moose eater
Well-known member
We'll take 2. I still owe my wife a 24-year-overdue sauna. Thinking about the plans in my mind fairly often.There are Wyoming Hot Tubs available for soaking the aches and pains from a good ole bison toss.
View attachment 19014685
Some have aerators, but no thermostats.
View attachment 19014686
We had a 7.9 quake here years ago, centered about 80 miles south of us, and about 45 miles south of a former friend's in the bush.
We were on the phone immediately after the first major, somewhat elongated rocking and rolling.
During an after-shock on that one, I was in the basement where my boiler (an older Energy Kinetics EK-1 at that time), was bolted to a welded angle iron stand in the shape of an inverted upper-case 'L', that was bolted to the wall, and bolted to the concrete slab, with the void beneath the stand and boiler having a 'low-boy' hot water heater sitting atop a circular piece of 2" blue exterior-grade foam.
At one point I looked at the boiler on the stand, about 2-1/2 feet off the floor, and the boiler was swaying like a drunken sailor, despite its stand being hard-bolted to a filled and rebar-reinforced block wall and the concrete slab.
A minor crack to the sheet rock in the vaulted ceiling of the stairwell that runs from the main floor to the top floor was the only discernible damage. The place was built over-kill; my specialty.
But there are times that Alaska gets a BUNCH of quakes in a single day, someplace. The defining differences in how they 'roll' or feel is greatly dependent on distance and depth in the earth.
Good and exciting times, until they're not.
On a good, lofty mattress, when lying down, it can be sort of a variation on the old 'magic fingers' massage beds you put .25 cents into, in random motels years and years ago... but with no coin slot.