Robb_K wrote:Being a Canuck (from Manitoba, no less) I know what "North of the MacKenzie" means (as my father took us up north to see the polar bears). But I already checked both Scrooge Klondike stories, as well as "Luck of The North", and couldn't find it. It rings a bell in my mind, but getting senile and even already now losing some long-term memory is no fun.
Robb_K wrote:I eat all the fish I can stand (every day) (I can't stands no more!). I'm going to kick myself when I hear the answer!
Bruce Lee wrote:Wow. Lobb can kick himself. me can do too. lets make a film with hollible synchlonisation voices and than we will save the plincess.
Robb_K wrote:If THAT'S a clue, I'm totally lost.
Robb_K wrote:It must be a '60s story, which I had, of course, less years to read over and over again, and read less, in any case, as the stories and artwork weren't as good as he earlier ones.
Doctor Witchie Britchie wrote:"One side, everybody, for Donald Duck, LAW north of the Mackenzie!" (which Barks story?)
Doctor Witchie Britchie wrote:Hint # 1 on the "Law north of the Mackenzie" quote:
"Wak! How did this BEAST get out of the cage?"
Doctor Witchie Britchie wrote:Hint #2:
"The Upper Mackenzie! And I'm the guy that expected to fly go-go girls to Fiji!"
Doctor Witchie Britchie wrote:A very big hint: Barks did the script but not the artwork for this story.
Egg wrote:Robb_K wrote:Being a Canuck (from Manitoba, no less) I know what "North of the MacKenzie" means (as my father took us up north to see the polar bears). But I already checked both Scrooge Klondike stories, as well as "Luck of The North", and couldn't find it. It rings a bell in my mind, but getting senile and even already now losing some long-term memory is no fun.
I've no idea what "North of the MacKenzie" is. Can you explain?Robb_K wrote:I eat all the fish I can stand (every day) (I can't stands no more!). I'm going to kick myself when I hear the answer!
That's easy to say. You already know you will forget that promise.Bruce Lee wrote:Wow. Lobb can kick himself. me can do too. lets make a film with hollible synchlonisation voices and than we will save the plincess.Robb_K wrote:If THAT'S a clue, I'm totally lost.
I think it's just a joke. Otherwise I'm lost, too.Robb_K wrote:It must be a '60s story, which I had, of course, less years to read over and over again, and read less, in any case, as the stories and artwork weren't as good as he earlier ones.
I protest! Barks grew as story-teller and artist. Only his basic ideas became a bit repetitive, with lots of deserts, etc. At the time of the retirement Woodchucks, his stories become richer because of the new approach, making the Woodchucks heroes of the stories. As a result, Scrooge could be a mean villain again, as side-character, like in the Donald Duck adventures of the late 1940s and early 1950s.Doctor Witchie Britchie wrote:"One side, everybody, for Donald Duck, LAW north of the Mackenzie!" (which Barks story?)Doctor Witchie Britchie wrote:Hint # 1 on the "Law north of the Mackenzie" quote:
"Wak! How did this BEAST get out of the cage?"Doctor Witchie Britchie wrote:Hint #2:
"The Upper Mackenzie! And I'm the guy that expected to fly go-go girls to Fiji!"
Pawns of the Loup Garou?
Stephan wrote:"Jumpin' Jacksnipes! What now!" (Which Barks-story?)
Doctor Witchie Britchie wrote:And...Darn it! I'm not sure where the jumping jacksnipes or the fighting heart comes from!
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