12 important questions and answers before considering vaccination
On 04/30/2021 12:37 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote:
On Mon, 26 Apr 2021 02:18:44 +0100, rbowman wrote: On 04/25/2021 12:45 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: The woman I got my first cat (as a kitten) from (apart from the stray before that) told me that the mother teaches them what a litter tray is. Actually I think that one did use it correctly. Her kittens didn't though, so presumably her mother never taught her to pass any information on. I have no idea what the cat that adopted me has for a personal history. I had a bag of litter in the car for traction on ice so figured I would experiment this winter. I poured some in a wash pan and the cat used it. You bought cat litter to use as grit? Definitely. the stores around here sell bags of 'traction sand'. The problem is it's still slightly damp so when you go to use it you find you have a 30 pound frigging sand Popsicle. otoh, you buy a 20 pound bag of cheap cat litter and it's perfectly dry. It's gritty and works quite well. Also, you get more volume per pound than a bag of rock salt and it's more pleasant to scoop out with your hand. Icy roads may not be a problem in your part of the world but the temperatures often hover around 32 here. High 30s in the day to melt the snow, and 20's at night to freeze it to a layer of ice. I switch to studs at the end of November but there often is snow before then when I still have road tires on. I haven't had to use it in years but I'm one of those better to have a MP5 and not need it than need it and not have one types. |
lowbrowwoman, Birdbrain's eternal senile whore!
On Fri, 30 Apr 2021 18:59:30 -0600, lowbrowwoman, the endlessly driveling,
troll-feeding, senile idiot, blabbered again: the stores around here sell bags of 'traction sand'. How about you trying to pull your senile thick head out of the trolling ******'s arsehole, lowbrowwoman? Or is it already grown in? BG |
12 important questions and answers before considering vaccination
On Fri, 30 Apr 2021 18:59:30 -0600, rbowman posted for all of us to digest... On 04/30/2021 12:37 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: On Mon, 26 Apr 2021 02:18:44 +0100, rbowman wrote: On 04/25/2021 12:45 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: The woman I got my first cat (as a kitten) from (apart from the stray before that) told me that the mother teaches them what a litter tray is. Actually I think that one did use it correctly. Her kittens didn't though, so presumably her mother never taught her to pass any information on. I have no idea what the cat that adopted me has for a personal history. I had a bag of litter in the car for traction on ice so figured I would experiment this winter. I poured some in a wash pan and the cat used it. You bought cat litter to use as grit? Definitely. the stores around here sell bags of 'traction sand'. The problem is it's still slightly damp so when you go to use it you find you have a 30 pound frigging sand Popsicle. otoh, you buy a 20 pound bag of cheap cat litter and it's perfectly dry. It's gritty and works quite well. Also, you get more volume per pound than a bag of rock salt and it's more pleasant to scoop out with your hand. Icy roads may not be a problem in your part of the world but the temperatures often hover around 32 here. High 30s in the day to melt the snow, and 20's at night to freeze it to a layer of ice. I switch to studs at the end of November but there often is snow before then when I still have road tires on. I haven't had to use it in years but I'm one of those better to have a MP5 and not need it than need it and not have one types. Can also be used to absorb those pesky fluid leaks. ;) -- Tekkie |
12 important questions and answers before considering vaccination
On Sat, 1 May 2021 15:45:54 -0400, Tekkie© wrote:
On Fri, 30 Apr 2021 18:59:30 -0600, rbowman posted for all of us to digest... On 04/30/2021 12:37 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: On Mon, 26 Apr 2021 02:18:44 +0100, rbowman wrote: On 04/25/2021 12:45 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: The woman I got my first cat (as a kitten) from (apart from the stray before that) told me that the mother teaches them what a litter tray is. Actually I think that one did use it correctly. Her kittens didn't though, so presumably her mother never taught her to pass any information on. I have no idea what the cat that adopted me has for a personal history. I had a bag of litter in the car for traction on ice so figured I would experiment this winter. I poured some in a wash pan and the cat used it. You bought cat litter to use as grit? Definitely. the stores around here sell bags of 'traction sand'. The problem is it's still slightly damp so when you go to use it you find you have a 30 pound frigging sand Popsicle. otoh, you buy a 20 pound bag of cheap cat litter and it's perfectly dry. It's gritty and works quite well. Also, you get more volume per pound than a bag of rock salt and it's more pleasant to scoop out with your hand. Icy roads may not be a problem in your part of the world but the temperatures often hover around 32 here. High 30s in the day to melt the snow, and 20's at night to freeze it to a layer of ice. I switch to studs at the end of November but there often is snow before then when I still have road tires on. I haven't had to use it in years but I'm one of those better to have a MP5 and not need it than need it and not have one types. Can also be used to absorb those pesky fluid leaks. ;) Autograph Eraser for Harleys and british cars |
12 important questions and answers before considering vaccination
On 05/01/2021 01:45 PM, Tekkie� wrote:
On Fri, 30 Apr 2021 18:59:30 -0600, rbowman posted for all of us to digest... On 04/30/2021 12:37 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: On Mon, 26 Apr 2021 02:18:44 +0100, rbowman wrote: On 04/25/2021 12:45 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: The woman I got my first cat (as a kitten) from (apart from the stray before that) told me that the mother teaches them what a litter tray is. Actually I think that one did use it correctly. Her kittens didn't though, so presumably her mother never taught her to pass any information on. I have no idea what the cat that adopted me has for a personal history. I had a bag of litter in the car for traction on ice so figured I would experiment this winter. I poured some in a wash pan and the cat used it. You bought cat litter to use as grit? Definitely. the stores around here sell bags of 'traction sand'. The problem is it's still slightly damp so when you go to use it you find you have a 30 pound frigging sand Popsicle. otoh, you buy a 20 pound bag of cheap cat litter and it's perfectly dry. It's gritty and works quite well. Also, you get more volume per pound than a bag of rock salt and it's more pleasant to scoop out with your hand. Icy roads may not be a problem in your part of the world but the temperatures often hover around 32 here. High 30s in the day to melt the snow, and 20's at night to freeze it to a layer of ice. I switch to studs at the end of November but there often is snow before then when I still have road tires on. I haven't had to use it in years but I'm one of those better to have a MP5 and not need it than need it and not have one types. Can also be used to absorb those pesky fluid leaks. ;) The driveway is gravel so I look at those as dust control. In some ironic twist of fate I have three bikes and the Harley is the only one that doesn't mark its territory. I know where the V-Strom is leaking and will fix it the next time I change the oil but I'll be damned if I can figure out where the DR is bleeding. The early models had a base gasket problem but that doesn't look like the source. |
