As many of you will recall I built an airplane display for a company
that transports heavy cargo all over the world. My display is in Las
Vegas this week, who knows where after that.
Anyway it seems to blend in with the "Pro" commercially designed booth.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/8539696494/in/photostream/lightbox/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/8538589223/in/photostream/lightbox/
"John Grossbohlin" <[email protected]> wrote:
> ...and yes, spell checkers can do some interesting things to the written
> word! I recall an embarrassing one when "Browning Citori" (a shotgun
> model) was "corrected."
LOL ... Great shotgun, if you can find it. ;)
Here's mine in action over 30 years ago:
http://lh6.googleusercontent.com/-tBLEBVR4vuM/TfUZggNeRmI/AAAAAAAAFbk/wJ7qXzNaIeE/s2048/06-12-2011%2002;15;45PM.jpg
--
www.ewoodshop.com (Mobile)
"John Grossbohlin" <[email protected]> wrote:
> "Swingman" wrote in message news:[email protected]...
>
>> I have an old Remington Model 11 (Browning patent) 20 ga (which I got
>> when >I was 11 years old); a 1950's era Browning A5, 12 ga; and the
>> Citori O&U >(full and modified choke) 12ga, magnum chambered.
>
>> The Citori is my favorite ... like you, it has become an extension of my >arms and eyes.
>
>> That said, I don't hunt much any longer, but I did more than my share of
>> >dove, quail, duck and goose hunting for 50 years.
>
>> I did the below twice a year, with clients, for a good ten years ...
>> don't >think it is even possible to do this any longer:
>
> In South America they have dove hunts... I think the standard package is
> two cases of shells per day but you can buy more!
>
> I've thinned out the inventory... down to the two Brownings, a 20 gauge
> S&W Gold Elite English stock, and a 28 gauge CZ Ringneck. The Gold Elite
> is all I used the past two seasons... great woodcock and grouse gun where
> action is fast in tight cover. I do better with the Citori on the
> relatively slow flying pheasants in more open cover but the Gold Elite
> carries so nicely I carried it for them too... missed a few though. ;~)
>
> Amusingly I used the Gold Elite at the Boy Scout sporting clays
> fundraiser last fall at Orvis Sandanona... worst score I ever got, a 50,
> but that got me first place in the "beginner's category" which we
> determined by the median score...! LOL That gun was totally out of place
> amongst the 12 gauge O/Us but I was there to have fun with the Gold Elite
> and I did. One of the trappers was giving me crap about shooting from a
> low gun during warm up. When my team showed up at his station during the
> shoot he started in again. He didn't say a word after I hit 5/6, from a
> low gun at a difficult uphill, tight, fast station where many got 0-3.
> That gun is made for that kind of shooting... those big slow 12 gauge
> guns were handicapped there. ;~)
>
> Sort of on topic... I'm working on a fitted case for the Gold Elite...
> oak frame and exterior with a cherry interior. I made one but am not
> crazy about it... it was a good learning experience though. I'm going to
> strip the Brusso Quadrant Hinges and Gerstner leather handle and
> compartment (drawer) pull and make another one.
Envy you the upland game shooting. The closest we have here to that
experience is Bob White quail in the Gulf Coast area. I used to load hay
bales for a neighbor farmer, all day in the hot summer sun, in exchange for
for the privilege of being able to hunt his acreage during quail season. I
grew up devouring the old "Field and Stream" mags and dreamed many a night
of pheasant and grouse hunting. :)
--
www.ewoodshop.com (Mobile)
"Swingman" wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>Envy you the upland game shooting. The closest we have here to that
>experience is Bob White quail in the Gulf Coast area. I used to load hay
>bales for a neighbor farmer, all day in the hot summer sun, in exchange for
>for the privilege of being able to hunt his acreage during quail season. I
>grew up devouring the old "Field and Stream" mags and dreamed many a night
>of pheasant and grouse hunting. :)
It is fun for sure... and it's not about the numbers it's about the
experience. Habitat has become an issue as development and maturation of the
forests has cut the number of birds. When I was a kid wild pheasants and
grouse could be found in our large yard at times. Now my parents have
turkey.... which is an outgrowth of the maturation.
