Calicoskies
Active Member
No digit missing, fat four inch tires need to be low for sand and snow to keep moving.
Steve …What kind of tree is that on the left?
That would be stunning riding around that area. Good photographs.This is around in the Pacific Northwest, Washington State
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I think it would be great to spend summers in here in Vancouver and the winters in New Zealand / Australia.Steve...
Australia's bark-shedding trees are commonly called 'eucalypts' or ' gum trees' and compromise three genera in the myrtle family (Myrtaceae): Eucalyptus, Corymbia and Angophora. They're a messy mob to have in the garden, especially in spring or early summer! I spent an hour or so this afternoon on the rider mower mulching up their fallen bark.
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Now you know where Trekkie spends lonely afternoons recharging from its morning exertions. We planted the tree behind the shed in the late 1980s and it now around fifteen metres tall.
... David
That's why I stuck to the gritted roads I did use some back roads but they were all climbs, much safer going up at 15mph than going down at 40mphbeware of that black ice laddie !
In Melbourne there is an urban trail called the "Koonung". It is in the midst of suburbia and closely follows a freeway, but in places, it is almost Australian bush. It is here I had my banana today.