lowbrowwoman, the Endlessly Driveling Senile Gossip
On Sat, 1 May 2021 21:15:03 -0600, lowbrowwoman, the endlessly driveling,
troll-feeding, senile idiot, blabbered again: The driveway is gravel so I look at those as dust control. In some ironic twist of fate I have three bikes "In some ironic twist of fate"??? ROTFLOL Who taught you talk in such a wordy manner, you endlessly driveling bigmouth? LOL |
12 important questions and answers before considering vaccination
On Sat, 01 May 2021 01:59:30 +0100, rbowman wrote:
On 04/30/2021 12:37 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: On Mon, 26 Apr 2021 02:18:44 +0100, rbowman wrote: On 04/25/2021 12:45 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: The woman I got my first cat (as a kitten) from (apart from the stray before that) told me that the mother teaches them what a litter tray is. Actually I think that one did use it correctly. Her kittens didn't though, so presumably her mother never taught her to pass any information on. I have no idea what the cat that adopted me has for a personal history. I had a bag of litter in the car for traction on ice so figured I would experiment this winter. I poured some in a wash pan and the cat used it. You bought cat litter to use as grit? Definitely. the stores around here sell bags of 'traction sand'. The problem is it's still slightly damp so when you go to use it you find you have a 30 pound frigging sand Popsicle. otoh, you buy a 20 pound bag of cheap cat litter and it's perfectly dry. It's gritty and works quite well. Also, you get more volume per pound than a bag of rock salt and it's more pleasant to scoop out with your hand. Icy roads may not be a problem in your part of the world but the temperatures often hover around 32 here. High 30s in the day to melt the snow, and 20's at night to freeze it to a layer of ice. I switch to studs at the end of November but there often is snow before then when I still have road tires on. I haven't had to use it in years but I'm one of those better to have a MP5 and not need it than need it and not have one types. We do get temperatures down to -5C. So quite a few icy days. But usually there isn't much precipitation to go with it, so just frost. Not that slippery. A couple of years ago there was an inch of snow/ice about. I made a delivery then went to turn round at the end of the road. There was a slope. With a car at the bottom. I was sliding downhill towards it at about 2mph. Braking with ABS, and reversing gently did nothing. So I floored it in reverse and spun the wheels. Surprisingly that gave more thrust than being gentle and I slowly moved backwards up the hill. I got some very angry looks, so I just shouted "don't park there!" I did a similar thing trying to get up a steep hill through a foot of snow. Driving gently enough not to spin the wheels just made me come to a halt, so I put my foot down. Being an automatic this was fun. It rapidly changed through the gears and got the speedo over 100mph, while my ground speed was actually about 4. The speed of the snow coming off the wheels was presumably also over 100. People hid behind things. I made a nice track that other people then followed in a more sociable manner. -- Sent from my iPhone, this spam courtesy of Apple incorporated. |
12 important questions and answers before considering vaccination
On Sat, 01 May 2021 20:45:54 +0100, Tekkie© wrote:
On Fri, 30 Apr 2021 18:59:30 -0600, rbowman posted for all of us to digest... On 04/30/2021 12:37 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: On Mon, 26 Apr 2021 02:18:44 +0100, rbowman wrote: On 04/25/2021 12:45 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: The woman I got my first cat (as a kitten) from (apart from the stray before that) told me that the mother teaches them what a litter tray is. Actually I think that one did use it correctly. Her kittens didn't though, so presumably her mother never taught her to pass any information on. I have no idea what the cat that adopted me has for a personal history. I had a bag of litter in the car for traction on ice so figured I would experiment this winter. I poured some in a wash pan and the cat used it. You bought cat litter to use as grit? Definitely. the stores around here sell bags of 'traction sand'. The problem is it's still slightly damp so when you go to use it you find you have a 30 pound frigging sand Popsicle. otoh, you buy a 20 pound bag of cheap cat litter and it's perfectly dry. It's gritty and works quite well. Also, you get more volume per pound than a bag of rock salt and it's more pleasant to scoop out with your hand. Icy roads may not be a problem in your part of the world but the temperatures often hover around 32 here. High 30s in the day to melt the snow, and 20's at night to freeze it to a layer of ice. I switch to studs at the end of November but there often is snow before then when I still have road tires on. I haven't had to use it in years but I'm one of those better to have a MP5 and not need it than need it and not have one types. Can also be used to absorb those pesky fluid leaks. ;) Do you mean inside or outside the car? -- Sent from my iPhone, this spam courtesy of Apple incorporated. |
12 important questions and answers before considering vaccination
On Sun, 02 May 2021 03:34:40 +0100, Clare Snyder wrote:
On Sat, 1 May 2021 15:45:54 -0400, Tekkie© wrote: On Fri, 30 Apr 2021 18:59:30 -0600, rbowman posted for all of us to digest... On 04/30/2021 12:37 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: On Mon, 26 Apr 2021 02:18:44 +0100, rbowman wrote: On 04/25/2021 12:45 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: The woman I got my first cat (as a kitten) from (apart from the stray before that) told me that the mother teaches them what a litter tray is. Actually I think that one did use it correctly. Her kittens didn't though, so presumably her mother never taught her to pass any information on. I have no idea what the cat that adopted me has for a personal history. I had a bag of litter in the car for traction on ice so figured I would experiment this winter. I poured some in a wash pan and the cat used it. You bought cat litter to use as grit? Definitely. the stores around here sell bags of 'traction sand'. The problem is it's still slightly damp so when you go to use it you find you have a 30 pound frigging sand Popsicle. otoh, you buy a 20 pound bag of cheap cat litter and it's perfectly dry. It's gritty and works quite well. Also, you get more volume per pound than a bag of rock salt and it's more pleasant to scoop out with your hand. Icy roads may not be a problem in your part of the world but the temperatures often hover around 32 here. High 30s in the day to melt the snow, and 20's at night to freeze it to a layer of ice. I switch to studs at the end of November but there often is snow before then when I still have road tires on. I haven't had to use it in years but I'm one of those better to have a MP5 and not need it than need it and not have one types. Can also be used to absorb those pesky fluid leaks. ;) Autograph Eraser for Harleys and british cars Why would anyone want to remove an autograph? -- Sent from my iPhone, this spam courtesy of Apple incorporated. |
