Yep 1942 Oklahoma still looks like that so no reason to move here.
The last pic that is.
Cederq, You come up with some of the coolest collages I’ve seen anywhere. How you keep getting new photos with no repeats that I can remember is beyond me.
Much appreciated.
Thank you Nemo! I just dig deep into the Dark Web… no, I just find interesting places and dig deep into their old archives and pull out what you see and I visit a lot of sites and am selective as to what I copy.
TOUGH LIVIIN THERE HOMBRE.
Great collection, as always Cederq !
Thank you, you and Nemo are gonna give me a big head and I will become insufferable…
“… are gonna give me a big head and I will become insufferable…”
Oh – – – Phil will put a stop to that when it happens. 🤣
That said, you do a fine job of finding images of cabins, trains, retro cars, etc.
I have hillbilly ancestry and proud of it. Family legend has it that Great Grandpa Ted would invite the game warden over for dinner and feed him “jumphigh jackrabbit” outa season. The warden knew these were subsistence farming folks who didn’t waste a bit of an animal needed for food, and kindly looked the other way.
Another important lesson is that there’s nothing wrong with being poor, but you don’t have to live in a garbage dump. We have a number of neighbors who can most kindly be described as “white trash”, and their yards would qualify as toxic waste sites. Like most of your cabin pics, clean it up! One of my favorite southern words is “shiftless” and the good for nuthin’ laziness it describes.
Agree – a great tour of real homes – where real people live or lived. History.
I’m surprised that Dick Proenneke’s cabin in Twin Lakes didn’t make the cut.
Thanks Cederq your work is much appreciated.
Yep 1942 Oklahoma still looks like that so no reason to move here.
The last pic that is.
Cederq, You come up with some of the coolest collages I’ve seen anywhere. How you keep getting new photos with no repeats that I can remember is beyond me.
Much appreciated.
Thank you Nemo! I just dig deep into the Dark Web… no, I just find interesting places and dig deep into their old archives and pull out what you see and I visit a lot of sites and am selective as to what I copy.
TOUGH LIVIIN THERE HOMBRE.
Great collection, as always Cederq !
Thank you, you and Nemo are gonna give me a big head and I will become insufferable…
“… are gonna give me a big head and I will become insufferable…”
Oh – – – Phil will put a stop to that when it happens. 🤣
That said, you do a fine job of finding images of cabins, trains, retro cars, etc.
I have hillbilly ancestry and proud of it. Family legend has it that Great Grandpa Ted would invite the game warden over for dinner and feed him “jumphigh jackrabbit” outa season. The warden knew these were subsistence farming folks who didn’t waste a bit of an animal needed for food, and kindly looked the other way.
Another important lesson is that there’s nothing wrong with being poor, but you don’t have to live in a garbage dump. We have a number of neighbors who can most kindly be described as “white trash”, and their yards would qualify as toxic waste sites. Like most of your cabin pics, clean it up! One of my favorite southern words is “shiftless” and the good for nuthin’ laziness it describes.
Agree – a great tour of real homes – where real people live or lived. History.
I’m surprised that Dick Proenneke’s cabin in Twin Lakes didn’t make the cut.
Thanks Cederq your work is much appreciated.