Regarding habitat I've gotten involved with the Ruffed Grouse Society as
treasurer of the Mid-Hudson chapter and my son Jesse is the secretary--the
youngest officer in RGS history. We had our inaugural fund raising banquet a
few weeks ago and had 73 participants. We've had discussions with the state
department of environmental conservation and NYC watershed folks and both
have indicated they would allow us to develop habitat on their lands.
Things are looking up!
We get a chance at quail on one piece of state forest preserve land. It is
stocked a couple times per year... don't think I've ever gotten more than 3
or 4 in a season though. It is a good place for stocked pheasants and the
woodcock flights keep things interesting. Ruffed grouse are the toughest to
find.... and kept secret!
"Swingman" wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I have an old Remington Model 11 (Browning patent) 20 ga (which I got when
>I was 11 years old); a 1950's era Browning A5, 12 ga; and the Citori O&U
>(full and modified choke) 12ga, magnum chambered.
>The Citori is my favorite ... like you, it has become an extension of my
>arms and eyes.
>That said, I don't hunt much any longer, but I did more than my share of
>dove, quail, duck and goose hunting for 50 years.
>I did the below twice a year, with clients, for a good ten years ... don't
>think it is even possible to do this any longer:
In South America they have dove hunts... I think the standard package is two
cases of shells per day but you can buy more!
I've thinned out the inventory... down to the two Brownings, a 20 gauge S&W
Gold Elite English stock, and a 28 gauge CZ Ringneck. The Gold Elite is all
I used the past two seasons... great woodcock and grouse gun where action is
fast in tight cover. I do better with the Citori on the relatively slow
flying pheasants in more open cover but the Gold Elite carries so nicely I
carried it for them too... missed a few though. ;~)
Amusingly I used the Gold Elite at the Boy Scout sporting clays fundraiser
last fall at Orvis Sandanona... worst score I ever got, a 50, but that got
me first place in the "beginner's category" which we determined by the
median score...! LOL That gun was totally out of place amongst the 12 gauge
O/Us but I was there to have fun with the Gold Elite and I did. One of the
trappers was giving me crap about shooting from a low gun during warm up.
When my team showed up at his station during the shoot he started in again.
He didn't say a word after I hit 5/6, from a low gun at a difficult uphill,
tight, fast station where many got 0-3. That gun is made for that kind of
shooting... those big slow 12 gauge guns were handicapped there. ;~)
Sort of on topic... I'm working on a fitted case for the Gold Elite... oak
frame and exterior with a cherry interior. I made one but am not crazy about
it... it was a good learning experience though. I'm going to strip the
Brusso Quadrant Hinges and Gerstner leather handle and compartment (drawer)
pull and make another one.
John
On 3/8/2013 2:44 PM, [email protected] wrote:
> Nicely done, Leon! Your design >really< shines when it is doing what
> it was designed to do.
Thank you Robert! It was not my first concept but a few suggestions and
pictures of the proposed area were a bit helpful. I was given
renderings of what the rest of the booth contents would look like.
Oddly the company that built the booth was apparently incapable of doing
the airplane display too.
>
> I must confess that I didn't read this thread earlier as I thought,
>
> Well.... poor Leon.... he got screwed. Damnit! At least he got
> paid!
You lost me there.. ;~)
>
> Then to find it was OK all along, that's great!
>
> Robert
>
Yeah, they seemed to have liked it.
On 3/8/2013 8:42 AM, Mike Marlow wrote:
> Leon wrote:
>> As many of you will recall I built an airplane display for a company
>> that transports heavy cargo all over the world. My display is in Las
>> Vegas this week, who knows where after that.
>>
>> Anyway it seems to blend in with the "Pro" commercially designed
>> booth.
>> http://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/8539696494/in/photostream/lightbox/
>>
>> http://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/8538589223/in/photostream/lightbox/
>
> Pretty neat when you see your own work (regardless of what it is), in the
> company of the "big boys", isn't it? Congratulations.