12 important questions and answers before considering vaccination
On Sun, 02 May 2021 04:15:03 +0100, rbowman wrote:
On 05/01/2021 01:45 PM, Tekkie� wrote: On Fri, 30 Apr 2021 18:59:30 -0600, rbowman posted for all of us to digest... On 04/30/2021 12:37 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: On Mon, 26 Apr 2021 02:18:44 +0100, rbowman wrote: On 04/25/2021 12:45 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: The woman I got my first cat (as a kitten) from (apart from the stray before that) told me that the mother teaches them what a litter tray is. Actually I think that one did use it correctly. Her kittens didn't though, so presumably her mother never taught her to pass any information on. I have no idea what the cat that adopted me has for a personal history. I had a bag of litter in the car for traction on ice so figured I would experiment this winter. I poured some in a wash pan and the cat used it. You bought cat litter to use as grit? Definitely. the stores around here sell bags of 'traction sand'. The problem is it's still slightly damp so when you go to use it you find you have a 30 pound frigging sand Popsicle. otoh, you buy a 20 pound bag of cheap cat litter and it's perfectly dry. It's gritty and works quite well. Also, you get more volume per pound than a bag of rock salt and it's more pleasant to scoop out with your hand. Icy roads may not be a problem in your part of the world but the temperatures often hover around 32 here. High 30s in the day to melt the snow, and 20's at night to freeze it to a layer of ice. I switch to studs at the end of November but there often is snow before then when I still have road tires on. I haven't had to use it in years but I'm one of those better to have a MP5 and not need it than need it and not have one types. Can also be used to absorb those pesky fluid leaks. ;) The driveway is gravel so I look at those as dust control. In some ironic twist of fate I have three bikes and the Harley is the only one that doesn't mark its territory. I know where the V-Strom is leaking and will fix it the next time I change the oil but I'll be damned if I can figure out where the DR is bleeding. The early models had a base gasket problem but that doesn't look like the source. I don't understand people using gravel, it gets everywhere. My neighbour even removed theirs and replaced it with more gravel! I have monoblock, but tarmac is just as good, in fact probably better for stopping weeds. -- Sent from my iPhone, this spam courtesy of Apple incorporated. |
12 important questions and answers before considering vaccination
"Commander Kinsey" wrote in message ... On Sun, 02 May 2021 03:34:40 +0100, Clare Snyder wrote: On Sat, 1 May 2021 15:45:54 -0400, Tekkie© wrote: On Fri, 30 Apr 2021 18:59:30 -0600, rbowman posted for all of us to digest... On 04/30/2021 12:37 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: On Mon, 26 Apr 2021 02:18:44 +0100, rbowman wrote: On 04/25/2021 12:45 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: The woman I got my first cat (as a kitten) from (apart from the stray before that) told me that the mother teaches them what a litter tray is. Actually I think that one did use it correctly. Her kittens didn't though, so presumably her mother never taught her to pass any information on. I have no idea what the cat that adopted me has for a personal history. I had a bag of litter in the car for traction on ice so figured I would experiment this winter. I poured some in a wash pan and the cat used it. You bought cat litter to use as grit? Definitely. the stores around here sell bags of 'traction sand'. The problem is it's still slightly damp so when you go to use it you find you have a 30 pound frigging sand Popsicle. otoh, you buy a 20 pound bag of cheap cat litter and it's perfectly dry. It's gritty and works quite well. Also, you get more volume per pound than a bag of rock salt and it's more pleasant to scoop out with your hand. Icy roads may not be a problem in your part of the world but the temperatures often hover around 32 here. High 30s in the day to melt the snow, and 20's at night to freeze it to a layer of ice. I switch to studs at the end of November but there often is snow before then when I still have road tires on. I haven't had to use it in years but I'm one of those better to have a MP5 and not need it than need it and not have one types. Can also be used to absorb those pesky fluid leaks. ;) Autograph Eraser for Harleys and british cars Why would anyone want to remove an autograph? He is talking about the oil leak autograph they leave on your driveway. |
12 important questions and answers before considering vaccination
"Commander Kinsey" wrote in message ... On Sun, 02 May 2021 04:15:03 +0100, rbowman wrote: On 05/01/2021 01:45 PM, Tekkie� wrote: On Fri, 30 Apr 2021 18:59:30 -0600, rbowman posted for all of us to digest... On 04/30/2021 12:37 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: On Mon, 26 Apr 2021 02:18:44 +0100, rbowman wrote: On 04/25/2021 12:45 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: The woman I got my first cat (as a kitten) from (apart from the stray before that) told me that the mother teaches them what a litter tray is. Actually I think that one did use it correctly. Her kittens didn't though, so presumably her mother never taught her to pass any information on. I have no idea what the cat that adopted me has for a personal history. I had a bag of litter in the car for traction on ice so figured I would experiment this winter. I poured some in a wash pan and the cat used it. You bought cat litter to use as grit? Definitely. the stores around here sell bags of 'traction sand'. The problem is it's still slightly damp so when you go to use it you find you have a 30 pound frigging sand Popsicle. otoh, you buy a 20 pound bag of cheap cat litter and it's perfectly dry. It's gritty and works quite well. Also, you get more volume per pound than a bag of rock salt and it's more pleasant to scoop out with your hand. Icy roads may not be a problem in your part of the world but the temperatures often hover around 32 here. High 30s in the day to melt the snow, and 20's at night to freeze it to a layer of ice. I switch to studs at the end of November but there often is snow before then when I still have road tires on. I haven't had to use it in years but I'm one of those better to have a MP5 and not need it than need it and not have one types. Can also be used to absorb those pesky fluid leaks. ;) The driveway is gravel so I look at those as dust control. In some ironic twist of fate I have three bikes and the Harley is the only one that doesn't mark its territory. I know where the V-Strom is leaking and will fix it the next time I change the oil but I'll be damned if I can figure out where the DR is bleeding. The early models had a base gasket problem but that doesn't look like the source. I don't understand people using gravel, it gets everywhere. My neighbour even removed theirs and replaced it with more gravel! Its cheap. I have monoblock, but tarmac is just as good, Looks much worse. in fact probably better for stopping weeds. If done properly, yep. Concrete is much better. |
The Two Inseparable Trolling Sociopathic Cretins together again!
