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#euro trip hcs
flossiewrites · 2 years
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gabby's recommendations
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hello! welcome to my big fat list of obx fic recommendations! all of these fics are outer banks related :) <3
disclaimer: a lot of these recommendations are smut, and certain fics on this list include dark/triggering themes. please only read if you are 18+. there are more detailed warnings on each individual post.
last updated: august 17, 2022
personal faves are bolded!
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rafe cameron series
ambivalence, parenthood, burnout, letters to you, my girl, crazy love, sixth sense @mackenzielovee
euro trip universe, the internship, real deal, bested @lurkymurker
new light @outerbankies
father figure @milkiane
smutty sports @goldenjo
brother may i, the hills @cherienymphe
holy matrimony, silent love @luxestarkey
willow @pankowfruitsnackswriting
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rafe cameron one shots + blurbs
me and my brother, girl on film, boy on film @cockslut-padalecki
attitude adjustment, playing his game, surprise visitors, the ways of lust @bethoconnor
his, shower time, the babysitter, how does that make you feel, housewife hc, stepford wife, dark rafe hc @drewbooooo
jealous, the surprise, tutoring, blurb @mackenzielovee
less than zero, blurb @softcoreparadise
discreet, tryst @velvet-paradox
blurb @lovserrr
masterlist @sunnypogue
five minutes @lovinhub
whipped @luxestarkey
blurb @avenging-fandoms
needy @maybanksslut
medicine @maybankxw
possessive @goldenjo
lovin’ after a hard day @storytellingwitht
first fuck @rafesbabes
tip of my tongue @around1302
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jj maybank series
the romantic tirades of indie routledge, the domestic pleasures of indie routledge, the later years of indie routledge @cognacdelights
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jj maybank one shots
jail birds @spilledtee
mission accomplished @msgorillagripcoochie
the challenges of having sex in a dorm room @ptersparkers​
in for it @bethoconnor
breakup just to makeup @pankowforlife
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other
don’t treat me rough @diorstarr (ward x reader)
tease @drewbooooo (ward x reader)
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bootlickerhawks · 3 years
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Twice/Hawks Anon: How big of a stipend do the students at Jujutsu Tech receive? Character profiles reveal that Nobara uses her stipend to support her shopping habit. I glimpsed a manga page where she mentions wanting to buy something from Givenchy. Are these high school kids richer that college students?!
That’s a good question actually... I have no idea how much they earn. It’s possible that Nobara saves up to support her shopping habits cuz it seems kinda weird to me that they would earn a lot of money. But on the other hand, given that they risk their lives on a daily basis, maybe that’s the least the College could do for them. 
If I had to hc an amount I’d say it’s a similar amount to the grant students receive in France. When I was a benefactor of the national grant I received 550 euros per month (this was the maximum amount given how poor I am) so in yen that turns into...  68,476 yen! And according to Matcha-jp.com : “At popular retailer Uniqlo, the starting price for a T-shirt is around 1000 yen; 4000 to 5000 yen for a sweater; and 4000 yen for a pair of jeans.” 
Holy shit no wonder Nobara can afford to blow her cash on shopping trips!  
But then that raises the question as to who finances them? Cuz I’m pretty sure that the Jujutsu schools are separate from the government. Wait... is the Japanese government even aware of jujutsu/curses??? I imagine that some officials must be aware given that Nanami and Yuuji were given access to a crime scene no problem. Does that mean there are shaman representatives in the government??? GEGE I NEED ANSWERS!!! 
Anyway back to the topic of financing, I imagine it must be some kind of collaboration between the three big families cuz we know Gojo is super loaded. 
