T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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679.1 | | IE0010::MALING | Mirthquake! | Mon Jan 28 1991 20:34 | 9 |
| I don't know how to *break* this to you, but for some strange reason
the eggs in New England are brown. Yes, that's right, brown eggs.
I've always been rather suspicious of brown eggs myself. White eggs
are available, and in some supermarkets they are *cheaper* than brown
ones. Who in their right mind would pay more for BROWN eggs? And
what's more useless at Easter time than brown eggs? I mean how do you
dye a brown egg yellow?
-Mary
|
679.2 | | GUESS::DERAMO | Dan D'Eramo | Mon Jan 28 1991 20:40 | 3 |
| What on earth do the natives see in Sen. Kennedy?
Dan
|
679.3 | | CSSE32::M_DAVIS | Marge Davis Hallyburton | Mon Jan 28 1991 20:47 | 4 |
| a broken-down parody of the myth that was his brother, John....
imho,
Marge
|
679.4 | | CSSE32::M_DAVIS | Marge Davis Hallyburton | Mon Jan 28 1991 20:50 | 9 |
| Mike, you'll have to watch out for those frost heaves signs....and also
the thickly settled signs, but they're always up.... you'll probably
arrive in time for mud season, followed by black fly season, then three
weeks of summer and the mosquitos which accompany it, if the spring is
wet...by August, you'll be thinking snow.
welcome to New England...I wouldn't trade it for anywhere else!
Grins
|
679.5 | eggs | WMOIS::B_REINKE | she is a 'red haired baby-woman' | Mon Jan 28 1991 21:01 | 17 |
| Mary
The commonest egg laying hen here in New England is the Rhode island
red, wich natuarlly lays brown eggs.
White eggs are laid by leghorns.
In general brown eggs are local eggs around here and are fresher.
]
At Easter the stores sell 'shrink wraps' to color brown eggs
or import white ones.
We used to raise hens and the easiest type to buy wereRhodies.
For easter I'd save my duck eggsand we'd color them.
Bonnie
|
679.7 | eggs | LEZAH::QUIRIY | Espresso mornings, lasagna nights | Mon Jan 28 1991 22:38 | 16 |
|
I just read something about brown eggs, must've been in the Parade from
yesterday's newspaper. Being from NE, I do like the look of brown eggs
better and will always buy brown eggs over white even though I believe
what I've read that says there's no difference in nutritional value.
One thing I remember from the little article I read is that the brown
shells are thicker than the white shells and this prevents
<something-or-other> from happening to the egg.
Speaking of Easter eggs, when I was a kid, we'd dye up a bunch of eggs
and then put them in a basket and those eggs would sit in the basket
on a table, unrefrigerated, to be snacked on whenever the desire hit,
for oh, maybe a week, before the last egg was gone. We never got sick
but now I'd never leave a basket of eggs out of the fridge for a week!
CQ
|
679.8 | | CSC32::M_VALENZA | Pizza, notes, and shelter. | Mon Jan 28 1991 22:50 | 13 |
| Thanks, Marge. :-) Now what's this about black flies? You mean you
have *insects* out there? Any more talk like that, and I'll be staying
put, right here in the High Country! :-)
I am looking forward to the beautiful fall foliage, rich history, great
radio stations, and excellent pizza that Massachusetts appears to
offer. But the other side of the coin is that I'll be giving up the
mountains, a wonderfully mild climate, and much cheaper rents; so talk
of black flies is not the sort of thing I want to hear. I need
*encouragement*! :-) :-)
-- Mike
|
679.9 | | CSC32::M_VALENZA | Pizza, notes, and shelter. | Mon Jan 28 1991 22:54 | 5 |
| -d, don't forget the mulled cider. I was introduced to that for the
first time in my life when I came out to New England last December. I
have to admit, it was damn good.
-- Mike
|
679.10 | | FIRST8::LEE | The stupid is always possible | Mon Jan 28 1991 22:54 | 17 |
|
I've always wondered why they call soda "tonic."
And I always get frappes and shakes confused.
Also, is it just me, or are there fewer malls in NE than in
the rest of the country? ("real malls" to me being on the
scale of Pheasant Lane and Burlington, the only two I know
of in the area) There seems to be a preference for going to
lots of little shops, fine if they are in walking distance of
one another, but otherwise a real pain.
-Andy
|
679.11 | moonlight in Vermont -- tonight! now! | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | hello darkness | Mon Jan 28 1991 22:59 | 27 |
| new england is a great place to live, and I've tried other places.
They just don't feel comfortable! Here we have four real seasons, and
(contrary to a previous posting) relatively few blackflies - a 3-wk
season - and none in the city. Tip: the over-the-counter
hydrocortisone cream, applied as soon as possible, surpresses the local
allergic reaction to blackfly bites (also mosquito). This is
tried-and-true, it worked when Adam got _39_ blackfly bites on his back
while running through the sprinkler. (I counted while applying the
lotion.)
In new england, we make clam chowder right. Lobsters are fresh. And
real maple syrup! (sigh, it's so expensive tho.)
We newenglanders have the reputation for being cold and unfriendly. So
many people, from so many places, have said this to me, that I believe
we come across that way. Of course, we're not really cold or
unfriendly, but we are reserved in manner, at least in public. Folks
generally don't speak to strangers in the supermarket. They look at me
strange when I do, but usually warm up ok.
What does Mass see in Ted Kennedy? a senator with LOTS of seniority.
This is a Good Thing for the state. I think he should be a senator for
a long time. (xlate: I wouldn't vote for him for Prez.) Mass also has
Barney Frank, and Ed King: the smartest and the kludgiest, all in one
place (personal opinion alert).
Last but blissfully not least: New England has Vermont in it.
|
679.12 | The real stuff! | AIRPRT::VAILLAN_D | Don't touch that! | Tue Jan 29 1991 01:02 | 4 |
| Re .11 I agree with you about clam chowder. At least you don't have
to buy New England clam chowder in a can like in the West. Just go
to nearest seafood restaurant and order it fresh. Also, Lobsters look
like lobsters not crawfish like in the south.
|
679.13 | Ayuh, New Hampsha or New Hampster | CGVAX2::CONNELL | It's reigning cats. | Tue Jan 29 1991 07:22 | 8 |
| re .11 Sara, it's not chowder, it's chowdah. That's a pre-req for
living heah Mike. No lettah "R" at the end of ouah wahds and sometimes
in the middle too. The fatha Noath you go, the moah it shows. :-)
Also, you have to have an addiction to lobstahs and steamahs (clams) to
live heah.
Phil, who as he gets oldah tries to use his New England accent moah.
|
679.14 | Tonic and Crazy Drivers | CECV03::TARRY | | Tue Jan 29 1991 07:31 | 11 |
| As a transplanted Southerner, I had trouble getting used to calling
soda pop,soft drinks, coke "tonic". To me "tonic" is medicine or something
that goes in "Gin and Tonic".
The worst is getting used to the way they drive. Watch out for U turns in the
middle of busy streets and especially for idiots backing up on the expressways
after they miss their exit.
I love New England and have no plans to return.
|
679.15 | Save the telephone poles??? | DRIFT::WOOD | Laughter is the best medicine | Tue Jan 29 1991 07:55 | 16 |
| One of the many things that I find very peculiar about New England is the
way they pave the roads around things.
Now given the local love for trees (which I share) I can understand paving
around part of a big tree, so that when a road was widened they didn't have
to cut down the tree. I can see that narrowing the road a bit is worth it
to save the tree.
But telephone poles???
I have seen (on more than one occasion) a telephone pole planted in the
street, paved all the way around it, with the curb a short distance away.
Never in the mid-west!
John (a mid-west transplant, taking root here)
|
679.16 | Be Careful of Directions | ELWOOD::CHRISTIE | | Tue Jan 29 1991 08:01 | 9 |
| When asking directions, beware of anyone saying "just down the road
a piece". Could be anywhere from 10 feet to 10 miles!!
Nothing like fresh Atlantic fish. As much as I hate the cold weather,
I'm a New Englander, born and bred and probably won't live anywhere
else. It would be too boring.
Linda
|
679.17 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | trial by fire | Tue Jan 29 1991 08:04 | 30 |
| Last time he visited I made SURE to have him driven over some frost
heaves just so he'd understand that you go SLOWLY when they're around
and you want something left of your suspension when you get home.
There's also the following:
soda= tonic, pop
frappe/shake (ask , everyone has different definitions)
sub=(hoagie,hero, etc)
water fountain = bubbler
New England, well, actually Massachusetts, has STRANGE intersections
which will have THE RED LIGHT telling you to stop all other actions
(cease and desist all movement), and at the SAME TIME, it'll have a
green arrow telling you it's okay to go THAT way, but not any other
way.
We're probably the only place who still builds rotaries (circles of
death, traffic circles, roller derby places for cars), and even though
THEORETICALLY the people IN the rotary have the right of way, don't
count on anyon letting you go.
People tend not to use their blinkers.
Depending on where you are, people may or may not smile at you while
you're walking down the street. Often they may avoid looking you in
the face depending on what part of the city/town you're in.
-Jody
|
679.18 | | CSSE32::M_DAVIS | Marge Davis Hallyburton | Tue Jan 29 1991 08:05 | 22 |
| re .8:
ah, Mike, doncha know I just want to keep this bit 'o heaven to meself?
The fact that you can actually go to town meeting and have your vote
mean something is wonderful. Of course, town meeting comes right at
mud season, so there's a price to pay :^) Quite a few DECies are
involved in school boards, as town moderators, in campaigns, etc. This
is grass roots.
I'd heard all the worries, before I arrived, about how cold New
Englanders are. Actually, I found the locals to be very sincere in
their friendship, not empty glad-handers. Still, it's better to do a
lot of listening before talking...change comes slowly and only after a
lot of consideration. Rabble rousers need not apply.
And, for gawdsake, learn to pronounce "aunt" and "scallops"! :^)
welcome,
Marge
|
679.19 | :-) | NOVA::FISHER | Well, there's still an Earth to come home to. | Tue Jan 29 1991 08:36 | 18 |
| Now, there, John, thet telephone pole was there first and by golly
we're gonna let it stay there, that's squatter's rights.
Mike, Welcome to New England. You'll find that we have four seasons
here designed 'specially for you forinners. We got black fly season
which comes 'bout May first an' stays 'bout a month. Then we got
June Bug season which is kinna hard to miss. Then we got the real
thing, fly season which lasts till the weather gets cold again.
Then we got snow flies. Oh, an' we got skeeters most o' the time.
I think it's great to have Senator Kennedy reelected by Massachusetts
all the time. Thank Gawd, I'm in Nieuw Hayumpshire.
Just watch out for the traffic laws. Like (in MA) you're allowed to
open your car door without looking. And you can run a stop sign
if you find the right loophole. Arghh... It's like a pinball game.
ed
|
679.20 | It has its good points | GWYNED::YUKONSEC | sated hugs | Tue Jan 29 1991 08:36 | 5 |
| I wouldn't trade New England for the world! (If that makes any
difference.) (*8
E Grace
|
679.23 | and 'cold' has 2 syllables: "co-wld" | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | hello darkness | Tue Jan 29 1991 08:59 | 9 |
| .13, Phil -- you gotta know that in Western Mass, where I grew up, we
DO say our 'r's. Heck, sometimes we put in extras, as in the word
"idear", as in, "hey! I've got an idear!"
In Vermont the people also say "paRk the caR". But a highway is "the
interstate" even though there are now 2 interstates in Vt (91 & 89).
Sara
|
679.24 | and where else but in New England... | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | hello darkness | Tue Jan 29 1991 09:03 | 5 |
| ... could I have grown up as a Jewish Puritan?
:-) :-) :-)
Sara
|
679.26 | Quirky but lovable | RAMPNT::DAVIS | Jane (Halvorson) Davis | Tue Jan 29 1991 10:05 | 23 |
| I moved to Boston from Virginia in 1983, and I've been hearing ever
since that "this winter is milder than usual." Either global
warming really kicked in, or the local idea of a "usual" winter is
the Blizzard of 1978, when people were stranded on Route 128 during
rush hour and had to be rescued by snowmobile! It has occurred
to me that New Englanders LIKE talking about bad weather, not so
much because they like to complain, but rather as a form of
bragging - I suspect they're secretly proud of the toughness it takes to
manage in any conditions.
Everything that you have heard about the drivers is true: I've had
to learn to laugh at it all. One thing that no one mentioned
is that if you actually do use a signal to change lanes on a highway,
the driver in the other lane will speed up, rather than letting you
in. Folks in general are more direct up here -- it's refreshing in
communication, but in driving this sometimes translates as rudeness.
I love it here - there's great variety in landscape and people ...
(Boston's ethnic diversity has broadened my taste in music and food.)
And it's on such a manageable scale -- New England states (except for
Maine) are small.
-- Jane
|
679.27 | and I *love* living in Massachusetts | WMOIS::B_REINKE | she is a 'red haired baby-woman' | Tue Jan 29 1991 10:11 | 23 |
| in re ed
you left out a few seasons:
first is ants, then black flies ;-)
and June bugs are perfectly harmless large beetles so they are
no problem
but after black flies are mosquitos and deerflies
and in late summer if you have pets, there are fleas
and in the late summer and early fall, wasps and hornets!
but this is only for us country folk..
and in re -d
we live about a mile and a half from the NH border in Mass... one
of our common jokes is derived from the second of the two stories
you told...
ie. we are glad we don't live in NH because the winters are so
much colder there!
Bonnie
|
679.28 | | ESIS::GALLUP | Swish, swish.....splat! | Tue Jan 29 1991 10:29 | 16 |
|
Rotaries
Mosquitos
It frustrates me to NO end that I can't just drive straight to get
someplace...the roads meander, and sometimes I even have to drive past
a place then cut back to get to it! (the fastest way is not
necessarily the shortest way).
Just to name a few...
k
|
679.29 | | CSC32::M_VALENZA | Pizza, notes, and shelter. | Tue Jan 29 1991 10:38 | 6 |
| I am curious about one New England custom.
If you can drink cold pop (er, I mean "tonic") in the winter, then why
can't you drink cold ice tea in the winter?????????????
-- Mike
|
679.30 | | ESIS::GALLUP | Swish, swish.....splat! | Tue Jan 29 1991 10:39 | 10 |
|
Ohhhh! Thank you for reminding me, Mike!
Bring your tea bags with you, New Englanders have NO concept of iced
tea in the winters. I've had waitrons look at me MORTIFIED when I
asked if they served it.
kath
|
679.31 | | GWYNED::WALKER | Twinkle Toes | Tue Jan 29 1991 10:53 | 14 |
| Winter may be pretty to look at here in New England but, wait until spring
comes! It's the best. I have already started looking forward to daffs and
crocs. Who could leave out PEEPERS!!! A sure sign that the ice has melted
and it will soon be warm enough to leave coats behind.
Definitely two of the best things in New England are the ocean and the
wonderful seafood. We have the best lobster in the world. You have got to
schedule a New England Clambake when you go to the ocean. We have beaches
but, don't go in the water until August you'll turn blue.
Well, wood burning stoves do make February pretty comfy here.
Heheheheh,
Mahther
|
679.32 | You can't get theah from heah. Ayuh | CGVAX2::CONNELL | It's reigning cats. | Tue Jan 29 1991 10:55 | 19 |
| Sara, -d, and others. I forgot about the moving around of "R"'s. As in
Tater, (potato) tomater (tomato) and squarsh (squash). I do tend to
save up all my "R"'s and give them away as cheap Christmas presents.
Regarding interstates. The closest one to you is "the interstate".
Doesn't matter how many are in the state or even if there are close by
ones in the next state. Also, route numbers can be confusing from one
state to the next. Case in point. Routes 3,3A,93, and the F.E. Everett
turnpike. In Mass. 3 runs from the NH line down through Lowell to 128
in Burlington. 93 runs from the NH line down through Lawrence to 128
somewhere North of Burlington. I'm not sure which town. 3A is what
people in NH call 3. The F.E. Everett turnpike is what people in Mass
call 3 until you get to Manchester where it merges with and is called
93 which continues on up to the mountains. In the meantime 3 continues
on up to the Canadian (a wonderful ride to take) border. 3A is an old
back road which basically runs parallel to 3. If this is confusing
Mike, don't worry. It was meant to be. :-). That is our roads.
