Sportsdude wrote:
The Tennessee River sytem just means the rivers and lakes associated to it, but the river itself is famous for the TVA daming most of it in Kentucky and Tennessee creating lakes, energy and economic benefits to the Tennessee Valley region during the Great Depression. The TVA is still around today, thankfully, but it's not as powerful as it once was. [SPAN style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold"]
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[SPAN style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold"]I did not know that. Apparently the only thing I know about water is that I need it to survive, I need it to clean myself with and it's fun to play in
So thanks for teaching me something new
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[SPAN style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold"]So is visiting The Tn River system a normal adventure for you?[/SPAN][/DIV][SPAN style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold"]
[/SPAN]No, not rafting. Rowing. [SPAN style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold"]
[/SPAN][A href="vny!://www.headofthehooch.org/"]vny!://www.headofthehooch.org/[/A][SPAN style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold"]
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[SPAN style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold"]Thanks for the video, I saw places on there I want to visit now
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[/SPAN] The sharks didn't bother me as I had been to SeaWorld by that time. What freaked me out (and still does to this day) were the moccassin snakes.
Sea World used to be an every weekend for me when I was younger. Needless to say I got burned out on it real quick. I haven't been back there in years and I don't plan on going anytime soon.Snakes in general are creepy. I came home one day and saw one slithering around my garage. With all the outdoor cats I own now, I never see any snakes... or birds..lol[SPAN style="FONT-WEIGHT: bold"][/SPAN]