Yes, this is Tommy Jefferson writing the Declaration.
The kids loved this maze, but it isn't always open. The bushes are at least 7 feet high.
This great blue heron was perching on a limb over the lake beside the governor's gardens. This is a telephoto view.
We purchased the pass that let's us into all the shows and exhibits. Being a new volunteer at the German farm at the Museum of Frontier Culture, Dubby picked up a lot of tips and tricks.
Yes, they were quite good. More than just Yankee Doodle. They had a wide repertoire.
Fingers in the ears. The guy at the far right isn't taking any chances with powder burns, either. They've obviously done this before.
And for those under 75 years of age, the treasure picture in the post below is a 20 megabyte disk pack. This was the "removable hard drive" of a computer circa 1974. The pack sat in a drive machine the size of a modern laundry washing machine. It's capacity was 20 megabytes... which was an almost unbelievable amount of storage for those days. We ran our entire paper mill -- puchasing, payables, billing, receivables, inventory, maintenance, payroll, accounting, everything -- on two of these disks. 20 megs. Today, you can't even get a thumbdrive or SD card that small. I'm proud of my antique.
2 comments:
Poor Tom Jefferson was having trouble writing that document. I had to help him.
wow that looks like fun! and by the way mom, i don't think you helped him much. partly because your hands are in your lap in the picture, and partly because there's nothing in the declaration banning complaining which is something i'm sure you'd include... with the jelly beans of course... no, I'd say with all the big words and how difficult it is to understand it was dad that helped...
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