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07-13-2024 08:26 PM
# ADS
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I don't have any US licence plates but I do have 2 or 3 Canadian ones dating to the 1970's hanging up in my shed/workshop. The first one was given to my father in the late 1970's as something to hang up in the garage, as an ornament. Around 1980 I visited Canada and during the visit we visited a "friend of a friend" who lived in a caravan in a wood near a sulphur mine where he worked. I remember asking him if he had any "licence plates going spare" and the reply that I got was "There's one on the back of the caravan/trailer and, if you can get it off, you can have it.". I remember it not being the easiest of things to get off but with a bit of fiddling about it came off. The licence plate now hangs up in my shed and it does prove that if you don't ask you don't get. How the chap could live 24 hours a day with that very strong pungent smell of sulphur is beyond me.
Later edit - Photos added.
Last edited by Flying10uk; 07-17-2024 at 08:45 PM.
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Originally Posted by
Flying10uk
How the chap could live 24 hours a day with that very strong pungent smell of sulphur is beyond me.
When you live by it, your nose and brain adjust to tune it out.
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The other thing that I remember, beside the strong sulphur smell was that all the tracks and paths in the woods were yellow where the sulphur had spread and transferred from the mine. 45 years ago there wasn't so much concern about the environment.
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We have papermills in the region I live in. Had one on the other side of the mountain and 30 miles away as the crow flies. They smell to high heaven or at least used to. I think they have figured out a way to minimize the smell these days. With all that distance and a mountain between us, every once in a while we could smell the mill on a hot summer day, very rare but I do remember it. I remember it more traveling through and past that mill to get to the large city that we were closest too. (it is a city officially but still relatively small. They had a mall and multiple theaters). As a kid I'd try to hold my breath as we drove past but never could for that long.
If you stopped and stayed there, your nose would tune out the smell pretty fast. It's the only sense I think we have as humans that does this. You can't tune out light or noise, touch or even taste but smell, yes.
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Tacoma Washington was the worst smelling place until they closed the pulp and paper mill a while back. It was a combination of the mill, the tide flats and a rendering plant. My Dad grew up there and couldn't even smell it. Aw -"the aroma of Tacoma"
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