My first "Real" camera was a Canon EOS 650 and yes I still have it as well as my second camera a Canon EOS 850 given to me by my brother. I bought the EOS 650 when I learned that I was going to be in Hawaii for 2 months. I was not going without a camera!
Garmin Oregon, great handheld. You may want to install some trail maps on it or simply use the track feature. Lasts for days on a pair of AA batteries.
Years ago I left a USB thumb drive in my pocket. The pants went through the wash and dry cycle. At this time I do not recall if I let the drive sit for a while before plugging it in to my PC. But when I did It worked and I was able to read and write to it. It still works today several years later. A USB drive is definitely less liquid tight than SD cards are. SO the SD may be just fine after its experience.
You think the Cartoonist may have done this deliberately just to see if readers would catch it?
I got the error. Same actor wrong characterization.
HRBIEL wrote:
Geese are experiencing a disturbance in the force. Actually, they're getting into the mating season and competition is heating up.
First of all Canadian or Canadians does not have an "E" in it.
Secondly,
The first recorded use of the name, 'Canada goose' appeared in 1772 in Carl Linnaeus' 8th-century work, Systema Naturae.
James Audubon called it the Canada goose in 1836.
The name Canada comes from the St. Lawrence Iroquoian word kanata, meaning "village" or "settlement". In 1535, indigenous inhabitants of the present-day Quebec City region used the word to direct French explorer Jacques Cartier to the village of Stadacona. By 1545, some European books and maps had begun referring to this region as Canada. In the 17th and early 18th centuries, "Canada" referred to the part of New France that lay along the St. Lawrence River and the northern shores of the Great Lakes. The area was later split into two British colonies, Upper Canada and Lower Canada. They were re-unified as the Province of Canada in 1841 and upon Confederation in 1867, Canada was adopted as the legal name for the new country.