Somewhere around here I've got a video of water up on the widows and windshield of the landcruiser as we went through a 5 foot deep hole.
#notimpressed
#notimpressed
RO519 said:
That "mud pit" was nothing more than a wet road. I could make it through that in my 1/2 ton silverado with goodrich AT's
AgreedRocco S said:RO519 said:
That "mud pit" was nothing more than a wet road. I could make it through that in my 1/2 ton silverado with goodrich AT's
A corvette could go through that
TexasAggie_02 said:
well, he got the tires muddy. still technically on the road though.
https://instagr.am/p/BPfgRyXjh7P
willie wonka said:TexasAggie_02 said:
well, he got the tires muddy. still technically on the road though.
https://instagr.am/p/BPfgRyXjh7P
I went through worse than that in my Honda Odyssey going to the deer lease.
TXAGFAN said:I believe it. I went to China where there are literally a billion people and as a tall white guy was like some unicorn.AggieChemist said:Texmid said:
Serious question, is there really a person (over the age of 9) on this planet who has not seen a white person? It's not like he has that Jeep some place a Land Cruiser cannot go. They may not see many white people, but, I'm sure they see one on occasion.
I went many places in Sierra Leone where I was quite the spectacle. I am quite certain I was the first white person ever in some of the Ebola villages.
The lady in that white Tahoe pulling out looks like she is calling the cops on you.Watchful Ag said:
Spotted in Victoria, TX. All lies.
He probably shat his britches after driving through that mud puddle.txags92 said:
Probably just a fierce case of olive ****s...
What do you mean "if?"AggieChemist said:
If he's stupid enough to be in West Africa in the rainy season with no anti-malarials I guarantee he does.
Malarone does not have that side effect.Quote:
On a trip like mine through Africa, Malaria presents a problem. Conventional wisdom says to take an "anti-malarial" pill in the hopes of preventing infection, though for a number of reasons that's not really practical. All anti-malarial tables come with an increased sensitivity to the sun (they advise staying out of the sun. I can tell you that's very difficult in Africa), and they are hard on your liver in the long-term. All the advice is not to use them for too long, though nobody can quite say how long is too long.
I think two years is long.
Malarone is a daily tablet, but you only have to take it 2 days before entering a Malaria infested area, and about 1 week after leaving. He wouldn't need a two-year supply. You don't really need it when you are in areas without mosquitoes.Quote:
One of the options requires taking a tablet daily, and is extremely expensive. Not only would I spent thousands on these tables alone, it's extremely likely the first border guard to find a stash of 700+ tables will confiscate them.
Malarone does not have this side effect.Quote:
One of the other major options comes with side effects, usually related to severe, severe demented dreams and interrupted sleep.
Good LuckQuote:
The final option is to use bug spray, cover up at dawn and dusk (when the particular type of malaria-carrying mosquito is active) and really hope for the best.
Wow, didn't even make it one whole day.Quote:
On my first afternoon in Bamako I venture into the city with a new local friend, and really am not thinking ahead. We are still out and about as dusk turns to evening, and I am wearing shorts. I get a lot of bites that night.
Maybe in Bamako, not all of Africa. He makes it sound like CVS and Walgreens.Quote:
It's possible to do a "quick test" which can be bought in any Pharmacy (there is one on every corner in Africa)
That's not true. Maybe every town he's been to.Quote:
The "cure" medication is cheap enough, and every single street corner in every single town has a pharmacy that stocks it
https://www.cdc.gov/malaria/about/faqs.htmlQuote:
During and after the whole thing I talk to a lot of people and learn a lot about Malaria. It turns out it's not nearly such a big deal as the Western media makes it out to be. Every single local here gets it every year, often a couple of times per year.
Quote:
Malaria is a serious and sometimes fatal disease caused by a parasite that commonly infects a certain type of mosquito which feeds on humans
Quote:
Globally, the World Health Organization estimates that in 2015, 214 million clinical cases of malaria occurred, and 438,000 people died of malaria, most of them children in Africa.
Sure, Dan listen to the people that live there and have antibodies built up. Maybe the next time you're in Mexico, you can chug down some water as well.Quote:
People who have little or no immunity to malaria, such as young children and pregnant women or travelers coming from areas with no malaria, are more likely to become very sick and die.