Bungees I
Port of entry
After hard rain
Scattered jewels
Low tide High tide
Tree debris
Maple seeds
An old hotel
Former Hotel Pelican
Arcade Hotel, abandoned
The Arcade Hotel
An attempt at restoration
Down to the basement
Wrecked interior
Front entrance
Photo in the window
Dog Bar
1955 Oldsmobile Super 88, "Holiday" model
Fragment from demolished "Egyptian building"
Old ginger boy
Out for a stroll
It's...Adventure Chicken!
Enter 1014
Stripes
"What was that?"
"That wasn't my cigarette!"
Goofy granddaughter
Mr. Bones and his boss
Immersion
Curious
The Club
Ship on rough sea
Flag
Amber waves of grain
Telescope: the art of spying
That sinking feeling
Crypt
A.P. Green Empire Fire Brick
Empire
Abyss
Canyon
Twig plastic wood
Ice wall
Highway
Blue highway
See also...
The Royal Society For Putting Things On Top Of Other Things
The Royal Society For Putting Things On Top Of Other Things
PLAYING WITH BRUSHES, TEXTURES, FILTERS, SPECIAL EFFECTS, etc
PLAYING WITH BRUSHES, TEXTURES, FILTERS, SPECIAL EFFECTS, etc
I LOVE IT ! ★ J'AIME CELA ! ★ DAS LIEBE ICH ! ★ MI PIACE MOLTO !
I LOVE IT ! ★ J'AIME CELA ! ★ DAS LIEBE ICH ! ★ MI PIACE MOLTO !
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Bungees II


Graf Geo, Andy Rodker, John FitzGerald, and 3 other people have particularly liked this photo
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Diane Putnam club has replied to GrahamH clubGrahamH club has replied to Diane Putnam clubDiane Putnam club has replied to GrahamH clubYes, it is, I've noticed! In my head I was pronouncing it "ossies."
Now I understand why bungee-jumping is so called. This is the first time I have known what bungees are. Maybe we use the same word for these stretchy rope things in the UK, and maybe we don't. Never having had to buy one or use one I've never had any reason to think about it.
I had unthinkingly assumed that Bungee was the name of the first (mad) protagonist of the art of Bungee-jumping where it originated in New Zealand ... "Don't jump, Bungee!!!! AGHHH - He's gone and done it"
Diane Putnam club has replied to Andy Rodker clubOnlineEtymology (US): "British schoolboy slang for "rubber eraser;" this probably is more or less onomatopoeic, from notions of bouncy + spongy. First record of bungee jumping is from 1979."
The Macquarie Dictionary (AU): "mate, friend. Used in North Queensland (Mareeba). May have aboriginal origins: Hey, bungee. How are you going?"
Oxford: "1930s (denoting an elasticated cord for launching a glider): of unknown origin."
Diane Putnam club has replied to Graf Geo clubSign-in to write a comment.