Phil
|
679.33 | | JJLIET::JUDY | Just get here if you can | Tue Jan 29 1991 10:56 | 16 |
|
I'm confused.....the only people here in NE that I've heard
call soda either pop or tonic are those who weren't born
and bred here! I grew up in western MA and everyone I know
calls soda, soda. Bonnie R, do they call it pop or soda where
you are? In Gardner (pronounce Gahdnah) it was always soda!
When driving in NH, don't expect drivers to merge into traffic
while coming onto the highway....they do one of two things...
1. Stop or 2. Drive full speed into the traffic. I am a
new NH resident having come from MA....I prefer NH...
Welcome to NE!
JJ
|
679.34 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | she is a 'red haired baby-woman' | Tue Jan 29 1991 11:03 | 9 |
| JJ
Do you mean me or the other Bonnie R? ;-)
I spent 10 years in northern va tho I'm from Mass originally
so I'm no expert, but I call coke, gingerale, tonic water, etc
soda.
Bonnie
|
679.35 | | GWYNED::WALKER | Twinkle Toes | Tue Jan 29 1991 11:03 | 3 |
| Oh yes, pronunciations - Worcester is said Wista in this state not Warchester.
M.
|
679.36 | | GWYNED::YUKONSEC | sated hugs | Tue Jan 29 1991 11:03 | 6 |
| I *always* drink tonic, and I was born here.
and at least our town borders actually do! (border)
E Grace
|
679.37 | :-) | CSC32::CONLON | Woman of Note | Tue Jan 29 1991 11:10 | 15 |
| Well, you think NE has strange customs around Interstates...
When I last lived in Hawaii, the main freeway was called the H-1,
Interstate.
I could just imagine the conversation with the folks who give states
Federal money for highways:
"Well, we give this money to be used on freeways that go from one
state to another, and you don't have one."
"We'd have one if the next state wasn't so far away. We had no
control over where they put California, though."
"Ok, well, just call it the Interstate, and that'll be fine."
|
679.38 | :-) | NOVA::FISHER | Well, there's still an Earth to come home to. | Tue Jan 29 1991 11:11 | 19 |
| an .32, shows how little he knows. Everyone up here in Gawd's Country
knows that 128 is really Mammoth Rd which runs from Manchester down
to Lowell. And those Massfolks only think they know where Rt 3 is.
Why, I was up in Merrimack when a Massfolk (sorry can't use the real
word here) asks me "How do I get back onto Rt 3? I told him, "You're
on it." Then he asks, "How do I get to that road over there?" So I
told him that too, damm forinner.
And if you're trying to figure out where you are, you know, looking for
street signs, forget it. If you don't know where you are you, don't
belong there anyway.
And re: a few back, there are 3 interstates in Vt ever since 93 got
finished.
Then there's teh one about the Old Vermonter who, when asked "Does
it matter which road I take to get to Burlington," replied "Not to me."
ed
|
679.39 | | GEMVAX::ADAMS | | Tue Jan 29 1991 11:16 | 6 |
| Thirty-six replies and no one's yet mentioned ice cream!
nla
p.s. I believe "tonic" is endemic to eastern Massachusetts.
|
679.42 | | IE0010::MALING | Mirthquake! | Tue Jan 29 1991 11:55 | 30 |
| I'm transplanted to Massachusetts from Virginia and I did have to make
a few adjustments. I arrived here in December of 1977 in time for the
blizzard of '78. I was thrilled at all that snow, but subsequent
winters have been a disappointment in the snow department.
Yes, Mike, here in New England the towns touch. They do have counties
but they don't use 'em very much.
The Catholic Church - very big here. Separation of church and state is
blurred. Cardinal Law can be seen mostly rubbing shoulders with
politicians and Massachusetts had a representative to Congress who was
also a Catholic priest. Also, I thought I left Blue Laws behind me in
the South, but that has changed a bit since I've been here.
Coffee ice cream - not particularly popular in other regions. Here
coffee goes without saying, like choclate and vanilla. McDonald's even
sells coffee milkshakes here. Of course McDonald's did take some flak
a few years back when it was discovered that they were using *white*
eggs in their Egg McMuffins.
One Jody left out - grinders - can you guess what they are?
You can't order Dr Pepper in a restaurant here. This was a tough one
for me to get used to. In fact I was in Stah Mahket this weekend and
they didn't even have it there. I *love* Dr Pepper. Of course, I
consider it a major cross cultural coop that E Grace drinks diet DP.
Although I suspect the reason she likes it is that Dr Pepper is spelled
without a period. :-)
Mary
|
679.43 | I scream you scream | CGVAX2::CONNELL | It's reigning cats. | Tue Jan 29 1991 11:57 | 11 |
| AAAARRRRRRGGGGGHHHHHH I fergot abouth Mammoth rd. The one I learned to
drive on too. DDUUHH.
Ice Cream. I think the results of the survey was those of us up in
Gawdesses country eat more ice cream then anyone else. I will admit,
and this is a very difficult thing for me to do, that Mass. has the
best ice cream. I'M TALKING KIMBALL'S AND DOC DAVISES' HERE FOLKS. They
have absolutely the most scrumpdiddlyumpcious ice cream in all of the
known multiverses. Doc's in Pepperell and Kimballs in Littleton.
Phil
|
679.44 | | IE0010::MALING | Mirthquake! | Tue Jan 29 1991 12:00 | 4 |
| Yeah, BYO tea bag. They threw all the tea in the harbor a few years
back. :-)
-Mary
|
679.45 | | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | hello darkness | Tue Jan 29 1991 12:01 | 6 |
| Kimballs, good and creamy but definitely a local operation.
Ben & Jerry's! YEAH! now, *they* know how to make interesting and
yummy ice cream flavors! Coffee Heathbar Crunch, Vanilla Chocolate
Chunk, and my all time fav, TOLL-HOUSE-COOKIE-DOUGH! Let me bring some
on over to the Floatation Tank...
|
679.46 | | LJOHUB::CRITZ | John Ellis to ride RAAM '91 | Tue Jan 29 1991 12:01 | 14 |
| I moved to Nude Hampster in May of 1984.
The winters are no worse here than in Ohio. The difference
is that in Ohio, at least the western part where I'm from,
it's mostly flat. Here, it's more rolling, which makes driving
in bad weather a little more bothersome.
The summers in Ohio are too humid for me. I like the lower
humidity up here much better.
But, too many people (Yea, I know, I'm part of the problem),
and too many cars for the road system.
Scott
|
679.47 | Three Interstates? You sure? | WORDS::DUKE | | Tue Jan 29 1991 12:10 | 24 |
|
> And re: a few back, there are 3 interstates in Vt ever since
> 93 got finished.
There are? I can only account for 2. I91 follows the
CT. River from MA to Canada. I89 crosses I91 at White River
and goes mostly north (hence the odd number) to Montpelier,
Burlington and St Albans. I189 circles around Burlington.
That make three is you count the I189 connector.
I93 is over here in NH.
Odd trivia. Did you ever notice that all of the single
digit US Highways, expect US8, are in New England.
I too would not by choice live anywhere but New England.
Born and raised in Vermont, school in Boston, Digital in MA
and NH. Merrimack is too far south if anything. Like them
mountains up north.
Peter Duke
|
679.48 | Transplanted Coloradan myself | MRKTNG::GODIN | Whisper words of wisdom--let it be | Tue Jan 29 1991 12:22 | 15 |
| >Coffee ice cream - not particularly popular in other regions. Here
>coffee goes without saying, like choclate and vanilla. McDonald's even
>sells coffee milkshakes here.
But, if you have a hankerin' for a cherry milkshake or ice cream soda
or frappe or whatever, better bring your own, 'cause these New
Englanders just give you an incredulous look if you ask for one.
Or am I the only one who likes cherry milkshakes?
Re. ice cream in general, one of the best things about living in
New England is Ben and Jerry's ice cream! I guess they've expanded
their distribution area, but it's made here.
Karen
|
679.49 | And CANDLEPIN BOWLING | KAHALA::CAMPBELL_K | Little things DO matter! | Tue Jan 29 1991 12:24 | 25 |
| When my folks showed us a map of the area we were relocating to from
upstate NY, my brother and I (aged 14 and 11) said things like
"NEW HAMPSHIRE?? WHERE IS THAT?" and "MERRIMACK??!!" (pronounced
Merry-mack by my dad) and "BABOOSIC LAKE??!" I mean, where we
were from the towns had NORMAL EASY TO PRONOUNCE NAMES like
Skaeneatlas, Cayuga, Oneonta, Schenectady, Throop, etc... Not
to mention Syracuse, pronounced Sary-cuse by my dad! I mean, really!
Developments of houses, that all looked alike. NO SIDEWALKS!
EVERGREEN TREES! Barely any maples in sight. People made fun of
OUR accent. Hummph. When we went to the mall, there were no parks,
only PARKING SPACES! Kids in school assumed that all of new york
is NEW YORK CITY.
I wouldn't go back if you paid me. I had never seen the ocean before.
Never tasted a lobster. Never hiked a mountain! And then there's
BOSTON! Plays! Hockey and Basketball and Baseball games! And beneath
the crusty exteriors, these new englanders have hearts of gold!
Oh yeah--and FRIED DOUGH! Jack and Jills--never heard of those either.
But I do miss Manhatten Style Clam Chowder, even tho I love NE style
too.
Kim
|
679.50 | | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Tue Jan 29 1991 12:33 | 31 |
| Well, I'm from Rhode Island (pronounced Rha DIE l'n), and I noticed
a few things when I moved to Massachusetts.
They drink frappes instead of cabinets, and eat subs instead of
grinders. They don't know what clamcakes are, and probably think
they're something like Maryland crab cakes.
They run red lights. (Tony had picked up a visitor at the airport,
and was driving him home. Here it was two in the morning, and
Tony was stopping at every *green* light in Cambridge! The visitor
asked why. Tony explained that people ran red lights. The visitor
replied, "That's the most id--". He stopped when a car ran the
light in front of them.) This puts them in mortal conflict with
New York drivers. (What's a nanosecond? The difference in time
between when the light turns green and the New York driver behind
you hits his horn.)
When you move to Massachusetts, go to a bookstore. (They are common.)
Buy _Wild_in_the_Streets:_The_Boston_Driver's_Handbook_ and a book
of maps of all the towns in eastern Massachusetts. Read the former,
and keep the other in your car.
Route 90 is called the Pike, the Mass Pike, or the Massachusetts
Turnpike. Massachusetts Avenue is called Massave. Commonwealth
Avenue is called Commave. Both are longer than you think.
Oh, yeah. I learned in the Midwest that most people don't understand
that an elastic is a rubber band. (This is in the same category
as bubbler = drinking fountain.)
Ann B.
|
679.51 | | THEALE::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Tue Jan 29 1991 12:43 | 5 |
|
The first time I'd heard of an "English Muffin" was when I went to the
states, do they orriginate from New England?
Heather
|
679.52 | | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | hello darkness | Tue Jan 29 1991 12:46 | 7 |
| .51, inre English Muffins,
you mean they're not English?!?!?! next you'll tell me French toast
and French fries aren't French!
Sara
|
679.53 | | LJOHUB::LBELLIVEAU | | Tue Jan 29 1991 13:04 | 8 |
| Ann,
In the Woostah area, we call grinders grinders too. When you get
towards "Metro West" they call them subs.
Nothing like a grinda and cold tonic!!!
Linda-local-yokel-from-Shrewsbury, MA
|
679.54 | | THEALE::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Tue Jan 29 1991 13:07 | 21 |
| > you mean they're not English?!?!?!
we have had "muffins for tea", but that was a long time before my gran
was even born when they used to toast them on the open fire, put a little
butter with them, and eat them with tea at 4.00pm. More like crumpets
really.
they have no resemblance to the "English Muffins" I saw on sale in America.
> next you'll tell me French toast and French fries aren't French!
I believe the French call them aluminettes, or whatever the French is for
matchsticks, I never understood why people would eat them, I much prefer
chips.
French toast, I'm not sure, I've seen different ways of doing this, one
way is poosible French.............where's Ad, I'm sure he knows!
Heather
|
679.55 | Ice Cream News | NETMAN::BASTION | Fix the mistake, not the blame | Tue Jan 29 1991 13:10 | 11 |
| **Ben and Jerry's News Flash**
They're opening up another plant in Bellows Falls, Vermont! Don't know
when they'll start production, but the plans were announced in
December. If you're in Middlebury, you can get "factory seconds".
re the pronunciation of Worcester....it's WUHSTAH!
Judi
|
679.56 | a lotta nothing in this one folks | CGVAX2::CONNELL | It's reigning cats. | Tue Jan 29 1991 13:12 | 38 |
| Yeah Sara, Kimball's is a local outfit. I'm something of an ice cream
snob. I don't eat boxed icecream. Ben and jerry's is boxed. I got
spoiled when my dad and i used to make our own. My arm gets sore
thinking about the handcranking I used to do and all that rock salt
oish.
English muffins. I think they were in England until Mr. Thomas left for
America in the late 19th century. At least that's what the TV
commercial says. :-) Seriously, or at least as much as this topic
allows, I've often wondered about that too. Anyone know the secret
origin of English muffins.
Oh yeah. Another great ice cream place is Keller Haus in Laconia.
Go up route 3, (that's the NH version, not the Mass. version) to the
Weirs Beach Water Slide. Keep going up the hill from there. Keller Haus
is on the right. One of those make your own Sundae places. Last time I
was there, several years now, you paid one price for the dish and told
them when to stop putting the ice cream in. 10 scoops? no problem.
Thjen you went and put all the goop and toppings on. Calorie city but
yummy. You eat it while sitting where you can overlook Lake
Winnepesaukee and Mt. Washington. After you go down stairs and browse
through one of the best candle shops I've ever been in.
Mike, Mt. Washington is small compared to Pikes Peak, but it is a nice
mountain. Besides, we have the great stone face. I know it's sexist,
but one of my favorite stories is about Daniel Webster. He was talking
to some business men in Boston one day and they were pointing out the
giant spectacles at the opticians and the giant boot outside the
cobbler's shop. He told them to come up to NH where we had a spot where
God hung out his sign to show that he made men. I love this story and I
know we have a female great stone face and a great indian face on the
cliffs of NH also. I just like this one because of the story. I also
like the Devil and Daniel Webster because in it the Devil had to
promise to leave native NH'ers alone for eternity because ole DW beat
him fair and square. Silly stories but I like em.
Phil who does get to rambling now and then.
|
679.57 | | LJOHUB::MAXHAM | Snort when you laugh! | Tue Jan 29 1991 13:13 | 21 |
| I grew up in Vermont, where we drink soda; my brother married a
woman from New Hampshire who drinks tonic and bets on the hosses.
Joanne is from Michigan, and she drinks pop.
As far as drivers go, there's no comparing eastern Massachusetts
drivers with the rest of New England. Eastern Mass. has the rudest bunch of
drivers I've ever seen. It starts getting better west of 495. Defensive driving
takes on a whole new meaning here! I much prefer driving in Vermont,
Maine, or New Hampshire (the real New Hampshire, not those border towns).
And Scott, Nashua isn't New Hampshire. It's Mass. North. You want
New Hampshire, you gotta get up Merrimack way, or further!
Town meeting day is the best. At least in Vermont. (Schools used
to close in Vermont on town meeting day. Do they still?) I haven't
been to one here in Massachusetts yet.
Don't forget Indian pudding, creamed onions, clam chowder, and New England
boiled dinner!
Kathy
|
679.58 | It much be lunch-time | NAC::BENCE | Shetland Pony School of Problem Solving | Tue Jan 29 1991 13:30 | 18 |
|
I grew up on the South Shore (suburbs southeast of Boston).
Some of my favorites:
black and white frappes
coffee frappes
scrod
indian pudding with hard sauce
steamers
lobster
clam fritters
Italian subs
tonic (especially Mrs. Meyer's home-made rootbeer)
Westport turnips
butter and sugar corn
|
679.59 | randomblings | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | hello darkness | Tue Jan 29 1991 13:30 | 21 |
| Mike, you're also gonna hafta learn to say towns' names right.
