Being a hilljack I can understand your wife's predicament exactly. I can navigate well in hill country with winding roads and visual landmarks. Usually the second time around in a particular area I'll have the landmarks and the lay of the land memorized well enough to know where I am and where I'm going, with only an occasional need to look at a map. Put me down in a big flat city or countryside, and I'm lost without constantly looking at a map or using some kind of GPS. Grid layouts are so damn boring and they all look alike. How is one to know which is which? Very confusing for us hill folk. You flatlanders can have your geometrically symmetrical grids, I'll take an asymmetrical hillside anytime. If you don't understand what I'm saying, just ask your wife, she'll be able to translate for you!
P.S. My wife's a flatlander from the wastlelands of central Ohio, so I have the opposite problem. She gets lost on hillly country roads but can navigate a grid with ease.
That's 6️⃣ wins in a row over Miami. #BleedGreen https://t.co/QRi57JaOtV— OhioMen'sBasketball (@OhioMBasketball) February 18, 2018
That's 6️⃣ wins in a row over Miami. #BleedGreen https://t.co/QRi57JaOtV
Last Edited: 2/19/2018 2:46:55 PM by Andrew Ruck
Last Edited: 2/20/2018 1:47:24 PM by cc-cat
Last Edited: 2/20/2018 5:13:44 PM by colobobcat66
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