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#1346 08/06/02 10:20 PM
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What games do you play on long rides?

We have a really fun one we play sometimes, taken from Whose Line Is It Anyway. Each of us can only talk in sentences of X words long. So I might only be able to say 3-word sentences, and Bob will say 5-word sentences and so on. So I could say

"What was that?"

and he's say

"I think that was a bird"

it is really fun and challenging!!

What do you play in the car?


P. Pureheart
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#1347 08/08/02 09:55 PM
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Having the ride on the car is fun by itself. Then again, I guess you won't appreciate the way those rides go. :rolleyes: <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />

#1348 08/08/02 09:56 PM
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I'm a little bit maniacal on cars theme (as well as might be on others <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" /> ), so, m yview are rarely shared by others.

#1349 08/08/02 10:10 PM
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Quote:

Having the ride on the car is fun by itself.
How do those rides go?

#1350 08/08/02 10:12 PM
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I'm not the one driving the car. They go in excess speed. Don't look at me that way. Still, it's always within reasonable limits ... I guess. Anyway I'm in Europe, guess it's quite different in USA.

#1351 08/09/02 03:42 PM
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I have a Mustang and love driving in general, and love travelling by car. So yes, driving to somewhere new is always fun. But sometimes the drives we do are say 10 hours a day, and after a while you want to do something else to keep yourself interested <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />

There's always the count-the-license-plates-from-different-places game <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />


P. Pureheart
#1352 08/09/02 03:55 PM
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I guess so. USA is very different from Europe. It is normal for you to travell from one city to another which may be like 500km away, here it is very rare. So rides only last for three or four hours at most. <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />

I know I'm bad because of excess speed thing, but there's nothing I can do about it. :rolleyes:

That number plates games does work. <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" /> When the traffic is somewhat heavy and you must move on accordingly, then you can play it.

Lisa, how fast do you go on a car? Usually and on rare occasions? (not emergencies).

#1353 08/10/02 11:19 PM
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I don't know in KM but usually I drive 70-75mph on the highways around here. The speed limit is 65mph and 75 is about the normal speed being travelled. The car is still smooth at 85 which is what I do sometimes if I'm running late. I don't really go over 85 though. The northeast US is full of deer, and I want to at least have some chance of dodging if a deer runs out onto the highway, which does happen. We even have moose sometimes <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />


P. Pureheart
#1354 08/11/02 03:30 PM
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LOL ... Sorry, but sound like a Safari. <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" /> Don't you have metalic barriers along both sides of the highway road? I guess not because of the distances.

We have a speed limit of 120 km/h which is 75 mph I think. Usually though people go at around 130, which would be around 80 mph. We usually go at around 87-100 mph (140-160 km/h) not compromising the road safety of course. Out highest has been 153 mph (245 km/h), on more or less straight road, the impressions are indesribable. <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" /> That's why I like the trip on its own. Maybe it looks kind of stupid to you. <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />

Are you a fan of american cars? I know you're into Mustangs. <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" /> The famous one was the 65' Mustang I think. <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />

#1355 08/12/02 03:05 PM
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Deer aren't known to pay attention to little things like barriers, they can leap a 6' fence easily <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" /> And no most roads don't have any barriers at all, just forests to either side.

I just like Mustangs, have had them since I began driving pretty much. All modern ones though, no classics <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" /> What do you drive?


P. Pureheart
#1356 08/15/02 04:26 PM
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I have no car of my own yet. <img src="/images/graemlins/frown.gif" alt="" /> Insurance is costy and I just don't really need one. I drive my father's M5 or M Roadster (with REAL M engine <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" /> ) ...

#1357 08/16/02 09:57 AM
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what kind of a mustang do u have lisa?
i got just a corolla... :rolleyes:
but i get my ways.
and i personaly love riding in cars, specially long disstances.