Wrentham: is it rent-ham or renthm?
Westford: is it west ford or wesfud?
Chelmsford: is it chelmsford, chum-fed, or (as I once heard a native say
chun-sed?
Phil -- I never said Kimballs wasn't good! it's yummy, but I don't
like the lines. Mike, bring wet wipes and don't wear nice clothes,
they overfill the cups with ice cream at Kimballs.
?? -- rt 93 was recently completed through Franconia Notch :-( in the
White Mtns and right on through to St Johnsbury Vt, where it connects
to rt 91. So someone else was right, there *are* 3 interstates in Vt.
Mike, don't ever try to drive the speed limit on rt 128, you'd be a
danger to yourself and everyone around you. And if you don't tailgate,
someone will cut into the space you leave between you and the car
ahead. I do not miss eastern Mass traffic.
|
679.60 | might as well say it right... | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | I swear I'd drive for miles | Tue Jan 29 1991 13:32 | 8 |
| re .55, I agree with your pronunciation of Worcester...Wuhstah
I grew up near Milford, Mass., pronounced...Milfid
My ex-husband grew-up in Leicester, Mass., or...Lestah
Lorna (pronounced Lawna)
|
679.61 | My view | ASHBY::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Tue Jan 29 1991 13:36 | 31 |
| The best ice cream is Toscanini's in Cambridge, hands down. I would
think that the reason so much ice cream is eaten is that there are so
many "designer" ice gream stores around but I may be wrong.
As for seasons
1) Cold season. Very cold. May snow. Jan-Mar.
2) Melt season. Any snow left on the ground melts, creating mud if you
live in New Hampster or a disgusting soup of salt and sand in Mass.
Make sure your windshield wiper fluid is full. Mid-Mar.
3) Rain season. 50�F and rainy just about every day. Apr-Mid May.
4) Spring. Beautiful weather, pretty flowers, lasts about 3 weeks.
Mid May - 1st week of June.
5) Mosquito hatching season. SElf-explanatory. June.
6) Oppressive heat and humidity. Self-explanatory. July- Mid Sept.
7) Fall. Pretty trees, lots of apples, lots of wood burning stoves,
crisp mornings. Lasts about 4 weeks. Mid Sept - Mid Oct.
8) Christmas season. Cold weather, no snow. All the stores are decked
out for the holidays. The decorations on Mass Ave. in Cambridge go up.
Mid Oct - Dec.
At least this is the way that I have figured them out to be. This
August wil mark the 10th anniversary of my becoming a New Englandite.
I used to live in NJ. Some things I noticed different were that there
were a lot more pick-up trucks on the roads, the air was better, people
in general seemed to have more self-sufficiency skills like knowing how
to fix things or grow things or raise animals, etc., the hair wasn't
quite as big, less malls (fine with me), no lights on the roads at
night, less crowded, houses were older, oh a lot of things.
Lisa
|
679.62 | I still can't pronounce Medford | CSSE32::M_DAVIS | Marge Davis Hallyburton | Tue Jan 29 1991 13:37 | 5 |
| Leominster only has three syllables.
Amherst drops the h in Mass, but not in New Hampshire.
:^)
|
679.63 | winter is the worst part | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | I swear I'd drive for miles | Tue Jan 29 1991 13:47 | 9 |
| The seasons:
Spring: May, June
Summer: July, August (I love oppressive heat & humidity)
Fall: Sept., Oct.
Winter: Nov., Dec., Jan., Feb., March, April, *sigh*
Lorna
|
679.64 | | GWYNED::YUKONSEC | a woman of honor & dignity | Tue Jan 29 1991 13:49 | 3 |
| It's Wus-ter! TheRe aRe those of us who pRonounce ouR "R"s!
E Grace_who_is_learning_to_say_"idea"
|
679.65 | If you're into the stuff... | MRKTNG::GODIN | Whisper words of wisdom--let it be | Tue Jan 29 1991 13:50 | 8 |
| If you're into Mexican food, better learn to cook it yourself (and set
up a supplier for some of the key ingredients before you leave
Colorado). While New England's eat-in Mexican restaurants are getting
better (or have I been away from the real stuff for so long that I've
forgotten what it tastes like?), there still aren't any Mexican
fast-food places that I'm aware of.
Karen
|
679.66 | You say tomater and I say tomatah... | NETMAN::BASTION | Fix the mistake, not the blame | Tue Jan 29 1991 13:58 | 15 |
| re Worcester
All the r's are intact when I pronounce it, but people always ask me if
I grew up in the Midwest! And people in California looked at me funny
when I asked where to find the bubbler!
And then there's Sommerville, pronounced as though one has just removed
their dentures...Summahvihl
Yes, I'm looking forward to moving to Maine. I've had enough of the
commute on route 2!
Judi
|
679.67 | | CGVAX2::CONNELL | It's reigning cats. | Tue Jan 29 1991 14:00 | 12 |
| E, it's easy. Idea pronounced idear. One of floating R's again. E,
could you give the R's the same lesson in nice behavior that your hugs
have?
Sara, I know you were not disparaging Kimball's. I am the one who is an
ice cream snob. (Not really. It's just that I don't care for Ben and
Jerry's. To each hir own. As long as we all like ice cream. :-) )
Oh yeah. The long lines are part of the atmosphere of Kimball's. Where
else you gonna go for ice cream and find a cop directing traffic
because it's so crowded.
Phil
|
679.68 | | SPIDER::GOLDMAN | Every choice is worth your while | Tue Jan 29 1991 14:04 | 8 |
| .62> -< I still can't pronounce Medford >-
That's easy, Marge - according to some people I know, it's
"Meffa"! :^)
amy (whose grandparents lived there for many years, and who
went to school in Medford/Somerville aka Summaville)
|
679.69 | | GEMVAX::ADAMS | | Tue Jan 29 1991 14:07 | 7 |
| Another shock you might experience if you ever drive up to
Massachusetts from Rhode Island on I95 ... when I95 meets
up with old Mass. highway 128, you'll find you're going
north and south at the same time.
nla
|
679.70 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | she is a 'red haired baby-woman' | Tue Jan 29 1991 14:08 | 6 |
| in re Kimballs, Erickson's in Stow is every bit as good, if they
are still open, but not as famous so the lines are shorter.
Bonnie
(former Stow Mass resident)
|
679.71 | | IE0010::MALING | Mirthquake! | Tue Jan 29 1991 14:17 | 11 |
| re: .63
> I love oppressive heat & humidity
Me too, Lorna. But then I have an excuse. DC has a reputation for
being the oppressive heat and humidity capital of the country (in
addition to being some other kind of capital that I can never
remember :-) BTW its pronounced Warshington by natives, *if* you can
find one.
-Mary
|
679.72 | ahh, Toscanini's | NAC::BENCE | Shetland Pony School of Problem Solving | Tue Jan 29 1991 14:52 | 11 |
|
RE .61
I second the recommendation for Toscanini's, especially their hazelnut.
Herrel's is a runner up with their almond icecream and heathbar
mix-ins.
clb (who lived on Bailey's hot
fudge sundaes during
college)
|
679.73 | I make great Mexican food | SONATA::ERVIN | Roots & Wings... | Tue Jan 29 1991 15:07 | 7 |
| Erickson's is still there, and fabulous...however it does close shop
between Nov. and April or May. Lines are getting longer, though. As
for Mexican food, there are no good restaurants that I know of. But I
do give cooking lessons!
Laura (a current Stow resident)
|
679.74 | from one who has been known to drive...... | DEMING::GARDNER | justme....jacqui | Tue Jan 29 1991 15:17 | 9 |
|
THE bestest ice cream is FaFa's STRAWBERRY CHEESECAKE ice cream!!!
This is found in the little town of Duxbury near the ocean! Now
open year round!
justme....jacqui
|
679.75 | excuse me, pistacio nut! | CADSYS::PSMITH | foop-shootin', flip city! | Tue Jan 29 1991 15:20 | 24 |
| ICE CREAM
Toscaninni's gets my vote for best ice cream, but I must insist the
pistacio is the most unusual and scrumptious flavor (and I'm a
confirmed chocoholic!). Emack and Bolio's is a close second. I've
heard Boston is an unusual place because people will wait in line in a
blizzard to get ice cream. It's probably unusual for other things as
well...!
Now I live in Amherst, MA, where they have things like beansprout ice tofu.
Ah, for the days when I lived in Coolidge Corner Brookline and had FIVE
gourmet ice cream shops in walking distance!
TRAFFIC
Another bizarre traffic thing in Massachusetts. We all know what
blinking red means (stop, look, go). We all know what blinking yellow
means (go slow). What on earth does BLINKING GREEN mean? I've even
looked it up and it makes no sense.
WEATHER
I used to live in DC and unfortunately DC winters (wet, ice storms, and
not enough snow) have followed me...we need a good blizzard. A real
RIPSNORTER.
Pam
|
679.76 | YA, BUT.... | DEMING::GARDNER | justme....jacqui | Tue Jan 29 1991 15:22 | 7 |
|
<---- Pam,
You can at least zip over to Herrel's in NOHO and get their
LEMON CHIFFON ice cream when they make it!!!
justme....jacqui
|
679.77 | | CGVAX2::CONNELL | It's reigning cats. | Tue Jan 29 1991 15:25 | 14 |
| Yes, I've been to Fa-fa's and it is good. Erickson's, I hadn't heard of
and would be willing to give it a try. I just am not crazy about ice
cream out of a box. Hmmm. Poor Mike is going to think we are all ice
cream junkies out here. Before we rathole this topic to far, let's try
to get back on track.
Quite a few back. Yes he's gotta try a good old fashioned New England
or even better, just Maine clambake. A mile long stretch of beach with
pits every 10 feet just for clams and lobsters. All the beer you can
drink and just a general good time. Hmm. Sounds like a good reason for
another Womannotes party. Anyone own a mile of beach up in Maine or
anywhere close. :-)
Phil
|
679.78 | | RUTLND::JOHNSTON | bean sidhe | Tue Jan 29 1991 15:33 | 12 |
| re.73 on Mexican food [Boston]
I have found Las Brisas near the Aquarium and Casa Romero in-the-
alley-off-Gloucester in the Back Bay to be pretty fine [esp Casa
Romero].
I, too, mostly make my own.
[We made flying run to Texas over Christmas. We hit the ground in
Austin, picked up our luggage and the rental car, drove straight-away
to eat some of the _real_ stuff ... before even letting the family know
we were in town <we surprised them>]
|
679.79 | Vernor's anyone? | ICHI::HOWARD | | Tue Jan 29 1991 15:35 | 3 |
| But
Where's the Vernor's Ginger Ale?
|
679.80 | Mexican Food | NETMAN::BASTION | Fix the mistake, not the blame | Tue Jan 29 1991 15:43 | 11 |
| Mexican Food
Rudi's in Sommerville and Jose's in Sommerville/Cambridge (those town
lines get awfully muddled up!) are pretty good.
If you're looking for decent fajitas, Tweeds on Grove Street in
Worcester does a good job.
Judi
|
679.82 | | FDCV06::KING | When all else fails,HIT the teddybear | Tue Jan 29 1991 16:00 | 2 |
| Houlihans (SP) in Framingham and Fanuil Hall make the best fajitas
hands down...
|
679.83 | Another translation for Mike | SCRPIO::LIZBICKI | | Tue Jan 29 1991 16:11 | 4 |
|
When you go to the grocery store, your groceries will go in "bags",
not "sacks".
|
679.84 | no proper Mexican, except perhaps at Border | TLE::D_CARROLL | get used to it! | Tue Jan 29 1991 16:21 | 12 |
| Ha! New England has NO Mexican food, period. Especially if you are
from the southwest. Unless you know how to cook your own, you might
as well just give it up. Even if you do, you can't get proper chili
peppers up here.
The best fajitas in the area are, without a doubt, at the Border Cafe
in Harvard Sq. Too bad the wait is so long, the service so bad and the
parking so hard. Even so, I got there at least once a month, usually
more, because the food is *sooo* good (compared to all other attempts
at Tex-mex in the Northeast.)
D!
|
679.85 | | BOOKS::BUEHLER | | Tue Jan 29 1991 16:27 | 5 |
| You may miss the mountains, but we do have an ocean here. For those
of us addicted to the sea, there can be no other place to live.
Maia
|
679.86 | | CSSE32::M_DAVIS | Marge Davis Hallyburton | Tue Jan 29 1991 16:28 | 4 |
| re bags and sacks... you'll have a shopping "carriage", not cart. You'll
put your trash in a "barrel", not trashcan or trashbin.
:^)
|
679.87 | Traffic signals | IE0010::MALING | Mirthquake! | Tue Jan 29 1991 16:42 | 30 |
| Traffic signals, at least in Masachusetts, do not conform to Federal
Hwy Admin standards.
Blinking green - I think this is a pedestrian activated light. Why they
need to make the distinction is beyond me. A solid green would
suffice.
And then there is the simultaneous red and yellow, which as far as I
can figure means the same thing as red, but pedestrian activated.
My favorite is the blinking yellow pedestrian lights on Rt. 16 in
Medford (I think) near I-93. These are accompanied by signs which read
"Signals timed to require frequent stops". They are pedestrian lights,
but are activated when there are no pedestrians present just to make
you stop. Instead of blinking green they are blinking yellow. You're
supposed to notice when the blinking yellow turns to solid yellow. This
means the light is about to turn red (or is it red and yellow at the
same time).
Jody already mentioned the red with a green arrow which in other states
is rare, but means the same thing as a yield sign. Here it means the
same thing as a green arrow. There's one of these in Harvard square
that's particularly quaint because the same light is used to control
traffic in opposing directions. These frugal New Englanders!
If you encounter a flashing yellow signal in Mass. do not assume the
other guy has a flashing red, it could be a flashing yellow as well.
That is just plain perverse.
Mary
|
679.88 | | IE0010::MALING | Mirthquake! | Tue Jan 29 1991 16:45 | 7 |
| D!
I love the Border Cafe, too. I go at 3 in the afternoon on weekends to
avoid the wait. Even then they are packed. But then parking is not a
problem for me. I can walk.
Mary
|
679.89 | Guide to Boston driving | ASHBY::GASSAWAY | Insert clever personal name here | Tue Jan 29 1991 17:09 | 46 |
| Yeah, I forgot about green arrows. There's a light in Waltham with a
left hand turn arrow.
The arrow turns green to allow people to make a left hand turn. But
those of us with Mass. driving experience know that the oncoming
traffic also has a green light and that if you are mistaken into
thinking that the lefthand turners have right of way because of the
arrow your car will get mushed.
Also remember that the Western Ave./Memorial Drive traffic light has a
delayed green in favor of those needing to turn left onto Western Ave.
This delayed green is about two seconds long, about the time it takes
out-of-towners to realize that the opposing traffic is not moving.
So they start to turn, and the opposing traffic moves forward (now they
have a green too) and the out-of-towner starts to panic and slow down,
which is really bad because the next four cars needing to turn left are
Boston residents who were attempting to form a train of cars turning
left in front of the oncoming traffic, so now you have eight zillion
cars in the intersection......
As a corrolary, Western Ave. bridge is one way out of Cambridge, River
Street bridge is one way in, don't make a mistake.....I've seen two
headon collisions here.....
Don't expect merge lanes when entering high speed highways like Rt.
2.....
In the city, on a road with multiple lanes in each direction recognize
the road hazards that come with travel in either lane, travelling in
the left lane will get you stuck behind someone turning left, travel in
the right lane will get you stuck behind a double (or Triple) parked
vehicle with its hazard lights on.
Taxis ALWAYS have the right of way. The same goes for early model land
yachts with rust....
and most of all......
Watch out for people that are lost. They drive very slow and/or weave
back and forth between lanes as they look at their map and/or come to a
complete stop when they realize they missed their turn. Sometimes they
throw it into reverse and start backing up. These are the only group
of people that I have found to be completely unpredictable in their
driving habits.