On Wed, 5 May 2021 04:39:12 +1000, cantankerous trolling geezer Rodent
Speed, the auto-contradicting senile sociopath, blabbered, again: FLUSH the two subnormal sociopathic cretins' endless absolutely idiotic blather -- Another typical retarded conversation between our two village idiots, Birdbrain and Rodent Speed: Birdbrain: "You beat me to it. Plain sex is boring." Senile Rodent: "Then **** the cats. That wont be boring." Birdbrain: "Sell me a de-clawing tool first." Senile Rodent: "Wont help with the teeth." Birdbrain: "They've never gone for me with their mouths." Rodent Speed: "They will if you are stupid enough to try ****ing them." Birdbrain: "No, they always use claws." Rodent Speed: "They wont if you try ****ing them. Try it and see." Message-ID: |
The Two Inseparable Trolling Sociopathic Cretins together again!
On Wed, 5 May 2021 04:41:36 +1000, cantankerous trolling geezer Rodent
Speed, the auto-contradicting senile sociopath, blabbered, again: FLUSH the two subnormal sociopathic cretins' endless absolutely idiotic blather -- Another typical retarded "conversation" between the two resident idiots: Birdbrain: "But imagine how cool it was to own slaves." Senile Rodent: "Yeah, right. Feed them, clothe them, and fix them when they're broken. After all, you paid good money for them. Then you've got to keep an eye on them all the time." Birdbrain: "Better than having to give them wages on top of that." Senile Rodent: "Specially when they make more slaves for you and produce their own food and clothes." MID: |
12 important questions and answers before considering vaccination
On 05/04/2021 11:49 AM, Commander Kinsey wrote:
I did a similar thing trying to get up a steep hill through a foot of snow. Driving gently enough not to spin the wheels just made me come to a halt, so I put my foot down. Being an automatic this was fun. It rapidly changed through the gears and got the speedo over 100mph, while my ground speed was actually about 4. The speed of the snow coming off the wheels was presumably also over 100. People hid behind things. I made a nice track that other people then followed in a more sociable manner. My previous Toyota had traction control you could not turn off. Normally it worked fine but there was no way to rock the car if it was stuck. My current Toyota of the same model allows you to turn off the traction control. The owner's manual even mentions rocking the car. You can also turn off the stability control. That wasn't any fun if you wanted to get loose on a dirt road. |
12 important questions and answers before considering vaccination
On 05/04/2021 11:51 AM, Commander Kinsey wrote:
I don't understand people using gravel, it gets everywhere. My neighbour even removed theirs and replaced it with more gravel! I have monoblock, but tarmac is just as good, in fact probably better for stopping weeds. It absorbs spills better, is a lot cheaper, and is virtually maintenance free, at least here where the topsoil could pass for gravel. The driveway where I grew up had the capacity of eating infinite quantities of gravel. It just sank in and disappeared in a couple of years. |
lowbrowwoman, Birdbrain's eternal senile whore!
On Tue, 4 May 2021 19:44:45 -0600, lowbrowwoman, the endlessly driveling,
troll-feeding, senile idiot, blabbered again: It absorbs spills better, is a lot cheaper, and is virtually maintenance free, at least here where the topsoil could pass for gravel. The driveway where I grew up had the capacity of eating infinite quantities of gravel. It just sank in and disappeared in a couple of years. Just like the unwashed ******'s cock disappeared in your senile gob, you subnormal devoted troll's whore. |
lowbrowwoman, Birdbrain's eternal senile whore!