>
Yeah, It finally hit home with me when I saw these pictures. I was not
sure how well it would blend in although it apparently got rave reviews
from the employees. Thank you!
On 3/8/2013 8:45 AM, G. Ross wrote:
> Leon wrote:
>> As many of you will recall I built an airplane display for a company
>> that transports heavy cargo all over the world. My display is in Las
>> Vegas this week, who knows where after that.
>>
>> Anyway it seems to blend in with the "Pro" commercially designed booth.
>>
>> http://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/8539696494/in/photostream/lightbox/
>>
>> http://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/8538589223/in/photostream/lightbox/
>
> Looks very professional. As usual.
>
Thank you!
"Swingman" wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>"John Grossbohlin" <[email protected]> wrote:
>> ...and yes, spell checkers can do some interesting things to the written
>> word! I recall an embarrassing one when "Browning Citori" (a shotgun
>> model) was "corrected."
>LOL ... Great shotgun, if you can find it. ;)
Yup... got a 20 and a 12. Seldom use the 12 any more as I primarily upland
bird hunt... the 20 is my "magic gun." It's pretty much a "See bird, See
bird fall" thing where I don't even notice what happens in between. The way
it should be... ;~)
John
Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet> wrote in news:NL-
[email protected]:
> As many of you will recall I built an airplane display for a company
> that transports heavy cargo all over the world. My display is in Las
> Vegas this week, who knows where after that.
>
> Anyway it seems to blend in with the "Pro" commercially designed booth.
>
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/8539696494/in/photostream/lightbo
x/
>
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/8538589223/in/photostream/lightbo
x/
Fantastic!!
The Volga reference reminds me of a song from my youth:
Ik ben Olga van de Wolga
Ik drink wodka tot ik kapot ga
Ik eet kaviaar als een moordenaar
Omdat ik zoooveel van je hou!
I am Olga from the Volga
I drink vodka until I go kaput
I eat caviar like a murderer
Because I Looove you that much!
So sorry, you have to have had some ...
--
Best regards
Han
email address is invalid
Ed Pawlowski <[email protected]> wrote in
news:[email protected]:
> On Fri, 08 Mar 2013 08:35:48 -0600, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
> wrote:
>
>>I guess my title should have said, NOW, not, not. Darn spell checker,
>>yeah I probably misspelled now. LOL
>
> You should have used the spell checker on the display too. The
> letters don't look like what we learned in school. .
Don't you remember, Ed?
The optimists were learning Russian, the pessimists Chinese.
--
Best regards
Han
email address is invalid
"Leon" wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I guess my title should have said, NOW, not, not. Darn spell checker, yeah
>I probably misspelled now. LOL
Cool that your display is now on display!
...and yes, spell checkers can do some interesting things to the written
word! I recall an embarrassing one when "Browning Citori" (a shotgun model)
was "corrected."
John
On 3/8/2013 2:07 PM, Steve B wrote:
> "Leon" <lcb11211@swbelldotnet> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>> As many of you will recall I built an airplane display for a company that
>> transports heavy cargo all over the world. My display is in Las Vegas
>> this week, who knows where after that.
>>
>> Anyway it seems to blend in with the "Pro" commercially designed booth.
>>
>> http://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/8539696494/in/photostream/lightbox/
>>
>> http://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/8538589223/in/photostream/lightbox/
>
> Saw the big Antonov take off from Las Vegas one time with a bunch of stuff
> on board for Chernobyl. The paper said that it barely cleared the fence on
> the other end. One hell of an airplane.
>
> Steve
>
>
Even the model in my garage was big. LOL. Had the landing snagged the
fence, Las Vegas might have been relocated near Chernobyl. ;~)
On 3/8/2013 8:31 AM, Leon wrote:
> As many of you will recall I built an airplane display for a company
> that transports heavy cargo all over the world. My display is in Las
> Vegas this week, who knows where after that.
>
> Anyway it seems to blend in with the "Pro" commercially designed booth.
