Jump to content

Hawaiian Vacation-wit flicks


mosluggo

Recommended Posts

This forum is supported by the 12ozProphet Shop, so go buy a shirt and help support!
This forum is brought to you by the 12ozProphet Shop.
This forum is brought to you by the 12oz Shop.
dam, nice flicks. my brother just got back from his honeymoon in hawaii. he loved it.

 

sadly, i think this is your second hawaii vaction superthread this year, and i've only gone to wisconsin dells since then lol

 

Haaahahaha watch out for cruzin chubbies...my boy got the herps there!! no really!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

:yuck: that's why you pack some jimmys!

 

i wouldn't mind hitting up hawaii someday. the food looks good out there!

 

Ya well most normal folk use rubbers but this kid aint normal. He still dont use them! and he just got ANOTHER girl pregnant. He "took care" of it. ahha thats number 7 or 8 now fuck when do you learn???Also, just cuz your wearing a rubber dont mean your nuts aint hitting something right? BallsDeepOner

Link to comment
Share on other sites

really couldnt tell you we hit the cloud line about 3/4 of the way up. could have stopped there, but kept going just to finish.cleanest air ever. it took us 2 hrs to get up. That was the hard part. little less than an hour getting down. If you do it bring gloves.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Haiku Stairs

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

• Ten things you may not know about images on Wikipedia •Jump to: navigation, search

 

Haiku Stairs, July 2007.The Ha'ikū Stairs, also known as the Stairway to Heaven or Haiku Ladder, is a steep hiking trail on the island of Oahu.

 

The trail began as a wooden ladder spiked to the cliff on the south side of the Haiku Valley. It was installed in 1943 to enable the construction of antenna cables that would be strung from one side of the cliffs above Haiku Valley to the other. A building to provide a continuous communication link between Wahiawa and Haiku Valley Naval Radio Station was also constructed at the very peak of Puukeahiakahoe, elevation at about 2800 feet. These extraordinary antennas transmitted very low frequency radio signals from a 200,000-watt Alexanderson alternator located in the center of Haiku valley. The signals could reach US Navy submarines as far away as Tokyo Bay even while the submarines remained underwater.

 

A popular history of the construction of Haiku Stairs is contained in Woodbury, David Builders for Battle chapter XXIII, E P Hutton & Company Inc., New York, 1946.

 

When the Naval base was decommissioned in the 1950s the United States Coast Guard used the site for an Omega station. In the early 1950s, the wooden stairs were replaced by sections of metal steps and ramps — by one count, 3,922 steps. The station and trail were closed to the public in 1987. Despite the closure, some hikers ignore the No Trespassing signs and continue to climb, contributing to the local community's misgivings about reopening the structure.

 

Local officials have repaired the trail and the ladders, but the trail will remain closed and patrolled by security until access and management issues have been resolved.

Oh heres a flick of the top

P1020437.jpg?t=1195256030

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

×
×
  • Create New...