So yeah to answer your question, if my hc is correct, then these high school kids are richer than your average college student 😔  
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captainkirkk · 5 years
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idk if someone chimed in on this already, but I went to an expensive ny private school on scholarship and trips were covered by financial aid! my siblings went to europe 100% free (they even got like 200 euro spending money) so I hc peter’s situation was the same
I’ve never heard of a scholarship covering field trips omg? That’s wild. But I love the scholarship student Peter headcanon sm, so thanks for letting me know
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mitchbeck · 6 years
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CANTLON'S CORNER: WOLF PACK OFF-SEASON VOLUME 12
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BY: Gerry Cantlon, Howlings.net HARTFORD, CT - Professional teams at all levels, all-around hockey had best hope they run short of pens, because this was a week that saw a great deal of movement. It starts in Hartford where the Wolf Pack had another busy week. WOLF PACK The Wolf Pack will have Boo Nieves back at center this coming season. Nieves accepted the qualifying offer he received form the New York Rangers that has him on a one-year, two-way deal paying him $700K at the NHL and $70K while playing in the AHL. His contract is the same one Steven Fogarty accepted from the organization two weeks ago. Nieves signing leaves just three Restricted Free Agents (RFA) from last year’s team who remain unsigned. Chris Bigras, who was acquired from San Antonio for Ryan Graves and who played well in the 18 games he played in Hartford, is the first of the three who are unsigned. The second is centerman, Peter Holland, who was acquired from Laval for Adam Cracknell. Holland was solid in keeping the Wolf Pack afloat at the mid-season for 16 games. He was recalled by the Rangers and never came back. Montreal signed Holland for $700K on a one-way deal for this upcoming season. The last player was a trade deadline pickup, Matt Beleskey. He didn't produce much in his 14 games, but he still has three years left on the deal he signed with Boston at $1.9 million per year. He's listed on the Rangers' roster and could be a buyout candidate. The Rangers currently have 51 organizational contracts, which is one above the 50 number permitted under the CBA. They are a shade under $23 million beneath the salary cap according to capfriendly.com. The Wolf Pack's current roster has 23 players and the Rangers have 24 with some arbitration hearings and RFA deadlines still to occur. It's inevitable that The Rangers are clearly going to be shifting players in one manner or another. The cap number that's been established for 2018-19 is $79.5 million with the 5% escalator that the NHLPA likely to exercise as they've done every year under the present agreement. The Pack made a small signing in Connor Lacouvee. It should make training camp for the Wolf Pack, which should be the most competitive in recent memory, especially among the goaltenders. Brandon Halverson, who's entering the final season under his entry level deal, and Chris Nell, in the second last year of his contract after playing with three teams last year including Hartford, Adirondack, and Kansas City in the ECHL, will compete with Marek Mazanec for the number two goalie slot behind the presumptive number one, Alexander Georgiev, assuming he isn't the number two in New York behind Henrik Lundqvist. Coming off a strong senior season with the University of Minnesota-Mankato, Lacouvee was signed to an ECHL deal with the Rangers new Double AA affiliate, the Maine Mariners. Lacouvee went 23-6-1 posting a 1.80 GAA and a .914% save percentage. LaCouvee transferred out of Boston University where he played under new Ranger head coach David Quinn. The Mavericks were eliminated in the opening game of the NCAA Tournament by the eventual national champion, University Minnesota-Duluth. PLAYERS & COACHING MOVEMENT On Saturday, The Rangers announced the signing of former Yale Bulldog defenseman, Rob O'Gara who accepted his qualifying offer of a one-year, two-way deal paying $874,105K in the NHL and $70K for his play in the AHL. O'Gara was obtained from Boston for defenseman Nick Holden at the trade deadline. RW Kevin Morris, the son of former Nighthawk, Mark Morris, has gone from the Manchester Monarchs (ECHL) to the Coventry Blaze (England-EIHL) for next season. The AHL first released the home openers of all 31 teams. The Wolf Pack play host to the Providence Bruins on October 5th at 7 pm. On Wednesday, the AHL released the entire AHL team-by-team schedule for the 2018-19 season. The Pack's second home game is Sunday October 7th at 3 pm against the Laval Rocket. The top minor league affiliate of the Rangers have just five home games in the first seven weeks of the season. They will have two road trips of