>
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/8539696494/in/photostream/lightbox/
>
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/8538589223/in/photostream/lightbox/
How cool is that, Bubba! Fantastic ... all that detailed planning of
yours paid off, BIG TIME.
The banking angle is perfection personified (despite no flaps <g> ).
Congratulations!!
--
eWoodShop: www.eWoodShop.com
Wood Shop: www.e-WoodShop.net
https://plus.google.com/114902129577517371552/posts
http://www.custommade.com/by/ewoodshop/
KarlCaillouet@ (the obvious)
On 3/9/2013 7:52 AM, John Grossbohlin wrote:
> "Swingman" wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>
>> "John Grossbohlin" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>>> ...and yes, spell checkers can do some interesting things to the written
>>> word! I recall an embarrassing one when "Browning Citori" (a shotgun
>>> model) was "corrected."
>
>> LOL ... Great shotgun, if you can find it. ;)
>
> Yup... got a 20 and a 12. Seldom use the 12 any more as I primarily
> upland bird hunt... the 20 is my "magic gun." It's pretty much a "See
> bird, See bird fall" thing where I don't even notice what happens in
> between. The way it should be... ;~)
I have an old Remington Model 11 (Browning patent) 20 ga (which I got
when I was 11 years old); a 1950's era Browning A5, 12 ga; and the
Citori O&U (full and modified choke) 12ga, magnum chambered.
The Citori is my favorite ... like you, it has become an extension of my
arms and eyes.
That said, I don't hunt much any longer, but I did more than my share of
dove, quail, duck and goose hunting for 50 years.
I did the below twice a year, with clients, for a good ten years ...
don't think it is even possible to do this any longer:
https://picasaweb.google.com/111355467778981859077/MexicoWhiteWingDoveHuntSept1981?authkey=Gv1sRgCOGapbueiLe45QE
--
eWoodShop: www.eWoodShop.com
Wood Shop: www.e-WoodShop.net
https://plus.google.com/114902129577517371552/posts
http://www.custommade.com/by/ewoodshop/
KarlCaillouet@ (the obvious)
Leon wrote:
> As many of you will recall I built an airplane display for a company
> that transports heavy cargo all over the world. My display is in Las
> Vegas this week, who knows where after that.
>
> Anyway it seems to blend in with the "Pro" commercially designed
> booth.
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/8539696494/in/photostream/lightbox/
>
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/8538589223/in/photostream/lightbox/
Pretty neat when you see your own work (regardless of what it is), in the
company of the "big boys", isn't it? Congratulations.
--
-Mike-
[email protected]
Leon wrote:
> As many of you will recall I built an airplane display for a company
> that transports heavy cargo all over the world. My display is in Las
> Vegas this week, who knows where after that.
>
> Anyway it seems to blend in with the "Pro" commercially designed booth.
>
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/8539696494/in/photostream/lightbox/
>
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/8538589223/in/photostream/lightbox/
It's really cool to see it not on display! It looks *great*on display!
Bill
"Leon" <lcb11211@swbelldotnet> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> As many of you will recall I built an airplane display for a company that
> transports heavy cargo all over the world. My display is in Las Vegas
> this week, who knows where after that.
>
> Anyway it seems to blend in with the "Pro" commercially designed booth.
>
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/8539696494/in/photostream/lightbox/
>
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/8538589223/in/photostream/lightbox/
Saw the big Antonov take off from Las Vegas one time with a bunch of stuff
on board for Chernobyl. The paper said that it barely cleared the fence on
the other end. One hell of an airplane.
Steve
On 3/9/13 11:54 AM, Dave in Texas wrote:
> "Leon" wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>
> As many of you will recall I built an airplane display for a company
> that transports heavy cargo all over the world. My display is in Las
> Vegas this week, who knows where after that.
>
> Anyway it seems to blend in with the "Pro" commercially designed booth.
>
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/8539696494/in/photostream/lightbox/
>
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/8538589223/in/photostream/lightbox/
>
> PRO!
>
> Dave in Texas
>
>
Definitely Pro. I have a friend who's done this for a living for quite a
while, while employed by another company and now, as owner of his own.
