Yes, it's part of the vernacular. Out east and back west don't quite have the same ring.What I find most amusing is that, 200 years in, it's still always "out" west and "back" east.
What I find most amusing is that, 200 years in, it's still always "out" west and "back" east.
Its hard to believe that what the snow country would brush off as a weather event completely decimates areas unaccustomed to it. It kinda makes me want to laugh, but it is no joke.
Hmmm...not sure their track record is any better than ours when it comes to a large tornado.
But I digress...
I WANT MY GLOW BALLS WORMING.
(For you long timers, you don't think if I say that 3 times he will come back???)
What I find most amusing is that, 200 years in, it's still always "out" west and "back" east.
I imagine it goes back to the direction people were moving. What about "up" north and "down" south? Probably from the long-established conventions of cartography, I s'pose. When we got a place on the Shenandoah River in Virginia, I learned that those references can be reversed depending on the direction of flow of the local river. That river flows south to north, so, to the locals, things to the north are "down" (river), and vice versa. Where did "down" east come from?
One of only two that have made me laugh that hard.
Well that raises a question
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