Lisa
|
679.90 | | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Tue Jan 29 1991 17:21 | 27 |
| D! is the first person talking about Mexican food in N.E. that I know is even
potentially qualified to judge. Having eaten Mexican food, in Mexico, for most
of my highschool years and quite a bit of college, I will have to agree with
her. There is NO good Mexican food in New England. Period. The food at the
Border Cafe is good, but it sure isn't Mexican.
I tried to cook cheese enchiladas for one Womannotes party. I had a gadawful
time finding ANY kind of enchilada sauce, and eventually had to settle for
"Old El Paso" canned enchilada sauce which we wouldn't even use to kill snails
out here. If you've only eaten Mexican food in New England, you are clearly and
obviously unqualified to judge whether it's good in any absolute sense, you
just don't have enough context.
On the other hand, youins have Bluefish... Live Maine lobsters I can get out
here, real Vermont maple syrup I can get out here (mail order is wonderful
stuff), I can even get good clam chowdah out here, but I CAN'T GET BLUEFISH!
I've got a list of places in New England that I'd be willing to live. For
many many years it was blank. Now there are two places on it:
Cambridge Mass.
Northampton Mass.
Good beer, good ice cream, decent restaurants, socially aware, college towns.
But the weather still sucks.
-- Charles
|
679.91 | | ICS::STRIFE | | Tue Jan 29 1991 17:41 | 30 |
| re .49 - Ah, another Upstate New Yorker! When I moved here from
Syracuse (Yes, Home of the Orangemen!) in 1979 I thought I'd moved to Miami.
Winter here is more messy than anything but then I was used to an
average snowfall in excess of 10 feet. It really blew my mind when a few
inches of snow was an excuse to be late for, not show up for, cancel
work. And I had never seen convoys of pick-up trucks plowing major
roads. Where are the butterfly plows?
I will say that I think New England springs are about the most
beautiful anywhere. Never seen so many flowering trees, blubs and
shrubs.
re Traffic lights. I made a study of this. Red and yellow together are
pedestrian activated and mean that the traffic is to stop in all
directions and that the pedestrain has absolute right of way.
Flashing green lights mean that the light might at some time in the
future -- but not the imminent future because then it would be a yellow
light -- turn red. Make sense? Not to me!
My daughter is a student in Rhodisland (pronounced as one word) and she
tells me that the drivers there are worse than here in eastern Mass but
that is a bit hard to believe. RI does have the disticntion of having
elected a known felon as mayor of their capitol city.
Having moved to Syracuse from Denver and to Mass from Syracuse, I'd
have to admit that while I like New England, I could move somewhere
else if their was enough incentive.
Polly
|
679.92 | And I thought only I was this warped | DRIFT::WOOD | Laughter is the best medicine | Tue Jan 29 1991 17:46 | 23 |
| According to Ben & Jerry's Homemade Ice Cream & Desert Book:
Coheeni's First Law
-------------------
We considered a few towns in Massachusetts but decided they were too
seasonal for our needs. At a friend's suggestion, we took a look at
Burlington, Vermont. It had the right number of students, and its
population was growing at a good rate. It didn't already have an ice cream
parlor. What it did have was an average of 161 days a year when the
temperature plunged below freezing and a total winter snow accumulation of
five feet (not counting a spring accumulation of 13 inches). That bothered
us until I came up with the Internal-External Temperature Differential and
Equalization Theory (later to become Coheeni's First Law of Ice-Cream-Eating
Dynamics). Herein I explained that the apparent cold that the body feels
in cold climates is based on the difference between the internal body
temperature and the external temperature. By lowering the internal
temperature (through eating cold things in the winter), the internal
temperature drops and the body feels comparative warmth. We discovered
that a healthy, daily intake of cold ice cream not only helped to reduce
that difference, but it also helped to make the frigid winter months much
more bearable, if not downright pleasant.
|
679.93 | Doritoes anyone? | CSC32::M_EVANS | | Tue Jan 29 1991 17:50 | 13 |
| Charles,
We occaisionally get bluefish in Colorado during some season, although
since the better local fish market closed, I haven't seen it. I can
live without bluefish, however, I live for southwestern cooking. Mike,
will we have to send you out regular care packages?
My sister always took beans, wholewheat tortilla's, Pace's Picante, and
her favorite brand of tortilla chips back when she was living on the
coast. At least where she was there were no Taco Bell's or Taco
John's.
Meg
|
679.94 | MA lacks *good* Tex-Mex and *all* Mexican | TLE::D_CARROLL | get used to it! | Tue Jan 29 1991 20:23 | 23 |
| Actually my use, and other people's use, of the word "Mexican" in this
string is a misnomer. What is commonly called "Mexican", such as
tacos, enchiladas, burritos and nachos, is really Tex-Mex. It was
invented in southern Texas and New Mexico (from whence I come) and
really has very little to do with the country of Mexico. There are a
few passable Tex-Mex restaurants in the Northeast, most notably the
Border Cafe - damn few, but they exist.
There is *also* a delicious cuisine which originates in Mexico and is
*properly* called "Mexican" and there are, literally, no Mexican
restaurants in Massachusetts, at least, none that I have found. Forget
good, they just don't exist! If ya'll ever make it to Santa Fe, and
want to experience one of the true culinary delights of the Western
Hemisphere, go to La Tertulia ("the meeting place") on Paseo de
Peralta, and order black bean soup, pollo (chicken) chalupas, flan for
desert, and don't forget the world's best Sangria!
How many New Englanders have ever had, or even heard of, a sopapilla?
Ah, but New England has it's good points, culinarily speaking...Legal
Seafood Bluefish Pate is truly the food of the god(esse)s.
D!
|
679.95 | Packy stores | LDYBUG::GOLDMAN | Every choice is worth your while | Tue Jan 29 1991 20:26 | 10 |
| Wait - did anyone mention that we have package stores (aka
liquor stores) here? That's New England specific...I remember the
first time I went to a grocery store...I can't remember what state
now...and they had beer and wine right there in the store! (Of
course I was mucho surprised the first time I went to the Victory
supermarket in Hudson, MA and they had alcohol). So when someone
says they have to make a "packy run", it means they're going to
the store for alcohol.
amy
|
679.96 | ever which way but what it says | TLE::D_CARROLL | get used to it! | Tue Jan 29 1991 20:54 | 33 |
| But wasn't I surprised to learn that in other states, while you can buy
beer in the supermarket, you *can't* buy it in the liquor store! In
New York state they had stores that specialized in *beer*, they didn't
sell groceries *or* wine and liquor, just beer and wine coolers (as
well as soda and other non-alcoholic beverages.)
Weird.
Also be forwarned about all the weird laws we have here. Can't buy
alcohol on a Sunday, by George! Can't kiss your wife on a Sunday,
either, although it doesn't say anything about other people's wives.
Also, to be granted Massachusetts citizenship you will be required to
change your political affiliation to Democrat (if it isn't already)
unless you swear on your honor to vote for Weld in the next election.
Also, you have to drink a *whole* can of Moxie. Ick!
Forget that you understand words like "north" as meaning
"towards the north pole" and "west" as meaning 270 degrees from North.
For only in New England to roads labelled "north" (such as Rt 128)
actually travel in a full circle; and only in MA can you be on one
road, travelling towards the East, and be on a road labelled North
*and* a road labelled South *at* *the* *same* *time*. I kid you not.
(I-93 North and I-95 South)
Massachusetts has the most rabid sports fans of anywhere I have ever
been. People get positively *obsessed*. Suicide rates soar round
World Series time. The annual Celtics victory march (which happens
whether they win or not) is to Boston was major religious holidays are
to other cities.
D!
|
679.97 | | CSC32::M_VALENZA | Pizza, notes, and shelter. | Tue Jan 29 1991 20:55 | 4 |
| After reading all of the previous notes about the meaning of New
England traffic signals, I think I'm going to sell my car.
-- Mike
|
679.98 | no problem | TLE::D_CARROLL | get used to it! | Tue Jan 29 1991 20:58 | 4 |
| Oh, Mike, don't worry about it! MA has the weirdest rules of the road,
but DON'T WORRY because you aren't expected to follow any of them!
D!
|
679.100 | though honey may squeak by | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVG West, UCS1-4 | Tue Jan 29 1991 21:11 | 4 |
| And before anyone back there chimes in about sopapillas, with all that
cinnamon sugar...no, that *isn't* what D! is talking about ;-).
DougO
|
679.101 | the *real* Boston driving rules | TLE::D_CARROLL | get used to it! | Tue Jan 29 1991 21:16 | 111 |
| Basic Rules for Driving in Boston
by Diane White
(original source unknown)
posted w/o any permission whatsoever
Boston is often aclaimed as the most exciting sity in Merica in thiwch
to drive. Who would argue? Herewith, for the nercomers and visitors,
a few basic rules of the road for driving hereabouts:
* To obtain a general idea of how to drive in Boston, go to a Celtics
game and carefully watch the fast breaks. Then get heind the wheel of
your car and practice it.
* Never take a green light at face value. Always look right and left
before proceeding.
* When in doubt, accelerate.
* Very generally speaking, the intransigence of the Bostons driver is
directly proportional to the expense of hir American-made car, and
inversely proportional to the expense of hir foreign-made car. But in
applying this formula, bear in mind that they are all more or less
intransigent.
* in the long run, parking your car in a lot is always cheaper than
parking it at a meter.
* Drivers whose cars sport "I brake for animals" bumper stickers may
brake for animals, but they may not brake for you. Watch it.
* Never drive behind a person whose head doesn't reach the top of the
steering wheel.
* Teenage drivers believe they are immortal. Don't yield to the
temptation to teach them otherwise.
* Taxicabs should always have the right of way, unless you are bent on
suicide.
* Never, ever, strop for a pedestrian unless he flings himself under
the wheels of your car.
* The first parking space you see will be the last parking space you
see. Grab it.
* Boston is the home of slalom driving, thanks to the Registry of Motor
Vehicles, which puts potholes in key locations to test drivers'
reflexes and keep them on their toes.
* Steer clear of people with antinuclear bumper stickers pasted on
their cars. They are interested in preserving mankind, which is
admirable. But they are not interested in preserving you or
themselves, for that matter. They have more important things to think
about.
* Never get in the way of a car that needs extensive body work.
* Double-park when shopping in the North End of Boston, unless
triple-parking is available.
* Always look both ways when running a red light.
* While it is possible to fit a 15-foot car into a 15-foot parking
space, it is seldom possible to fit a 16-foot car into a 15-foor
parking space. Sad but true.
* There is not such thing as a short cut during rush-hour traffice in
Boston.
* It is traditional in Boston to honk your horn at cards that don't
move the instant the light changes.
* Never put your faith in signs that purport to provide directions.
They are put there to further confuse people who don't know their way
around the city.
* Use extreme caution when pulling into breakdown lanes. Breakdown
lanes are not for breaking down, but for speeding, especially during
rush-hour.
[ed: how many people know that this is actually *legal* on 128 during
rush-hour? -D!]
* Never use turn directional signals, since they only confound and
distract other Boston drivers, who are not used to then.
* Similarly, never attempt to give hand signals. Boston drivers,
unused to such courtesies, will think you are waving them on to pass
you.
* The yellow light is not, as commonly supposed outside the Boston
area, a signal to slow down. It is a warning to speed up and get
through the intersection before the light turns red.
* Never pass on the left when you can pass on the right.
* In making a left turn from the right lane, employ the element of
surprise. That is, do it as suddenly as possible, so as to stun the
other drivers.
* Speed limits are arbitrary figures posted only to make you feel
guilty.
* Whenever possible, stop in the moddle of a crosswalk to ensure
inconvenience as many pedestrians as possible.
* Remember that the goal of ever Boston driver is to get there first by
whatever means necessary.
*** Above all, keep moving. ***
|
679.102 | Red/yellow = pedestrian radar lock | STAR::BECK | Paul Beck | Tue Jan 29 1991 21:25 | 29 |
| When you come down to it, the rules of the road in Massachusetts
are really straightforward:
Oldest car has the right of way.
Unless it's a rental.
Also, I haven't seen the really accurate description of the
blinking green (a couple were close).
Blinking green denotes a pedestrian crosswalk - never a cross
street for cars. When the pedestrian pushes the button (if it
works), the blinking green turns to red and yellow simultaneously.
(I don't recall if it goes through a yellow-only cycle first.)
For Boston drivers, red+yellow means "targeting engaged, bogies
detected, radar lock".
I also don't recall seeing a description of the algorithm for
naming streets.
A street is named for the next town over. So in Arlington you'll
have a street called (say) Belmont Street. As soon as you cross
the line into Belmont on this street, you'll note it's called
Arlington Street.
Some towns are too small to be noticed. I live in Carlisle. We
have Concord Road. But in Concord, it's Lowell Road. Humph. At
least they ignored Chelmsford, too (but then, who doesn't?).
|
679.103 | This is just for you, Mike! | TLE::D_CARROLL | get used to it! | Tue Jan 29 1991 21:52 | 105 |
| Macho Driving in Massachusetts
(author unknown)
Those of you who have been driving in Massachusetts all your lives are
familiar with many of the so-called macho driving techniques. Drivers
from out of state, new to the macho driving scene, are probably curious
as to what these people are up to. So here are some tips for macho
driving in Nassachusetts:
1. You should drive a pickup truck whether you need one or not. It
should be extremely large with lots of blinding yellow fog lights. If
it doesn't have them already, purchase used tires from MX missle
transport trucks (roughly six feet in diameter) and raise the
suspension to allow clearance over the wimps that drive cars. If you
must drive a car, make sure that it couldn't possibly pass inspection.
2. Practice your best scowl. Remember that this is the only
expression you are permitted to show once behind the wheel. So make it
as ugly as possible.
3. Do NOT be intimidated by the weather. It should never affect your
macho driving style. Under no circumstances should you use windshield
wipers. They are for appearance only. IF snow has blanketed your
vehicle, clear a peephole just large enough to see what's in front of
you. You are not permitted to leave your vehicle to do this, however!
IF you can't reach around to the windshield while you are driving, then
put on your defroster and windshield wipers full blast under you can
just see the road.
4. Darkness intimidates wimps! Only use your headlights when its
pitch dark and you see the police. Of course, if you do have those
brlinding yellow fog lights, you may use them whenever you see fit. It
is also considered macho if only one front headlight works.
5. Always drive with your right hand on the wheel and your entire left
arm hanging lossely out the window like a slab of meat.
6. Any loose objects in the vehicle may be thrown out of the window
without hesitation (especially macho is throwing out burning objects
like cigars.)
7. The only appropriate time to use directional signals, if you must
use them at all, is while you're driving in a straight line down the
highway (you could actually leave them on all the time since nobody
really believe you are going to turn anyway).
8. You must be prepared to yell obscenities at and give the finger to
anything that moves. If you are always prepared, you will beat the
other macho drivers to the punch.
9. In Massachusetts, the road sign YIELD has no meaning, but the sign
STOP means YIELD. A flashing yellow or green light means the same thing
as a YIELD sign, and a flashing red light is the same as a STOP sign.
You must never come to a complete stop unless the vehicle in front of
you comes to a complete stop. Only wimps stop for red lights. So be
sure to blast your horn the split second the light turns green.
10. Driving in the breakdown lane is stronly encouraged. Passing
traffic in the breakdown lane on multi-lane highways in particularly
macho. Driving over the road shoulder or on top of the median strip to
get traffic should be left to the experienced macho driver.
11. Passing traffic on winding, narrow roads without hesitation will
gain the respect of other macho drivers.
12. Never yield to emergency road vehicles such as ambulances. They
will find a way to get around you (they never should have caught up
with you in the first place.)
13. You must master the art of tailgaiting to become a full-fledged
macho driver. With practice, it is possible to maintain a distance of
two to three inches between you and the vehicle in front of you without
even paying attention! This is particularly confusing to the driver
when you are in heavy traffic. If the driver in front of you tries
something cute like slowly down, jamming on the brakes, or flipping the
lights on and off, be ready with your obscenities and finger. Remember
that you are always in a bigger hurry than the guy in front of you.
14. Another art to master is that of "cutting off" other drivers.
This must be done with great care when cutting off other macho drivers.
