- Drove about 40 miles to relatives to prepare for great grandmothers funeral- in a hailstorm.
- Honestly
- Caught maybe a 5 minute break at one point.
- Then sat in the car for 10-15 minutes to keep from getting killed.
- Oh, we passed the Weatherford TX car chase, my first thought when I saw it coming a mile away was a police officers funeral.
- The dude passed right by us, he was cool looking as a cucumber.
- Tires shredded, smoking- one of the rear ones was layed over nearly flat.
- There were 8 units behind him from 3 different agencies.
- There was one coming up to him with the officer riding shotgun climbing over into the back seat as they passed and closed with the guy.
- Presumably with a shotgun.
- My thought as they went by?
- If I was in my one ton truck and by myself- I'd stop that dude.
- He went a couple of more miles then put 3 people in the hospital.
Wednesday, May 27, 2009
Wednesday's Bonus Digressions With Yesterday's Weather And Traffic Report
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6 comments:
Must of been huge bits of hail, I bet the sound of the hail hitting the car roof must of been deafening... like being inside my sons drumkit LOL
Wow a real live police chase, I have seen that programme on the telly about doodle bobbies.... what I dont get or understand, is, why do so many police cars have to chase one car, I saw once about 15 squad cars following this one car.... why? what can the bobby in Car Number 15 do? of what use is he? or Car Number 6, 7 or 8 for that matter..... we find it very comical over here when that happens.... on saying that, how scary to be a policeman in america, not knowing if someone will pull out a gun just for having a brake light out..... very brave they are, or very daft, or maybe just on a control high :)
I could imagine you in a big lorry with super hero cape flying off ya shoulders, smashing into the criminal before he hurt others.....
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word verification - ememi
LOL I read it as enima *shaking me head*
That made me laugh. Can you just imagine the North Texas Ford Dealers group advertising the new Ford F-350 Super Lorry.
As a junior-high student in Vienna, I went to school with a chap named Ian. Learned a lot of Britishisms from him.
I still think it's funny when a British woman, turning in at the end of the day at the hotel or B&B, requests: "Knock me up at 6:00 a.m."
Well, uh, sure, if you insist.
Me milkman knocks me up every Wednesday morning :)
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ano @ 751 i'd never heard that one before (knock up) and yes i'm sure that would be quite the endorsement. i wonder how impressed the police would be though?
To clarify, the intent of the request was a wake up call, or knock on the door. But our usage of the term is considerably different.
LOL@to clarify....
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