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Re: Life in Canada

Posted: Wed Jul 17, 2024 2:47 am
by KoolBak
I don't understand the obsession with mexi fries? They're at every taco time. Not a Canadian thing. :-s

Re: Life in Canada

Posted: Wed Jul 17, 2024 4:05 am
by 2dimes
Saxitoxin claimed there are two separate and different chains in the United States that both use the Taco Time name.

In Canada we only have the good one that started in Eugene, Oregon. https://www.tacotime.com/about/index.html

Saxitoxin posted, down there it's only in Washington and Oregon.

Mookie said he could get them when he was a kid. Now he lives in California, excellent actual Mexican food but none of the good Taco Times with tots near him.

https://www.conquerclub.com/forum/viewt ... p=5251069u

Re: Life in Canada

Posted: Wed Jul 17, 2024 3:58 pm
by mookiemcgee
No Taco Times in the 7th largest economy in the world sadly. looks like there are a couple in NV, and one in OR next time I venture out of the greatest state in America.

Re: Life in Canada

Posted: Thu Jul 18, 2024 8:46 am
by KoolBak
There are 4 within 20 miles of me off the top of my head, all with mexi fries. I pass many others travelling....assumed all the same.

No fooking clue what goes on in Cali....and not gonna find out :lol:

EDIT: Quick search turns up 23 in Oregon....

Re: Life in Canada

Posted: Thu Jul 18, 2024 9:02 am
by 2dimes
So now I presume https://tacotimecanada.com broke away from https://www.tacotime.com at some point. Their origin story says they started in 1978 in Lethbridge.

I kind of want to investigate the other chain Saxi was writing abowt. Possibly a bad idea.

KoolBak wrote:
No fooking clue what goes on in Cali....and not gonna find out :lol:
Fair enough.

I'll tell you what's not going on there...

Delicious crispy Mexi-Fries®.

Re: Life in Canada

Posted: Thu Jul 18, 2024 2:37 pm
by mookiemcgee
KoolBak wrote:There are 4 within 20 miles of me off the top of my head, all with mexi fries. I pass many others travelling....assumed all the same.

No fooking clue what goes on in Cali....and not gonna find out :lol:

EDIT: Quick search turns up 23 in Oregon....
I wonder if it's a mix of the two chains? I was looking here - https://www.tacotime.com/locator/index. ... 0&q=oregon
and it seems like there are maybe 5-6 in OR but I'm putting in minimal effort

Re: Life in Canada

Posted: Thu Jul 18, 2024 3:11 pm
by KoolBak
What a weird site.

I enter my zip and there's 5 less than 10 miles away.

I enter OREGON and it shows a total of 5 several hundred miles away :lol:

There's a bunch. I see them when we travel and I love the mexi fries, so we stop.

This is the site I found

https://www.scrapehero.com/location-rep ... otime-USA/

Re: Life in Canada

Posted: Mon Jul 22, 2024 9:03 am
by KoolBak
Let's keep beating this dead horse.

I found a blurb that the IRS thinks 85% of tip income remains unreported annually and that figure amounts to $500MM (that's million in roman). At a punt if 20% fed tax rate, that's $100MM tax revenue.

Our last reported gross national income (income reported by all taxable entities to the IRS) was 27 trillion. At 20% that's some gawd awful huge number. The tip tax doesn't even register as a figure in comparison.

So....yes, a great campaign ploy :lol:

Go get em Trump-baby.

Re: Life in Canada

Posted: Fri Jun 06, 2025 7:43 pm
by HitRed
Image

St. Joseph’s Oratory

Re: Life in Canada

Posted: Sat Jun 07, 2025 6:54 am
by Dukasaur
HitRed wrote:Image

St. Joseph’s Oratory
Cool.

Re: Life in Canada

Posted: Tue Jun 10, 2025 10:12 am
by 2dimes
OH oh, are you going to break in there?

Re: Life in Canada

Posted: Thu Sep 04, 2025 10:18 pm
by HitRed
In 2019, Canadian mines produced 18.6 million carats of diamonds, valued at $2.25 billion. Canada is currently the world's third largest producer of diamonds by both value and volume.

Re: Life in Canada

Posted: Fri Sep 05, 2025 7:50 am
by KoolBak
That's very interesting....I had no idea.

I'd be interested to know if there's a standard type of mining used and if they are concentrated in any particular area....

Re: Life in Canada

Posted: Mon Sep 15, 2025 8:42 pm
by WILLIAMS5232
when i imagine life in canada, it goes something like this;



i drove through canada in 2018 when they first opened the all weather road to tuktoyuktuk, my main destination was alaska, and was intent on just passing through canada. along with driving up to the arctic ocean. in alaska you can only drive within a mile, then have to get permissions to ride a tour bus through a chemical plant which was not my idea of exploration. i'll have to say, canada was exceptionally nice. as an american you always hear about the canadians being rude, but they were the nicest people. with the excepetion of 1 chap i met at the gas station behind the counter.

the tombstone mountain range was beautiful, aside from the road being terrible (which is understandable considering the location), it was the best trip i've taken.

i also liked the setup of the provincial parks. US has something similiar, but they seemed more usable in canada as far as payment goes. plus cleaner.
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i definately plan to return and spend more time. i'd also like to go up the eastern portion as well. maybe even hit hudson bay on both sides just to say i did it.

Re: Life in Canada

Posted: Mon Sep 15, 2025 9:04 pm
by jusplay4fun
I have never been to Canada, but based on the population, land mass, and your photos, William, it confirms my perception of Canada having LOTS of wide open spaces with very few, if any, people. Beautiful photos, btw.

In 2023, I took a tour of the Western states, (Wyoming, Montana, Idaho, Utah, and Arizona, as well as western Colorado) and that is true of much of that area (but with a bit more people, it seems).

I also travelled into eastern North Carolina, along I-40 west of Raleigh, and was surprised how much of that land had NO ONE and NO buildings around the interstate highway. We travelled for miles and saw nothing but (basically) trees. Now, granted, that was some 30 years ago, but I doubt many people moved there. The same with those regions out West (2023), as I visited 5 National (US) Parks (Grand Tetons, Yellowstone, Bryce, Zion, and the Grand Canyon); very few people moved out to those areas in between those National Parks. America is a HUGE land and driving out West (even west of St. Louis, MO., and the Mississippi River) reveals LOTS of open space with few people, such in much of Kansas and even eastern Colorado (east of Denver and I-25).

I enjoyed my travels, seeing places where many people live and visit (e.g, London, Paris, Dublin, Rome, Edinburgh, Washington, DC, and Disney World) as well as seeing those regions with few people I mentioned above. I got a sense how vast is this world and how insignificant I am when I see all these places and so many other people. It is a beautiful world and we need to be sure it stays beautiful for future generations, such as for my grandchildren.

Re: Life in Canada

Posted: Mon Sep 29, 2025 3:20 pm
by riskllama
KoolBak wrote:That's very interesting....I had no idea.

I'd be interested to know if there's a standard type of mining used and if they are concentrated in any particular area....
they are all located mostly waayyy up north, to my knowledge. used to be good buddies w/a guy who worked at one as a blaster - BIG $$$

Re: Life in Canada

Posted: Mon Sep 29, 2025 5:01 pm
by KoolBak
Interesting....

Re: Life in Canada

Posted: Wed Oct 29, 2025 9:53 pm
by HitRed
74% of mining concessions in Mexico are owned by Canadian companies

Wikipedia

Re: Life in Canada

Posted: Wed Oct 29, 2025 10:43 pm
by WILLIAMS5232
i just sold my position in Vizsla Silver. i kinda wanted to hang on to it.