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sdduuuude
Participantsdduuuude
Participantsdduuuude
Participantsdduuuude
ParticipantI know it isn’t what you were going for, but a Wii is pretty darn fun, and can offer many games in a small space while changing over time. A foosball table will always be a foosball table.
A regular card table is nice, too, for board-games, cards, Yahtzee, etc.
Consider a bumper-pool table. Needs less space than a regular pool table and doubles as a card-table.
Air-hockey comes to mind. Shuffleboard is fun.
sdduuuude
ParticipantI know it isn’t what you were going for, but a Wii is pretty darn fun, and can offer many games in a small space while changing over time. A foosball table will always be a foosball table.
A regular card table is nice, too, for board-games, cards, Yahtzee, etc.
Consider a bumper-pool table. Needs less space than a regular pool table and doubles as a card-table.
Air-hockey comes to mind. Shuffleboard is fun.
sdduuuude
ParticipantI know it isn’t what you were going for, but a Wii is pretty darn fun, and can offer many games in a small space while changing over time. A foosball table will always be a foosball table.
A regular card table is nice, too, for board-games, cards, Yahtzee, etc.
Consider a bumper-pool table. Needs less space than a regular pool table and doubles as a card-table.
Air-hockey comes to mind. Shuffleboard is fun.
sdduuuude
ParticipantI know it isn’t what you were going for, but a Wii is pretty darn fun, and can offer many games in a small space while changing over time. A foosball table will always be a foosball table.
A regular card table is nice, too, for board-games, cards, Yahtzee, etc.
Consider a bumper-pool table. Needs less space than a regular pool table and doubles as a card-table.
Air-hockey comes to mind. Shuffleboard is fun.
sdduuuude
ParticipantI know it isn’t what you were going for, but a Wii is pretty darn fun, and can offer many games in a small space while changing over time. A foosball table will always be a foosball table.
A regular card table is nice, too, for board-games, cards, Yahtzee, etc.
Consider a bumper-pool table. Needs less space than a regular pool table and doubles as a card-table.
Air-hockey comes to mind. Shuffleboard is fun.
sdduuuude
Participant[quote=bubble_contagion]Could someone point me to a Southern California suburban ghost town? I know of none.[/quote]
Maybe talking about California City:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/California_City,_California
Zoom in to see miles of grid without houses:
Or the Salton Sea “resorts.”
Or – the more modern versions (doesn’t give locations):
Video Mentions Willowalk in Hemet:
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/money_co/2010/03/housing-crisis-turns-some-suburban-neighborhoods-into-ghost-towns.htmlsdduuuude
Participant[quote=bubble_contagion]Could someone point me to a Southern California suburban ghost town? I know of none.[/quote]
Maybe talking about California City:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/California_City,_California
Zoom in to see miles of grid without houses:
Or the Salton Sea “resorts.”
Or – the more modern versions (doesn’t give locations):
Video Mentions Willowalk in Hemet:
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/money_co/2010/03/housing-crisis-turns-some-suburban-neighborhoods-into-ghost-towns.htmlsdduuuude
Participant[quote=bubble_contagion]Could someone point me to a Southern California suburban ghost town? I know of none.[/quote]
Maybe talking about California City:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/California_City,_California
Zoom in to see miles of grid without houses:
Or the Salton Sea “resorts.”
Or – the more modern versions (doesn’t give locations):
Video Mentions Willowalk in Hemet:
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/money_co/2010/03/housing-crisis-turns-some-suburban-neighborhoods-into-ghost-towns.htmlsdduuuude
Participant[quote=bubble_contagion]Could someone point me to a Southern California suburban ghost town? I know of none.[/quote]
Maybe talking about California City:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/California_City,_California
Zoom in to see miles of grid without houses:
Or the Salton Sea “resorts.”
Or – the more modern versions (doesn’t give locations):
Video Mentions Willowalk in Hemet:
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/money_co/2010/03/housing-crisis-turns-some-suburban-neighborhoods-into-ghost-towns.htmlsdduuuude
Participant[quote=bubble_contagion]Could someone point me to a Southern California suburban ghost town? I know of none.[/quote]
Maybe talking about California City:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/California_City,_California
Zoom in to see miles of grid without houses:
Or the Salton Sea “resorts.”
Or – the more modern versions (doesn’t give locations):
Video Mentions Willowalk in Hemet:
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/money_co/2010/03/housing-crisis-turns-some-suburban-neighborhoods-into-ghost-towns.htmlsdduuuude
ParticipantTrue, Rustico. I was thinking for drywall and paint, they should have no problems.
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