chucK Posted February 17, 2003 Posted February 17, 2003 Cooking container accusing the dedicated water-heating container of absorbing light. Quote
sk Posted February 17, 2003 Posted February 17, 2003 I just learned that I am not adicted to cc.com. I have a whloe new lease on life Quote
iain Posted February 17, 2003 Posted February 17, 2003 Dr_Flash_Amazing said: Cooking container accusing the dedicated water-heating container of absorbing light. when cloven-hoofed mammals move through the air by means of wings or winglike parts. Quote
Dr_Flash_Amazing Posted February 17, 2003 Posted February 17, 2003 chucK said: Cooking container accusing the dedicated water-heating container of absorbing light. Electrostatic reproduction feline! Quote
chucK Posted February 17, 2003 Posted February 17, 2003 (edited) nevermind Edited February 17, 2003 by chucK Quote
Dru Posted February 17, 2003 Author Posted February 17, 2003 Didn't your mama ever tell you what to do to when your hose unclamps in public? Strange but true thread drift: one time a buddy and I drove down I5 to J tree from Vancouver. it was my first trip to J tree. so he puts oil in his car in blaine, and by the time he gets to centralia, its low on oil again. adds another quart, and its ALL GONE by the time we reach Kalama. so he adds ANOTHER quart and when we get to portland, we find some mechanic who agrees to examine it in the AM. so we sleep in the car all night somewhere in north portland, and in the morning hit a denny's while mechanic examines car. BUT the leak?? had mysteriously sealed up?? maybe it was the radiation from the kalama reactor... and the car did not lose another drop of oil all the way to j tree or home again??? PORTLAND FIXES OIL LEAKS Quote
Dru Posted February 17, 2003 Author Posted February 17, 2003 chucK said: Could you dumb it down a bit Doc? Xerox Cat. Quote
iain Posted February 17, 2003 Posted February 17, 2003 chucK said: Could you dumb it down a bit Doc? copy cat, but I bet he combusted both extremities of a cylindrical mass of tallow, wax, or other fatty substance with an axially embedded wick to come up with it. Quote
Dr_Flash_Amazing Posted February 17, 2003 Posted February 17, 2003 You're ambulating via foot-mounted metal runners on frozen water of insufficient thickness relative to your weight, Iain. Quote
Dru Posted February 17, 2003 Author Posted February 17, 2003 iain said: Dr_Flash_Amazing said: Cooking container accusing the dedicated water-heating container of absorbing light. when cloven-hoofed mammals move through the air by means of wings or winglike parts. Quote
iain Posted February 17, 2003 Posted February 17, 2003 Dru said: where in god's name did you find that twisted piece? Quote
iain Posted February 17, 2003 Posted February 17, 2003 or is that some footage from the latest naval airshow in Canada Quote
Dr_Flash_Amazing Posted February 17, 2003 Posted February 17, 2003 Wendy Detrick Worsham http://www.wdw-art.com/portfolio.html Quote
iain Posted February 17, 2003 Posted February 17, 2003 hmm, looks like yet another fetish gone clinical... Quote
Dru Posted February 17, 2003 Author Posted February 17, 2003 iain said: Dru said: where in god's name did you find that twisted piece? Google Image Search "flying sheep" more than pigs with cloven hoofs no? wait, are sheeps hooves cloven? DEER have cloven hoofs. Goats have cloven hoofs. are orthodox jews allowed to eat goats and deer? kosher? Quote
Dru Posted February 17, 2003 Author Posted February 17, 2003 iain said: bah. baaaaa baaaa baaaaaa! Quote
Dr_Flash_Amazing Posted February 17, 2003 Posted February 17, 2003 Bit of spare time on your hands, Mr. Dru? Quote
Dru Posted February 17, 2003 Author Posted February 17, 2003 apprehend unity to comprehend unity Quote
Mer Posted February 18, 2003 Posted February 18, 2003 I saw masses of cloven hooved mammals this weekend. White tail and deer and Elk, while driving Settlers road on the way back from gibralter wall (still in good shape though getting fried where the sun hits it.) Climbed at Cedared Creek too, down by Spillamacheen (it's better and bigger than the guidebook suggests, and it's in a steep gully so the ice is staying blue and fat even through warm temps.) Raining heavily in Golden where we stopped at the Trapper for some roast ungulate, fries and Too foggy to see anything across the river, but it's pretty warm for the east side of the Selkeirks in Feb. Quote
catbirdseat Posted February 18, 2003 Posted February 18, 2003 No chest beating here. Saturday, I was content to drive out to the "sunny" eastside by Lake Cle Elum and hike up Hex Mountain. Indeed, I avoided most of the precip and stretched my legs too boot. Sunday, I helped teach a beginning navigation field trip on Heybrook Ridge, near Index. This time I did not avoid the rain. I poured all morning and let up a bit in the afternoon. It's a good thing I brought my "climbing" umbrella. I guess any time you come back out of the woods with all your students is a good day, wet or not. Quote
plexus Posted February 18, 2003 Posted February 18, 2003 Saturday: Trail running, worked. Sunday: Looked outside, organized gear closet, dinner with friends Monday: Made future plans of some 'xploring this weekend, looked outside, saw some sun, wished I didn't have to....., worked Quote
Dru Posted June 4, 2003 Author Posted June 4, 2003 Here is a new NO TRIP TR!!!!!! I was just heading out to go bouldering, when I saw a big pile of empties. Yeah, and I realized I was out of beer! So instead of going bouldering I walked to the liquor store and traded 15 empties for 6 full ones. Now I'm too drunk to go bouldering but I'm thinking of gfoing out for a run and falling in the river. Let this be a lesson to you young'uns when you are debating beer or climbing. Prioritize! Climb first, beer later, unless you can walk to the climb. Quote
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