On Tue, 4 May 2021 19:40:31 -0600, lowbrowwoman, the endlessly driveling,
troll-feeding, senile idiot, blabbered again: My previous Toyota had traction control YOU need to get your cocksucking senile mouth under control, lowbrowwoman! |
12 important questions and answers before considering vaccination
On Tue, 4 May 2021 19:44:45 -0600, rbowman wrote:
On 05/04/2021 11:51 AM, Commander Kinsey wrote: I don't understand people using gravel, it gets everywhere. My neighbour even removed theirs and replaced it with more gravel! I have monoblock, but tarmac is just as good, in fact probably better for stopping weeds. It absorbs spills better, is a lot cheaper, and is virtually maintenance free, at least here where the topsoil could pass for gravel. The driveway where I grew up had the capacity of eating infinite quantities of gravel. It just sank in and disappeared in a couple of years. We have been dumping and spreading 10 yard loads of gravel on a parking lot here every 4 or 5 years for the last 50 years. It just seems to disappear. That is a pretty solid chunk of ground tho. |
12 important questions and answers before considering vaccination
|
12 important questions and answers before considering vaccination
"Ralph Mowery" wrote in message In article says... We have been dumping and spreading 10 yard loads of gravel on a parking lot here every 4 or 5 years for the last 50 years. It just seems to disappear. That is a pretty solid chunk of ground tho. I don't know much about the gravel lots and drive ways. I do see on youtube where there is a device pulled behind a tractor that digs a few inches into the gravel and then levels it up. Sort of like a bunch of shallow plows .Will that work or not to renew the gravel the ground seems to eat ? Crushed limestone works pretty good. |
12 important questions and answers before considering vaccination
On Tue, 4 May 2021 19:44:45 -0600, rbowman posted for all of us to digest... On 05/04/2021 11:51 AM, Commander Kinsey wrote: I don't understand people using gravel, it gets everywhere. My neighbour even removed theirs and replaced it with more gravel! I have monoblock, but tarmac is just as good, in fact probably better for stopping weeds. It absorbs spills better, is a lot cheaper, and is virtually maintenance free, at least here where the topsoil could pass for gravel. The driveway where I grew up had the capacity of eating infinite quantities of gravel. It just sank in and disappeared in a couple of years. Like mine! Where do it go? I guess the clay eats the gravel. ;-) -- Tekkie |
12 important questions and answers before considering vaccination
On 05/05/2021 02:01 PM, Tekkie� wrote:
On Tue, 4 May 2021 19:44:45 -0600, rbowman posted for all of us to digest... On 05/04/2021 11:51 AM, Commander Kinsey wrote: I don't understand people using gravel, it gets everywhere. My neighbour even removed theirs and replaced it with more gravel! I have monoblock, but tarmac is just as good, in fact probably better for stopping weeds. It absorbs spills better, is a lot cheaper, and is virtually maintenance free, at least here where the topsoil could pass for gravel. The driveway where I grew up had the capacity of eating infinite quantities of gravel. It just sank in and disappeared in a couple of years. Like mine! Where do it go? I guess the clay eats the gravel. ;-) It gave me some quality time with a wheelbarrow and a shovel that came in handy in later life. |
lowbrowwoman, the Endlessly Driveling Senile Gossip
On Wed, 5 May 2021 22:26:57 -0600, lowbrowwoman, the endlessly driveling,
troll-feeding, senile idiot, blabbered again: It gave me some quality time with a wheelbarrow and a shovel that came in handy in later life. Tell us ALL about your quality time, senile gossip! |
12 important questions and answers before considering vaccination
On Wed, 5 May 2021 14:04:29 -0400, "Phil Kangas"
wrote: Crushed limestone works pretty good. Yup. My farm had a 1/4 mile gravel driveway, portions of which would get washed out each year. Finally someone suggested I use "crusher mix" instead of gravel. Five years later, only one steep section had washed out (I then paved that section). -dan z- -- Protect your civil rights! Let the politicians know how you feel. Join or donate to the NRA today! http://membership.nrahq.org/default....ignid=XR014887 (use cut and paste to your browser if necessary) Gun control is like trying to reduce drunk driving by making it tougher for sober people to own cars. |
12 important questions and answers before considering vaccination
On Thu, 29 Apr 2021 22:27:16 +0100, Rod Speed wrote:
"Commander Kinsey" wrote in message ... On Sun, 25 Apr 2021 21:39:11 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Commander Kinsey" wrote in message ... On Thu, 22 Apr 2021 20:30:36 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Commander Kinsey" wrote in message ... Did you train them? Nope, they appeared to just decide that they preferred to **** and **** there than in the rest of the house. It doesnt work like that with puppys, you do have to train them not to **** and **** in the house. You dont with cats. The woman I got my first cat (as a kitten) from (apart from the stray before that) told me that the mother teaches them what a litter tray is. She's right, but that doesnt happen with dogs. Actually I think that one did use it correctly. Her kittens didn't though, so presumably her mother never taught her to pass any information on. That isnt taught, its instinctive. Then explain why most of mine didn't have the instinct. Easy, thats in their genes. Any instinct has to be. You see that with how good a parent they are with any species. Well the mother did but the kids didn't, I guess the father's genes sucked. I don't know who the father is. -- Sent from my iPhone, this spam courtesy of Apple incorporated. |
12 important questions and answers before considering vaccination
On Fri, 30 Apr 2021 20:52:01 +0100, Rod Speed wrote:
"Commander Kinsey" wrote in message ... On Mon, 26 Apr 2021 02:18:44 +0100, rbowman wrote: On 04/25/2021 12:45 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: The woman I got my first cat (as a kitten) from (apart from the stray before that) told me that the mother teaches them what a litter tray is. Actually I think that one did use it correctly. Her kittens didn't though, so presumably her mother never taught her to pass any information on. I have no idea what the cat that adopted me has for a personal history. I had a bag of litter in the car for traction on ice so figured I would experiment this winter. I poured some in a wash pan and the cat used it. You bought cat litter to use as grit? The cat is mostly an outdoor cat and really prefers going outside but when it's 10 degrees F a litter box doesn't look all that bad. I wonder if anyone has has their **** instantly freeze and got stuck to the ground? Nope, doesn't happen. And you'd easily be able to break the ice column if it did anyway. You wouldn't think your tongue would freeze to a lamppost, considering all the warm blood pumping through it, but it seems to. You could try shimmying up a lamppost naked then intentionally wet yourself. -- Sent from my iPhone, this spam courtesy of Apple incorporated. |
