|
Posted by MonkeyGang No? I am most definitely not MountainManDan. I don't know what MountainManDan did, but I know he has a bad reputation around here. Sorry but, why would you assume that? My username is nothing similar.
|
Please.... Do tell us more. Do you know SparklePyre?
Give abandonment a reason for its sacrificial reclamation to nature. Love it. Remember it. Take a picture. Share it. Leave the decay to nature. Lifetime member of The Anti-MyInstaTubeTweetFace consortium. |
|
Posted by Mr. Bitey
Please.... Do tell us more. Do you know SparklePyre?
|
I know nothing of SparklePyre other than reading some drama on here from a few months ago (account sharing with MountainManDan?). If mods want evidence I am not MountainManDan I can share it but I would prefer to keep some anonymity. Why the witchunt... I'm a genuine rookie trying to join with new people for urbex...
More of my photos: https://www.instagram.com/xiketic_urbex/ |
|
Found some more cool looking walls!
[last edit 11/6/2018 12:47 AM by Xiketic - edited 3 times]
More of my photos: https://www.instagram.com/xiketic_urbex/ |
|
wow you found "more" cool looking walls!
|
|
Reply 10 is indeed exactly what 2X says it is, just bags of Quickrete that had been left out in the rain, etc.. Engineers, laborers and sometimes even Civil Defense use the bags to build walls around creek beds, etc. for erosion control. Much easier than mixing the bags by hand or actually pouring concrete....
http://www.flickr....rescueme1060/sets/ |
|
Posted by RescueMe1060 Reply 10 is indeed exactly what 2X says it is, just bags of Quickrete that had been left out in the rain, etc.. Engineers, laborers and sometimes even Civil Defense use the bags to build walls around creek beds, etc. for erosion control. Much easier than mixing the bags by hand or actually pouring concrete....
|
are you sure he is not mountainmandan? or some iteration thereof??? you would think even the most cloistered teeny bopper living with at least one adult and a television set would know what ready mix concrete (Sakrete) in a bag looks like this should be a pinned thread on what not to explore Im disappointed there was np Mongolian connections here!
next week we explore woven straw wattles left by the ancient Yaqui indian tribe to control runoff and irrigate their corn crops. I saw some near the highway once, must have been placed there before cars were imported into the U.S.A. by white people
|
|
Lol I call those caterpillars or wig woms, usually full of black widows if left in storage too long
http://www.flickr....rescueme1060/sets/ |