He specializes in museum displays and these kind of convention displays.
Leon, yours stands up in every aspect, with possibly one exception. In
his business, they usually only have a week or two to produce an entire
convention display. Of course, there's more than one guy doing it.
Kudos to you, looks fantastic.
--
-MIKE-
"Playing is not something I do at night, it's my function in life"
--Elvin Jones (1927-2004)
--
http://mikedrums.com
[email protected]
---remove "DOT" ^^^^ to reply
"John Grossbohlin" <[email protected]> wrote
> We get a chance at quail on one piece of state forest preserve land. It is
> stocked a couple times per year... don't think I've ever gotten more than
> 3 or 4 in a season though. It is a good place for stocked pheasants and
> the woodcock flights keep things interesting. Ruffed grouse are the
> toughest to find.... and kept secret!
I kinda got spoiled early in life at age 13. I used to get taken with some
other boys, and their dads, to some fantastic quail shooting near the town
of Searchlight, home of Sen. Harry Reid. We used to go on overniters there,
and always limited out. Well, nearly. In other parts of the state, I have
seen a thousand in one day. So many in a covey that they made your mind
spin when they all walked at the same time, like during an earthquake when
something's just not right, the ground is moving. I live in Utah now, and
don't hunt quail here. Not too many around. Not like southern Nevada.
Steve
"Leon" wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
As many of you will recall I built an airplane display for a company
that transports heavy cargo all over the world. My display is in Las
Vegas this week, who knows where after that.
Anyway it seems to blend in with the "Pro" commercially designed booth.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/8539696494/in/photostream/lightbox/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/8538589223/in/photostream/lightbox/
PRO!
Dave in Texas
On 3/9/2013 12:12 PM, -MIKE- wrote:> On 3/9/13 11:54 AM, Dave in Texas
wrote:
>> "Leon" wrote in message
>> news:[email protected]...
>>
>> As many of you will recall I built an airplane display for a company
>> that transports heavy cargo all over the world. My display is in Las
>> Vegas this week, who knows where after that.
>>
>> Anyway it seems to blend in with the "Pro" commercially designed booth.
>>
>>
http://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/8539696494/in/photostream/lightbox/
>>
>>
http://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/8538589223/in/photostream/lightbox/
>>
>> PRO!
>>
>> Dave in Texas
>>
>>
>
> Definitely Pro. I have a friend who's done this for a living for quite a
> while, while employed by another company and now, as owner of his own.
> He specializes in museum displays and these kind of convention displays.
Thank you! It looked good in my garage. ;~) I was not sure how it
would look compared to the other pieces that it would be used with. I
think it works. At least they liked it enough to send me these pictures.
>
> Leon, yours stands up in every aspect, with possibly one exception. In
> his business, they usually only have a week or two to produce an entire
> convention display. Of course, there's more than one guy doing it.
I recall the day before Thanksgiving sending the quote to them and I got
a go ahead a couple of hours later. I bought materials the following
Monday and the unit was completed before the end of the year. There
were bumps in the road that delayed getting started in earnest and there
was about a 10 day period that I had to wait for the airplanes to arrive
so that I could space them before proceeding to cut the angles holes for
the mounting posts and covering the top with laminate. I'm sure the
guys that do this for a living already have an inventory of materials
that are premade much like Ikea furniture. This set up appeared to be
that way. I do recall feed back when the cabinet I built was first
assembled with out my guidance. The response was, it's nice to have a
display that goes together like you would think it should and it only
take 10 minutes.
I put a lot of thought into the simplicity factor. There are 8 bolts
that are all on the outside of the cabinet and that is all that is
needed to hold everything in place. This does not count the actual
mounting of the airplanes to the tops of the posts. Add 2 set screws
for that. There are two shelves for storage inside behind the back
doors and the airplane mounting posts slide through the angled top and
index into the top shelf for stability.
>
> Kudos to you, looks fantastic.
>
>
Thanks again!
