Really cool and real for them to invite some of the fans on stage with them near the end of the show. Losing themselves together in the moment of music and dance.
Just came back from Camp Ross and they are still doing this. It is great for the kids. I am the Cub Master for our pack and have a Webelos 1 and just crossed over Boy Scout that attended. The staff works so many hours to ensure this program functions and some of them even remember kids from previous years.
@@PrincessNottingham hi P... ' american space shuttle is a NOT retirement... keep continue going american space shuttle anyday anytime... ussr russia have a very cheap low classic buran airplane
@@thespiritstingray9359 hi T... ' keep up going american space shuttle fly in the future... ussr russia cheap buran plane is a purely death and garbage... ussr russia is a spy / copy / steal information american space shuttle system... dont let ussr russia fly in american space shuttle
This needs legs for outdoor use and is way overpriced. This is a 12x 8 x 6 oven for $517.06, but you can get a MACA 10 x 14 x 8 for $185 or a 12 x 16 x 9 for $250. Granted, they aren't multi-ovens but you can get trivets and things and still have money for a large feats. Those Maca ovens are substantially heavier also.
@@e5095 I think it's really cool, and though I've been craving some real Japanese cast iron to add to my collection, that price tag just sort of struck me as off. I guess with the grate it technically has legs. I have the Maca 12x16x9 and it's a monster.
if you ever get to DC, take the DC Metro Silver Line to the end of the line or Dulles airport (for now it stops in Reston, a suburb away) later on - the Udvar-Hazy annex to NASM is where the really juicy artifacts are located. You get to stare up into the wheel wells of Discovery these days, etc - you're really close. They also have an SR-71, the Enola Gay, an Air France Concorde, the Boeing "Dash 80", a bunch of Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo artifacts including _the_ quarantine Airstream. A bunch of random space suits, mission hardware, Apollo Guidance Computer parts, random race airplanes, random military airplanes (including many rare/unique ones), some old WACS uniforms, some US clones of the V-1 buzz bomb, and the scale model of the mothership from Close Encounters of the Third Kind. And yes, you will find yourself humming B flat, C, A flat, (octave lower) A flat, E flat when you're in front of it:P
@@chouseification yep - we live in Reston and I had my son play hooky that day to go watch Discovery be delivered to its final resting place at Udvar-Hazy!
@@e5095 you're a good dad. Sometimes, the real learning is out in the world. :D I've only been there once myself, and due to where/what DC is, didn't get a rental car; but staying at the W by the big map of the city meant we were blocks away from public transit to any of the main destinations; DC really was wise to put that subway system in, and to continue to expand it, as it's such a freeing thing as a tourist to know there were always taxis if needed, but most places were on or close to a Metro stop. Even in cities with light rail, it's not quite the same, although I could get on light rail and ride to our airport in my city, the network doesn't have enough coverage yet, so I'd have to be intentionally driven to one of the lines, at which point may as well drop me off right at the main terminal by car. D'oh. My fellow travelers on that trip weren't at all veterans (second round trip flight in their life, shockingly enough) so when I pointed at the Metro line station at Reagan airport knowing the train went to basically right across the road from our hotel, I was vetoed and we all crammed into a taxi. Newbies can be funny sometimes, but I didn't want to fight it. They went to portrait museum. DC is truly neat though - on day 2 or 3 of trip, the rest didn't want to go to Udvar-Hazy (yeah) so I buzzed there solo - sadly (and I think that's still current status) the line ended at the big transit hub at Wiehle street - had to wait a while for the bus, which then spent a good 45 minutes wandering to various business parks and a few apartment complex areas in Reston and once to the main gates at Dulles... oooh so close, then back on the freeway for a while and eventually there it was... Udvar-Hazy! :D Hahaha, it's not really that much of a hassle, however a direct shuttle (or the eventual train stop at Dulles+shuttle bus) would have been far preferred over cruising the 'burbs of DC, and is something people visiting should be aware of. Plan a lot of extra time in your commute to get there at opening, etc :D
' american space shuttle on the top JUMBO 747 is the best beautifully aircraft... saw that space shuttle / 747 fly over the JPL / NASA campus in pasadena before
You’re welcome - it was a great show and we got to meet them afterwards at the merch counter. It was the last show of the US leg of the tour and they had to sell it all. Really nice people!
Hi, sorry I didn't see your question! I've cooked with it on the stove several times, making chashu pork and some curries, and also grilled on it outside three or four times including camping - grilling steaks, kabobs, some okra, spare ribs, etc. It works really well but haven't made another video yet...super pleased with it though - especially as an hibachi/shichirin!
I was at that gig. I'd been a fan of Kraftwerk since about 1980, when I was still a kid, and this was the only time I'd seen the group live. Thanks for uploading this.
Yeah, I didn't become a fan until around my freshman year in college, but like you never had the opportunity to see them before...in my case I spent a fair amount of time in Germany, too including a stint living in Berlin (pre-reunification)! Very stoked to have seen them at the Tate - a fantastic venue for this kind of show.
Back in the day we had a camp counselor who would be a post and all he did was just stand there and yell "POST!!!!!!!!!!!" He nearly passed out every time lol
We live in Reston, VA - there aren't too many barren hills around here, so I tend to look for the man-made ones but the trees tend to hem you in too close!
The hill you found is excellent. The valley helps to crowd the wind into the bare hill, and nice smooth surface (water) at the base of the hill. Looks good!