Subject: more wandering rocks ohpawv to dry ohn
Date: Aug 16, 2003 @ 19:38
Author: m06079 ("m06079" <barbaria_longa@...>)
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> yes thats itparsell
> glad someone is paying attention
>
> --- In BoundaryPoint@yahoogroups.com, "Lowell G. McManus"
> <mcmanus71496@m...> wrote:
> > Perhaps you are referring to manyvt, not manhvt. The latter is
> the "mud
> > turtle."
> >
> > Lowell G. McManus
> > Leesville, Louisiana, USA
> >
> >
> > ----- Original Message -----
> > From: "acroorca2002" <orc@o...>
> > To: <BoundaryPoint@yahoogroups.com>
> > Sent: Thursday, August 14, 2003 11:05 AM
> > Subject: [BoundaryPoint] Re: arlatx pic may 1997
> >
> >
> > > & while we are contemplating wandering monuments
> > > as well as comparing jacks 1991 pic of arlatx
> > > & the rest of his entirely earth moving book
> > > which i hope everyone finds in our files section under
> > > please take a look especially at jacks manhvt pic
> > >
> > > there the listing of the rock is owing to no single tree but is
> > > probably due entirely to frost heaving & the sloping ground
> is inmore
> > > & i can attest that its nose dive has even accelerated in
> > > recent timeswith
> > >
> > > one of the beauties of this particular pic is that while jack is
> > > standing erect & visiting the dimple atop the monument
> histhe
> > > right index finger
> > > class a as it were
> > > he is also pointing with his right elbow for a simultaneous
> class
> > > b visit to what is actually the most presumptive location of
> > > true but invisible manhvt tripoint itself
> > > which was formerly but no longer truly is marked by that
> dimple
> > >
> > > so i would say manhvt also is definitely worth a periodic
> revisit to
> > > see if its 8 or 10 foot rock is still even embedded in the
> ground
> > > because it appears to be just falling down a hill by
> comparison