On 3/8/2013 11:32 AM, Bill wrote:
> Leon wrote:
>> As many of you will recall I built an airplane display for a company
>> that transports heavy cargo all over the world. My display is in Las
>> Vegas this week, who knows where after that.
>>
>> Anyway it seems to blend in with the "Pro" commercially designed booth.
>>
>> http://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/8539696494/in/photostream/lightbox/
>>
>> http://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/8538589223/in/photostream/lightbox/
>
> It's really cool to see it not on display! It looks *great*on display!
>
> Bill
;~) Thank you Bill.
On 3/9/2013 11:54 AM, Dave in Texas wrote:
> "Leon" wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>
> As many of you will recall I built an airplane display for a company
> that transports heavy cargo all over the world. My display is in Las
> Vegas this week, who knows where after that.
>
> Anyway it seems to blend in with the "Pro" commercially designed booth.
>
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/8539696494/in/photostream/lightbox/
>
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/8538589223/in/photostream/lightbox/
>
> PRO!
>
> Dave in Texas
>
>
thank you
On 3/8/2013 9:42 AM, John Grossbohlin wrote:
> "Leon" wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>
>> I guess my title should have said, NOW, not, not. Darn spell checker,
>> yeah I probably misspelled now. LOL
>
> Cool that your display is now on display!
>
> ...and yes, spell checkers can do some interesting things to the written
> word! I recall an embarrassing one when "Browning Citori" (a shotgun
> model) was "corrected."
Beautiful shotgun! Probably equally beautiful "other" '~)
And Thank you!
On 3/8/2013 9:23 AM, Swingman wrote:
> On 3/8/2013 8:31 AM, Leon wrote:
>> As many of you will recall I built an airplane display for a company
>> that transports heavy cargo all over the world. My display is in Las
>> Vegas this week, who knows where after that.
>>
>> Anyway it seems to blend in with the "Pro" commercially designed booth.
>>
>> http://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/8539696494/in/photostream/lightbox/
>>
>> http://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/8538589223/in/photostream/lightbox/
>
>
> How cool is that, Bubba! Fantastic ... all that detailed planning of
> yours paid off, BIG TIME.
>
> The banking angle is perfection personified (despite no flaps <g> ).
>
> Congratulations!!
>
Thank you!
On 3/8/2013 10:23 AM, Ed Pawlowski wrote:
> On Fri, 08 Mar 2013 08:35:48 -0600, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
> wrote:
>
>> I guess my title should have said, NOW, not, not. Darn spell checker,
>> yeah I probably misspelled now. LOL
>
> You should have used the spell checker on the display too. The
> letters don't look like what we learned in school. .
>
Yeah! Russian
On 3/8/2013 10:10 AM, Han wrote:
> Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet> wrote in news:NL-
> [email protected]:
>
>> As many of you will recall I built an airplane display for a company
>> that transports heavy cargo all over the world. My display is in Las
>> Vegas this week, who knows where after that.
>>
>> Anyway it seems to blend in with the "Pro" commercially designed booth.
>>
>> http://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/8539696494/in/photostream/lightbo
> x/
>>
>> http://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/8538589223/in/photostream/lightbo
> x/
>
> Fantastic!!
Thank you!
>
> The Volga reference reminds me of a song from my youth:
>
> Ik ben Olga van de Wolga
> Ik drink wodka tot ik kapot ga
> Ik eet kaviaar als een moordenaar
> Omdat ik zoooveel van je hou!
>
> I am Olga from the Volga
> I drink vodka until I go kaput
> I eat caviar like a murderer
> Because I Looove you that much!
>
> So sorry, you have to have had some ...
>
If you say so. LOL
Leon wrote:
> As many of you will recall I built an airplane display for a company
> that transports heavy cargo all over the world. My display is in Las
> Vegas this week, who knows where after that.
>
> Anyway it seems to blend in with the "Pro" commercially designed booth.
>
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/8539696494/in/photostream/lightbox/
>
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/8538589223/in/photostream/lightbox/
Looks very professional. As usual.
--
GW Ross
A Canadian is an unarmed American
with health insurance