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On Wed, 25 Jun 2025 18:58:51 GMT, cyclintom <cyclintom@yahoo.com>oh dear gawd...did he really write that?
wrote:
On Mon Jun 23 18:15:42 2025 John B. wrote:On Mon, 23 Jun 2025 17:47:20 GMT, cyclintom <cyclintom@yahoo.com>
wrote:
>On Mon Jun 23 06:10:04 2025 John B. wrote:>>>
>
I can only sympathies with you people back there .... all those
helpful agencies.
>
Growing up in mid New Hampshire we lived in two houses with wells and
septic tanks. Never a problem.
>
I suppose that the difference was that we knew what we were doing and
the U.S. wasn't, in those days intent on controlling every act the
citizens make.
>
>
>
John, I expect you simply never knew the problems because of your young age. Septic systems in particulsr ned constant maintenance. Even outhouses have to be relocated far away from others when they fill enough to be covered over with dirt to cap them off. Water treatment plants are not terribly complicated but what do you do with the brown water?
No Tom I do/did know what I was doing.
Anyone with the brain p0wer of a cockroach is aware that you always
build your water source up hill from your septic system which requires
very limited service (obvious you don't how a septic tank works).New Hamposhire is mostly flat. what is it you were saying about brains of a cockroach?
What percentage of the area of New Hampshire do you consider to beTo be fair, parts of the seacost are quite flat. The Granite State Wheelmen host an annual century ride, which while claiming over 3000' feet of total climbing, doesn't have any any individual climb over 100'.
"mostly flat"?
Notice the mountains and hills?
<https://www.visitwhitemountains.com/things-to-do/outdoors/mount-washington/>
I could provide a link to a topo map for you, but then I would need to
show you how to read the map. It's your claim and you get to prove
it.
Looking at various relief maps of NH, I can's find any part of NH that
is flat:
<https://www.google.com/search?num=10&q=3d%20relief%20map%20of%20new%20hampshire&udm=2>
This isn't quite what you claimed, but still interesting:
"How much bigger would N.H. be if you flattened out the mountains?"
<https://www.nhpr.org/environment/2021-10-01/how-much-bigger-would-nh-be-if-you-flattened-out-the-mountains>
"According to his calculations, New Hampshire is 133 square miles
bigger when you iron out the wrinkles, which is just about 1.5 percent
bigger."
I'm taking a break from stacking firewood. Everything aches.
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