Seattle is better than Portland. The women are mediocre at best, but other than that, they are good places to live. Both are way better than anywhere in the Midwest or South. Chicago is pretty cool, but the weather is terrible. I might take Nashville over Seattle and Portland, but I can't be certain because I didn't do anything but get drunk, bang sluts, and listen to great music. I don't know why everyone gets off thinking either Seattle or Portland is that bad though.
Haole Kai (actually Hawaii Kai) isn't ewa of anything. It's so far Diamond Head that's it's actually Koko Head. Basically the eastern (just the) tip of Oahu.
Haole Kai (actually Hawaii Kai) isn't ewa of anything. It's so far Diamond Head that's it's actually Koko Head. Basically the eastern (just the) tip of Oahu.
Haole Kai (actually Hawaii Kai) isn't ewa of anything. It's so far Diamond Head that's it's actually Koko Head. Basically the eastern (just the) tip of Oahu.
Haole Kai (actually Hawaii Kai) isn't ewa of anything. It's so far Diamond Head that's it's actually Koko Head. Basically the eastern (just the) tip of Oahu.
Really awesome place. And full of haoles.
Can't wait for the cleansing tsunami.
That's the best part. My house is at 20', so it would have to be a Tohoku-level tsunami to fuck it up, even though I'm on the marina. There's also a kind of barrier strip on the seaward side of the marina that would take most of the impact from a tsunami. Also, too, Maunalua Bay is like 1' deep for about 1/4 mile out, then deepens gradually. No hard shelf, like on the North Shore. Even so, I get an alert on my phone whenever there is a magnitude 6.0 quake anywhere in the Pacific basin
Haole Kai (actually Hawaii Kai) isn't ewa of anything. It's so far Diamond Head that's it's actually Koko Head. Basically the eastern (just the) tip of Oahu.
Really awesome place. And full of haoles.
Can't wait for the cleansing tsunami.
That's the best part. My house is at 20', so it would have to be a Tohoku-level tsunami to fuck it up, even though I'm on the marina. There's also a kind of barrier strip on the seaward side of the marina that would take most of the impact from a tsunami. Also, too, Maunalua Bay is like 1' deep for about 1/4 mile out, then deepens gradually. No hard shelf, like on the North Shore. Even so, I get an alert on my phone whenever there is a magnitude 6.0 quake anywhere in the Pacific basin
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What do I win?
@TheChart, what say you?
Really awesome place. And full of haoles.
Shoot out on bicycles to bread the tie