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Welcome!

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Some cookies to welcome you!

Welcome to Wikipedia, FJ19! Thank you for your contributions. I am Doug Weller and I have been editing Wikipedia for some time, so if you have any questions, feel free to leave me a message on my talk page. You can also check out Wikipedia:Questions or type {{help me}} at the bottom of this page. Here are some pages that you might find helpful:

Also, when you post on talk pages you should sign your name using four tildes (~~~~); that will automatically produce your username and the date. I hope you enjoy editing here and being a Wikipedian! Doug Weller talk 12:16, 14 December 2018 (UTC)[reply]

Article talk pages

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Information icon Welcome to Wikipedia and thank you for your contributions. I am glad to see that you are discussing a topic. However, as a general rule, talk pages are for discussion related to improving the article in specific ways based on reliable sources and the project policies and guidelines, not for general discussion about the topic or unrelated topics, or statements based on your thoughts or feelings. If you have specific questions about certain topics, consider visiting our reference desk and asking them there instead of on article talk pages. Thank you. Doug Weller talk 12:17, 14 December 2018 (UTC)[reply]

It would probably help you if you read WP:VERIFY and no original research. Your idea about the route is interesting, but there's really no place on Wikipedia to discuss it except maybe this talk page of yours, and sadly I don't have the time or background perhaps to discuss it. Doug Weller talk 12:19, 14 December 2018 (UTC)[reply]

April 2023

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Information icon I noticed that you have posted comments to the page User talk:CJDOS in a language other than English. At the English-language Wikipedia, we try to use English for all comments. Posting all comments in English makes it easier for other editors to join the conversation and help you. If you cannot avoid using another language, then please provide a translation into English, if you can. If you cannot provide a translation, please go to the list of Wikipedias, look in the list for a Wikipedia that is in your language, and edit there instead of here. For more details, see Wikipedia:Talk page guidelines. (WP:ENGLISHPLEASE) — CJDOS, Sheridan, OR (talk) 11:59, 6 April 2023 (UTC)[reply]


Hi CJDOS, thanks for the heads up, although the page is translated immediately. I'll remember that for next time. Sorry, Fernando FJ19 (talk) 06:21, 26 April 2023 (UTC)[reply]

El Viaje de Gilgamesh

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A diferencia de Enoch que recorre la Tierra y la describe a su modo, Gilgamesh recoge en un viaje el saber de la época de su autor. Dirigido hacia el Este, recorre la tierra para llegar al Monte Everest y el Lhotse, la atraviesa hasta Pekín, o Japón por el Monte Fuji, donde coge las cañas de bambú, después atraviesa el Océano Pacífico y termina su viaje en la bahía de San Francisco donde encuentra a Utnapishtim. De este modo, Gilgamesh recorrió medio mundo. FJ19 (talk) 20:15, 24 April 2023 (UTC)[reply]


Es hora de recorrerlo!!!


Unlike Enoch who travels the Earth and describes it in his own way, Gilgamesh collects the knowledge of his author's time on a journey. Directed towards the East, it crosses the earth to reach Mount Everest and Lhotse, crosses it to Beijing or Japan by Mount Fuji where it collects bamboo canes, then crosses the Pacific Ocean and ends its journey in San Francisco Bay where it meets Utnapishtim. In this way, Gilgamesh traveled half the world.


The first difficulty begins when the imagination embroiders the story. But in Ramp Story we find out that:

The Rampa Story

First chapter

The jagged tops of the rocky Himalayas jutted deep into the vivid purple of the Tibetan twilight sky. The setting sun sank behind the enormous mountain range, casting glittering, iridescent colors on the vast foam of snow that perpetually blows from the highest peaks. The atmosphere was crystal clear, invigorating, and offered almost limitless visibility. At first glance, the landscape was completely devoid of life. Nothing moved in it, nothing stirred, save the long streamer of snow blown high overhead. Apparently nothing could live in those barren mountains. It would seem that there had been no life there since the beginning of time. Only when you know it, when you have been shown it over and over again, can you perceive, with difficulty, the faint hints that human beings live there. Only habit can guide our steps in this wild and forbidden place. Then one can only see the entrance, wrapped in shadows, of a deep and gloomy cave; a cave that is but the vestibule of a myriad of tunnels and chambers that make this austere chain of mountains a honeycomb.