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3644. thoughtful - 3/15/2006 9:21:53 PM

Comme ça?

3645. thoughtful - 3/15/2006 9:24:33 PM

vs. a t-bar?

3646. alistairConnor - 3/15/2006 9:25:41 PM

Yes but the rubber disc should be visible between her legs.

3647. ronski - 3/15/2006 11:21:28 PM

It's not visible only because it is the same color as her ski suit.

In any case, it is what in the U.S. is called a pomalift, made by Poma, now called Leitner-Poma and now better known for chairlifts, such as detachable quads.

3648. ronski - 3/15/2006 11:25:05 PM



Mt. Mansfield, from Spruce Peak, Stowe, Vermont, Sunday.

3649. ronski - 3/16/2006 12:09:14 AM



Moss Glen Falls, Granville, Vermont, yesterday.

3650. ronski - 3/16/2006 12:10:54 AM



Clover-Dale Farm, Waterbury, Vermont.

3651. ronski - 3/16/2006 12:12:41 AM



Balsam firs, summit of Mount Ellen, Waitsfield, Vermont.

3652. alistairConnor - 3/16/2006 12:13:28 AM

I spent three days in Vermont in 1998

Definitely a place I want to go back to.
Granville surely refers to French settlers, from the eponymous port in Normandy?

3653. ronski - 3/16/2006 12:14:13 AM



Dead weeds in a cold rain, Stowe.

3654. ronski - 3/16/2006 12:15:04 AM



Ice jam, the White River.

3655. ronski - 3/16/2006 12:18:50 AM

Granville surely refers to French settlers, from the eponymous port in Normandy?

More likely from an English surname, anglicized from the French, in that part of the state (central). For all the French-ancestry residents in Vermont, and the state's name itself, most place names are Abenaki Indian or British (including English names for foreign cities or countries, such as "Moscow" and "Peru.")

3656. ronski - 3/16/2006 12:19:54 AM



Mountain birches.

3657. thoughtful - 3/16/2006 12:21:00 AM

It is generally assumed that the Vermont Granville derives from Granville in either Massachusetts or New York, both of which were named for John Carteret (1690-1763), the first Earl of Granville, one of the most illustrious men of his day. Already a peer by the time he was six years old, he became one of the best classical scholars of the 18th Century, and was second to none in political infiuence under the first three Georges. Horace Walpole, said the Earl was "handsome, open and engaging; ... his genius was magnificent and lofty; his heart was without gall or friendship, for he never tried to be revenged on his enemies or to serve his friends."

Strangely enough, some of the earliest Vermont records for the town of Granville show its name spelled Grantville. This gives rise to the thought that possibly the name merely meant that the town was granted by the Vermont legislature.

3658. ronski - 3/16/2006 12:21:33 AM



Moi.

3659. ronski - 3/16/2006 12:22:27 AM

thoughtful,

Cool. Thanks.

3660. alistairConnor - 3/16/2006 12:30:31 AM

At last, we know what you look like, Ronski!

OK, so the earl of Granville was actually called Carteret... oddly enough, I'm currently organising a mountain biking trip in which we get on the boat in Granville, spend a day riding around the isle of Jersey, then get the boat back to ... Carteret, which is about 30 miles further north on the coast of Normandy.

3661. ronski - 3/16/2006 12:31:52 AM

There's also a Carteret, New Jersey.

3662. Ronski - 3/16/2006 3:32:18 AM



Stowe, March thaw.

3663. Jenerator - 3/16/2006 3:38:40 AM

I miss skiing now.

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