Karen
#1358 08/16/02 02:44 PM
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It's a silver 2000 mustang. Before that was my favorite Mustang I've had, white with stripes <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />



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#1359 08/18/02 09:40 AM
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Looks very cool nad sporty. <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" /> Here, cars are rairly painted with stripes or any other secondary color patterns, kind of bad. What's your opinio about Corvette? <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" /> Also, I've heard that European cars are not very welcome on the road in USA, especially BMW's? <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" /> I guess it's fair enough, since most of them are jerks. Myself not including, of course ... <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" /> American cars are SO different to European. There is almost nothing in common.

A bit off-topic ... but it is very funny to read through the posts, where people seriously take "additional" cupholders as an advantage. And I've seen quite a few of those. Why? In Europe almost nobody uses them and manufacturers, when include them, they do it just formally, those holders are not that good at holding cups. <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />

#1360 08/18/02 09:41 AM
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Japanese cars are practical I think. If you want to use it for many years, their warranty extends up to 7 years I think ... Toyota's at least.

#1361 08/19/02 11:36 PM
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I see a ton of all sorts of cars on the road, it's certainly not just American cars here. Many people drive Japanese cars, or BMWs and so on.

When you say additional cupholders, do you mean the 2 commonly found in the center console, or ones other than those? I find the 2 in the console really handy <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />


Lisa, Birding Enthusiast
#1362 08/20/02 04:37 PM
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Really? You use them? <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" /> I don't know, I have never ever used one. And there was this forum and someone was discussing about some car, a BMW I think, and someone said "I wouldn't buy it in your place. It has no cupholders." ... I was amazed. <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" /> Are the roads in USA THAR smooth and soft that they actually allow you to put a cup in a cupholder?

Yes, I meant those in the center console and those at the back as well. I think that there might even be more on other cars. <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />

#1363 08/20/02 04:57 PM
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I actually have an article about cars games you can play in the car. It's at: http://www.bellaonline.com/articles/art48.asp

There's one that's not on the list, however. It's played like the Punchbuggy game, except with PT Crusiers and you yell "PT Cruiser Bruiser!!" and then punch someone. eek

#1364 08/20/02 04:58 PM
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I think every single person I know uses those. Don't you buy food at McDonalds and Wendy's and then eat it while you're driving? That's a national pasttime here! So you stick the drink into the cupholder, and the cupholder has high sides so sure, it holds the drink container very securely. You just grab it and sip through the straw and put it back down, it's very convenient. No spilled drinks.

Most morning commuters use it to hold their coffee which they drink while they drive to work.

Our roads are paved, you know <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />


Lisa, Birding Enthusiast
#1365 08/20/02 04:59 PM
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Yikes there are games that involve people punching each other in a car?? That sounds like a really bad idea <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />


Lisa, Birding Enthusiast
#1366 08/20/02 06:14 PM
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Excessive activity in a car can lead to undesired outcomes. <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />

What you've described is called "rush" or "lack of time" in simpler words. Here, either you it AT McDonalds, either you buy a "take away" and bring it home or whatever place you're going to. Also, breakfasts here are usually dealt at home as well. That's odd. Then again, Europe and USA are completely different and opposed, like water and fire. What is normal there is impossible here and viceversa. Very interesting, indeed. <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" /> By the way ... the "car games" ... maybe I haven't had enough experience yet, but I had never seen someone playing in a car (apart from little kids obviously), in USA however, it seems to be very normal.

We should have some place to discuss how different the "worlds" are on the same planet. <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" /> Just kidding, it will lead to unhealthy debates.

#1367 08/20/02 09:57 PM
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Quote:
Originally posted by Lisa, Birding Host:
[qb]Yikes there are games that involve people punching each other in a car?? That sounds like a really bad idea <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" /> [/qb]
hehehe - you've never seen my cousins play in my car. Talk about insane!! I was driving & they were 12 & 14 at the time. They were making faces at other people in other cars AND playing punchbuggy very intensely or is that violently? Anyway, I was driving and I don't play any car games at all when I'm driving since that would obviously be very dangerous. My cousins had me laughing so hard when I was driving - they were simply crazy!

