was that he wasn't
going to break character and acknowledge we were not in the 1700's. We
caught on and we told him about the Redcoats on the road. He thanked
us, told us to stay safe and moved quietly on toward the road. By this
time the kids were a tad spooked, but we hiked a bit further and then
started to hear men shouting and gunfire in the distance. The kids were
really getting spooked and it was becoming too real for them.
We decided to turn back, but back on the road the Redcoats were swarming
all over the place. We stayed back until they cleared out and then made
a beeline to the van. As we drove out of the park, we saw one farm boy
captured and set down in a field with a guard and then two unsuspecting
farm women walking in that direction. Who knows what happened to them?!
You should have heard the conversation in our van all the way home! We
all have very fond memories of that letterboxing adventure! I can't
tell you how many cool things we have seen or done because of
letterboxing.
The Puddlejumpers
Heather Long wrote:
> Ok after I posted I went a searched all the link,databases,and
> files... I have some understanding now.....
>
>
> Now a question how many of you homeschool? I think this is a great
> idea for us. We homeschool,and we like to hike often,and to younger
> children just going for going is tedious.But I think that if they know
> the will be something cool like a stamp for their very own book it
> will make all the more desireious to go!
>
> So do family have family stamp or do each of your children have there
> verey own hand made stamp? I am so into this....
>
>
> SPONSORED LINKS
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[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Re: [LbNA] Thank you
From: Kurt Copeland (tabulator32@mac.com) |
Date: 2005-08-29 13:13:35 UTC-05:00
If ever a kid wondered what it would be like to be in a battle they had heard about in school, I'll bet that bit of "virtual reality" brought some things to light.
tabulator32
On Monday, August 29, 2005, at 11:42AM, SKJJJK wrote:
>
By this
time the kids were a tad spooked, but we hiked a bit further and then
started to hear men shouting and gunfire in the distance. The kids were
really getting spooked and it was becoming too real for them.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
tabulator32
On Monday, August 29, 2005, at 11:42AM, SKJJJK
>
By this
time the kids were a tad spooked, but we hiked a bit further and then
started to hear men shouting and gunfire in the distance. The kids were
really getting spooked and it was becoming too real for them.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Thank you
From: edobrn (maherx5@burlingtontelecom.net) |
Date: 2008-04-20 15:32:29 UTC
Thank you to all the seasoned and active Letterboxers out there who are
enabeling our family to discover the fantastic hobby that is
Letterboxing. We are new to the past time but are finding that it
becomes a slight obsession pretty quick. Spring has sprug in Vermont
and we did our first letterbox of the season yesterday.
enabeling our family to discover the fantastic hobby that is
Letterboxing. We are new to the past time but are finding that it
becomes a slight obsession pretty quick. Spring has sprug in Vermont
and we did our first letterbox of the season yesterday.
Re: [LbNA] Thank you
From: zess the treehuggers (zess.devine@gmail.com) |
Date: 2008-04-21 21:36:11 UTC-04:00
What a nice message to send! Thank YOU for recognizing all the folks who
plant letterboxes for others to enjoy--that's very thoughtful of you. Yes,
the "slight obsession" escalates pretty quickly into "serious obsession" for
many of us. You'll be out there planting some of your own some day, no
doubt. :-)
Happy 'boxing!
~zess~
On Sun, Apr 20, 2008 at 11:32 AM, edobrn
wrote:
> Thank you to all the seasoned and active Letterboxers out there who are
> enabeling our family to discover the fantastic hobby that is
> Letterboxing. We are new to the past time but are finding that it
> becomes a slight obsession pretty quick. Spring has sprug in Vermont
> and we did our first letterbox of the season yesterday.
>
>
>
--
Happiness itself is a kind of gratitude - Joseph Wood Krutch
"..... The Bus came by and I got on, that's when it all began ....." Hop
aboard at:
http://groups.google.com/group/the-grateful-letterboxers?hl=en
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
plant letterboxes for others to enjoy--that's very thoughtful of you. Yes,
the "slight obsession" escalates pretty quickly into "serious obsession" for
many of us. You'll be out there planting some of your own some day, no
doubt. :-)
Happy 'boxing!
~zess~
On Sun, Apr 20, 2008 at 11:32 AM, edobrn
wrote:
> Thank you to all the seasoned and active Letterboxers out there who are
> enabeling our family to discover the fantastic hobby that is
> Letterboxing. We are new to the past time but are finding that it
> becomes a slight obsession pretty quick. Spring has sprug in Vermont
> and we did our first letterbox of the season yesterday.
>
>
>
--
Happiness itself is a kind of gratitude - Joseph Wood Krutch
"..... The Bus came by and I got on, that's when it all began ....." Hop
aboard at:
http://groups.google.com/group/the-grateful-letterboxers?hl=en
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]