When I say "sort-of Mexican food," I'm not denigrating it. Both New
Mexico (and Tucson) have their own unique cuisine. The chimichanga was
invented in Tucson. And it's hard to find a cheese crisp or green-corn
tamales anywhere else.
On 2020-01-15 16:04, roxanna Mason wrote:
Including open fire roasted green chili's. Lived in Socorro 8 years, 150 mi
north of Las Cruces on I-25
On Wed, Jan 15, 2020 at 3:58 PM Rand Simberg <simberg@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
I've long considered Las Cruces to be (culturally) the NM equivalent of
Tucson. College town in the desert, with decent sort-of Mexican food.
On 2020-01-15 15:04, Henry Vanderbilt wrote: That's on the NM spaceport,
right? I see they finished the paved road up from the south finally. Still
a long way from anywhere, yeah. Brings it a bit closer to Las Cruces, which
is an OK little town. Looks like about 45 minutes, with a good radar
detector and no fear of death.
A swamp next to the Equator? Not Kourou? Speaking of air you chew rather
than breathe... One summer in DC was enough for my lifetime - I can't even
imagine being stuck in Guiana. Hot and wet, cold and wet, doesn't matter - I
hate wet.
On 1/15/2020 11:51 AM, Anthony Cesaroni wrote:
We acquired the SpaceX Hopper facility in NM. It rivals contemporary
descriptions of Mars but it's beautiful high desert. Logistics are a
nightmare but manageable. I don't miss the snow one bit but my day job
requires me to travel up north on occasion. Meanwhile I spend most of my time
in a swamp next to the equator.
Anthony J. Cesaroni
President/CEO
Cesaroni Technology/Cesaroni Aerospace
http://www.cesaronitech.com/ [1] ;
(941) 360-3100 x101 Sarasota
(905) 887-2370 x222 Toronto
FROM: arocket-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <arocket-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> ON BEHALF
OF Henry Vanderbilt
SENT: Wednesday, January 15, 2020 1:22 PM
TO: arocket@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
SUBJECT: [AR] Re: Space Access Symposium
On 1/14/2020 9:11 PM, Anthony Cesaroni wrote:
As a general rule, Canadians don't fare well in temperatures above 21C but
manage well in Martian summer like conditions. Something to consider when
planning initial settlements there.:-)
I'm a lizard and jumped ship. I love the heat.
Anthony J. Cesaroni
A fellow convert! I grew up in Michigan then Boston with real winters. Had
no concept of the alternative till I found myself in Tucson in '86 working
for L5 Society. Walking around in a t-shirt in January! And discovering I
was part-reptile and could handle the dry-heat summers just fine. A very
small price to pay for _never_ having slush spilling into my shoes again. I
was home.
Henry