Swiss Army knife. The real deal Victorinox, not some piece of crap knockoff. One small enough that he will keep it on his keychain. Have the handle or blade engraved with his name or your name or somesuch. Knives are just cool, everyone should cary one, and he will think about how awesome his son is every time he sees it. The dude has plenty of dough. Spending a big chunk on him won’t make an impact.
Orrrrrrr - take him to a shooting/trap/skeet range and spend some $ on gun rental/ammo/clays etc. If you have a sporting clays course anywhere near, THAT is a fun way to spend an hour or three. He will remember that.
bah…I didn’t even see he doctored it…just thought his silly picture most likely of Nick Cage didn’t show up…to be honest, this is NOT his best work…we were doing this back in ought eight…it’s the ol’ reverse the definitive object perspective, or as they say in France Le Plus De Revere…anyway…NEXT![/quote]
What does he like but isn’t real “into”? Those are the types of things you can really expand for him. For instance, if you know he drinks coffee every morning but sticks with starbucks, find a local roaster in your area to give him something new to try (I’ve recently started roasting my own coffee and can honestly say the right coffees are 5x better when roasted within the last week or 2). Or if you know he likes bourbon, buy a hard to find bottle on the 2nd hand market (you’ll have to pay a premium for stuff that’s hard to find). Whatever he is passively interested in, there is an entire sub culture of good shit he doesn’t know about.
[quote]LankyMofo wrote:
What does he like but isn’t real “into”? Those are the types of things you can really expand for him. For instance, if you know he drinks coffee every morning but sticks with starbucks, find a local roaster in your area to give him something new to try (I’ve recently started roasting my own coffee and can honestly say the right coffees are 5x better when roasted within the last week or 2). Or if you know he likes bourbon, buy a hard to find bottle on the 2nd hand market (you’ll have to pay a premium for stuff that’s hard to find). Whatever he is passively interested in, there is an entire sub culture of good shit he doesn’t know about. [/quote]
This is all ghey info…a man at 53 (?) should know what he likes…no surprises…eff off Testy1 ya fuck!
[quote]LankyMofo wrote:
What does he like but isn’t real “into”? Those are the types of things you can really expand for him. For instance, if you know he drinks coffee every morning but sticks with starbucks, find a local roaster in your area to give him something new to try (I’ve recently started roasting my own coffee and can honestly say the right coffees are 5x better when roasted within the last week or 2). Or if you know he likes bourbon, buy a hard to find bottle on the 2nd hand market (you’ll have to pay a premium for stuff that’s hard to find). Whatever he is passively interested in, there is an entire sub culture of good shit he doesn’t know about. [/quote]
This is all ghey info…a man at 53 (?) should know what he likes…no surprises…eff off Testy1 ya fuck![/quote]
If you stop finding things you like in old age I feel bad for you, son!
[quote]LankyMofo wrote:
What does he like but isn’t real “into”? Those are the types of things you can really expand for him. For instance, if you know he drinks coffee every morning but sticks with starbucks, find a local roaster in your area to give him something new to try (I’ve recently started roasting my own coffee and can honestly say the right coffees are 5x better when roasted within the last week or 2). Or if you know he likes bourbon, buy a hard to find bottle on the 2nd hand market (you’ll have to pay a premium for stuff that’s hard to find). Whatever he is passively interested in, there is an entire sub culture of good shit he doesn’t know about. [/quote]
This is all ghey info…a man at 53 (?) should know what he likes…no surprises…eff off Testy1 ya fuck![/quote]
If you stop finding things you like in old age I feel bad for you, son!
[/quote]
He sure is grumpy for a whippersnapper. If it helps Sen, I do find you mildly amusing.
[quote]LankyMofo wrote:
What does he like but isn’t real “into”? Those are the types of things you can really expand for him. For instance, if you know he drinks coffee every morning but sticks with starbucks, find a local roaster in your area to give him something new to try (I’ve recently started roasting my own coffee and can honestly say the right coffees are 5x better when roasted within the last week or 2). Or if you know he likes bourbon, buy a hard to find bottle on the 2nd hand market (you’ll have to pay a premium for stuff that’s hard to find). Whatever he is passively interested in, there is an entire sub culture of good shit he doesn’t know about. [/quote]
This is all ghey info…a man at 53 (?) should know what he likes…no surprises…eff off Testy1 ya fuck![/quote]
If you stop finding things you like in old age I feel bad for you, son!
[/quote]
Seems like he’s got 99 problems but a birthday present ain’t one.
[quote]Waittz wrote:
Need some help on this one. My dad is turning 58 in a couple weeks and I am having a hard time finding a gift. He is very wealthy so its kind of the situation where you have to ask ‘what do you get a guy that has everything’.
He loves like tech things and hinted he wants something ‘techy’ but doesn’t really have any one thing in mind when he says it. I also know if I go over the 200 mark in price he will be more upset than happy. Any suggestions? Was thinking one of those fit bit bracelets would be perfect but of course a day or so back Amazon Primes beats me to it so I am stuck here. [/quote]
I would recommend looking at books and manuals related to his hobbies. Or possibly some type of item with historical significance.