four and five games during that time span. Read the story HERE. The Sound Tigers signed 10 players for the upcoming season including the Bourque brothers, Ryan and Chris. Chris, 33, signed a one-year deal while Ryan signed an extension. This will be the third team where the pair will play for professionally, the first time was in Hartford, then Hershey and now BrIdgeport. Tigers team captain, Ben Holmstrom, his brother Josh, and Connor Jones have also signed extensions. Jones, of course, along with his twin brother Kellen, are the grandsons of former New Haven Blades player Terry Jones and both attended Quinnipiac University (ECACHL). Kellen is heading overseas to play next year for Vastervik IK (Sweden-Allsvenskan) after playing in Worcester (ECHL) last season. Goalie Jeremy Smith signed a one-year free agent deal with the Sound Tigers after playing last year in Charlotte and Jeff Kubiak, Matt Gaudreau (Johnny Gaudreau’s younger brother), Mike Cornell and Tyler Mueller. Ex-Pack, Ryan Haggerty, (Stamford/Trinity Catholic) re-signs with Wilkes Barre/Scranton. Former Yale goalie, Alex Lyon, signed a two-year extension with Philadelphia. His first season is $750K for the NHL and $250K for the AHL. His second year is a $750K one-way deal. Lyon’s former college teammate with the Bulldogs, Adam Larkin, has signed with Reading (ECHL) for the upcoming season. Ex-Pack, Michael Joly, signed a one-year AHL deal with the AHL newest team, the Colorado Eagles. Last season, his second as a pro, Joly helped lead the Eagles to their second consecutive ECHL Kelly Cup title leading the league in the regular season with 41 goals in 52 games for 67 points. Joly was named playoff MVP with his 29 points in 24 post-season games. He played 19 games with three goals and seven points while on recall with San Antonio. Joly will have a brand new bench boss in one-time Sound Tiger head coach Greg Cronin. He was named as the Eagles first AHL head coach. Cronin was the second head coach in Bridgeport history. He was there for two years (2003-2005). Cronin was in his second tour as an assistant with the Islanders and has coached for over 30 years. He was an assistant coach at Colorado College for three years in the early 1990’s. Cronin’s assistants will be the Eagles ECHL head coach Aaron Schneekloth and former Wolf Pack, Ryan Tobler. His post game rants were usually amusing, very colorful and often unprintable. Tucson inks the Klima twins, Kelly and Kevin from Chicoutimi (QMJHL), They are the sons of former NHL’er, Petr Klima. The Roadrunners also signed one-time Ranger draft pick, and an ex-Sound Tiger, Daniel Maggio, who signed a one-year AHL contract. Maggio spent most of last year with Ft. Wayne (ECHL) and a 13-game recall time with Tucson. Ex-Sound Tiger, Harry Zolnierczyk, signs with Springfield, his seventh AHL team. Adam Erne (North Branford) inks a one-year, one-way ($800K) deal with Tampa Bay. The Lightning also added Iowa head coach Derek Lalonde as a new assistant coach. Ex-CT Whale, Christian Thomas, departs from Wilkes Barre/Scranton and heads to Rogle BK (Sweden-SHL). Former Wolf Pack captain, and Sound Tiger player, Joe Whitney, and who's about to become a father for a second time, has signed a Euro deal with HC Linkopings (Sweden-SHL). Also joining him on the AHL-To-Euro list is Patrick Wiercioch of the Utica Comets who hooks up with Dynamo Minsk (Belarus-KHL). Ex-Sound Tiger, Darren Nowick, who split last season with Stockton and Kansas City (ECHL), signs with Vasterik IK (Sweden-Allsvenskan). Dustin Gazley departs Hershey for EC Salzburg (Austria-AEHL). That makes 48 players plus a coach who have signed to go overseas. 23 teams have lost at least one player. Greg Rallo, after 615 AHL games and over 700 pro-and-minor pro games, retires from Texas to become an assistant coach with Milwaukee. He replaces former New Haven Nighthawk, Stan Drulia, who was made a Pro Scout by Nashville after eight years as an assistant coach. Former Beast of New Haven and NHL enforcer, Peter Worrell, was signed as an assistant coach with the Fayetteville Marksmen (SPHL). Worrell’s coaching career began after his 2010 retirement. He was the head coach at the collegiate club hockey level with the Florida Atlantic University Owls (ACHA Division-3) and North Broward County Prep School over the last seven years. The Owls made it to the regional finals this year before losing 2-1 to the University of Central Florida Knights in double overtime. Ex-Pack, Pascal Rheaume, was named head coach for the Val D’Or Foreurs (QMJHL) and his assistant coach is ex-Sound Tiger super pest, Pascal Morency. Ex-Pack, Brodie Dupont, signs with Dornbirner EC (Austria-AEHL). Ex-CT Whale, Andreas Thuresson, has signed with HV-71 (Sweden-SHL) after splitting last year with Kunlun Red Star (China-KHL) and SC Langnau Tigers (Switzerland-LNA) in the second half. Ex-Pack, Layne Ulmer, re-signs with defending EIHL champion Cardiff Devils (Wales-EIHL). Ex-Pack, Jordan Owens, goes