Sometimes it is necessary to wait for the oncoming vehicle for quite
some time before rolling out in front of it, but that is the art. Your
mission is to see the front of the vehicle you are cutting off nearly
hit the ground as it brakes to a screeching halt. Of course, you appear
never to have seen the oncoming vehicle even though you had to wait for
it. You must then be careful not to accelerate until the driver you
just cut off has finished giving you the finger and yelling
obscenities.
15. Sometimes associate with "cutting off" is the ability to close off
gaps in traffic. This is one of my favorite macho-driving techniques.
When you detect a vehicle either trying to pull into traffic or
accelerating toward you in an attempt tp get past you, you must adjust
your speed such that the gap in traffic will NOT be there when the
vehicle gets to it. You must anticipate the driver's intention while
nonchalantly altering your speed to intercept. A fun variation of this
technique is to use it to prevent vehicles from getting on or off the
highway. Remember that you must not notice the other driver's
predicament as s/he jams on the brakes.
16. The experienced macho driver is capable of eating lunch, driving a
beer, and having complete sexual relations while performing all the
above activities simultaneously. So practice up!
|
679.104 | | FIRST8::LEE | The stupid is always possible | Tue Jan 29 1991 21:56 | 24 |
| <<< Note 679.71 by IE0010::MALING "Mirthquake!" >>>
Re: .71
> > I love oppressive heat & humidity
> Me too, Lorna. But then I have an excuse. DC has a reputation for
> being the oppressive heat and humidity capital of the country (in
> addition to being some other kind of capital that I can never
> remember :-) BTW its pronounced Warshington by natives, *if* you can
> find one.
Funny thing, I was going to say that, except for a couple of
weeks in August, I don't consider the summer heat in New England
particularily oppressive. Yep, you guessed it, I'm originally
from DC as well, although I don't say Warshington. (In my
experience, the people most likely to say Warshington are from
southern Maryland -- pronounced "Muhrland")
-Andy
|
679.105 | | CGVAX2::CONNELL | It's reigning cats. | Wed Jan 30 1991 07:02 | 24 |
| Actually, the only thing worse then driving in Boston is.....
being a passenger in a car thats being driven through Boston. Ever feel
totally helpless and completely left in the hands of a higher power and
then realize that the higher power gets off on slapstick and pratfalls.
That's how I feel when I'm being driven through the streets of Boston.
At least when driving you have a fighting chance and a mostly equal
defensive weapon. :-)
Phil
|
679.106 | aaauuuggghhh!!! | SA1794::CHARBONND | Yeh, mon, no problem | Wed Jan 30 1991 07:09 | 3 |
| re .105 I dunno, _walking_ in Boston is a trip. You need an ego
large enough to be convinced that 3000 pounds of steel crashing into
your body won't hurt you. Terrifying if you're a country boy ;-)
|
679.107 | The Coke Sign | CECV03::TARRY | | Wed Jan 30 1991 07:40 | 15 |
| Another comment regarding directions in Boston. People give directions with
regard to a famous Coca-Cola sign. This sign must really have been something
because everybody remembers where it used to be. Of course it was long gone
before I came to the area so I don't know where it used to be. I think what is
needed is a historic marker indicating the spot.
It seems the famous sign was taken down and sold for $1.00. The buyer arranged
for it to be stored at the Conrail yard and the workers at the yard destroyed
it. The buyer has now successfully sued Conrail for something like $30,000 for
the sign.
One thing I really appreciate about the area is the way people are willing to
help with directions. The first week I was here, working in downtown Boston, I
asked a gentleman for directions and he ended up walking a block to make sure I
got pointed in the right direction.
|
679.108 | | RUTLND::JOHNSTON | bean sidhe | Wed Jan 30 1991 08:08 | 18 |
| re. walking in Boston
I find it ever-so-much more pleasant than driving. But as with
driving, you've got to pick your battles ... it does require at least
the the appearance of the confidence of a rhinoceros.
re..90,.94 -sniff-
gee ...., and I thought 13 years of living in Texas & New Mexico
spending weekends in Monterey [Mexico], making border runs on a lark,
and spending Christmas in Mexico,D.F. and the trekking through the
Yucatan for school would give me _some_ credibility of both US-Mex and
actual Mexican cuisines ... but apparently not. Leo Romero's place
is _very_ fine ... _not_ TexMex.
As for shopping for ingredients around here...of course not, I have
them shipped in from sources outside of Austin and in Laredo ...
|
679.109 | granite curbstones | CSSE32::M_DAVIS | Marge Davis Hallyburton | Wed Jan 30 1991 08:49 | 1 |
|
|
679.110 | ;-) | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | hello darkness | Wed Jan 30 1991 09:05 | 1 |
| read it all, Mike -- quiz next week !
|
679.112 | hehehehehe | SA1794::CHARBONND | Yeh, mon, no problem | Wed Jan 30 1991 09:16 | 1 |
| re .111 Thank heavens, it's neither ! ;-)
|
679.113 | | ESIS::GALLUP | Swish, swish.....splat! | Wed Jan 30 1991 09:35 | 21 |
|
RE: D! and Mexican food
Actually, you can't really categorize Mexican food. Mexico is a very
big country and it has many regions--which means very different styles
of cooking.
It's VERY difficult to say "Mexican food is xxxx" because it simply
isn't true. We can't even categorize American food into one category
(take BBQ sauce, for instance...it's different in every part of the
country!).
But, I'll agree...there are very few GOOD Mexican resturants in
NewEngland. Probably mainly because there is almost a nonexistant
Mexican population here.
kath
|
679.114 | | CGVAX2::CONNELL | It's reigning cats. | Wed Jan 30 1991 09:36 | 9 |
| Salt on the roads in the Winter. It runs cars and runs off into the
ground and drinking water. YYYUUUCCCCCCHHHHHHHH.
Plows that only plow the roads with their blades 2 inches off the
surface of the road and don't do side streets until 2 days after the
storm and either don't do sidewalks at all or wait a week to do them.
Nashua does it this way.
Phil
|
679.115 | yes you can | TLE::D_CARROLL | get used to it! | Wed Jan 30 1991 09:46 | 28 |
| >It's VERY difficult to say "Mexican food is xxxx" because it simply
>isn't true. We can't even categorize American food into one category
>(take BBQ sauce, for instance...it's different in every part of the
>country!).
Ah, but you'll notice I didn't say "Mexican food *is" something, I said
what Mexican food *wasn't*, which is tacos, burritos, etc. (Although
it is true that TexMex has migrated into norther cities in Mexico such
as Juarez and Nogales...but then, who would want to go there. :-P)
Anyway, it isn't true that you can't categorize food just because it
comes from a big country. While there is a lot of diversity in, say,
Chinese food, American food or Mexican food, it is possible to make
distinctions and broad generalizations. Mexican food may videly vary
but it would be hard to mistake for, say, Indian food. It's just like
with cultures - while individuals in a culture vary widely, it is
possible to draw broad-stroke pictures of a culture.
So while it isn't possible to say exactly *what* BBQ sauce is like, it
is possible to say that BBQ sauce is distinctly American.
-----
E Grace, Boston may not *be* New England, but any discussion of New
England wouldn't be complete without a discussion of it's largest city,
and the capital of the state with the largest population.
D!
|
679.116 | ;-) | COBWEB::SWALKER | | Wed Jan 30 1991 09:46 | 13 |
| re: driving
Maybe I've just missed it, but I haven't yet seen mention of that most
bizarre road sign peculiar to Massachusetts: "Thickly Settled".
As anyone who has had to take a written Mass driving test will know
(but nobody else is likely to suspect!), "Thickly Settled" is really a
speed limit sign. I think it's 35, but if you're stopped in one of
these zones, you could always hedge and tell the officer your speedometer
said you were only going thickly settled.
Sharon
|
679.111 | sorry, had to do an edit | GWYNED::YUKONSEC | woman of honor dignity & hugosity | Wed Jan 30 1991 10:02 | 12 |
| -< I really hate... >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
...people who think Boston *is* Massachusetts, or _worse_, think it
*is* New England!
grrrrrrrrr
E Grace
|
679.118 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Wed Jan 30 1991 10:03 | 12 |
|
> So while it isn't possible to say exactly *what* BBQ sauce is like, it
> is possible to say that BBQ sauce is distinctly American.
Bar-b-que sauce American??????????????????
Pah
Heather
|
679.119 | | LJOHUB::MAXHAM | Snort when you laugh! | Wed Jan 30 1991 10:08 | 12 |
| E Grace, I share your frustration with people who think Massachusetts
(and even New England) is equal to Boston!
By the way Springtime in New England is nice 'cause it's always
so long in coming, but (IMHO) Springtime in Kentucky is much more
beautiful with lots of flowering trees and bushes. (Right Nancy Smith?!?)
And to all you Mexican and Tex-Mex food experts out there: I feel
sorry for you for having been exposed to The Real Thing. I'm perfectly
happy eating burritos in New England and calling them good Mexican food!!!!
Kathy
|
679.120 | there were clouds in my coffee! | REGENT::WOODWARD | Executive Sweet | Wed Jan 30 1991 10:38 | 5 |
| Well, anyone moving from CO to MA is going to notice the
number of cloudy days here. I made the move in July and
the cloudy days got to me real quick!
kath
|
679.121 | "Chinese" Food | NETMAN::BASTION | Fix the mistake, not the blame | Wed Jan 30 1991 10:46 | 16 |
| As long as we're talking about food...
I grew up thinking that "Chinese Food" meant sweet and sour sauce, bbq
spare ribs, etc.
Thank goodness for San Francisco! I learned that there are many
provinces, each with their own distinct styles of spices and cooking
techniques.
After I returned to New England, I discovered that the vast majority of
"Chinese" restaurants serve Polynesian food. I have since discovered
some terrific places in Worcester and Arlington that serve Szechwan and
more inventive dishes!
Judi
|
679.122 | MA Fundamental Speed Law | GUESS::DERAMO | Dan D'Eramo | Wed Jan 30 1991 12:10 | 6 |
| re .116, "I think it's 35"
I thought the speed limit in a "Thickly Settled" zone was
30 mph.
Dan
|
679.123 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Wed Jan 30 1991 12:13 | 9 |
|
> I thought the speed limit in a "Thickly Settled" zone was
> 30 mph.
And I'd be thinking that it was the name of the town or area!
Heather
|
679.124 | more driving quirks.... | ASD::HOWER | Helen Hower | Wed Jan 30 1991 13:14 | 23 |
| More driving hints:
-if you're planning to drive somewhere, even to Boston or Cambridge,
memorize the names of all the little towns in between. Some of those
infamous rotaries have a nasty habit of labelling the road with only
the NEXT town in that direction (which direction? oh, they don't always
tell you irrelevant stuff like that! :-) Got lost my first trip taking
rt 2 east from Acton to Cambridge when the signs in a rotary informed me
that I could head to Arlington or Concord, with no mention of which was
east of wherevertheheck I was....
-main roads are distinguisable by almost NEVER having street signs; the
minor roads intersecting them may be marked, but main road won't be
until it intersects something larger.
-locals may refer to roads by name, rather than route number (see also
note about naming 'em by town). Or by a no-longer-used route number,
like rt 128 (now a section of rt 95).
-Another place you may find flashing green lights is in front of fire stations;
normally it's green, but may turn red *suddenly* if the engine need to get out!
Helen
Oh, and another pronunciation hint: in MA, "B-O-R-O[-U-G-H]" is pronounced "brah",
as in "Marlbrah" (Marlboro), "Westbrah" (Westborough), etc. :-)
|
679.125 | | LJOHUB::LBELLIVEAU | | Wed Jan 30 1991 13:17 | 9 |
| Thickly Settled (as far as MA traffic laws) =30mph
a thickly settled area is one in which buildings are less than 300
feet apart or an area where there's a lot of businesses.
Linda, who recently took my motorcycle learner's permit written
exam and hopes this type of info disappears from her brain soon
|
679.126 | (*8 | GWYNED::YUKONSEC | woman of honor dignity & hugosity | Wed Jan 30 1991 13:30 | 4 |
| errrrr, folks? The idea is *not* to scare potential new residents
away!
E Grace
|
679.127 | | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Wed Jan 30 1991 13:37 | 24 |
| Annie - sorry I slighted your Mexican food expertise. I *was* careful to say
"that I knew of" and "that had contributed", since I knew Kathy Gallup was from
AZ and probably qualified.
FWIW Kath is absolutely correct - Mexico has a number of wonderful regional
cuisines, I particularly like sea food in the Vera Cruz style (Red Snapper
Vera Cruzano in particular is a classic dish), anythin in the Yucatecan style,
and my local *Mexican* restaurant is Michihuatecan with a Oxacan place across
the street.
Annie - what's the address of this "Leo's" place again? I'll check it out - but
if the main things on the menu are combination plates with Chile Colorado,
Chile Verde, Enchiladas, Tacos, Burritos, Taquitos, and Tamales I'm going to
be disappointed in both you and them...
Also FWIW a good Chile Verde is a WONDERFUL dish, and is authentically always
made with pork. It's a not particularly spicy pork stew with tomatillos,
chayote and other green squashes, fresh cilantro, and a small amount of green
chiles. I make a good one...
If anyone is interested in this subject, I definitely recommed Diana Kennedy's
book "The Cuisines of Mexico." Most of the ingredients can be mail ordered.
-- Charles
|
679.128 | How come Dorchester isn't pronounced "Doostah"? | STAR::RDAVIS | Untimely ripp'd | Wed Jan 30 1991 13:43 | 6 |
| � errrrr, folks? The idea is *not* to scare potential new residents
� away!
You'll notice that I haven't said a word!
Ray (off to the Bay)
|
679.129 | merrily merrily merrily merrily | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVG West, UCS1-4 | Wed Jan 30 1991 14:07 | 14 |
| > Also FWIW a good Chile Verde is a WONDERFUL dish, and is authentically
> always made with pork.
Yes.
> It's a not particularly spicy pork stew with tomatillos, chayote and
> other green squashes, fresh cilantro, and a small amount of green
> chiles. I make a good one...
Regional differences again; some areas dispense with all that tomatillo
and squash business. Deliciously spicey, entirely from green chile.
If I could *get* good chiles, I'd make a good one too...;-)
DougO
|
679.130 | | FIRST8::LEE | The stupid is always possible | Wed Jan 30 1991 14:30 | 4 |
|
And here I thought "Thickly Settled" described the
inhabitants of the area...
|
679.131 | In Boston, pahk ya cah and walk! | GEMVAX::WARREN | | Wed Jan 30 1991 15:26 | 24 |
| I've always lived in NE (Mass.). I grew up and went to college on the North
Shore: Gloucester (Glostah), Lynn, Salem. I've lived for the past 10+
years in the Worcester (Woostah) area: Shrewsbury (Shrewsberry), Westboro
(Westburro) and Auburn (Aubin).
First of all, it's tonic "inside" 128 (maybe even 495); soda here in
central Mass. Of course, those inside 128 think Worcester is "western"
Mass. (somewhere in the Berkshires, probably, right next to Springfield
and New York). They haven't heard of any other towns west of Framingham.
Now, I don't mind if you make fun of how we talk. Just do it right!
We DO say ah ahs (our Rs), just not where you want us to (this is
Ameriker, aftah all). We do NOT talk like the Kennedys. (It's Hahvid,
not Havvid.) And we do NOT sound the twerps on "Murder She Wrote."
(It's Baawston, not Baaahston.)
Re .86: In this part of NE, it's a shopping caht.
Re "packies": I just heard that they can now be open on Sundays from
noon to 8. Is this true??
-Tracy
|
679.132 | | GUESS::DERAMO | Dan D'Eramo | Wed Jan 30 1991 17:46 | 8 |
| re .125,
>> who recently took my motorcycle learner's permit written
>> exam and hopes this type of info disappears from her brain soon
After which you'll fit right in as a MA driver! :-)
Dan
|
679.133 | eastern N.E.er's are frugal with our Rs | EMASS::SKALTSIS | Deb | Wed Jan 30 1991 18:13 | 37 |
| >First of all, it's tonic "inside" 128 (maybe even 495); soda here in
>central Mass.
