#81
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__________________
http://www.facebook.com/cajungator26 |
#82
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I wish you would have captured this a second or two earlier. Then the pushers would be known to all. |
#83
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__________________
http://www.facebook.com/cajungator26 |
#84
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Many would disagree with you. |
#85
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__________________
http://www.facebook.com/cajungator26 |
#86
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__________________
@TimeformUSfigs |
#87
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Well it would beat getting taught by a terp. Besides...I've already swam with sharks. I have no desire to repeat that gig. |
#88
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I had you on ignore. I should have left you there. BLECH |
#89
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__________________
@TimeformUSfigs |
#90
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It means there is a 50 large bounty to anyone bringing me a certain pedestal. |
#91
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so what is goin awn?
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#92
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I just looked at this thread too. Something about Mortikins being dead, but DANG it is taking him three friggen days to die...
__________________
"Until one has loved an animal, part of their soul remains unawaken. |
#93
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yes... slow and painful is the only way a real predator can do it. |
#94
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I guess you are right. Do we know who murdered him yet?
__________________
"Until one has loved an animal, part of their soul remains unawaken. |
#95
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"As with many such terms that seem to have evolved rather than been decreed, the history of "buckeye" is a bit fuzzy. The buckeye (aesculus glabra) is a tree, native to Ohio and particularly prevalent in the Ohio River Valley, whose shiny dark brown nuts with lighter tan patches resemble the eye of a deer. Settlers who crossed the Alleghenies found it to be the only unfamiliar tree in the forest. Perhaps its uniqueness contributed to its popularity because it had few other attractions. Pioneers carved the soft buckeye wood into troughs, platters, and even cradles. Before the days of plastic, buckeye wood was often used to fashion artificial limbs. The nuts, although inedible, are attractive and folk wisdom had it that carrying one in a pocket brings good luck and wards off rheumatism. However, in general, the trees and their nuts are of little practical use: the wood does not burn well, the bark has an unpleasant odor, and the bitter nut meat is mildly toxic. Still, the tree has grit. It grows where others cannot, is difficult to kill, and adapts to its circumstances. Daniel Drake, who gave a witty speech on behalf of the buckeye at a well attended dinner in Cincinnati in 1833, said, "In all our woods there is not a tree so hard to kill as the buckeye. The deepest girdling does not deaden it, and even after it is cut down and worked up into the side of a cabin it will send out young branches, denoting to all the world that Buckeyes are not easily conquered, and could with difficulty be destroyed.""
__________________
http://www.facebook.com/cajungator26 |
#96
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#97
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__________________
http://www.facebook.com/cajungator26 |
#98
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and the bitter nut meat is mildly toxic
Bite me. |
#99
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__________________
http://www.facebook.com/cajungator26 |
#100
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Say ...what's a pretty cherubic lizzard like you doing in a place like this? |
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