from the Fischtown Penguins (Germany-DEL-2) to Sheffield Steelers (England-EIHL). Alex Barron, the former QU Bobcat, moves from Coventry (England-EIHL) to EHC Freiburg (Germany-DEL-2). Mark Naclerio (Milford/Avon Old Farms) goes from Reading (ECHL)/EHC Linz (Austria-AEHL) to Asiago AS (Italy-AlpsHL). One time Wolf Pack, Brandon Alderson, goes from Heilbronner (Germany DEL-2) to Villacher SV (Austria-AEHL) Cederic Lacroix from University of Maine (HE) signs with Wheeling (ECHL). That makes 161 Division I players to sign a North American pro deal and 213 total college players to sign North American or European deals. A third US collegian transfers to Canadian college hockey. Freshmen Owen Stout of RPI (ECACHL) goes to Queens University (OUAA). After all the tragedy, the Humboldt Broncos are putting back together a hockey team. The team has named a new head coach and GM in former AHL’er, Nathan Oystrick. A Saskatchewan native, Oystrick retired two years ago was an assistant with Atlanta (ECHL) for one-year and was the head coach at Colorado Academy High School last year. The Broncos assistant coach, Chris Beaudry, who didn’t ride on the team bus that day, not surprisingly has taken another assistant coaching job with the Melville Millionaires (SJHL). The team is interviewing presently for his replacement. In conjunction with the North Peace Navigators of the Junior B level NWJHL (North West Junior Hockey League), located in Peace River, AB, the Broncos late coach Darcy Haugan, a native started out as a coach, they will host the first games the Broncos play this season, a two-game exhibition on September 1st and 2nd against the Whitecourt Wolverines (AJHL) and Grand Prairie Storm (AJHL). The team’s regular season and home opener will be against the Nipawin Hawks, the team there were going to play that fateful day in game 5 of their SJHL playoff series. The game is on September 12 will be carried live on the NHL Network at 9:00pm EST via TSN of Canada and CTV Saskatchewan. XL CENTER UPDATE The RFP process is now closed and just one bidder submitted a bid to buy the XL Center. That organization is the Oak Street Real Estate Capital, LLC of Chicago. Clearly, the CRDA had hoped for a few more bids to sift through over the summer, but given the buildings dire financial picture and the complicated ownership arrangement that may lie ahead IF an agreement in principal is reached. Whatever occurs this will be a very complicated negotiation if one is ever started. The Chairman of Northland Corporation the enigmatic Larry Gottesdiener who owns the much needed and debated XL Center Atrium gave a lengthy and broad ranging interview with the Hartford Business Journal. Clearly, he is staking a out a position that he is going to hold out on the XL Center atrium in the hope they he will be able to obtain the building if it were closed. By being a title holder of the portion of the property could buy it conceivably for what Oak Street said it would pay for the building $50 million and then rebuild the whole Trumbull Block as it is known. When Northland Corporation teamed up with AEG to run the XL Center that is what one AEG official said then was the primary long term objective of Northland. Read the complete story HERE. Read the full article
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writinguphill · 7 years
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GRAN CANARIA: The Valley and the Volcano
If you like year-round sunshine, stunning switchbacks and old German couples in matching outfits, Gran Canaria’s definitely worth a visit. I headed out mid-March for three days of biking with two main rides lined up; Pico de las Nieves and the Valley of the Tears. 
This was a trip where not everything went right, so I’ve stuck a few recommendations at the bottom. But first, the lovely lovely rides.
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Pico de las Nieves - 95km, 2600m
At 50km from the sea to the summit, this is a long old climb, but it’s an absolute dream. 
Setting out from Playa del Ingles (more on this shit hole later), you join the GC-60 and start going up. With a sexy smooth road surface and a nice 7% gradient it’s a great start to the ride. 
Before you know it, you’re descending down into a valley and through to La Barandila, then it’s up again for another steady 8km to San Bartolome - nothing too scary, averaging about 6%. The ride through the valley here is glorious and the scenery’s absolutely incredible, so it’s worth having your phone to hand for some drive-bys.
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Enjoy it while you can, because as you leave San Bartolome you turn a corner and see what Strava aptly names ‘The Wall’… 
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Fortunately, you go down it, but knowing you’ll be coming the other way later makes it a fairly unwelcome sight. Don’t worry too much though - it’s short, sharp and actually a nice little burner on the return leg.