Actually, it's "tonic" in seacoast NH and southern Maine (where I grew
up). And I believe that we call it tonic because the first popular
soft-drink in these parts was Moxie, still enjoyed by several of my
aunts (you will note this word has a U in it and is not pronounced
"ants"), which called itself a tonic.
Also, from what I've read, the Connecticut River seems to be the line
that divides we folks that enunciate words properly from those that
pronounce the letter R every time that they see it.
Helpful Hint in Maine:
Now, as someone that was born Down East (Yoawk Haa-ba), I'd like to
caution you that when you go to buy something in Maine, ask for the
"finest kind" (pronounced as one word, fineskind) of whatever you are
looking for so that the proprietor will know that you want the best.
This is especially important if you are buying seafood.
I'd like to agree with the folks that brought up the point that Not all
of New England is like Boston, or for that matter, Massachusetts. In
fact, Mass plates are considered "foreign" in non-bordering towns of NH
and all of Maine.
RE: a few notes where folks have said they have been New Englanders
for n years since moving here from there:
I am reminded of the story of local farmer who was conversing with a
transplanted NJ native. The "new arrival" said that living in the town for
the past 10 years made him feel like a real New Englander. The farmer
replied "The cat might sleep in the oven but that don't make her a muffin."
'Nuff said.
Deb New England Native
|
679.134 | what good is it? | SOLANA::BROWN_RO | Greater Satan metropolitan area | Wed Jan 30 1991 18:51 | 7 |
| Ah, New England.
Can't get a good teriyaki pastrami burrito anywhere.
-roger
|
679.135 | | SOLANA::BROWN_RO | Greater Satan metropolitan area | Wed Jan 30 1991 19:14 | 11 |
| re:79
>But
>Where's the Vernor's Ginger Ale?
Where it's made, DEEE-troyt, the Motor City.
Probably where it should have stayed.
|
679.136 | | EQUITY::GREEN | Long Live the Duck!!! | Wed Jan 30 1991 22:47 | 14 |
|
This isn't about New England but... with all this talk about
how phrases are different in New England...
Does anyone else say "shut the light"? My husband
keeps on making fun of me. Also, if you say that phrase,
can you tell me where you were from? Thanks...
To get back to the subject... in my first year of college,
a friend of mine from West Roxbury (part of Boston) asked me
if I wanted to go potty! I thought that was a rather personal
question! :-0 (party)
Amy
|
679.137 | | GUESS::DERAMO | Dan D'Eramo | Thu Jan 31 1991 00:28 | 6 |
| "Shut the light" is acceptable, as is "shut the light
off" or "turn the light off" or "turn the light out".
Western Pennsylvania.
Dan
|
679.138 | remember that you are talking about NEW england... | BRABAM::PHILPOTT | Col I F 'Tsingtao Dhum' Philpott | Thu Jan 31 1991 04:55 | 8 |
|
Re the 10 year story (and the feline muffin): I own a "cottage" near a village
in England were most of the families arrived before they'd discovered New
England, and families that arrived in the last 300 years or so are still
considered "in-comers" - especially if they fought on the wrong side in the War
of the Roses.
/. Ian .\
|
679.139 | | SUBURB::THOMASH | The Devon Dumpling | Thu Jan 31 1991 07:56 | 6 |
| > "Shut the light" is acceptable, as is "shut the light
> off" or "turn the light off" or "turn the light out".
or - make out the light?
South western UK.
|
679.140 | re .139, some universal(?) interpolations... :-) | NEMAIL::KALIKOWD | LibR8 Q8 | Thu Jan 31 1991 08:00 | 3 |
| with off
or - make out the light ?
^ ^
|
679.141 | another Right of Way law | NOVA::FISHER | Well, there's still an Earth to come home to. | Thu Jan 31 1991 08:14 | 3 |
| You have the right of way if your father did...
ed
|
679.142 | And then there are the politicians... | NETMAN::BASTION | Fix the mistake, not the blame | Thu Jan 31 1991 08:54 | 16 |
| The basis of the street signs, odd directions (i.e., turn right where
the mumble department store *used* to be) and other quirks is the
assumption is that one has grown up in the area!
Of course, there are no street signs along major streets because they
were all removed during Colonial times when the British were
attacking! (Now I know that local government moves slowly, but this
one is ridiculous!)
Despite all the quirks and eccentricities, New England has its plusses.
They may take a while for you to discover, but they're out there!
Judi
|
679.143 | you get used to it | VIA::HEFFERNAN | Broccoli not bombs! | Thu Jan 31 1991 08:56 | 5 |
| Well, the way we drive in Boston wouldn't be my first choice on
driving manners, but I'll actually come to almost enjoy. It has it's
own rhythm and feel after a while...
john (resident of Boston for 4 years and living in the area for 15 years)
|
679.144 | Anent -.1, my N.E. Culture Shock comes when I'm away! :-) | NEMAIL::KALIKOWD | LibR8 Q8 | Thu Jan 31 1991 09:05 | 3 |
| ... when I drive in California, ferinstance, I (born & bred & learned
to drive in Boston area) always feel like a shark amongst goldfish!!
:-) :-(
|
679.145 | Toto, I don't think we're in Harvard Sq! | LJOHUB::LBELLIVEAU | | Thu Jan 31 1991 09:09 | 6 |
| When I was in California, I was completely shocked that the drivers
stopped if a pedestrian even *looked* like she might cross the streets.
I remember my sisters practically dragging me as they reassured me it
wasn't a trick!
Linda
|
679.146 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | trial by fire | Thu Jan 31 1991 09:45 | 12 |
| Yeah, I do really think the Vernor's folks should get their act
together and distribute up here - it's such a nuisance my having to beg
friends to smuggle it up here when they visit!
And as for natives, I lived mostly in the midwest for about 8 years
(hence I have my R's in most of the right places), so I'm no native.
But I do come from seriously stolid Boston Brahmin stock (Winthrops,
Munroes, Aldens, Lynch's, Mayflower descendent). Well, at least I've
got the Blue Blood, even if I don't have the Green Backs!
-Jody
|
679.147 | :-) | NOVA::FISHER | Well, there's still an Earth to come home to. | Thu Jan 31 1991 09:57 | 12 |
| If you're one of the Coloradans with 2.3 guns, you have to get some
paperwork in Massachusetts otherwise you're liable for a mandatory
sentence of 1 yer in jail that noone seems to do anyway.
I erred earlier.
You have the right of way of your father did. Feminist may claim
either parent depending on which, if any, had the right of way. If
your parents never lived in Massachusetts, you do not have the right of
way.
ed
|
679.149 | | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | snow sky | Thu Jan 31 1991 10:31 | 3 |
| Colorado, or at least parts of it, doesn't have a surplus of water,
right? In New England, we have lots of water. But water rights are
different than in the West. (don't ask me for details, please :-)
|
679.150 | they actually stop too! | VIA::HEFFERNAN | Broccoli not bombs! | Thu Jan 31 1991 10:43 | 7 |
| Speaking of strange driving habits, when I was in San Francisco, there
are millions of 4 way stop signs. And, get this, YOU GET TO GO IN THE
ORDER THAT YOU GOT THERE!!! So, if you were the first you go first.
VERY STRANGE!
john
|
679.151 | We have one of those... | PARITY::DDAVIS | Long-cool woman in a black dress | Thu Jan 31 1991 11:35 | 8 |
| John,
We have that same 4-way stop sign in Chelmsford, where Dalton Road
crosses Steadman Street....first one at the stop sign goes first..
Very strange indeed!!
-Dotti.
|
679.152 | 4-way stop - different rules! | SCRPIO::LIZBICKI | | Thu Jan 31 1991 12:05 | 16 |
|
Dotti -
Is that the one in Chelmsford center? I lived in that area for
over a year, and I don't recall the four-way stop sign working
quite that way. That intersection was a mess, and the stop
signs were ignored for the most part! Once one car was going
through, at least 2-3 cars would stick to it and go through
as well!
When I first moved to California, people would get mad at me
at the four-way stop signs, because I just didn't trust the
other people to REALLY stop when they were supposed to and
would wait too long!
|
679.153 | high prices maybe though! | JURAN::GARDNER | justme....jacqui | Thu Jan 31 1991 12:13 | 7 |
|
Back to Charles on the West Coast.....
Have you thought to check with LEGAL SEAFOODS for fastship of
bluefish???? They do have a mailorder business!
justme....jacqui
|
679.154 | | TINCUP::KOLBE | The dilettante divorcee | Thu Jan 31 1991 12:46 | 9 |
| My father was born and raised in Fall River so even though I grew up in northern
Indiana I learned to love coffee ice cream and say Ameriker. Of course I also
was taught to call the refrigerator an ice box and we had a warshing machine.
I loved my trips back east and staying with Joyce in Boston was terrific, but to
leave the west and live there???!!! You people got ripped off when they passed
out the sunny days. And the humidity and thick air nearly killed me. I like
being able to see for miles and miles and towns should be a long ways from each
other. liesl
|
679.155 | | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Thu Jan 31 1991 13:14 | 9 |
| > Have you thought to check with LEGAL SEAFOODS for fastship of
> bluefish???? They do have a mailorder business!
Nope - haven't tried that yet. I'll ask them how many days out of the water it'd
be by the time it gets to me. I knew they had mail order, but I've found it to
be overpriced - might be worth it for Bluefish though.
-- Charles
|
679.156 | It works, sometimes.... | PARITY::DDAVIS | Long-cool woman in a black dress | Thu Jan 31 1991 14:00 | 9 |
| re: .152 SCRPIO::LIZBICKI
No, not Chelmsford center. It's on Steadman St. And it really works,
because one time I didn't go in "order" and I got the "finger" from the
other driver!!!! Chelmsford center has a 4-way stop, too, but that's
really a free for all....I shift to 3rd, close my eyes and go like
h*ll!
-Dotti.
|
679.157 | rambling thoughts | SOLANA::BROWN_RO | Greater Satan metropolitan area | Thu Jan 31 1991 14:08 | 18 |
| >When I was in California, I was completely shocked that the drivers
>stopped if a pedestrian even *looked* like she might cross the streets.
This is because pedestrians always have the right of way in a
crosswalk, and it is accompanied by a very serious ticket if violated.
About $64.00, a few years back, and all the pedestrian has to do is
step into the crosswalk.
L.A. is getting worse in it's driving habits, though, with much more
cheating on red lights, curb sneaking, and sheer aggression.
And Lucy's Drive-In at the corner of Pico and LaBrea has the best
green chile burritos in the known universe.
As my family settled in Mass in 1636, does this make me an automatic
citizen? Probably come after me for back taxes....
|
679.158 | Driving in LA | SOLANA::BROWN_RO | Greater Satan metropolitan area | Thu Jan 31 1991 14:11 | 7 |
| and if you think Boston traffic is rough....
Do you have people randomly shooting each other on the freeway????
-roger
|
679.159 | | LJOHUB::CRITZ | John Ellis to ride RAAM '91 | Thu Jan 31 1991 14:23 | 11 |
| RE: 4-way stops
I don't understand why it seems strange that the first person
to a 4-way stop gets to go first.
Doesn't that make sense. That's the way it has been in Ohio
since before I started to drive (before 1963).
What would be the alternative to the first driver going first?
Scott (Yeah, I'm a little perplexed)
|
679.160 | | NETMAN::BASTION | Fix the mistake, not the blame | Thu Jan 31 1991 14:29 | 8 |
| re .159
Some drivers are under the impression that they are invisible and have
all rights to the road. At a 4-way stop, they tend to go when
*they're* ready to go, never mind waiting for anyone else!
Judi_who's_*really*_looking_forward_to_Maine!
|
679.161 | pennypinch first, safety last | SA1794::CHARBONND | Yeh, mon, no problem | Thu Jan 31 1991 15:33 | 3 |
| The 4-way was invented by some nameless small town, no doubt
in New England, where the town was simply too deleted cheap
to spring for a real traffic light.
|
679.162 | Stop signs? | STAR::BECK | Paul Beck | Thu Jan 31 1991 15:40 | 7 |
| Hey, at least they sprung for the 4-way stops, unlike the famous
intersection in Medford (Malden? never keep them straight) which
has seven (count them seven) streets coming into a single point
without so much as a Yield sign on any of them.
Driving instructors take their students through the intersection
as a final exam...
|
679.163 | | LJOHUB::CRITZ | John Ellis to ride RAAM '91 | Thu Jan 31 1991 16:16 | 15 |
| Outside of many Texas towns, there are no lights or
signs. That's not usually a problem in west Texas,
because it's so flat. However, I was going to my
sister-in-law's wedding back in the '70s and saw
one massive crash between a pickup truck and a
Porsche. The truck stopped on its top. The impact
knocked the engine outta the Porsche. The accident
occurred at one of those infamous, no lights, no signs
crossroads. Only problem was, the intersection was
cut (both ways) through the only hill (I assume) in
west Texas. This happened just west of Lubbock and
just east of Levelland. Yes, that's the correct name
of the town, Levelland.
Scott
|
679.164 | hehehehehe | IE0010::MALING | Mirthquake! | Thu Jan 31 1991 16:27 | 8 |
| re: .126 E Grace
> errrrr, folks? The idea is *not* to scare potential new residents
> away!
Is *that* what you think is the reason I started this note? :-)
Mary
|
679.165 | | CSC32::M_VALENZA | Create peace. | Thu Jan 31 1991 16:37 | 7 |
| For some of us potential new residents, it is too late now to scare us
away; we are committed to a course of action beyond our control. :-)
Not only that, but I've been assured by my current manager that I'll be
released from my current job some time this fiscal year.
-- Mike
|
679.166 | sorry charles | VIA::HEFFERNAN | Broccoli not bombs! | Thu Jan 31 1991 16:39 | 9 |
| RE: <<< Note 679.156 by PARITY::DDAVIS "Long-cool woman in a black dress" >>>
> because one time I didn't go in "order" and I got the "finger" from the
> other driver!!!! Chelmsford center has a 4-way stop, too, but that's
When I did the same thing in San Fransciso, someone gave me bad vibes!
john
|
679.167 | | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Thu Jan 31 1991 16:42 | 12 |
| > Title: sorry charles
> When I did the same thing in San Fransciso, someone gave me bad vibes!
:-)
John, you *know* that you own your own feelings. No one GAVE you those bad vibes
they were part of your karma. You can, however, keep your psychic damage to a
minimum, but only if you sign up for my chakra cleaning course, limited time
offer so act now!
-- Charles
|
679.168 | | VIA::HEFFERNAN | Broccoli not bombs! | Thu Jan 31 1991 17:02 | 8 |
| RE: .-1
Ha! ;-) Good one...
john
|
679.169 | | TINCUP::KOLBE | The dilettante divorcee | Thu Jan 31 1991 18:12 | 3 |
| Not to worry Mike, last time I switched jobs at the center I only had to wait
5 months for my release date. :*) That's not a joke folks, they are serious
about release dates out here. liesl
|
679.170 | | CSC32::M_VALENZA | Create peace. | Thu Jan 31 1991 18:17 | 7 |
| Liesl, I guess I should feel lucky that they are only talking about 2
and a half months for me.
Welcome to the Hotel Colorado. You can check in, but you can't check
out. :-)
-- Mike
|
679.171 | | LEZAH::QUIRIY | Espresso mornings, lasagna nights | Thu Jan 31 1991 20:15 | 9 |
|
re: .158
Well, yeah, we do, unfortunately. (Have people randomly shooting each
other on the freeway...) Southeastern Mass. has been the scene of
sniper activity. A 14 year old girl was recently shot and killed; she
was a basketball player on her school's team.
CQ
|
679.172 | lookin' forward to summah! | DCL::NANCYB | You be the client and I'll be the server. | Fri Feb 01 1991 09:30 | 11 |
|
Mike, I don't mean to scare you or anything, but...
(formfeed for the squeamish ;-)...
We throw footballs harder here in Massachusetts.
nancy b.
|
679.173 | | CSC32::M_VALENZA | Create peace. | Fri Feb 01 1991 09:54 | 1 |
| So I hear. :-)
|
679.174 | | DCL::NANCYB | You be the client and I'll be the server. | Fri Feb 01 1991 13:44 | 11 |
|
Mike V.,
Where did you manage to find good pizza around here?
nancy b.
p.s. sprinkles = jimmies
|
679.175 | | CSC32::M_VALENZA | Create peace. | Fri Feb 01 1991 13:51 | 5 |
| Nancy B., I've been told by a New England emigr� that the pizza is much
better there. I have had pizza two places so far, and I don't remember
the names of either--but they were both very good.
