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DerbyDad03 DerbyDad03 is offline
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Default This has become a very Scary World to live in.

On Saturday, April 16, 2016 at 7:20:49 PM UTC-4, Mr Macaw wrote:
On Sun, 17 Apr 2016 00:09:02 +0100, DerbyDad03 wrote:

On Saturday, April 16, 2016 at 9:41:17 AM UTC-4, Mr Macaw wrote:
On Sat, 16 Apr 2016 04:31:13 +0100, DerbyDad03 wrote:

On Friday, April 15, 2016 at 7:21:12 PM UTC-4, Mr Macaw wrote:
On Thu, 14 Apr 2016 15:51:49 +0100, philo wrote:

On 04/14/2016 08:37 AM, Uncle Monster wrote:
On Thursday, April 14, 2016 at 5:10:01 AM UTC-5, philo wrote:
On 04/13/

For the last 35 years I have never needed to set an alarm clock..

I have a built-in bladder alarm.

I know how much water to drink, to wake up at any specific time..

I sleep two hours at a time before Mr.Bladder wakes me up to get rid of 500cc. My record is 775cc at one time. I pee a lot. ^_^

[8~{} Uncle IP Monster




Holy cow, I don't record the amount.


BTW: When I was 8 years old I could not make it home from school, so I
peed in a sewer. A kid in my class yelled, "I'm gonna tell."

Errr.... a sewer is precisely where your pee goes anyway, so you did good.


Not necessarily.

In many municipalities, any sewer that you could pee into is not the sewer you
should be peeing into.

Then it isn't a sewer. A sewer is for human effluent. If it's a for rainwater, it's not a sewer.


Where exactly do you go to get all of your incorrect information?


Life experience. The rain drains are called just that - storm drains, surfacewater drains, etc, etc. In the UK, there are always two pipes from new houses - one is called the sewage pipe, and comes from sinks, toilets, etc. The other is the surfacewater pipe, and comes from the gutters to take rainwater from the roof. Older houses just had the sewer and put everything into that.


See my other response wherein you asked me to "educate myself".

I am very familiar with the 2 different types of *sewers*, which is why
I said "not necessarily" in the first place.