The road gets rougher after San Bartolome until you turn right onto the GC-600, and while the surface flattens out nicely here, the gradient does the opposite, and for 3km you’ll be cursing the 15% reading on your Garmin (other bike computers are available). 
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As the rocking and auto-pause beeps suggest, this is the toughest section of the entire climb, but it’s eased by knowing that you’re nearly there. The tree-lined roads are a signal that you’ve reached the Pico de las Nieves national park - and with the sun beating down, it’s a right joy to hit the top. 
Food tip: The café cart at the summit sells little pastry treats for a euro that are up there with the most-epic-things-to-dunk I’ve ever eaten. So get a coffee, pop your shoes off, and admire that view. It’s all downhill from here. Ish.
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I didn’t stop on the way up, but all the little villages looked set up for bikes, with racks outside and plenty of bald bronzed legs sat about drinking coffee, so loads of refuelling opportunities.
There are also 2 HC segments if case you want to push on and get some Strava silverware. The gradients are a little misleading - reduced heavily by the downhill sections - so prepare for about an 8% average for most of the up bits:
Fataga - Roque Nublo (20km, 935m, 5%) | San Bartolome - the top (22km, 1040m, 4%)
Valley of the Tears - 82km, 2500m
This was the main ride I wanted to do on the island - and for some reason, I was shitting my bibshorts.
I mean the name didn’t help, but it also seemed the reviews and Youtubes I’d seen really rather hammed up all the 20%+ sections. I’m going to say it right here - it’s not that tough. For me, it was more a Valley of the Sweat and the Sunburn.
Top tip: Do it early before the sun’s too hot. I was going to have a rest day as I’d burnt the day before, but inevitably my red skin lost the hopeless battle with my ego, and I headed out around midday. Bad decision (but great resulting lines). 
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I’d actually attempted the Valley ride with the Freemotion Bike Centre Sport XL tour on my first day, but crazy rain put a stop to it about 8km in - so this time I skipped those first few kilometres of climbing and started my ride from La Aldea de san Nicolas.
From here you’re immediately onto narrow rough roads leading into the valley - and while it’s all a bit juddery, the landscape is absolutely epic. Jurassic Park. 
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The route starts very up and down, which makes it tricky to get your climbing head on - but then 14km in, you start to go up. And up. Right up the side of a dam at about 17%. It’s a lovely switchbacking start, and would be perfection if the road was a bit smoother.
From here the climbing sets in and you’re looking at fairly solid gradients ‘til you reach Artenera, the highest village on the island. It’s a 14km slog at an average of 6% - but again, don’t be mislead by this gradient. A few significant descents do it an injustice, so prepare yourself for about a 10% average, with a few 25%+ sections thrown in. 
After Artenera, you undulate all the way to Tejeda - then it’s up again as you round the Roque Neblo up to the highest point on the ride. And you’re done!
While there’s no summiting elation with this ride, this descent (below) down the GC-605 gives you the feelings to make up for it. Wonderfully winding, it dips and weaves all the way down to Mogan, and the final few switchbacks are some of the best I’ve ever seen.   
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GC Recommendations:
Accommodation
Stay on the south/south west of the island as all the best rides go from there, but don’t stay in Playa del Ingles - it’s really not great. My biggest bit of advice would be to stay in an Airbnb outside of the main towns and hire a car. You’ll save massively, avoid the holidaying Jeremy Kyle cast, and if you’re ruddy lucky, your missus will play support car driver/official photographer.
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Bike hire
I hired a Cannondale Synapse from Freemotion. Mixed feelings about this place. It was carnage the morning I picked up my bike, so make sure you get there with plenty of time. I didn’t rate the guide on the Sport XL tour I did either - he went off at his own pace, left people behind when they had mechanicals, and didn’t communicate with the group.
Kit
Go big on sun cream. I’m normally OK with just a splash of 15 but it didn’t help me here. Other than that it’s your standard mountain attire; short sleeves and bibs, arm warmers, gilet and sunglasses for the descents. 
Food and water
There are plenty of cafés on the Pico de lad Nieves ride, so no food and drink worries there. But for the Valley, you’re pretty much on your own from the moment you leave La Aldea de san Nicolas ‘til you reach Artenera. It’s also super hot here, so make sure your bidons are brimming.
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