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Wise Old Owl wrote:
JimBlue wrote:
TrafficJam wrote:
max.patch wrote:
i thot this was kinda funny.
a dollar store opened about a mile from my house a little while ago. i've checked it out and there are few things worth picking up for a buck (and a lot best left alone).
anyway, i was there today and saw that they sold a box of 6 condoms for a buck. and right next to them were the dollar boxes of pregnancy tests.
How embarrassing... so when someone gets pregnant - do you get your money back.....
Sometimes you will never know the value of a moment until it becomes a memory.
Dr. Seuss -
JimBlue wrote:
TrafficJam wrote:
max.patch wrote:
i thot this was kinda funny.
a dollar store opened about a mile from my house a little while ago. i've checked it out and there are few things worth picking up for a buck (and a lot best left alone).
anyway, i was there today and saw that they sold a box of 6 condoms for a buck. and right next to them were the dollar boxes of pregnancy tests.
Dogs are excellent judges of character, this fact goes a long way toward explaining why some people don't like being around them. -
Rasty wrote:
Wise Old Owl wrote:
JimBlue wrote:
TrafficJam wrote:
max.patch wrote:
i thot this was kinda funny.
a dollar store opened about a mile from my house a little while ago. i've checked it out and there are few things worth picking up for a buck (and a lot best left alone).
anyway, i was there today and saw that they sold a box of 6 condoms for a buck. and right next to them were the dollar boxes of pregnancy tests.
Be wise enough to walk away from the nonsense around you! -
Wise Old Owl wrote:
Rasty wrote:
Wise Old Owl wrote:
JimBlue wrote:
TrafficJam wrote:
max.patch wrote:
i thot this was kinda funny.
a dollar store opened about a mile from my house a little while ago. i've checked it out and there are few things worth picking up for a buck (and a lot best left alone).
anyway, i was there today and saw that they sold a box of 6 condoms for a buck. and right next to them were the dollar boxes of pregnancy tests.
I may grow old but I'll never grow up. -
Drybones wrote:
Wise Old Owl wrote:
Rasty wrote:
Wise Old Owl wrote:
JimBlue wrote:
TrafficJam wrote:
max.patch wrote:
i thot this was kinda funny.
a dollar store opened about a mile from my house a little while ago. i've checked it out and there are few things worth picking up for a buck (and a lot best left alone).
anyway, i was there today and saw that they sold a box of 6 condoms for a buck. and right next to them were the dollar boxes of pregnancy tests.
andhigh school years ya got a live in grass cutter. as one who hates yard work thats a fair trade.2,000 milerThe post was edited 3 times, last by max.patch ().
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max.patch wrote:
Drybones wrote:
Wise Old Owl wrote:
Rasty wrote:
Wise Old Owl wrote:
JimBlue wrote:
TrafficJam wrote:
max.patch wrote:
i thot this was kinda funny.
a dollar store opened about a mile from my house a little while ago. i've checked it out and there are few things worth picking up for a buck (and a lot best left alone).
anyway, i was there today and saw that they sold a box of 6 condoms for a buck. and right next to them were the dollar boxes of pregnancy tests.
The road to glory cannot be followed with much baggage.
Richard Ewell, CSA General -
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the baltimore sun got punked.
too bad they didn't get any quotes from Seymour Butts, I.P. Freely, Mike Hunt, or Amanda Huggenkiss.
<snip>
Supporters of Donald Trump came to Stephen Decatur High School on Wednesday excited, they said, at the opportunity to hear the Republican presidential front-runner without the filter of the news media.
They described the real estate developer and reality show star as a candidate who could unite the country.
Jack Mehoff, 19, praised Trump as a "hardworking, smart individual that wants the best for all people in this country that are allowed to be here.2,000 milerThe post was edited 1 time, last by max.patch ().
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OK I am stumped - what the hell is a small pay cut? someone explain please.... cus if I took one moonlighting or moon shining might be in order...Be wise enough to walk away from the nonsense around you!
