I've been there once, for a day. People were friendly enough but not that much to see and I'd not consider it a great destination for an extended stay!
If that gal can move like that in a horizontal position, I'll bet her husband/boyfriend has his chiropractor on speed dial. I was in USAF basic training in 1967 with a bunch of guys from American Samoa. They were chocolate brown, about "4 feet nothing" tall, and built like a fireplug. Those guys were as tough as a $2.00 steak. All of us were members of "Project 100,000" which was a special program for people who either didn't meet the physical or police record standards for normal enlistment. My training flight also included some incredibly fat couch potatoes and some damyankee gangbangers with a police record a mile long. The washout rate was pretty steep. My "disqualifying" factor was a reckless driving and speeding history going back several years. At least I never got caught with a tanker loaded with Tennessee moonshine whiskey.
I flew to Hawaii to expedite the unloading of a barge load of lumber/beams in 1972. Met the barge at the port area, got it tied up and fired up the onboard pedestal crane and began removing hatch covers. A big Cadillac pulled up on the dock honking the horn, and 4 huge brown guys too well dressed to be lonshoremen, got out. giving me the hand across the throat signal, shut er down. I went down to talk to them...they informed me in funny English, You stop now, boy...longshore union job. Foolishly I replied, where the hell are they then? We are paying 400 bucks an hour sitting at this dock. Hateful glares...you stop now. I got the message. I walked to the Harbormasters office, complained and was told for safety reasons the best thing to do was fly back to the mainland. I smarted off, ah Hawaiian hospitality. He said no, those are Samoan tough boys, go home, don't get sideways with them.
Well this is a fine pickle we're in, should'a listened to Joe McCarthy and George Orwell I guess.
They were chocolate brown, about "4 feet nothing" tall, and built like a fireplug.
I haven't known any of them personally, but guys from AS have occasionally attended mainland colleges on football scholarships. They're BIG, mainly playing as linemen.
“In a time of deceit telling the truth is a revolutionary act.” ― George Orwell
It's not over when you lose. It's over when you quit.
You’d like The Cook Islands or Fiji much better. Sailed a small boat through there a few years ago. If Fiji you need to get away from the Nadi area. Cook Islands are really great but not very busy so you’d need to entertain yourselves. All three speak english, Fiji and Cook Islands are also safer than American Samoa.
had a friend stationed there for awhile. Said the diving was great. But he'd not go back to live.
Worked with two fellas. Sal and F. Former was Father in Law to latter. both rather strong. FIL especially so. Would watch him put one 100lb sack of flour on one shoulder, flip another up onto his other, then carry them 50' or so to the mixer at the bakery. Picked up a dude about 180 lb and stuck him against the wall when the other dude started an altercation with him. Last altercation the dude started. Both of those guys extremely nice folks until you gave them grief. FIL was a clan leader sort, lots of stuff ran thru him.
Generally speaking, I'd have them as friends rather than the other option.
not sure about taking my dog there though.
And whodafugg this Saul dude?
Last edited by Valsdad; 01/24/24.
The desert is a true treasure for him who seeks refuge from men and the evil of men. In it is contentment In it is death and all you seek (Quoted from "The Bleeding of the Stone" Ibrahim Al-Koni)