Here, kitty kittyThis creature was right at the front steps of KSKO so I stayed inside this morning
Here, kitty kitty
is that a moose?
Good decisionThis creature was right at the front steps of KSKO so I stayed inside this morning
That beats the skunk that was waiting outside the WEZR studio / transmitter site back around 1970. It gave a prize to the morning guy at 6 AM, so I stayed in the transmitter room for quite a while.This creature was right at the front steps of KSKO so I stayed inside this morning
I'll bet coolant in the past was a bona fide carcinogen, too!Definitely beats the worst "calamity" I ever dealt with in a radio station. That was when the air conditioner in the studio exploded while I was on the air....with the mike open! Coolant all over the studio. Including the cart machines, turntables, board, maggie, etc.
Maybe you should call your station The Moose, or change the call letters to something resembling K-Moose? For a while, they was a noncommercial station in Michigan, WQAK. They called it "The Duck"!This creature was right at the front steps of KSKO so I stayed inside this morning
Sure....let me give it a little thought to go through my horror stories, and I'll launch one. I'll post it here, and you and Frank can dicide if and/or where to move it if needs be.We should do a thread of "worst thing that happened to me in a radio station"!
Cyberdad, want to get that one rolling?
This would have been summer of 1971, so my memory is a little fuzzy, But I seem to remember a light brown thick gooey substance that didn't exactly smell good. It sort of reminded me of STP (a motor oil additive if anyone here doesn't remember the stuf). I can't imagine that would have been non-toxic. And I remember thinking that it was a good thing the mess stopped just short of the transmitter, about 25 feet from the exploding window mounted AC.I'll bet coolant in the past was a bona fide carcinogen, too!
Reminds me of the time I was crossing into Canada after a customer meeting in Northern Minnesota. The direct route was U.S. 59, an otherwise busy route that was deserted at the border. I was the only car there, but had to wait about fifteen minutes until the moose in front of me decided to move along. (I assume his entry into was legal).There are moose in WA state, but only in the Selkirk mountains of northeastern Washington, and a few in the North Cascades. I've never seen one. But I did stumble across two cow elk (females) grazing in the nearby grass coming back from a Manastash Lake hike last July. Beautiful animals. I was about 100 feet from them. Eventually, they stared me down and skipped their way back into the forest.