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Astro wrote:
Just received the AT Journey. It great seeing over 20 people I hiked with last summer completed their Thru-Hikes!
mine just came. i flipped it open and OMG there she is!2,000 miler -
max.patch wrote:
kids may be expensive -- but during the middle and high school years ya got a live in grass cutter. as one who hates yard work thats a fair trade.
Do your duty in all things. You cannot do more, you should never wish to do less. - Robert E. Lee -
Do your duty in all things. You cannot do more, you should never wish to do less. - Robert E. Lee
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They already hve a devise that enables you to go farther... It's called a car.
I don't look forward to the day SAR gets called because sombodiy's leg batteries died. -
Mountain-Mike wrote:
I don't look forward to the day SAR gets called because sombodiy's leg batteries died.
Do your duty in all things. You cannot do more, you should never wish to do less. - Robert E. Lee -
Grinder wrote:
max.patch wrote:
kids may be expensive -- but during the middle and high school years ya got a live in grass cutter. as one who hates yard work thats a fair trade.
I may grow old but I'll never grow up. -
I believe under current regulations they wouldn't be allowed in wilderness areas. On the serious side; hopefully it can help some of our vets & other disabled people walk again.
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I don't see how the non-powered version could be disallowed. It's not really any different than trekking poles. Not trying to start an argument (and I'm not really a fan of this other than potential use for helping the disabled), just curious why they wouldn't be allowed. Honestly I can't even see how/why the powered version would be banned. BUT I don't know squat about the rules other than the very basics.Do your duty in all things. You cannot do more, you should never wish to do less. - Robert E. Lee
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Grinder wrote:
I don't see how the non-powered version could be disallowed. It's not really any different than trekking poles. Not trying to start an argument (and I'm not really a fan of this other than potential use for helping the disabled), just curious why they wouldn't be allowed. Honestly I can't even see how/why the powered version would be banned. BUT I don't know squat about the rules other than the very basics.
The battery thing is something I would be concerned about. Particularly in hot or freezing weather.--
"What do you mean its sunrise already ?!", me. -
Drybones wrote:
Grinder wrote:
max.patch wrote:
kids may be expensive -- but during the middle and high school years ya got a live in grass cutter. as one who hates yard work thats a fair trade.
Lost in the right direction. -
TrafficJam wrote:
Drybones wrote:
Grinder wrote:
max.patch wrote:
kids may be expensive -- but during the middle and high school years ya got a live in grass cutter. as one who hates yard work thats a fair trade.
The road to glory cannot be followed with much baggage.
Richard Ewell, CSA General -
Drybones wrote:
Once they get a driver license you never see them again.
Do your duty in all things. You cannot do more, you should never wish to do less. - Robert E. Lee -
TrafficJam wrote:
Mine were excited about driving until I made them start grocery shopping and driving each other around, then they didn't like it so much.
Do your duty in all things. You cannot do more, you should never wish to do less. - Robert E. Lee -
Mountain-Mike wrote:
I believe under current regulations they wouldn't be allowed in wilderness areas. On the serious side; hopefully it can help some of our vets & other disabled people walk again.
Sometimes you will never know the value of a moment until it becomes a memory.
Dr. Seuss -
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JimBlue wrote:
Well, there is that handicap latrine up on the trail... maybe the trail is going to be widened ?
Just another case of PC over common sense.
I'm pretty sure that anyone who could make it to the hut could do a stair or two. -
If i thot this was kinda funny.
Astro wrote:
TrafficJam wrote:
max.patch wrote:
a dollar store opened about a mile from my house a little while ago. i've checked it out and there are few things worth picking up for a buck (and a lot best left alone).
anyway, i was there today and saw that they sold a box of 6 condoms for a buck. and right next to them were the dollar boxes of pregnancy tests.
bacon can solve most any problem. -
Rasty wrote:
Mountain-Mike wrote:
I believe under current regulations they wouldn't be allowed in wilderness areas. On the serious side; hopefully it can help some of our vets & other disabled people walk again.
County folks obtained a federal grand and rebuilt most of the trail to ADA standards to include paving. Initially I was dismayed but then Brooks Army Medical Center personnel started taking wounded vets onto the trail. It was heartening to view amputees and wheel chair bound folks out in the woods.