Punchbuggy & PT Cruiser Bruiser are games that should be played only with the participants in the back seat. It's not intended for the driver to participate. I don't generally condone violence, but as long as the kids aren't actually punching each other but keeping it to something close to a friendly tap, I don't mind the game being played.

#1368 08/21/02 02:11 PM
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So you would go to a McDonalds, drive all the way home and eat it at home? I don't think I've ever heard of such a thing <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />

Many people in the states have a 1/2 hr to a full hour commute each day. That's a long time to be sitting in a car without having some coffee to drink! It's not a matter of being rushed or anything else. Sure, many of them might have some breakfast before they leave the house. But they still stop off at Dunkin Donuts, grab some coffee and a donut or muffin, and then settle in for the drive. Some listen to NPR radio, some have books-on-tape to listen while they drive, etc.

As far as eating McDonalds (etc) in the car, we do it all the time while we're travelling. The idea of eating in a McDonalds with lots of screaming children and slimy seats really doesn't appeal to me when I'm in the middle of a 4 hour drive anyway. I'd MUCH rather be in our comfy car, listening to the radio, nice and peaceful, talking to each other. Plus if you're driving 4 hours to get somewhere you don't usually feel like tacking on another 1/2 hour to that time to sit in a McDonalds somewhere and savor your french fries <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />

It's no different than eating in an airplane seat when you're flying somewhere. You don't do it for rush reasons. You do it because it's time to eat, and you're in the middle of going somewhere.

It sounds like you really don't use your car a lot except for short little drives, yes? That might be why you have a different point of view. But I do know many Europeans that have commutes to work and I know for a fact that they do the coffee-donut thing in the morning <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />


Lisa, Birding Enthusiast
#1369 08/21/02 02:15 PM
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I guess me and my sister weren't punching types so we didn't think about a game like that. When we drove places we tended to sing a lot of songs, do the license plate game, and do the "find something that beings with the next letter of the alphabet" game. So one person would spot an apple, then the next a bird and so on.

Games definitely aren't just for kids. Jeez, what would life be like if adults didn't have any fun? What's the purpose of living if life is boring? <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" /> Most adults I know still enjoy sports and play board games and card games and so on. Fun games in the car is a way to pass the time. Like I said, I love the "speak only in phrases of X words" game, that's tons of fun. Plus we have this great board game called Cranium that has cards that have you do all sorts of things. We carry the cards in the car and play with those. They might say things like "imitate John Wayne without mentioning any names or places" or "hum the theme to Star Trek" and others have to guess what you're doing.


Lisa, Birding Enthusiast
#1370 08/24/02 01:22 PM
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AINTD, I was thinking about your "do people drive foreign cars" question a few days ago when we ate at a very nice restaurant. Practically every single car in the lot was a BMW or an AUDI or so on <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />


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#1371 08/25/02 06:40 PM
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I don't think I've put it that way, did I? <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" /> I meant that BWM's and Mercedeses often annoy on the road. Here they do. And in USA they do twice as much, I'm sure of it. Why? Because mostly (mostly, not always), people who drive them missbehave on the road. I'm not talking about speeding, since that' OK in my mind ( <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" /> That's what I do) but being "rude", agressive, breaking the basic traffic rules, etc. I've read an article written by an American taxi driver with a 30 years experience and he was talking about these matters and it only confirmed it. Number one as*h**** - BMW drivers ... Mercedes was on seventh place I think. In many cases, a person who buys a European car in USA has something wrong in him if you understand me. Here, noone drives American cars except for Ford (which more likely an International company) and similar. The only ones you can sometimes see are C5 Corvette's. I'm not saying that to buy a BMW car in USA you must be a freak or something, I'm saying that that's what things look like. A tendency. Audi's sell well in USA because of illegal company prices policy.

