[meteorite-list] HOT Meteorite Hunting

Galactic Stone & Ironworks meteoritemike at gmail.com
Fri Jul 3 16:00:51 EDT 2009


Hi Adam and List,

It reminds me of roofers working in the summer up on black tar paper.
Right out of high school, I had a summer job in Florida doing lawn
work.  A friend of mine was a roofer.  We both had to endure the
merciless sun and choking humidity.  We got into a friendly argument
once over who had the hottest job.  He won with a fried egg story to
top them all.  One July afternoon he was working on the roof of a mom
and pop grocery store.  During lunch break he went down and bought a
half dozen eggs, a can of spam, and a loaf of bread.  He then climbed
back on the roof, put a piece of foil down on the black tar paper, and
proceeded to cook fried spam and egg sandwiches for half of the crew.

I don't know what impressed me more - the roof being hot enough to fry
food, or coming back from lunch break and working in that heat with a
belly full of fried eggs and meat. LOL

Regards,

MikeG


On 7/3/09, Adam Hupe <raremeteorites at yahoo.com> wrote:
>
> Dear List Members,
>
> I cannot tell you how many people have inquired about meteorite hunting here
> in beautiful, friendly and very hot Laughlin, Nevada, USA.  Although it is
> in the middle of the very best meteorite hunting grounds in the Southwest,
> this is not the time of year to hunt.  Gold basin, Franconia, Red Lake,
> Ivanpah and Primm, all within and hour or so drive may be 10 degrees
> Fahrenheit cooler but still well over 100 degrees on most days this time of
> year.
>
> Here is an example that illustrates just how hot it gets here. I looked at
> the temperature gauge on my back patio and it was maxed out at 120 degrees
> Fahrenheit in the shade although the local paper stated it only got up to
> 116 degrees. I always heard that it gets hot enough to fry eggs on rocks so
> I gave it a try on my patio.  The results can be seen at the links below:
>
> Egg Frying On Porch Link:
> http://themeteoritesite.com/Z-Egg-a.jpg
>
> Close-up:
> http://themeteoritesite.com/Z-Egg-b.jpg
>
> It only took about 20 minutes to get the egg to over-easy. Imagine if this
> was your head.  Be careful if you are brave enough to hunt in these
> conditions. Bring lots of water, sunscreen and protective clothing.
>
>
> Best Regards from the hottest meteorite hunting grounds in the United
> States,
>
> Adam
>
>
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-- 
.........................................................
Michael Gilmer (Louisiana, USA)
Member of the Meteoritical Society.
Member of the Bayou Region Stargazers Network.
Websites - http://www.galactic-stone.com and http://www.glassthrower.com
..........................................................



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