-- Mike
|
679.176 | Ciro's for pizza | STAR::BECK | Paul Beck | Fri Feb 01 1991 14:03 | 4 |
| RE gourmet pizza
Ciro's. There's one in Chelmsford on Lowell Road, and one in
Nashua on 101A.
|
679.177 | | CGVAX2::CONNELL | It's reigning cats. | Fri Feb 01 1991 15:31 | 3 |
| Bob's in Nashua is the best I ever had.
Phil
|
679.178 | Someone is messing with my mind | IE0010::MALING | Mirthquake! | Fri Feb 01 1991 15:44 | 6 |
| So, I went out to lunch today to get some of that delicious New England
Mexican food at Taco Bell. I go to Taco Bell because they have Dr
Pepper on the menu. So my friend orders Dr Pepper, and they say
they're out of Dr Pepper. So she orders iced tea. And they had it!
-Mary
|
679.179 | The McDonalds of 'Mexican' cuisine | SA1794::CHARBONND | Yeh, mon, no problem | Fri Feb 01 1991 15:48 | 2 |
| Taco Bell 'New England' ??! And here I've been blaming California
for that particular abomination ;-)
|
679.180 | about pizza! about pizza! | GWYNED::YUKONSEC | Teach Peace | Fri Feb 01 1991 16:37 | 16 |
| >> I have had pizza two places so far, and I don't remember
>>the names of either-
Bambini's in Marlborough, Dean Park in Shrewsbury
-but they were both very good.
Yes, but Mike, we all *know* how easy you are!
|
679.181 | pizza, cont'd. | CSSE32::M_DAVIS | Marge Davis Hallyburton | Fri Feb 01 1991 16:49 | 7 |
| I like Bertucci's in Nashua on 101A.
I don't know if it's been mentioned yet, but the curbs, or curbstones
if you prefer, are made of granite, the real stuff...none of that
macadam that crumbles the first time someone takes a corner too close.
Grins
|
679.182 | Snack Time | WMOIS::A_STYVES | | Fri Feb 01 1991 16:55 | 5 |
| I had a friend once that came from some one horse town in Michigan and
she used to love to ask what my favorite snack was. It is pop corn but
she insisted I was saying "porp con". Ah what did she know, she was
the one that talked funny.
|
679.184 | | IE0010::MALING | Mirthquake! | Fri Feb 01 1991 18:03 | 5 |
| Best pizza I've had was Monster Pizza Patch in Greenfield, MA
Second best at Village Pizza House also in Greenfield. Only thing
wrong with Monster is they got no beer. Village Pizza does.
Mary
|
679.185 | | ESIS::GALLUP | sined, seeled, delivered | Fri Feb 01 1991 19:04 | 10 |
|
E Grace!
Ain't Dean Park pizza the best!?!?!?! I go there all the time
(probably because I live in Shrewsbury)...
Their Hawaiian is EXCELLENT! (And Cheap!)
kat
|
679.186 | | NOATAK::BLAZEK | cosmic spinal bebop in blue | Fri Feb 01 1991 19:08 | 4 |
|
I vote for a mass pizza exodus sometime during the big =wn= June
weekend.
|
679.187 | | GUESS::DERAMO | Dan D'Eramo | Fri Feb 01 1991 21:11 | 5 |
| >> I vote for a mass pizza exodus sometime during the big =wn= June weekend.
Great idea! Where would we all fit? :-)
Dan
|
679.188 | Comparisons with Southern Calif. | METAFR::MEAGHER | | Sat Feb 02 1991 18:02 | 29 |
| I moved to Massachusetts from Southern California two years ago. My striking
first impressions, as I remember them, were:
New England has bigger, more colorful, and more attractive homes. The yards
are tremendous!
You can get half and half with your coffee everywhere (not that yucky white
powder stuff in California).
The women in New England are more dowdy in appearance.
New Englanders seem to be less educated than people in the urban areas of
Southern California. (Lots of natives here use bad grammar--"could have went,"
double negatives, etc.)
Much less emphasis on cars in New England. (I miss those cheap car washes in
California.)
More interest in politics in New England.
More emphasis in New England on owning your own home. It's assumed that if you
don't own your own home, it's because you can't afford to.
The food in New England Mexican restaurants tastes like it comes out of a can.
(It probably does.)
People seem more laid back in New England. (No kidding. That's my impression.)
Vicki Meagher
|
679.189 | | REFINE::BARTOO | Good morning, Saudi Arabia! | Sat Feb 02 1991 18:36 | 8 |
|
I find New Englanders rude at work. I am new to the area, and when I
call a store for directions or other info, I get not-so-kind replies.
I also find these workers to be short-fused. I have countless examples
of rude replies and total blow offs when I don't understand someone's
initial information.
|
679.190 | I'll take mine irregular, please. | CSSE32::M_DAVIS | Marge Davis Hallyburton | Sun Feb 03 1991 07:37 | 19 |
| I hope someone has warned Mike about answering "yes" to "Regular?" when
ordering coffee. You will not be answering, "Yes, caffeinated versus
decaffeinated" but rather "yes, cream and two sugars". If you want
your coffee black, best to specify. :^) However, if you take it with
cream and two sugars, "regular" is the shorthand.
Another thing I found in New England were volunteer fire and rescue
squads, at least in the towns. That's also why you see so many pickup
trucks with red lights on top. You'll see lots of pickups in New
England generally. They're practical for manipulating the back roads,
and they haul wood, etc.
mdh
|
679.191 | N.E. Book Excellent | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Sun Feb 03 1991 21:23 | 13 |
| How could I have failed to mention?
New England Mobile Book Fair
It is not mobile. You couldn't get it to move with anything less
than spindizzies. But it's got more than its fair share of books.
They are ordered by title within publisher. Hardbacks are in a
different room from paperbacks. But there is a map posted.
It is about 2 miles off the Highland Ave. exit from Route 128, in
Newton, in towards Boston.
Ann B.
|
679.192 | | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | these romantic dreams in my head | Mon Feb 04 1991 09:55 | 6 |
| re .188, Vicki, Well! After attending our book discussion group for
several months, I don't see how you can consider New England women
"dowdy"! Just look around you this time! :-) Huh!
Lorna
|
679.193 | Dowdy Women & Pizza | NETMAN::BASTION | Fix the mistake, not the blame | Mon Feb 04 1991 10:13 | 15 |
| re Dowdy Women
It's hard to be a fashion plate when you have to cope with such odd
weather...30 degrees in the morning, 60 in the afternoon, mud
underfoot.
Bel Canto pizza in Lexington Center (route 2A) is fantastic! Their
whole wheat crust is out of this world. Too bad they don't deliver to
Maine...
Judi
|
679.194 | "What Village?" | STAR::RDAVIS | Untimely ripp'd | Mon Feb 04 1991 11:00 | 6 |
| Sorry, just couldn't let this pass:
Bertucci's is a pale, albeit charcoal-smeared, imitation of John's
Pizzeria in the Village.
Ray
|
679.195 | | OXNARD::HAYNES | Charles Haynes | Mon Feb 04 1991 12:06 | 13 |
| Bel Canto - yes!
As a furriner one thing I noticed and liked about New England was the way
drivers flash their brights at you to tell you there's a policeman waiting
ahead of you on the road.
If I 'brighted' anyone out here they'd either think I was trying to piss them
off or they'd be some conceited BMW owner thinking I was complimenting them on
their choice of car.
-- Charles (who owns a 325e...)
|
679.196 | Jane Doe for Selectman | CSSE32::M_DAVIS | Marge Davis Hallyburton | Mon Feb 04 1991 12:30 | 9 |
| Gosh, I thought that was universal...shows what I know.
Something you'll find in New England is political campaigning at the
town landfill (dump). After all, where else do you have a captive
audience on a Saturday midday? *Everyone* has to go to the dump
eventually!
:^)
mdh
|
679.197 | "Uh, I'll have a sub/hoagie/grinder/hero... | KOBAL::BROWN | upcountry frolics | Mon Feb 04 1991 13:15 | 15 |
|
It's also possible for a native New Englander to have culture shock
within New England...
After growing up and going to college in Maine, I moved to Virginia
for five years, then moved to Massachusetts, then 2 1/2 years ago
to New Hampshire. I had to relearn how to order various foods after
each move... 8^)
Acculturation tip for small towns: Sign up as a library volunteer --
you'll find out with very little effort who you can and can't afford to
mess with if you ever need a building permit. It helps to keep a chart
of family relationships, just for reference...
Ron
|
679.198 | | CSC32::M_VALENZA | N�te d'Azur | Wed Mar 06 1991 12:49 | 4 |
| One New England custom I think I will never get used to is the funny
way the natives pronounce "aunt". :-)
-- Mike
|
679.199 | | LJOHUB::MAXHAM | Snort when you laugh! | Wed Mar 06 1991 13:08 | 5 |
| And Mike, just to confuse things... For some of us, our pronunciation
of "aunt" depends on the context. For example, I have several
awnts, but my favorite is Ant Polly.....
Kathy
|
679.200 | get used to it! | COBWEB::swalker | Toto, I don't think we're in Kansas anymore | Wed Mar 06 1991 13:09 | 12 |
| Ha! You'd be surprised how quickly you can adapt to this one. When I
first moved to New England at the tender age of 10, I'd never heard "aunt"
pronounced as anything but "ant". And when I talked about my "Ant" Ethel or
"Ant" Pat, people would laugh at me, so I learned to say "Ont".
However, this was not problem-free; my Aunt Pat and Aunt Ethel (who have
both lived in the midwest all their lives) no longer knew what I was calling
them. To this day, I switch unconsciously between "Ant" and "Ont" depending
on who I'm talking to (and whether they've ever laughed at me for pronouncing
it wrong in the past ;-).
Sharon
|
679.201 | :-) | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | sun flurries | Wed Mar 06 1991 13:12 | 2 |
| and sometimes it varies among siblings. My brother says ant, I say
awnt. He's crazy in lots of other ways too!
|
679.202 | we speak correctly in N.E.! | WRKSYS::STHILAIRE | like you but with a human head | Wed Mar 06 1991 13:28 | 6 |
| I've never understood *why* people in some parts of the country
pronounce aunt as "ant." It sounds so weird to me, almost as weird as
the way some people pronounce creek as "crick" or roof "ruff"!
Lorna
|
679.204 | | CGVAX2::CONNELL | Caressing the Tiger | Wed Mar 06 1991 14:17 | 4 |
| Gee, I got no Ants and I got no awnts. I do have a wonderful Aren't
Gingersnap. (Virginia or Virginya if we pronounce it "our" way)
Phil (whose been real busy but still reading)
|
679.205 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | bread and roses | Wed Mar 06 1991 15:41 | 9 |
| Phil I've added and 'r' to a few words like Warshington in my
day, having spent 10 years in northern Virginia. ;-)
I remember when my Kansas cousins came to visit us once and were
teasing us about saying AHnt (my mom is from Mass and we picked
up a lot of her speach patterns). My reply? I asked them if
their mother was an insect. ;-)!
Bonnie
|
679.206 | | RUTLND::RMAXFIELD | Dances with shelves | Tue Mar 12 1991 15:21 | 8 |
| Thanks Bonnie, for getting the phonetic spelling right.
In New England, we have AHnts; Onts and AWnts reside
somewhere on Long Island, I would imagine.
Of course, we have ants here too, little red ones and big
black ones. ;-)
Richard
|
679.207 | | CGVAX2::CONNELL | Caressing the Tiger | Tue Mar 12 1991 17:00 | 9 |
| OK, we now no about the AHnts, Onts, Aunts, and AWnts. But did you know
that if you go way up to Northern N.H. and Northern Maine. Also
Northern Cal. Oregon, Washington State and Alaska., you find Ents. you
gotta be alone or only one companion. You Gotta be up there for
several days and really in the deep woods, but if your lucky you may,
in the early morning, just as you wake up hear a faint
HHHRRUUUMMMHHHRRRROOOOMMMM.
Phil
|
679.208 | :-) | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Tue Mar 12 1991 17:13 | 3 |
| Aren't you being a little bit hasty there, Phil?
Ann B.
|
679.209 | | CGVAX2::CONNELL | Caressing the Tiger | Tue Mar 12 1991 17:25 | 7 |
| I suppose you're right Ann. One might have to spend a few years in the
woods before hearing an Ent. I always assumed that the Entwives came
across to this side of the ocean (North America) when they left
Middle Earth. I just hope the Ents followed them here.
Phil(who likes Tom Bombadil best after the Ents)
|
679.210 | re:Tom Bombadil - why am I not surprised, Phil? | TLE::DBANG::carroll | get used to it! | Tue Mar 12 1991 17:52 | 7 |
| Ents frustrate me too much.
You won't find many Ents in the Northeast. Life is just too fast-paced around
here. Perhaps a good influx of Ents would help slow things down just a bit.
:-)
D!
|
679.211 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | bread and roses | Tue Mar 12 1991 20:20 | 7 |
| oh Phil, if you really can find Ents, I want to know where...
we have some trees around here that we suspect of being Hurons...
:-)
Bonnie
|
679.212 | Hobbit Hole Alert | CGVAX2::CONNELL | Caressing the Tiger | Wed Mar 13 1991 07:04 | 10 |
| Bonnie, I have been searching for Ents since I was 12 (1964). That's
when I 1st discovered them, literaturly, that is. I really think that
if you spend years in extreme Northern Maine, you may find them. This
is deep woods. Some areas of Northern Wisconsin and Minnesota may have
a few, and definitely the Pacific Northwest and Alaska. You gotta find
Old Forest, Primeval Forest, not much of that left. Mores the pity. But
they're out there. I know they are. In fact, I believe old Fangorn
himself is out there still.
Phil
|
679.213 | %^} * 100! | SSGBPM::KENAH | The man with a child in his eyes... | Thu Mar 14 1991 14:12 | 9 |
| <<< Note 679.211 by WMOIS::B_REINKE "bread and roses" >>>
>we have some trees around here that we suspect of being Hurons...
You mean like the Indian tribe?? Oh! You mean Huorns -- okay.
{^% andrew %^}
|
679.214 | | WMOIS::B_REINKE | bread and roses | Thu Mar 14 1991 14:15 | 5 |
| thanks Andrew, spell check doesn't do Tolkien...
;-)
BJ
|
679.215 | strangely familiar | ATSE::FLAHERTY | A K'in(dred) Spirit | Thu Mar 28 1991 10:35 | 9 |
| Hi Bonnie (.214),
If ever a place felt like Tolkien-land, it is your property in
Royalston (where I was lucky enough to spend some time a couple of
weekends ago). Especially that 'doorway' to Middle Earth that Don
showed us. ;')
Ro
|
679.216 | I lived there once | TYGON::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Fri Apr 05 1991 20:55 | 41 |
| I would like to add my comments to this one...when I moved to Mass. 23
years ago, I had been living in Houston - you can imagine there was a little
cultural shock involved in the move. I coulda taken anything else in stride,
HOWEVER, the towns in New England have names that are pronounced in a manner
that does NOT resemble, in any way, shape, or fashion the phonetic
pronunciation of the spelling of said names. This isn't a problem for a
native. For a young, slightly frightened person who had never been east of
the Mississippi, and WHO COULDN'T UNDERSTAND THE NATIVE LANGUAGE ANYWAY, this
was an insurmountable hurdle. I didn't know how to find ANYTHING or get
ANYWHERE for at least 6 months after I moved there....and it was 8 months
before I connected WORCESTER with "WOOSTER" or "WOUSTER" or "WUSTER"...and
I was AFRAID to try a FRAPPE for the first year I lived there...I had no idea
what it was, but the MILKSHAKES in that part of the world were SO BAD, I
figured a FRAPPE would be horrible! Besides, a "BLACK AND WHITE" simply
did not sound appetizing...know what I mean? The first waitperson I
encountered informed me in a horrified voice that "iced tea is a summa drink!!"
and I knew I was in trouble. I got hot tea - served with MILK IN IT
EVEN THOUGH I DIDN'T ASK FOR IT - I mean, WHO WOULD ASK FOR MILK IN TEA???!?!