What do you appreciate in a car?

#1372 08/26/02 06:32 AM
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Of course games are not just for kids. I have no respect for the people who say that computer games, console games, board games and all other are just "kiddy's stuff", they are definitely lost.

Here, we usually go to McDonalds when there is little time. For instance, we would go to McDonalds if we were away all day and only got back home at four o'clock and there is no time left for cooking, then we'd go to McDonalds, buy a take-away and eat it at home.

#1373 08/26/02 03:55 PM
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Why not buy US cars though? I guess what I was saying is in the US people buy cars of all types, just like when you go into the grocery store there are 10 kinds of apples and you can choose whatever appeals to you at the moment. Whatever your price range and interest, there's a car suited for you, and it really doesn't matter where it comes from ...


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#1374 08/26/02 03:57 PM
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I'm so intrigued by your dinner system!!

Here we eat around 6pm or 7pm. And cooking food only takes 1/2 hr or so, you toss something on the grill (since it's summer) and a salad and veggies and you're set. So if someone gets home at 6pm, we wouldn't bother driving out to somewhere, getting food, driving back again and eating it. By that time you could have easily made your food and be eating it <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" /> And to go out deliberately for McDonalds is interesting! To me McDonalds is sort of the drabbest food you could get, but you grab it on the road because it's right there and convenient and you don't spend extra time on your trip. But I don't think I would ever deliberately leave the house to go TO a McDonalds as a destination ...

Anyone else want to chime in here?


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#1375 08/26/02 04:33 PM
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Well, cars aren't apples, are they? <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" /> Cars differ from apples primarilly because they are easily seen and often get on the way of other people. Nobody except for you and your family knows what apples you eat. So, when someone is driving and sees a car ahead of him behaving in an agressive way, then it's hardly but acceptable, but when it is a "foreign" object, then a comment "Well of course, this [swearing goes in here] is driving a BMW! What an [even more swearing]!" is very natural and comes out without even thinking. Maybe it's different at your place (I doubt that, though), but when you see a car that is missbehaving and comes from another province (state in your case), this always plays a role. If it was someone from your state, then it's more or less forgiving, but if not, then "This [state/province name] [swearing] is a comlete [swearing]!" exclamation is natural. Well, Lisa, I'm sure, that you do not swear but I hope you get the point. I have little time to be concise, so I'm writing many words. Just like Lenin said while writing to his wife Krupskaya "My dear! I have little time, so I'm writing long to you." <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" /> Anyway, that's the point. I'll tell you more about dinner system in my next post. <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />

#1376 08/27/02 02:41 AM
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Hmmmmm I don't know that I change my opinion of a driver based on the license plate, but we're all in the US here, so states are just all parts of it. If I had to think about it, I might get annoyed at SUV drivers because most of them get the SUV because it's "big" and waste tons of gas and resources. That's probably my pet peeve. So if I see a SUV driver hogging the road it falls into my "they only care about themselves, just look at that hog they're driving and the way they drive" thought pattern <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" /> And these drivers don't want their car to get dirty or drive it over bumps! I've seen SUV drivers dodging small bumps in the road! Sheesh <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />


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#1377 08/27/02 04:48 AM
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There is a tendency that big cars are driven by small people. It's not the law but a clear tendency. Must be something psychological. <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" /> Well, I guess you're tolerant to the cars from other states because you really travel a lot in USA, so maybe it is not that unusual and annoying. Also, since you're a woman (and no offence, please), you don't really pay attention at the cars (manufacturer, model) that you see thus it doesn't really strike you. <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" /> Just a guess.

My point is: in life, when you an object of annoyance (be it a person, a car or anything), if it stands out of normal in some way, in the end, this little aspect will "explain" why a person is so bad or behaves so badly or whatever. I'm not sure if I made myself clear though. <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />

Ooops, gotta run, update on food in the next post. <img src="/images/graemlins/smile.gif" alt="" />

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