12 important questions and answers before considering vaccination
"Commander Kinsey" wrote in message ... On Fri, 30 Apr 2021 20:52:01 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Commander Kinsey" wrote in message ... On Mon, 26 Apr 2021 02:18:44 +0100, rbowman wrote: On 04/25/2021 12:45 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: The woman I got my first cat (as a kitten) from (apart from the stray before that) told me that the mother teaches them what a litter tray is. Actually I think that one did use it correctly. Her kittens didn't though, so presumably her mother never taught her to pass any information on. I have no idea what the cat that adopted me has for a personal history. I had a bag of litter in the car for traction on ice so figured I would experiment this winter. I poured some in a wash pan and the cat used it. You bought cat litter to use as grit? The cat is mostly an outdoor cat and really prefers going outside but when it's 10 degrees F a litter box doesn't look all that bad. I wonder if anyone has has their **** instantly freeze and got stuck to the ground? Nope, doesn't happen. And you'd easily be able to break the ice column if it did anyway. You wouldn't think your tongue would freeze to a lamppost, considering all the warm blood pumping through it, I would, because that's nothing like what the lamppost conducts away. but it seems to. Yes it does. You could try shimmying up a lamppost naked then intentionally wet yourself. I'll leave that to you. |
The Two Inseparable Trolling Resident Sociopaths together again
On Sat, 8 May 2021 04:41:44 +1000, cantankerous trolling geezer Rodent
Speed, the auto-contradicting senile sociopath, blabbered, again: FLUSH the two subnormal sociopathic cretins' endless absolutely idiotic blather -- TYPICAL retarded "conversation" between sociopath Rodent and sociopath Birdbrain from August 26th 2018: Birdbrain: "I have one head but 5 fingers." Senile Rodent: "Obvious lie. You hairy legged cross dressers are so inbred that you all have two heads." Birdbrain: "You're the one that likes hairy legs remember?" Senile Rodent: "The problem isnt the hairy legs, it's the gross inbreeding that produces two headed unemployables like you." Birdbrain: "So why did you mention hairy legs?" Senile Rodent: "Because that's what those who arent actually stupid enough to shave their legs have." Birdbrain: "You only have hairy legs if both of the following are true: 1) You're quite far back on the evolutionary scale. 2) You haven't learned what a razor is for." Senile Rodent: "Only a terminal ****wit or a woman shaves their legs." Birdbrain: "There is literally zero point in having hair all over your body." Senile Rodent: "There is even less point in wasting your time changing what you are born with." MID: |
12 important questions and answers before considering vaccination
On Wed, 5 May 2021 22:26:57 -0600, rbowman posted for all of us to digest... On 05/05/2021 02:01 PM, Tekkie? wrote: On Tue, 4 May 2021 19:44:45 -0600, rbowman posted for all of us to digest... On 05/04/2021 11:51 AM, Commander Kinsey wrote: I don't understand people using gravel, it gets everywhere. My neighbour even removed theirs and replaced it with more gravel! I have monoblock, but tarmac is just as good, in fact probably better for stopping weeds. It absorbs spills better, is a lot cheaper, and is virtually maintenance free, at least here where the topsoil could pass for gravel. The driveway where I grew up had the capacity of eating infinite quantities of gravel. It just sank in and disappeared in a couple of years. Like mine! Where do it go? I guess the clay eats the gravel. ;-) It gave me some quality time with a wheelbarrow and a shovel that came in handy in later life. If you want quality time like that come see me. It will give you quite an education. -- Tekkie |
12 important questions and answers before considering vaccination
On 05/07/2021 03:09 PM, Tekkie� wrote:
On Wed, 5 May 2021 22:26:57 -0600, rbowman posted for all of us to digest... On 05/05/2021 02:01 PM, Tekkie? wrote: On Tue, 4 May 2021 19:44:45 -0600, rbowman posted for all of us to digest... On 05/04/2021 11:51 AM, Commander Kinsey wrote: I don't understand people using gravel, it gets everywhere. My neighbour even removed theirs and replaced it with more gravel! I have monoblock, but tarmac is just as good, in fact probably better for stopping weeds. It absorbs spills better, is a lot cheaper, and is virtually maintenance free, at least here where the topsoil could pass for gravel. The driveway where I grew up had the capacity of eating infinite quantities of gravel. It just sank in and disappeared in a couple of years. Like mine! Where do it go? I guess the clay eats the gravel. ;-) It gave me some quality time with a wheelbarrow and a shovel that came in handy in later life. If you want quality time like that come see me. It will give you quite an education. I'm hoping I've had all that sort of education I need in this lifetime. I worked one job putting in a leach field. I won't go into the builder's ethics but the 'leach field' was basically a swamp and too soft to drive a dump truck on so all the gravel was moved with a wheelbarrow on 12" planks. I'd drive to work mornings with the heels of my hands on the wheel because my fingers wouldn't work. Much later it was the same deal except it was an irrigation diversion dam down in a creek bottom. Going down the hill without losing the load was fun, then you had to push the barrow back up the hill and do it all again. I still visit the site to remember the good times. To be honest I did enjoy it and like seeing the stuff I did thirty years ago still around and working. It gives you a feeling you've done something worthwhile. |
lowbrowwoman, the Endlessly Driveling Senile Gossip
On Fri, 7 May 2021 20:18:03 -0600, lowbrowwoman, the endlessly driveling,
troll-feeding, senile idiot, blabbered again: I'm hoping I've had all that sort of education I need in this lifetime. Yeah, but WHO taught you to drivel, blather and gossip so much, the way you keep doing, lowbrowwoman? Or is it genetic with you? |
12 important questions and answers before considering vaccination
On Wed, 05 May 2021 02:40:31 +0100, rbowman wrote:
On 05/04/2021 11:49 AM, Commander Kinsey wrote: I did a similar thing trying to get up a steep hill through a foot of snow. Driving gently enough not to spin the wheels just made me come to a halt, so I put my foot down. Being an automatic this was fun. It rapidly changed through the gears and got the speedo over 100mph, while my ground speed was actually about 4. The speed of the snow coming off the wheels was presumably also over 100. People hid behind things. I made a nice track that other people then followed in a more sociable manner. My previous Toyota had traction control you could not turn off. Normally it worked fine but there was no way to rock the car if it was stuck. My current Toyota of the same model allows you to turn off the traction control. The owner's manual even mentions rocking the car. You can also turn off the stability control. That wasn't any fun if you wanted to get loose on a dirt road. I had a Honda 4x4 with automatic 4 wheel drive. Stupidest thing ever. It took about half to one second to engage the rear wheels, by which time the front ones were well and truly stuck. Mind you, since it had no diff locks, you could still get almost all the power going to the wheel that was in mud. I couldn't beleive it when I got stuck in a field and only one wheel rotated. -- Sent from my iPhone, this spam courtesy of Apple incorporated. |