Lest we forget.....
SSgt Ray Rangel - USAF
SrA Elizabeth Loncki - USAF
PFC Adam Harris - USA
MSgt Eden Pearl - USMC -
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LIhikers wrote:
JimBlue wrote:
Well, there is that handicap latrine up on the trail... maybe the trail is going to be widened ?
I'm pretty sure that anyone who could make it to the hut could do a stair or two.
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and in todays news from iceland:
The staff at the old downtown swimming pool Sundhöllin had provided guests with handy blow-dryers to dry their hair, but as some gentlemen were happy to discover the dryers were just as useful when it came to drying their ball sacks, others were less pleased with this novelty.
After Haraldur Jónasson, a disgruntled swimming pool patron wrote an article under the title "This is not a ball sack dryer" for the local newspaper Fréttatíminn, denouncing this use of the blow-dryers as an example of inconsiderate and offensive behaviour at swimming pools and gyms. The staff at Sundhöllin decided the rules were good enough to post publicly and prominently.
Rule no. 1:
"Don‘t dry your ball sack or your butt with the communal hairdryer in the swimming pool or the gym. Bald older gentlemen with hairy torsos must either bring their own blow-dryers or just buy a more absorbent towel."
[IMG:http://icelandmag.visir.is/sites/default/files/styles/article_body_image/public/thumbnails/image/balldryer_1.jpg?itok=XuqKUIQo]2,000 miler -
max.patch wrote:
and in todays news from iceland:
The staff at the old downtown swimming pool Sundhöllin had provided guests with handy blow-dryers to dry their hair, but as some gentlemen were happy to discover the dryers were just as useful when it came to drying their ball sacks, others were less pleased with this novelty.
After Haraldur Jónasson, a disgruntled swimming pool patron wrote an article under the title "This is not a ball sack dryer" for the local newspaper Fréttatíminn, denouncing this use of the blow-dryers as an example of inconsiderate and offensive behaviour at swimming pools and gyms. The staff at Sundhöllin decided the rules were good enough to post publicly and prominently.
Rule no. 1:
"Don‘t dry your ball sack or your butt with the communal hairdryer in the swimming pool or the gym. Bald older gentlemen with hairy torsos must either bring their own blow-dryers or just buy a more absorbent towel."
[IMG:http://icelandmag.visir.is/sites/default/files/styles/article_body_image/public/thumbnails/image/balldryer_1.jpg?itok=XuqKUIQo]
Lost in the right direction. -
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This video never gets old to me:
Dogs are excellent judges of character, this fact goes a long way toward explaining why some people don't like being around them. -
TrafficJam wrote:
max.patch wrote:
and in todays news from iceland:
The staff at the old downtown swimming pool Sundhöllin had provided guests with handy blow-dryers to dry their hair, but as some gentlemen were happy to discover the dryers were just as useful when it came to drying their ball sacks, others were less pleased with this novelty.
After Haraldur Jónasson, a disgruntled swimming pool patron wrote an article under the title "This is not a ball sack dryer" for the local newspaper Fréttatíminn, denouncing this use of the blow-dryers as an example of inconsiderate and offensive behaviour at swimming pools and gyms. The staff at Sundhöllin decided the rules were good enough to post publicly and prominently.
Rule no. 1:
"Don‘t dry your ball sack or your butt with the communal hairdryer in the swimming pool or the gym. Bald older gentlemen with hairy torsos must either bring their own blow-dryers or just buy a more absorbent towel."
[IMG:http://icelandmag.visir.is/sites/default/files/styles/article_body_image/public/thumbnails/image/balldryer_1.jpg?itok=XuqKUIQo]
i'm cursed with being a speed reader. i cover a lotta territory when i get behind the computer.2,000 miler -
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Do your duty in all things. You cannot do more, you should never wish to do less. - Robert E. Lee
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JimBlue wrote:
Drybones wrote:
Got a new computer.....I hate change!
I'm not lost. I know where I am. I'm right here. -
AnotherKevin wrote:
JimBlue wrote:
Drybones wrote:
Got a new computer.....I hate change!
I may grow old but I'll never grow up.
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