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Post by emergencyoverride on Jun 24, 2009 19:32:08 GMT -9
Looks like the sheriff is preparing to clean up the town, starting in the saloon.
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Post by buckwiley on Jun 24, 2009 19:43:22 GMT -9
Wow that really came out looking great! "The Law" should have no problem cleaning up that town!
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Post by godofrandomness on Jun 24, 2009 19:45:06 GMT -9
Looks like the sheriff is preparing to clean up the town, starting in the saloon. I just have one question: how does a wild west era saloon serve cold beer?
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Post by kricket on Jun 24, 2009 20:15:18 GMT -9
I just have one question: how does a wild west era saloon serve cold beer? "Some saloons had ice houses or cellars where they would store huge blocks of ice cut from a nearby lake. Old West historian Kathy Weiser cites the Laguna Vista Saloon in Eagle Nest, N.M., as an example." from www.legendsofamerica.com/WE-Saloons.htmlTho it says ice cellars were more the exception than the norm.
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Post by ghostgirl on Jun 24, 2009 20:25:51 GMT -9
that is totally awesome! thanks for posting these ;D
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Post by cobra on Jun 25, 2009 8:15:03 GMT -9
Looks great. Now he only need some outlaws to shoot... Where is the building from? /Cobra
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Post by emergencyoverride on Jun 25, 2009 9:03:31 GMT -9
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Post by josedominguez on Jun 25, 2009 9:19:29 GMT -9
I just have one question: how does a wild west era saloon serve cold beer? "Some saloons had ice houses or cellars where they would store huge blocks of ice cut from a nearby lake. Old West historian Kathy Weiser cites the Laguna Vista Saloon in Eagle Nest, N.M., as an example." from www.legendsofamerica.com/WE-Saloons.htmlTho it says ice cellars were more the exception than the norm. Cool is relative..... even in a desert town, something brought up from a cellar will feel cool, hot during the day, freezing at night above ground, but the cellar stays relatively stable somewhere in the middle
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