And WHAT was a SUMMA, anyway?
The worst trouble for me was, however, on the job....I worked for a man
named (by spelling) "CLARKE WEGNER" - and called by everyone "CLOCK WAGNA" -
I forwarded several very frustrated callers to facilities on the first day
on the job in Mass...they asked for a clock and I KNEW Software Services
did not provide clocks...Of course, they thought I was playing around with
their minds - have you noticed how hostile New Englanders are first thing
in the morning? I've always felt it had to do with the Atlantic Ocean...
low pressure or something...and then this very excitable person came up to
me and asked for a GANTT CHOT - I knew what a gantt chart was and I HOPED
that was what he meant, but I wasn't taking any chances as everyone was
yelling at me so I asked him to spell it - he exploded and started yelling,
"CHOT! CHOT! YOU KNOW, SEE AITCH AY AH T!!! I broke into tears and ran into
the bathroom....he was still yelling when I last looked back at him.
Ah well, we survived - the New Englanders learned to laugh at me when I
talked and I learned to understand their unique twist on the native language...
and I do miss the fall season to this day...even though I've not lived there
in 19 years. Oh, and the apples - crisp and sweet with a surprising taste
of wine and magic in their perfume. And even the snow - well, maybe a little
of the snow - that first morning after a snow fall when I got up real early
before it had been ruined by tires and feet - then I miss it.
|
679.217 | | DPDMAI::DAWSON | Could be....But I doubt it! | Sat Apr 06 1991 00:55 | 5 |
| <--------
|- Funniest piece I have read in a *LONG* time and its true...
................Us poor Texans!
Dave
|
679.218 | | AUSSIE::WHORLOW | I brew the best koala_tea products | Sun Apr 07 1991 21:33 | 30 |
| G'day,
Re -.a_couple
> The first waitperson I
>encountered informed me in a horrified voice that "iced tea is a summa drink!!"
>and I knew I was in trouble. I got hot tea - served with MILK IN IT
>EVEN THOUGH I DIDN'T ASK FOR IT - I mean, WHO WOULD ASK FOR MILK IN TEA???!?!
Just about any Brit (Limey, Pom, Englander, British person) you may
care to ask....
And iced tea YUKK! why would _anyone_ drink it that way??? Hot with
lemon in summer, possibly..... but _iced_ - ***NOWAY***
I understand why they tipped all the tea into Bahstin harboUr! Having
_actually_ tasted iced tea, I wanted to do the same! and as for instant
tea �POWDER? the end of the world _must_ be nigh!
8-)
derek
ps
Frappes are real tasty.
|
679.219 | | DEMING::VALENZA | Too thick to staple. | Mon Aug 19 1991 10:01 | 31 |
| Now that I have spent four months in New England (I can't believe that
much time has passed already), I have accumulated quite a bit of
information about the ways in which New England culture differs from
what I am used to. I have been meaning to write a summary of what that
I have encountered, but other things kept getting in the way, and I
just never found (or devoted) the time to it. So, rather than writing a
long note that summarized all of my experiences of culture shock, I
decided instead to write a note here and there as I think of something.
First of all, I just wanted to mention that nobody told me when I moved
here that you people have HURRICANES!!!!!!!!!!
Ahem. There, now that I have gotten that off my chest, I wanted to
mention one example of New England culture that I have been noticing
recently. I am referring to a feature of New England speech, where
"yup" means "you're welcome". I have run into quite a few instances
where, if I say "thank you" to some one, they respond with the word
"yup". I really don't recall hearing people respond that way in other
parts of the country (except, come to think of it, a friend of mine
who was raised in New England). Maybe people say this elsewhere, but
it never seemed to strike me the way it has here. To my Midwestern
ears, this at first sounded brusque, and even rude, almost a kind of
brush off in response to someone else's politeness. However, I have
come to assume that this is just a local way of saying "You're welcome"
that involves fewer syllables, with no rudeness implied, although I
have to admit that it still sounds harsh to my Heartland sensibilities.
But I am sure I'll get used to it.
More examples of culture shock will be forthcoming.
-- Mike
|
679.220 | (smiley-captioned for the humor impaired) | TLE::TLE::D_CARROLL | A woman full of fire | Mon Aug 19 1991 10:39 | 13 |
| >I am referring to a feature of New England speech, where
> "yup" means "you're welcome"
No, no, yp doesn't mean "you're welcome". "Yup" is an acknowledgement
of your "thankyou", but it does not carry the meaning of "you are
*welcome*". Since when have New Englanders been *welcoming*???
"You're welcome" in response to "thank you" is sort of "by your
existence, you have right for good things to happen to you" whereas
"yup" translates more into "Yes, see how I have gone out of my way to
do this service for *you*? I'm glad to see you are appropriately
grateful."
D!
|
679.221 | | CFSCTC::MACKIN | Jim Mackin, OO-R-US | Mon Aug 19 1991 10:46 | 4 |
| Mike, the reason we never mentioned hurricanes was because we're
usually preoccupied with tornadoes and blizzards.
Jim
|
679.222 | I love bloopers :-) | CALS::MALING | Mirthquake! | Mon Aug 19 1991 11:32 | 8 |
| But's its not really a hurricane Mike. I heard on the news this
morning.
"Top stories in the news today - Gorbachov is ousted in a coop and
president Bob is bearing down on New England." :-)
Mary
|
679.223 | | BOOVX1::MANDILE | But ma, it followed me home,honest! | Wed Aug 21 1991 12:11 | 5 |
| What I think (or what struck me as rude), was the response
given by many N.E.'ers to Hello....They would respond,
"Hello, yourself". Hit me as being a brush-off....
HRH
|
679.224 | no response to my hello's! | DECWET::PCATTOLICO | DoesYourVisionIncludeEveryone? | Sat Aug 24 1991 13:13 | 11 |
|
I'm at the end of 9 days in New England and the only response
(at ALL) that I've gotten from my Hello's was from the
woman at the cash register in PK3 cafeteria.
No one else would even look me in the eye.
:-(
Pat
and people wonder why I love Seattle :-)
|
679.225 | is not coldness but courtesy | HANOI::HANOI::D_CARROLL | A woman full of fire | Sat Aug 24 1991 15:17 | 9 |
| Remember, Pat, it' sjust that they are being *polite* by not invading
your personal space.
spend a few years here, and you will start to feel uncomfortable in
those "warmer" places where people (*ick*) meet your eyes on the
streets. :-)
D!, displaced southwesterner
|
679.226 | even inside DEC buildings? | DECWET::PCATTOLICO | DoesYourVisionIncludeEveryone? | Sat Aug 24 1991 16:16 | 15 |
|
D!
Having lived near NYC for way too long, the coldness
on the streets doesn't surprise me. Inside DEC buildings,
it does.
I ask no one how they are, I just smile. It's sad
that no one can muster a smile back.
Maybe it's related to the sadness of so many DECcies leaving?
Pat
|
679.227 | | MANIC::THIBAULT | Land of Confusion | Mon Aug 26 1991 12:08 | 6 |
| re: <<< Note 679.224 by DECWET::PCATTOLICO "DoesYourVisionIncludeEveryone?" >>>
>> -< no response to my hello's! >-
Must be you didn't make it to Vermont!! :-)
Jenna
|
679.229 | I'm sooo confuuuused | MEMIT::JOHNSTON | bean sidhe | Wed Aug 28 1991 15:29 | 14 |
| I keep wondering about all this New Englanders and New Yorkers not
smiling business.
Far be it from me to challenge the validity of anyone else's
experience, but I don't get.
Everywhere I go, people smile at me ... perfect strangers, people on
the T, people in line at the market ...
People say 'hi, how are you?' 'good morning' 'great evening isn't it?'
I don't know _any_ of these people.
Annie
|
679.230 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Hungry mouths are waiting... | Wed Aug 28 1991 15:45 | 7 |
| If you were a guy, I'd say your fly was down. :-)
All kidding aside, I think it's because when you are used to _everybody_
smiling at you, going to a place where many do but most don't is a little
off putting...
The Doctah
|
679.231 | | JJLIET::JUDY | Born to be wild... | Wed Aug 28 1991 16:26 | 7 |
|
I went to Prince Edward Island for vacation this summer. And the
people there are so extraordinarily friendly that I went into
NE culture shock when I got home!
JJ
|
679.232 | | MEMIT::JOHNSTON | bean sidhe | Wed Aug 28 1991 16:31 | 16 |
| yes, Doctah, but that's just my point:
when I lived in Scotland everyone smiled and said, 'hi' to me
when I lived in Illinois everyone smiled and said, 'hi' to me
when I lived in New York City everyone smiled and said, 'hi' to me
when I lived in Portugal everyone smiled and said, 'hi' to me
when I lived in Texas everyone smiled and said, 'hi' to me
when I lived in Washington, DC everyone smiled and said, 'hi' to me
and now I live in New England everyone smiles and said, 'hi' to me
I'm not making this up and all empirical evidence points to my sharing
the same planet with the rest of you.
But I'm beginning to wonder ...
Annie
|
679.233 | I can't help it, I'm a smiler..... | BOOVX1::MANDILE | Her Royal Highness | Wed Aug 28 1991 16:32 | 14 |
| When my sister was visiting, her, my other sister, my niece
and I went to see the 'Sox play at Fenway. We decided to
take the train in, and then take the green line in.
When my sister and I get together, it's yack, yack, yack non-
stop. And, we get really goofy (Goofy? Who, me? nah! (-; )
So, we started telling jokes on the T, engaging those around
us in conversation, tapping on the windows and waving to people
standing on the platform....We had those around us laughing and
talking to us, and, in general, made the long faces and the trip
a little less "boring".
It's amazing what a smile and a joke will do...they are contagious!
HRH
|
679.234 | | CARTUN::NOONAN | hug slave | Wed Aug 28 1991 16:39 | 15 |
| I don't get it. I consider myself to be a *real* New Englander.
hmmmmmmmm
OH NO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I'M COLD AND UNFRIENDLY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Geez, between this, and not being a *real* woman, I think I'll just go
find a cave somewhere.
E Grace
|
679.235 | nit | BOOVX1::MANDILE | Her Royal Highness | Wed Aug 28 1991 16:49 | 6 |
| Re .232
In Texas, everyone says Hi y'all! (-8
HRH
|
679.236 | (-: (-: | BOOVX1::MANDILE | Her Royal Highness | Wed Aug 28 1991 16:51 | 5 |
| Phew! It's o.k. for me to be the way I am, as I'm
not a "Real" New Englander!
HRH (misplaced California woman longing for Texas livin')
|
679.237 | Texas rathole | MEMIT::JOHNSTON | bean sidhe | Wed Aug 28 1991 16:55 | 14 |
| re.235
only at the State Fair, where they're require to say it by law, and in
towns of less than 5,000 people [of which there are many].
Other than that, it's pretty much just plain 'hi!' unless greeting more
than one known person in which case the 'y'all' is added to save time.
'y'all' is, of course the _only_ acceptable second person pronoun,
singular or plural; it's just that it's considered extremely unmannerly
to say the equivalent of 'hi, you' to a lone woman, whereas 'hi,
<guys,ladies,etc>' perfectly fine.
Annie
|
679.238 | | BOOVX1::MANDILE | Her Royal Highness | Wed Aug 28 1991 16:58 | 3 |
| Required to say it by law? Why?
HRH
|
679.239 | | MEMIT::JOHNSTON | bean sidhe | Wed Aug 28 1991 17:08 | 8 |
| I _was_ being silly and somewhat ironic, but it is amazing how very,
_very_ thick the accents become during the Fair.
Even investment bankers who grew up in Highland Park and got a manicure
every week from the age of 10 onward behave like they grew up in Tom
Greene County mustering new calves and stuff and stuff.
It's all a lark.
|
679.240 | | AITE::WASKOM | | Wed Aug 28 1991 17:37 | 21 |
| I believe that there is a bell curve of "friendliness" among
populations. And that curve shifts based on geography. In general,
more people respond to "friendly" than initiate "friendly" -- which may
explain the experiences of Annie and E, as I perceive them both to be
"friendly" initiators, and at the far end of the bell curve in the
positive direction at that.
Where "very friendly" is on the right hand side of the curve, I believe
rural New Englanders have a further left "top" of the bell (can you
tell I didn't do well in Stat? :-) ) than Mid-Westerners. Californians
probably have the furthest right "top" of the bell. City folks
generally will be further left than suburbanites, at least in down
town areas. (I don't know about neighborhoods, since I've never been
in them for any length of time.)
New Englanders generally have a larger "personal space" zone than other
regions of the country, and this can also be perceived as being "cold",
even with smiles and hellos and quite sincere interest on the part of
the New Englander.
Alison
|
679.241 | more ratholes, y'all | TINCUP::XAIPE::KOLBE | The Debutante Deranged | Thu Aug 29 1991 17:34 | 1 |
| I believe that y'all is singular and that "all y'all" is plural. ;*) liesl
|
679.242 | | N2ITIV::LEE | runnin' down a dream | Fri Aug 30 1991 00:41 | 9 |
|
>I believe that y'all is singular and that "all y'all" is plural. ;*) liesl
That's how it is in Maryland, too. (at least, where I grew up)
*A*
|
679.243 | Did you know that the ratholes in Texas were so big that ... | CALS::MALING | Mirthquake! | Fri Aug 30 1991 21:29 | 3 |
| When I lived in Texas they said "Howdy"
Mary
|
679.244 | more misplaced New Mexican adventures | FORTSC::WILDE | why am I not yet a dragon? | Tue Sep 03 1991 16:43 | 38 |
| more adventures of the misplaced Southwesterner in New England:
friendliness:
actually, for the first 6 months I was in New England, I thought everyone
was MAD at me for something. It wasn't that they didn't address me, it
was the tone of voice, and the direct manner in which they approached
me that was confusing. I later realized that the man who lived next door
to me and who, upon meeting me outside one summer morning, said, sans
preamble, "Use my mower!" was OFFERING me the use of his mower, not
ordering me to mow my lawn NOW! I was used to a more "roundabout"
approach. For the record, I was so intimidated by the order to use
his mower, that I DID...right then...even though I had purchased my own
the day before. In time, I learned that the New Englander, born and
raised, was/is the most loyal of creatures on the face of this earth.
Once you have earned their trust and friendship, they are there for
you, whenever you need them.
language misinterpretations:
as earlier pointed out, I had some difficulty with the language and
accents....however, after 6 months of living there, I thought I had it
wired. Then one day my "steady date" walked up to me and said, "Wanna
go to the potty with me?" Being from a small town in the southwest,
I was, at first, simply confused....did people actually DO that together
in this part of the world?....I mean, at the very least, wouldn't you
need to be "intimate" first?...you have to understand, in the previous
six months I had run into alot of very different rules for getting
along in this world...just prior to my opening my mouth and embarassing
myself beyond repair, Bob clarified his purpose by saying, "Y'know,
Vinnie's potty next Saturday night". With great relief, I said I was
delighted to go to Vinnie's party. What a relief! I had been trying
to figure out how to say that where I came from folks simply didn't DO
that with other people....and not make Bob mad. Needless to say, had
I announced this to Bob, he might have had difficulty determining just
how people in New Mexico had a party if they never partied WITH anyone.
Memories of my youth...what fun.
|
679.245 | | BTOVT::THIGPEN_S | cold nights, northern lights | Tue Sep 03 1991 16:47 | 6 |
| going to the potty.... I can't stop laughing!
welcome to New England! glad you came!
Sara
|
679.246 | Not enough to let the hugs go, though | CARTUN::NOONAN | Day 6 - Will the horror never end? | Tue Sep 03 1991 17:02 | 6 |
| For some strange reason, people are rushing to my cube to find out
*what* is going on!
It's alright folks! just chortling hysterically!
E Grace
|
679.247 | | BSS::VANFLEET | Time for a cool change... | Wed Sep 04 1991 15:23 | 5 |
| Me too! chortle-chortle!!
:-D!!!
Nanci
|