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by Kyraina » Thu May 26, 2016 12:13 am
by Ularn » Thu May 26, 2016 12:19 am
Kyraina wrote:Should have a hotel attached to the terminal considering its a international airport. Only reason I mentioned a spear tip out of a mirror shard is it can be used as a Bo staff after the shard has broken and spears are cheap easy weapons to make
Ularn wrote:Altito Asmoro wrote:
Okay.
So...what kind of weapon that can be make of in a hotel room with available kit in the bathroom and the bedroom? Aside from shard of glass as weapon. And a lighter.
Curtain rod club? Mini-bar molotovs? I wouldn't suggest using mirror shards as a spear; they'd break too easily. Wardrobe doors might be ripped off and used as a shield.
Checking out hotels around SeaTac, it looks like the nearest large multi-storey ones (I'm imagining a big hotel from your post since Sherry could just escape out a window if she was less than two or three floors up) ones are the Radisson and the Crowne Plaza. I'll check out their websites for pictures of their rooms and see if I have any more ideas.
by Kyraina » Thu May 26, 2016 12:22 am
Ularn wrote:Kyraina wrote:Should have a hotel attached to the terminal considering its a international airport. Only reason I mentioned a spear tip out of a mirror shard is it can be used as a Bo staff after the shard has broken and spears are cheap easy weapons to make
I would have thought so as well, but the airport webpage makes no mention of an attached hotel and just directed me to a bunch of nearby establishments.Ularn wrote:Curtain rod club? Mini-bar molotovs? I wouldn't suggest using mirror shards as a spear; they'd break too easily. Wardrobe doors might be ripped off and used as a shield.
Checking out hotels around SeaTac, it looks like the nearest large multi-storey ones (I'm imagining a big hotel from your post since Sherry could just escape out a window if she was less than two or three floors up) ones are the Radisson and the Crowne Plaza. I'll check out their websites for pictures of their rooms and see if I have any more ideas.
...okay, so you want Sherry to be staying at the Crowne Plaza. It's furnishings look much less sturdy than the Radisson's; if Sherry managed to break a leg off that desk she could use it as a club. Unfortunately I don't think either have usable curtain rails; both look like they're attached to flimsy plastic runners recessed where they'd be trickier to rip out.
And yes; I did just offer hotel advice based on zombie apocalypse survivability. Now I'm going on Google Maps to find the quickest route to the airport from Downtown Seattle, assuming that the traffic's going to be...murder!
by Kyraina » Thu May 26, 2016 12:28 am
Corrian wrote:I know SeaTac pretty well. I don't remember a hotel being directly off of it either. But my god is it a busy airport.
by Corrian » Thu May 26, 2016 12:33 am
by Cainesland » Thu May 26, 2016 12:38 am
Corrian wrote:Kyraina wrote:You have seen nothing till you have seen DFW or Atlanta's international Airports
The only airports I've been to is the Sacramento Airport and SeaTac. Totally not coincidental that those are the only two places I've ever flown to (Yearly trips to family)
Sacramento Airport seems rather quiet. Been there when the main entrance is almost entirely empty. Well, maybe not main entrance, but wherever we enter can be oddly deserted.
by Corrian » Thu May 26, 2016 12:40 am
Cainesland wrote:The busiest one I've been to is Lester B Pearson in the GTA (Greater Toronto Area). But I've also sprinted through Los Angeles airport .
by Ularn » Thu May 26, 2016 12:44 am
by Kyraina » Thu May 26, 2016 12:45 am
Ularn wrote:Weird question, but do Americans have a word for the snack you eat during a work break?
by Cainesland » Thu May 26, 2016 12:49 am
Ularn wrote:Weird question, but do Americans have a word for the snack you eat during a work break?
by Ularn » Thu May 26, 2016 12:51 am
by Kyraina » Thu May 26, 2016 12:59 am
Ularn wrote:Corrian wrote:There's a specific snack you eat for work breaks?
No, just for whatever you eat during that break, like in Scotland we'd call it your 'piece' (piece is slang for sandwich) and the short morning break would be your 'piece-break' to distinguish it from your lunch break when you'd rest for longer and eat something more substantial. In Australia and New Zealand they call it 'smoko' because it started off as a cigarette break. I'm just wondering if Americans had any kind of similar word?
by Corrian » Thu May 26, 2016 1:01 am
Ularn wrote:No, just for whatever you eat during that break, like in Scotland we'd call it your 'piece' (piece is slang for sandwich) and the short morning break would be your 'piece-break' to distinguish it from your lunch break when you'd rest for longer and eat something more substantial. In Australia and New Zealand they call it 'smoko' because it started off as a cigarette break. I'm just wondering if Americans had any kind of similar word?
Cainesland wrote:Well, I don't believe I have ever been outside the Los Angeles airport to see the traffic, but I can second your father with regard to the internal busy-ness of the Los Angeles airport.
by Cainesland » Thu May 26, 2016 1:03 am
Ularn wrote:Corrian wrote:There's a specific snack you eat for work breaks?
No, just for whatever you eat during that break, like in Scotland we'd call it your 'piece' (piece is slang for sandwich) and the short morning break would be your 'piece-break' to distinguish it from your lunch break when you'd rest for longer and eat something more substantial. In Australia and New Zealand they call it 'smoko' because it started off as a cigarette break. I'm just wondering if Americans had any kind of similar word?
by Kyraina » Thu May 26, 2016 1:05 am
Corrian wrote:Ularn wrote:No, just for whatever you eat during that break, like in Scotland we'd call it your 'piece' (piece is slang for sandwich) and the short morning break would be your 'piece-break' to distinguish it from your lunch break when you'd rest for longer and eat something more substantial. In Australia and New Zealand they call it 'smoko' because it started off as a cigarette break. I'm just wondering if Americans had any kind of similar word?
All I can think of is the general term "Lunch" to describe the "Lunch break" you have at noon to go and do whatever it is you do on the lunch break (my dad goes on a walk usually, occasionally getting something as well)Cainesland wrote:Well, I don't believe I have ever been outside the Los Angeles airport to see the traffic, but I can second your father with regard to the internal busy-ness of the Los Angeles airport.
His friend paid for him to visit Los Angeles, so he had been driven back to the airport, and it sounded like it was a joke.
by Corrian » Thu May 26, 2016 1:06 am
Kyraina wrote:Yo Corrian want Effy and Joseph to meet up since Joseph is only 30 minutes east of her
by Ularn » Thu May 26, 2016 1:17 am
by Kyraina » Thu May 26, 2016 1:21 am
Ularn wrote:Okay then, next up: what do you call those roads marked on a map by blue shields with a red top?
by Ularn » Thu May 26, 2016 1:34 am
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