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  1. #41
    Join Date
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    Quote Originally Posted by Alan H View Post
    *bump*

    Just 'cause I enjoyed both the kilt discussion and the fish and chips discussion but the kingpin of them all was the image of Pleater as a young lass, rebuilding a BSA "A" in her dining room!
    Oh how I'd love to see a photo of that!

  2. #42
    Join Date
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    I bought my first kilt from a Scottish shop, in Vancouver, (BC) in sept 1970; a 13 oz in MAcNaughton dress tartan. They measured me with a lenght of string, and sent he order to a kiltmaker in Scotland ( can't recall which one). It cost me a total of ( if memory serves) around $300 (CAD). One of my newphews now wears has it, and wears it ( my middle-age spread).

    By the way, the Canadian dollar was worth about 10 cents more, than the US$, in the mid '50's, as I clearly recall the "DefinDollars" , that the Fereal Liberals producved, during an election campaign, that had a 'tear-off' section "worth" 10 cents.

  3. #43
    Join Date
    8th January 08
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    Quote Originally Posted by MacMillan of Rathdown View Post
    Absolutely bang on message! If all you do is save for that rainy day, the only thing you can count is that they'll be passing out free umbrellas at your funeral.
    Go to the nursing home and see how those on Medicaid are living.

  4. #44
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    13th September 04
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jack Daw View Post
    Go to the nursing home and see how those on Medicaid are living.
    I'll share a little detail of my private life.

    My father in law has Parkinsons disease. He's had it for several years and is now pretty much confined to a wheelchair. I won't go into details, but he needs 24/7 care to do the simplest thing, like visit the bathroom. He's living in a pretty nice, but hardly sumptuous care home, which is a GREAT deal, and the monthly cost is $3,000 a month. That's $36,000 a year. This does not cover the cost of his medications, or the visits to the neurologist etc. etc. I'm going to guess that his annual cost for basic housing, food, doctor expenses and so on is around $45,000 or $50,000 a year.

    This is CHEAP, out here. Dirt cheap. 24/7 care cost for living in a facility with nursing care round the clock is more like $5,000 a month, or $60,000 a year. Add in all that "other" stuff like doctors visits and it's probably $70,000 a year, and just in case you haven't visited a facility like that recently I STRONGLY recommend that you go walk into one and think about YOUR future..

    Dad will likely live for another 3-4 years in this condition. If the annual cost is $50,000, then Dad had better have a drop-dead minimum of $200,000 to "make it", and Dad has already lived out 18 years of retirement.

    Remember, you have to have a million dollars saved up to generate $50,000 a year annual income for an extended (say from age 65 to 85) retirement. $50,000 might sound like a lot right now (or it might not) but how will it sound, say in 2025 or 2045?
    Even if you don't live on interest alone and you spend down your nest egg at the rate of $20,000 a year for those 20 years, you're going to need that million bucks at age 65 to have an income of $65,000 a year at age 85, 'cause if you're flat-broke at 85, and DANG...you live until you're 90, well.... Health care costs and nursing costs are skyrocketing.

    AND....every dollar you save when you're 25 has that much longer to earn interest.

    Sticking your head in the sand will not make these economic realities go away, eh?

    While I agree that there ain't no point in living only for tomorrow, and that you can't take it with you, and that you COULD step in front of a bus and die tomorrow, the sobering realities of economics suggest that prudent folks might want to prepare for living into their 80's and 90's. If you DON"T prepare for that....and this goes ten times over for those of us who don't have kids.....your last years might be pretty freakin' GRIM.

    And that needs to be balanced against how much you need/want that $600 kilt. Do you really want it? Are you saving for the future and still have some income left over? Then cool, get the kilt.

  5. #45
    Join Date
    19th March 09
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    Astatula Florida
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    The lesson for TODAY::QUALITY FIRST::QUALITY LAST::QUALITY ALWAYS!
    I don't believe the idea is to arrive in heaven in a well preserved body! But to slide in side ways,Kilt A' Fly'n! Scream'en "Mon Wha A Ride" Kilted Santas
    4th Laird of Lochaber, Knights of St Andrew,Knight of The Double Eagle
    Clan Seton,House of Gordon,Clan Claus,Semper Fedilas

  6. #46
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    8th November 08
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    When I first went to Scotland in 1982 there were a couple of shops in Dunoon that were advertising a complete dress kilt outfit for something like 350 - 395 pounds. At the time the exchange rate down at the local YMCA was about 1.80 per pound, making the cost of the outfit about $630 - $711. I don't have any idea what kind of quality I would have got for that price, but I believe that was supposed to be the complete outfit - Kilt in the tartan of your choice, Jacket and waistcoat (probably a PC), shirt, hose and shoes. I don't remember whether it included any kind of sporran or other accessories or not. I'm sure there were options that would have raised the price if you didn't care for the standard package.

    I've sometimes wished I had gone ahead and scraped up the money to buy one, but I never would have had the nerve 25 or 30 years ago to wear the thing, and I doubt I could wear it now, although I'm not too much heavier now than I was then.

    In real terms that $700 would have been about half a month's take home pay for a junior NCO in the Navy in the early '80's. My situation has changed considerably since then and it would cost me much less than half a month's pay to buy the same outfit today.

  7. #47
    Join Date
    3rd March 09
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    Puyallup,WA
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    Lightbulb Only in America

    Gentlefolk(men & woman),
    I want to thank you for ALL your coments,they allowed me wander back in time and remember long forgotten memories. You American laddies gave me the best and longest laugh I have had in donkey's years. Your assumptions and sliderule analogies are just hilarious. I mean no disrespect when I say, "yea jus doant hae a clue". You North Americans have a saying that I am fond of.."You have to walk in the moccassins....". Please stick to what you know and not to what you have read. Stovies,fish and chips,tatties an neeps, these are all part of our childhood just as much as the thought processes of our parents when considering the cost of clothing us. Reading all of these comments has been a definite eye opener for me, even after 30 years of living amongst you. My father thanks you,my mother thanks you and I thank you.
    Aye Yours.



    VINCERE-VEL-MORI

  8. #48
    Phil is offline Membership Revoked for repeated rule violations.
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    I see this old thread has been resurrected. I posted originally and have since found the receipts from 1950 -





    And here is the Montrose doublet and jabot 59 years later -



    and the kilt -



    Not bad value you have to agree. So it is worth buying the best you can afford.

    (I still have the tartan hose as well)

  9. #49
    Join Date
    27th December 06
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    My first new kilt cost £40 in 1960 Istill wear it and it still fits! Last new kilt in 2004 was £ 350 though I think it is better quality

  10. #50
    Join Date
    1st December 06
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    Quote Originally Posted by Phil View Post
    In 1950 my father-in-law paid £7:10/- (£7.50 or $14.65) for a Montrose doublet - this is it today 57 years later!



    At the same time he bought a kilt for £7:15/- (£7.75 or $15.14) which I had altered to fit and wear to this day. He also bought the jabot you see in the photo for the princely sum of 8/6d (42p or 82 cents) full tartan hose for £1:17/6 (£1.80 or $3.52) which I still wear with the kilt but wait for it - he had to pay £3 ($5.86) for a leather belt and £3:12/6 (£3.65 or $7.13) for a sporan.
    Just goes to show you what purchasing quality attire does for you. I suspect your grandchildren will be wearing the same items long after you've gone to sleep with your fathers.
    Jim Killman
    Writer, Philosopher, Teacher of English and Math, Soldier of Fortune, Bon Vivant, Heart Transplant Recipient, Knight of St. Andrew (among other knighthoods)
    Freedom is not free, but the US Marine Corps will pay most of your share.

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