Want to Support Us?

By Joe Berk

Joe Gresh’s “Call to Arms” post had a lot of positive results for us (thank you, everyone who contributed), and we’ve had a lot of folks ask us to make it easier to support the site.  So that’s what we’ve done.

There’s no obligation, there’s no subscription required, you’ll still have access to everything on the site, and if you choose not to donate, that’s okay, too.  We still love you.  But we’re making it easier (as you have requested) to support ExhaustNotes and our blog.  PayPal, credit cards, whatever.  100% of anything you contribute will go to the writers.

Just click on the button below and do whatever you feel is right, and thanks in advance.

4 thoughts on “Want to Support Us?”

  1. How does paying the writers 100% actually support the site?
    I mean I am in for contributing to a degree for fees you may have running this place .
    And despite “click on the ads” and your advertising your books ,
    Exhaust Notes never felt like a commercial forum .
    Just thinking out loud.

    1. Hack,

      The writers are the site. The writers create the content that you read, without them the site wouldn’t exist.

      In addition to the tiny sum the writers earn there is a cost to hosting a website.

      There’s no pressure to support the site, it’s still free to everyone.

  2. I set up a monthly donation of $10. Yep, I do feel cheap.
    But if few hundred do something similar it should add up.
    I enjoy pert near everything. Even the watch blogs. In my hard very deep diving days the only watch that would hold up was a Casio G shock. Went through several expensive brand names. Never a Rolex.
    Another past life was re-loading, would buy 45 semi wad cutters 500 to a box.
    Then in another past life I bought a storage unit (just like in the TV show, I was a big player) that had
    over 250,000 rounds of re loads. A over flowing 55 gallon barrel of each, 45, 9nn, 40, 38 Special.
    Four over flowing barrels, paid $650 for the unit. About 2006. Had a hard time selling them as no prominence until found auction arms.
    And Joe Gresh is the only motorcycle writer I ever remembered, then he disappeared for 20 years.
    Life is good – buy a couple of “cold one’s” and plan the next anything.

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