12 important questions and answers before considering vaccination
On Fri, 7 May 2021 20:18:03 -0600, rbowman posted for all of us to digest... On 05/07/2021 03:09 PM, Tekkie? wrote: On Wed, 5 May 2021 22:26:57 -0600, rbowman posted for all of us to digest... On 05/05/2021 02:01 PM, Tekkie? wrote: On Tue, 4 May 2021 19:44:45 -0600, rbowman posted for all of us to digest... On 05/04/2021 11:51 AM, Commander Kinsey wrote: I don't understand people using gravel, it gets everywhere. My neighbour even removed theirs and replaced it with more gravel! I have monoblock, but tarmac is just as good, in fact probably better for stopping weeds. It absorbs spills better, is a lot cheaper, and is virtually maintenance free, at least here where the topsoil could pass for gravel. The driveway where I grew up had the capacity of eating infinite quantities of gravel. It just sank in and disappeared in a couple of years. Like mine! Where do it go? I guess the clay eats the gravel. ;-) It gave me some quality time with a wheelbarrow and a shovel that came in handy in later life. If you want quality time like that come see me. It will give you quite an education. I'm hoping I've had all that sort of education I need in this lifetime. I worked one job putting in a leach field. I won't go into the builder's ethics but the 'leach field' was basically a swamp and too soft to drive a dump truck on so all the gravel was moved with a wheelbarrow on 12" planks. I'd drive to work mornings with the heels of my hands on the wheel because my fingers wouldn't work. Much later it was the same deal except it was an irrigation diversion dam down in a creek bottom. Going down the hill without losing the load was fun, then you had to push the barrow back up the hill and do it all again. I still visit the site to remember the good times. To be honest I did enjoy it and like seeing the stuff I did thirty years ago still around and working. It gives you a feeling you've done something worthwhile. Yup, building some thing is a real feeling of accomplishment. Other jobs the feelings were murky. -- Tekkie |
12 important questions and answers before considering vaccination
On 05/08/2021 11:59 AM, Commander Kinsey wrote:
Mind you, since it had no diff locks, you could still get almost all the power going to the wheel that was in mud. I couldn't beleive it when I got stuck in a field and only one wheel rotated. Dual drive axle trucks usually have limited slip between the axles but not side to side. I managed to get both left side drivers off the ground and was completely screwed and required a wrecker for extraction. |
lowbrowwoman, Birdbrain's eternal senile whore!
On Sat, 8 May 2021 14:44:21 -0600, lowbrowwoman, the endlessly driveling,
troll-feeding, senile idiot, blabbered again: Dual drive axle trucks usually have limited slip between the axles but not side to side. I managed to get both left side drivers off the ground and was completely screwed and required a wrecker for extraction. You STILL haven't managed to wean your senile gob away from the unwashed trolling ******'s cock, lowbrowwoman! |
12 important questions and answers before considering vaccination
On Tue, 04 May 2021 19:39:12 +0100, Rod Speed wrote:
"Commander Kinsey" wrote in message ... On Sun, 02 May 2021 03:34:40 +0100, Clare Snyder wrote: On Sat, 1 May 2021 15:45:54 -0400, Tekkie© wrote: On Fri, 30 Apr 2021 18:59:30 -0600, rbowman posted for all of us to digest... On 04/30/2021 12:37 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: On Mon, 26 Apr 2021 02:18:44 +0100, rbowman wrote: On 04/25/2021 12:45 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: The woman I got my first cat (as a kitten) from (apart from the stray before that) told me that the mother teaches them what a litter tray is. Actually I think that one did use it correctly. Her kittens didn't though, so presumably her mother never taught her to pass any information on. I have no idea what the cat that adopted me has for a personal history. I had a bag of litter in the car for traction on ice so figured I would experiment this winter. I poured some in a wash pan and the cat used it. You bought cat litter to use as grit? Definitely. the stores around here sell bags of 'traction sand'. The problem is it's still slightly damp so when you go to use it you find you have a 30 pound frigging sand Popsicle. otoh, you buy a 20 pound bag of cheap cat litter and it's perfectly dry. It's gritty and works quite well. Also, you get more volume per pound than a bag of rock salt and it's more pleasant to scoop out with your hand. Icy roads may not be a problem in your part of the world but the temperatures often hover around 32 here. High 30s in the day to melt the snow, and 20's at night to freeze it to a layer of ice. I switch to studs at the end of November but there often is snow before then when I still have road tires on. I haven't had to use it in years but I'm one of those better to have a MP5 and not need it than need it and not have one types. Can also be used to absorb those pesky fluid leaks. ;) Autograph Eraser for Harleys and british cars Why would anyone want to remove an autograph? He is talking about the oil leak autograph they leave on your driveway.. An Autograph Eraser is actually a thing. For footballs etc. Worship a different team? -- Sent from my iPhone, this spam courtesy of Apple incorporated. |
12 important questions and answers before considering vaccination
On Tue, 04 May 2021 19:41:36 +0100, Rod Speed wrote:
"Commander Kinsey" wrote in message ... On Sun, 02 May 2021 04:15:03 +0100, rbowman wrote: On 05/01/2021 01:45 PM, Tekkie� wrote: On Fri, 30 Apr 2021 18:59:30 -0600, rbowman posted for all of us to digest... On 04/30/2021 12:37 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: On Mon, 26 Apr 2021 02:18:44 +0100, rbowman wrote: On 04/25/2021 12:45 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: The woman I got my first cat (as a kitten) from (apart from the stray before that) told me that the mother teaches them what a litter tray is. Actually I think that one did use it correctly. Her kittens didn't though, so presumably her mother never taught her to pass any information on. I have no idea what the cat that adopted me has for a personal history. I had a bag of litter in the car for traction on ice so figured I would experiment this winter. I poured some in a wash pan and the cat used it. You bought cat litter to use as grit? Definitely. the stores around here sell bags of 'traction sand'. The problem is it's still slightly damp so when you go to use it you find you have a 30 pound frigging sand Popsicle. otoh, you buy a 20 pound bag of cheap cat litter and it's perfectly dry. It's gritty and works quite well. Also, you get more volume per pound than a bag of rock salt and it's more pleasant to scoop out with your