Club 600

Flaming Pie

Well-Known Member
Genuity,

You must make a fire OG x cherry pie for me. Or another strain with pain relief and high potency and name it flaming pie.
 

Dr.D81

Well-Known Member
i have fireballs and cherry puff now and waiting on the cherry pie cut so it could happen;) he does not have those cuts he used fak from og raskel and cherry puff from gage green i think

mad props guys had to add this pie side tracked me;) cant wait to flower them:mrgreen:
 

Mohican

Well-Known Member
B B Bitchin Dudes!

The love child is getting bigger and really showing the Ace of Spades pink center:








Cheers,
Mo
 

urban1026835

Well-Known Member
everything s gong to hell here. sadly if they do not fix all this I will probably just become more active somewhere else not because I don't like riu better than any where else because I do but seems everyday less and less of those I talk to log on anymore, and all the longer threads I was a part of are now so difficult to navigate that It just isn't worth the headache.

anyways to all those I have talked shop with and to those I have yet to meet my user name is always urban1026835 so feel free to send me a message.
 

DoobieBrother

Well-Known Member
Starting to put ol' Betsy back together:
I call all my things "Betsy": guns, cars, motorcycles, bicycles, electric drills, R/C cars & boats, aerosol cans, bongs, pipes, spliffs. All of them.
What do you all name your stuff?







And here's my "To Do" list for the day:

Smoke weed.
Mount lights from chains & hooks in celing in garage and over workbench to the shelf.
Mount fender & front wheel.
Mount seat & rear panels.
Smoke weed.
Secure wires with ties under frame (etc) and bundle & tape-wrap together as needed.
Mount battery tray and all components and attach wires & plugs.
Mount front cowl.
Smoke weed.
Mount handlebar covers (incl. speedo & headlight).
Remove air cleaner cover, degrease it, and paint it silver.
Remove rear fender again and pull off the license plate & reflectors and then paint it silver.
Smoke weed.
Remove drive cover plate and drill venting holes for the variator and the clutch.
Smoke weed.
Make a clutch holder tool.
Install 5g rollers.
Remove clutch and install kevlar belt.
Smoke weed.
Reassemble variator and attach drive cover plate.
Attach running boards.
Smoke weed.
Drill out the ends of bolts in handlebar end weights or cut them off, grind the bolt stubs flat enough to use vise grips on them and remove them at all costs so the flashy new bar weights can be installed.
Smoke weed.
Re-attach the air cleaner cover.
​Smoke weed.

Bonging out on some Cantaloupe Haze and then out to hang some 48" T-12's in the garage so I can finally see what I'm doing.
bongsmilie
 

DoobieBrother

Well-Known Member
Oh yeah! I remember you mentioning that :-)
I liked the name from being a kid and being into Davy Crockett who named three of his rifles: "Old Betsy", "Pretty Betsy", and "Fancy Betsy".


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*from: http://bcyesteryear.com/node/497

A Tale of Four Rifles: All Proudly Owned by David Crockett


For David “Davy” Crockett (1786-1836), “it was the best of times, it was the worst of times.” The folk hero, frontiersman, soldier, storyteller, politician and defender of the Alamo was born near Limestone, Tennessee at the convergence of Limestone Creek and the Nolichucky River in the short-lived State of Franklin. Two counties, Washington and Greene, claim his birthplace.


(Crockett as he appeared while in politics, replica of the pioneer's cabin on the Nolichucky River)



Although Crockett likely possessed countless rifles throughout his 49 years on this earth, four stand out prominently. The first one was an unnamed .48-caliber flintlock that he acquired when he was about eight years old. With it he attained the hunting skills and resulting reputation that would remain with him beyond the grave.The second weapon honored Crockett’s service in the Tennessee State Assembly in 1822. His Lawrence County constituents presented him with a .40-caliber flintlock crafted by James Graham. Davy affectionately named it “Old Betsy,” after his oldest sister. When he dropped out of politics in 1835 and headed for Texas, he gave the weapon to his son, John Wesley Crockett. It was later handed down to Bob Crockett, grandson of the pioneer, who reportedly brought down much game with it before retiring it to honor his legendary grandfather.
About 1834, Davy was awarded a third firearm from his friends who were members of the Whig Society of Philadelphia. “Pretty Betsy,” as he called it, cost $250 and was paid for from donors each contributing 50 cents.
The Memphis Commercial Appeal described the unique relic as being of the flintlock type, with a .40-caliber bore. The barrel length was later shortened from 46 inches to 40.5 inches.
It was impressively covered with gold and silver. The stock was trimmed in sterling silver with figures of the Goddess of Liberty, a raccoon, a deer's head, an elk’s head and other designs. The guard over the trigger displayed a silver alligator and underneath the stock was the inscription, “Constitution and Laws.”
Along the upper portion of the barrel were gold letters that read, “Presented by the young men of Philadelphia to the Hon. David Crockett of Tennessee.” Similar lettering near the muzzle said, “Go ahead,” referring to the backwoodsman’s famous admonition to "Be sure you are right, then go ahead." After the presentation, the outdoorsman amused his audience by shooting holes in quarters as they were tossed in the air.
Arkansas Secretary of State John M. Crockett, a great-grandson of the famous Tennessee pioneer, inherited “Fancy Betsy” in 1903. Because of its splendor, it never encountered the same exploits as the other three.
None of the aforementioned rifles played a role in the Battle of the Alamo. While it is not known what rifle (or rifles) Davy used to defend the fortress, it was not one of the three previously mentioned. On March 6, 1836, Santa Anna's Mexican army broke down their barricade and massacred the garrison during a 13-day siege, leaving no defender as a witness. Crockett earned even more acclaim for bravery for dying while defending the fortification.
Many stories of courage are related regarding this dreadful battle in which the defenders of the church gave their lives willingly, but in doing so slew or wounded eight of their assailants to one before the last brave soul was overcome. In 1898, 70-year-old Bob Crockett visited the Alamo.
He drew the attention of local media who depicted him as being a typical southern gentleman, medium height, white hair and beard and standing straight as an arrow. The hallowed ground where his grandfather, David Bowie, William Travis and 169 other determined supporters perished likely moved him.
Those of us who were captivated by Walt Disney’s Davy Crockett phenomenon in the 1950s will fondly recall Fess Parker, who played the role of Davy Crockett, frequently referring to his rifle as “Old Betsy.” He and his family of rifles left behind a colorful legacy.

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Flaming Pie

Well-Known Member
Yeah I really didn't expect the paint job to turn out so well. You should post a pic of each layer so we can see the progression.
 

SomeGuy

Well-Known Member
yup.. I like an HG1100 heat gun and a volcano solid valve kit personally. on the go by vabor-dab pen works well. :-)


I actually have two of the gun/volcano setups. (poor mans volcano). My two setup cost less than one volcano...LOL
 

SomeGuy

Well-Known Member
Your in socal I think Dez.. Jig said he met up with you. I am sure I could arrange a test if you are looking into them. Jig can vouch for the setup I got too.
 
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