Jay Sco
Well-known member
Nobody is going to call you Average Joe. You aren't a mediocre superhero. We'll call you Joe if you'd like, or perhaps thereal.
Average Joey?[emoji106] [emoji107] ?Nobody is going to call you Average Joe. You aren't a mediocre superhero. We'll call you Joe if you'd like, or perhaps thereal.
I'm in the "don't get it" camp.
The chances of someone online wanting to track this person down are slim, the chance of someone being local and capable are even slimmer.
As far as the negativity on this forum in general, some may be uncalled for, but it's one of the positives as far as I'm concerned. People say what's honestly on their mind without having to worry about hurting someone's feelings. Everyone is entitled to an opinion whether you agree with it or not. Grow some thick skin and keep moving ahead.
Constructive feedback is great. Criticism for not parking his cars inside is just being an *******. .
So we are all assholes if we commented that he didn't park the cars in the garage?
Another homeowner keeping $45,000 worth of cars outside so you can store $1500 worth of **** in your garage. I don't get it....
No, only if you were rude about it. I was speaking specifically of this:
Another homeowner keeping $45,000 worth of cars outside so you can store $1500 worth of **** in your garage. I don't get it....
LOL[emoji23] [emoji23] [emoji23], socks with crocs=clean feet when socks come off=happy wife when dirt doesn't get tracked in the house=happy meCrocs with socks? And who sits in that chair?
It originates in one of the strongest instincts found in all living things - survival. Just like the squirrel laying away nuts for the winter, so do humans feel the instinctive need to stockpile stuff for the future.
The problem comes when this hording instinct is stronger than the realization that there are enough safety nets in place in modern advanced societies to render such precautions unneccessary ....![]()
Some of us only have garages, not both a shop and a garage.. For me, it is either park my truck in the garage and leave my tools and stuff in the driveway, or vice-versa..Looks like he was hopped up on Red Bull and did a good sweeping and quick clean up. A better finish would have been cars in the garage.
Or maybe they just like using their garage for other stuff. FFS, this is Garage Journal. I thought the whole point was doing interesting things with / in our garages. Parking cars? That's just about the least interesting thing I can think of to do with my garage.
You guys apparently lack any imagination.
No no - I think you may have miss-understood my point - I was talking about the phenomenon you can see when you drive by an open garage door and all you see when you look inside is - storage containers - washing machines - fridges - and all sorts of redundant houshold junk with barely any space for a person to even get inside the door.
My point to 'olytdi' was that this clearly didn't apply to the OP or anybody else using their garage for recreation and/or making money and I merely offered an explanation for it.
I don't think imagination - or lack of it - is the point at issue here ....![]()
Some of us only have garages, not both a shop and a garage.. For me, it is either park my truck in the garage and leave my tools and stuff in the driveway, or vice-versa..
Can you guess which option I went with?
This post edited by the NSA
That's Average Beaux[emoji23]Who's the black furry helper I see scooting around?
no cars in the man cave!!!looks like he was hopped up on red bull and did a good sweeping and quick clean up. A better finish would have been cars in the garage.
I understand that, I'm from Texas. Up here in the Midwest we get a little break from that intense sun.
50 shades of red [emoji23] [emoji23] [emoji23] . I have seen a lot of the neons from those years with bad paint. I think they had a run of bad paint jobs.I wish. My wife bought new a 2001 Dodge neon in salsa red. 10 years after owning it was 50 shades of red. LOL
50 shades of red [emoji23] [emoji23] [emoji23] . I have seen a lot of the neons from those years with bad paint. I think they had a run of bad paint jobs.
Another homeowner keeping $45,000 worth of cars outside so you can store $1500 worth of **** in your garage. I don't get it....
If they lived long enough to have bad paint, you've probably got the only one off of the factory line worth owning.
I'm sure there are survivors from each automobile genre. I just have a nasty taste in my mouth from owning the jeep wrangler from hell. Had an awesome 88 s10, sold to a friend. Bought the 2005 wrangler 4.0, nothing but electrical problems. Took a huge hit, now back to chevy b/c it's made with real tornadoes[emoji23] .Heck, we have a 2001 neon I bought for my daughter 5 years ago
It was the local TV stations news car. 240000 miles. 258000 today we still use it as a back up when someone need wheels
White paint still looks good.
Capt. Chrysler
White paint still looks good.
Capt. Chrysler
Looks the same to me at the end except the counters are cleared. Where's the beef?
In my mind, this is an impossible mess that will take weeks to recover from[emoji12]'He calls that a mess.'
/Gimli