hand. Icy roads may not be a problem in your part of the world but the temperatures often hover around 32 here. High 30s in the day to melt the snow, and 20's at night to freeze it to a layer of ice. I switch to studs at the end of November but there often is snow before then when I still have road tires on. I haven't had to use it in years but I'm one of those better to have a MP5 and not need it than need it and not have one types. Can also be used to absorb those pesky fluid leaks. ;) The driveway is gravel so I look at those as dust control. In some ironic twist of fate I have three bikes and the Harley is the only one that doesn't mark its territory. I know where the V-Strom is leaking and will fix it the next time I change the oil but I'll be damned if I can figure out where the DR is bleeding. The early models had a base gasket problem but that doesn't look like the source. I don't understand people using gravel, it gets everywhere. My neighbour even removed theirs and replaced it with more gravel! Its cheap. My neighbour has plenty money. They got it because they wanted it! She also replaced a very nice wood ceiling on her landing with tacky white PVC. When I queried it, she said "it's the fashion, wood is out of date". They walk among us.... I have monoblock, but tarmac is just as good, Looks much worse. Looks nice when it's in good condition. in fact probably better for stopping weeds. If done properly, yep. Concrete is much better. Grey looks awful. Jet black is nicer. I wonder if you can get coloured concrete? -- Sent from my iPhone, this spam courtesy of Apple incorporated. |
12 important questions and answers before considering vaccination
"Commander Kinsey" wrote in message ... On Tue, 04 May 2021 19:39:12 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Commander Kinsey" wrote in message ... On Sun, 02 May 2021 03:34:40 +0100, Clare Snyder wrote: On Sat, 1 May 2021 15:45:54 -0400, Tekkie© wrote: On Fri, 30 Apr 2021 18:59:30 -0600, rbowman posted for all of us to digest... On 04/30/2021 12:37 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: On Mon, 26 Apr 2021 02:18:44 +0100, rbowman wrote: On 04/25/2021 12:45 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: The woman I got my first cat (as a kitten) from (apart from the stray before that) told me that the mother teaches them what a litter tray is. Actually I think that one did use it correctly. Her kittens didn't though, so presumably her mother never taught her to pass any information on. I have no idea what the cat that adopted me has for a personal history. I had a bag of litter in the car for traction on ice so figured I would experiment this winter. I poured some in a wash pan and the cat used it. You bought cat litter to use as grit? Definitely. the stores around here sell bags of 'traction sand'. The problem is it's still slightly damp so when you go to use it you find you have a 30 pound frigging sand Popsicle. otoh, you buy a 20 pound bag of cheap cat litter and it's perfectly dry. It's gritty and works quite well. Also, you get more volume per pound than a bag of rock salt and it's more pleasant to scoop out with your hand. Icy roads may not be a problem in your part of the world but the temperatures often hover around 32 here. High 30s in the day to melt the snow, and 20's at night to freeze it to a layer of ice. I switch to studs at the end of November but there often is snow before then when I still have road tires on. I haven't had to use it in years but I'm one of those better to have a MP5 and not need it than need it and not have one types. Can also be used to absorb those pesky fluid leaks. ;) Autograph Eraser for Harleys and british cars Why would anyone want to remove an autograph? He is talking about the oil leak autograph they leave on your driveway. An Autograph Eraser is actually a thing. For footballs etc. Worship a different team? Sure but that wasn't how he was using the term. |
12 important questions and answers before considering vaccination
"Commander Kinsey" wrote in message ... On Tue, 04 May 2021 19:41:36 +0100, Rod Speed wrote: "Commander Kinsey" wrote in message ... On Sun, 02 May 2021 04:15:03 +0100, rbowman wrote: On 05/01/2021 01:45 PM, Tekkie� wrote: On Fri, 30 Apr 2021 18:59:30 -0600, rbowman posted for all of us to digest... On 04/30/2021 12:37 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: On Mon, 26 Apr 2021 02:18:44 +0100, rbowman wrote: On 04/25/2021 12:45 PM, Commander Kinsey wrote: The woman I got my first cat (as a kitten) from (apart from the stray before that) told me that the mother teaches them what a litter tray is. Actually I think that one did use it correctly. Her kittens didn't though, so presumably her mother never taught her to pass any information on. I have no idea what the cat that adopted me has for a personal history. I had a bag of litter in the car for traction on ice so figured I would experiment this winter. I poured some in a wash pan and the cat used it. You bought cat litter to use as grit? Definitely. the stores around here sell bags of 'traction sand'. The problem is it's still slightly damp so when you go to use it you find you have a 30 pound frigging sand Popsicle. otoh, you buy a 20 pound bag of cheap cat litter and it's perfectly dry. It's gritty and works quite well. Also, you get more volume per pound than a bag of rock salt and it's more pleasant to scoop out with your hand. Icy roads may not be a problem in your part of the world but the temperatures often hover around 32 here. High 30s in the day to melt the snow, and 20's at night to freeze it to a layer of ice. I switch to studs at the end of November but there often is snow before then when I still have road tires on. I haven't had to use it in years but I'm one of those better to have a MP5 and not need it than need it and not have one types. Can also be used to absorb those pesky fluid leaks. ;) The driveway is gravel so I look at those as dust control. In some ironic twist of fate I have three bikes and the Harley is the only one that doesn't mark its territory. I know where the V-Strom is leaking and will fix it the next time I change the oil but I'll be damned if I can figure out where the DR is bleeding. The early models had a base gasket problem but that doesn't look like the source. I don't understand people using gravel, it gets everywhere. My neighbour even removed theirs and replaced it with more gravel! Its cheap. My neighbour has plenty money. They got it because they wanted it! Yeah, some prefer it. Those fancy great houses in the country your toffs had almost always had gravel driveways, immense things. She also replaced a very nice wood ceiling on her landing with tacky white PVC. When I queried it, she said "it's the fashion, wood is out of date". They walk among us.... They mostly swan around in Chelsea tractors. I have monoblock, but tarmac is just as good, Looks much worse. Looks nice when it's in good condition. Yep. in fact probably better for stopping weeds. If done properly, yep. Concrete is much better. Grey looks awful. Jet black is nicer. That shows the dirt. I wonder if you can get coloured concrete? Yes you can. |
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