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Maggie’s Funny & awesome pics, vids and memes thread (work safe, no nudity)

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Best nut milk bag? I've got a better nut milk bag right here. *Butthead laugh.

 
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New Apple Car Play capable radio for the Venza. Got it from ol’ Bezos, it had great reviews and was on sale for like $125….Chyna…

Sounds much better than the Pioneer that was in it as well 🤷🏼‍♂️ Hard to find one with an actual volume knob but glad I did. Steering wheel controls work, used the same interface as the Pioneer.


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Man I hate when people caption things wrong... This has nothing to do with the Continental Army or the Sons of Liberty. And Brian Williams wasn't born yet. This is not related to the Revolutionary war because planes had not been invented yet.

This is Grant taking Vicksburg with the Union Marine Aviation pioneer Capt. Thaddeus "Zepplin" Lowe flying CAS. Happened right at the same time as Gettysburg, so they never got any decent press. But Vicksburg was taken only after a serious application of Snake and Nape.

I so wish people would research pictures before posting them.

Cheers,

Sirhr
 
When you visit...

Spend about 2 hours at the visitors center. Then put on a ruck. Get plenty of water. And spend the next day and a half not only walking the battlefield, but driving it. Remember, the 'battlefield' was encampments 15+ miles away. Cavalry actions were not infantry actions. Cavalry could cover 100 miles a day. Not easily. But they could do it. The battle 'space' that ended with the stand at Little Bighorn is immense. More the size one would expect in a WW2 armored action.

Also, it is the only national battlefield where the headstones are placed exactly where the troopers fell. You can see the 'pockets' where they were herded in and reduced. You can walk out hundreds of yards (in one case a couple of miles) and find graves where 1 or 2 or 3 men tried to escape as a group or solo from the perimeter and were run down and killed by the Indian horsemen. You can 'feel' the battle unfolding much better than on many battlefields where there may be some markers. But the graves are remote and all lined up.

Once you get a mile or so from the park.... even the grass fights you. You step into unseen ditches or chuck holes. It looks smooth and undulating. But under it all is some totally savage dirt and terrain.

Geographic determinism is a major force in history, especially military history. Terrain shapes the battle. Such a good example of it at Little Bighorn.

Cheers,

Sirhr

PS. Gatling Gun was a 4 - 6 man crew. Plus they travelled with 2 - 3 limbers each. So that meant horse teams for each gun and limber. And horsemen to manage those. Then an officer or NCO in charge. Then a loader, and an operator who worked in shifts. And extra men for the setup and digging in as well as security ( infantry and cavalry charging cannon positions was common). A Gatling battery was an artillery battery, for all intents and purposes. So... not one guy by any means. And a definite burden to a cavalry company.
Also remember the visitor center and “entrance” is at the end of the battle….. you have to start at the top
 
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The last photo is from the Chimney Tops trail. The last stretch was closed off due to fires but people climbed around a gate to actually scamper up that trail to the top. I watched them actually crawl the last few hundred yards to reach that top peak. From what I could see, any misstep would be costly. Get there early to avoid all the crowds. A stunning park with beautiful views.
 
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The last photo is from the Chimney Tops trail. The last stretch was closed off due to fires but people climbed around a gate to actually scamper up that trail to the top. I watched them actually crawl the last few hundred yards to reach that top peak. From what I could see, any misstep would be costly. Get there early to avoid all the crowds. A stunning park with beautiful views.
Hiked that many times before the fire and gate. The view from the top is incredible. That trail is short but it's straight up with multiple switchbacks.
 
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The last photo is from the Chimney Tops trail. The last stretch was closed off due to fires but people climbed around a gate to actually scamper up that trail to the top. I watched them actually crawl the last few hundred yards to reach that top peak. From what I could see, any misstep would be costly. Get there early to avoid all the crowds. A stunning park with beautiful views.

That's a beautiful place. Not sure these old bones could make it to the top of that peak. In my younger days, I'd be up for that climb. I can't imagine the view from up there.
 

I field dressed a mature bull for a client. When the guts dropped and rib cage exposed, his ribs were a mess. Over half were broken and rehealed. He had two major trauma scars that went deep into his chest. Years of fighting like this will do that.

Buffalo are incredible athletes as well. They can outrun quarter horses, walk across cattle guards, etc. A friend tried to catch a young cow on his four wheeler and she kept up with him when he maxed out at 65 mph.
 
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They didn't carry their sabres, either. Dunno how much that would've mattered, but if it came down to hand-to-hand I'd rather have a few feet of sharp steel than an empty carbine.

Custer almost got the chop at the Battle of Washita under the same circumstances a few years before. He attacked an isolated camp while following a raiding party. If not for the cold weather and snow on the ground the 4000 Indians camped a few miles away might have decided to attack him. He used a ruse to scare them off but it barely worked.

The repeating rifles in the hands of the Sioux va the single shots of the US at Bighorn were decisive in that engagement. The Indians only had a few hundred of those rifles but they were shockingly effective in the initial exchanges.

You really have to walk the battlefield. Custer had no idea what he was doing and neither did the Indians.