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We like big chests…

Nov13
by Greg Cravens on November 13, 2011 at 8:32 am
Posted In: Talk About Toys

Gone are the days when we had the little styrofoam coolers that would grow increasingly manky then collapse under the weight of someone tripping past the campfire.  Gone, I say, are the days of using those squeaky coolers that got deeper and deeper nicks and cuts in them and were finally used for fish and had to be destroyed, as mom would no longer allow them in the house OR the storage building.

Nowadays, we collect the bigger, badder, bolder coolers.

You got your little soft-side cooler, that can carry snacks and drinks for one, or a whole case if you don’t need anything else in there other than about a trayful of ice.  Lovely bits of technology these things are these days.  They have liners and filling that has scientifically unlikely names.  You pull off the tags that say, “Now with PolyEXtrico Liner and with TempraBlock sides” and you toss that.  You pull off the tag that says “Cleaning instructions” and you ashcan that thing, ’cause who they heck cleans these things?  No, you wait for your ice to melt, swish it around to get the bits of sandwich meat and cheese moving around and then you pour it out next to the driveway.  If everyone who isn’t a big fan of botulism is very lucky, you give it a blast with the hose before tossing it into the least-spidery corner of the storage room.

Then you got your slightly larger hard-shell cooler with the clever little thumbswitch that keeps the top from sliding open while you make mountain turns.  It still leaks like a sieve, but your drinks don’t go rolling around the back of the truck.  Very handy for keeping in the back of your car in case you need to take leftovers home from Momma’s.

Then there’s the “I don’t know how many people are bringing coolers, and I don’t want to have to pack a campchair” cooler.  Sturdy, with a removable lid, maybe a bit bigger than medium-sized, but still capable of being misplaced under a load of gear in the back of a Suburban.  You gotta watch those lids… Once this puppy has been your camp chair for long enough, that lid’s gonna flop off every chance it gets.  Nasty thing, too.  This cooler is the one that invariably gets left next to the shed and collects leaves and spider webs that you have to hurry and swash out before you run off on your trip, as you didn’t leave time for swashing out a cooler and you’re late.

Then, there’s your standard big boy size cooler, with the spigot on the side and handles that move and hinges on the lid.  Woo.  Luxury.  This is the one that you offer others space in when you’re getting ready- Hey, toss your drinks and sammich meats in here, and we’ll just go with this one cooler, boys!  What’s to be said about these?  We’ll eventually, you’re gonna kick that damned spigot stopper off there and have to figure a way to seal it up.  Wine cork, Silicon, Gorilla Tape… be prepared.  And that little plastic strap that holds the lid up at 90 degrees?  That’ll be gone soon, and you’ll be glad at first because that’s also what makes the lid slam on your fingers.  When the straps broken, then you have to worry about the hinges going bad, but that takes a good long while.  This one can take up a whole trunk on a fiddly little car.

There are, of course, the super mega-mondo coolers I see there on the sales floor of the Costco.  You could keep a Bigfoot carcass in one of those until the MIBs come and get it.  I  don’t have one… yet.  You got one?  Let me know how that’s working for you.  You’re the next product review here on Hubriscomics.

└ Tags: Bigfoot carcass, camp, camping, Coleman, cooler, cravens, Gorilla Tape, greg, Greg Cravens, hubris, ice, Ice Chest, MIB. Igloo, outdoor, outdoors, outside, Spigot, styrofaom
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Grand Canyon Diary- Part 3

Nov12
by Greg Cravens on November 12, 2011 at 7:52 am
Posted In: Lies Around The Campfire

At some point early in your preparation for going to the Grand Canyon, you find yourself on YouTube.com. Turns out that everything that has happened for years is either on YouTube or is about to be.  It’s insane.  My father uses it to watch videos from heaven-knows-where of his favorite music.  As his favorite music was written, performed, and saw its creators die long before there were music videos, much less computers, you have to wonder where the hell they’re getting these videos. I imagine that some were performances on obscure old TV shows being hosted by a Red Skeleton or somesuch.  I admit to being baffled.  At any rate, his own work now appears on YouTube.  So the circle is now complete, we’ve all joined the Dark Side, and YouTube owns us and our kitty-cats that chase laser pointers.

So. Everything else being covered, YouTube, of course, has lots of video of whitewater rafts flipping over in a ‘hole’.  A hole, as you probably know, is a spot in a river where you have:

1. A rock,

2. A steep decline in your feet above sea level, and

3. Water that momentarily and repeatedly smashes itself back upstream against the aforementioned rock.

If this sounds like the dumbest place in the world to put a boat filled with your food, dry clothes and the things that prevent you from being stung by scorpions in your sleep, then you’ll get no argument from me.

You know, it’s one thing to read about rafts flipping in holes. It’s another thing entirely to see video of someone’s boat flipping over in a hole.  When you see it, you’re not seeing ‘it’.  You’re seeing YOU.  In your mind’s wide eye, it will not be that little video person, but yourself.  You will, you know, be IN that boat when it does its drunken lurch to the upstream side.  You will no longer be in that boat when the little video person is chucked out of that upended mess into the chocolate-milk-colored river.  And as you watch the tiny little video person claw its way through the water,  you remember the part about only having a few minutes to get out of the river before your body heat departs, leaving no forwarding address.

It’s best to take YouTube.com in small bites.

└ Tags: adventure, Cecil Cravens, cravens, Grand Canyon, Grand Canyon Diary, greg, Greg Cravens, Hole, kayak, outdoor, outdoors, outside, paddle, Raft, River, rock, whitewater, YouTube
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Flapdoodle- page 6

Nov10
by Greg Cravens on November 10, 2011 at 1:30 am
Posted In: Non-Hubris comics

Here you go!  Flapdoodle saves the day in six pages.  I have a much longer Flapdoodle story that’s more entertaining, but have never had a venue or opportunity that drove me to draw it.  It’s a lovely script, and maybe now that I love doing Hubriscomics.com so much, I have a reason to complete the work and show it to you guys.  For now, though.  Wander back to down the site again in a couple of days and we’ll continue with The Grand Canyon Diaries.  And please remember to Vote Hubris and give us a Google+, a StumbleUpon, a Tweet or whatever you got.  Share the fun, yeah?  “Thankyuh, thankyuh ver’ musch” as the King is popularly said to have said.

└ Tags: cravens, Elvis, Flapdoodle, greg, Greg Cravens, King, Kobold, muse, Pllumber, Throne, Troll, writer
2 Comments

FlapDoodle- Page 5

Nov08
by Greg Cravens on November 8, 2011 at 1:30 am
Posted In: Non-Hubris comics

Oh, here we are at the Penultimate Page – where we compound the issues and further stymie poor Steve’s ambitions… That means we’re ready to resolve the action!   Tune in again on the very next Non-New Hubris cartoon day and see!

└ Tags: cartoon, comic, comic strip, cravens, Flapdoodle, greg, hubris, Kobold, misspelling, muse, Steve, writer
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Flapdoodle, page 4

Nov06
by Greg Cravens on November 6, 2011 at 4:00 am
Posted In: Non-Hubris comics

Page 4, in which the conflict is revealed, and the writer Steve has to admit that his dreams look a lot like everyone else’s dreams.

└ Tags: adventure, cartoon, comic, Comic Book, comic strip, cravens, dream, Flapdoodle, great american novel, greg, Greg Cravens, muse, writer
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