PainlessWolf wrote:Roy, Good morning,
Thank you, sir. Yes, Gardner sits in a high desert valley between three mountain sub ranges of the Rockies. Altitude is some 7000 ft so the winds here ( which are nearly ceaseless ) are refreshing in the Summer and biting in the Winter. Snows are generally heavy and very dry powder types... Those were good times on the Forum to be sure. I sometimes feel isolated and antiquated here. New and marvelous advancements like 3D printing make the type of modeling I do, old hat *chuckles* My tanks soldier on tho', year after year and suffer through many upgrades to keep them current. It's fun and I will do it as long as fun is to be had. ( Snow tanking! )
regards,
Painless
I'm slowly becoming a dinosaur myself, Painless. The rate of change in this modern world is astounding..
At 7,000 ft your are on the threshold of anoxia. But that's not all bad..

The Gurkhas, who come from the oxygen depleted heights of the Himalayas, are legendary for their endurance and, of course, athletes also train at altitude to enhance their red blood cell capacities. Living at altitude means Clark Kent performance in all things physical; but at sea level, you get the benefit of being Superman
It's great that you have all that space, and being semi-solitary is
not the same as being lonely..

Many would envy you the 'tank park' you're evolving there..
If you don't mind a visual diversion, here's the front portion of my garden, facing Loch Ewe (the Atlantic sea loch), and the distant Torridon mountains. I intend to use this as my own Ardennes setting, and as a proving ground for my tanks (with obstacles, of course..

)...in warmer weather:

- Highland Tank park in warmer weather
and as it has been since December.. very Ardennes Campaign like

Incidentally, I planted all the trees myself. Much of the Highlands region was once heavily forested, but the timber was cut down to reinforce WW1
trenches, for making ships for the British navy in the time of Nelson, and for making coke to smelt iron.

- Highland Tank Park in Winter..
This is also where the Convoys used to sail from in WW2, to supply Aircraft and tanks to the Russian Army...Those poor sailors. Being sunk in Arctic waters meant practically a zero chance of survival.

Sorry about the wee visual digression..
