To: Happy2BMe
people visiting the Park usually stay but a few hours before leaving since the stench of sulfur is so strong they literally can't stand the smell. My BS meter is starting to shake...
94 posted on
01/01/2004 9:07:33 PM PST by
Izzy Dunne
(Hello, I'm a TAGLINE virus. Please help me spread by copying me into YOUR tag line.)
To: Izzy Dunne
Sulfur cooks out of the geysers, so if things are getting overall hotter, that would be expected. Is Old Faithful getting a bit faster now?
To: Izzy Dunne
Having visited the Volcano National Park on the Big Island of Hawaii many times (and during an eruption) I can testify to the incredible smell (stench, if you like) of sulfur. Burns your eyes, and if you have asthma, too bad. Sulfur and volcanoes seem to go hand in hand, so to speak.
To: Izzy Dunne
Why is your BS meter acting up?
Have you been to Yellowstone?
Some of the areas normally smelled awful the last time I went. I din't linger in those areas.
How many tourists do you know LOVE to go and stay in areas which are revotingly wretching at a gut, visceral level?
309 posted on
01/02/2004 12:57:47 AM PST by
Quix
(Particularly quite true conspiracies are rarely proven until it's too late to do anything about them)
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