Please note. If Cabinet Sauvignon is not on your medical plan, Vodka, or Tequila, may be a more powerful solution, and a sutable substitute.
(To a chemist, alcohol IS a solution)
I am ambidextrous. I have to buy two of eveything!!!
I find it very weird, that when I was born, at least one American civil war veteran was still alive. Nice photo's, thanks.
I think this may be the flight I was listening to on shortwave. If anyone does know what was going on, please let me know.
There was a lot more talk between the a/c and ground control that I have ever heard before.
Cheers
A
I have had both eyes done, (one at a time) both set for "reading distance"
I find it strange to use glasses for distant viewing, but that is only for high detail/driving. I can manage without, but my distant viewing is slightly below the legal requirement. (but then, I live on a small island, with no permanent police presence!!)
One warning. I have very sensitive eyes. The op is done under local anesthetic, and you will probably have to stare into a really bright light. Mention this before the procedure is booked. I could not do this, and had to go back and have it under general.
I am so glad I have had it done!!! Do not worry.
Those aircraft look fantastic. They must be replicas, (nothing wrong with that!)
Who builds them?
I went to the Shuttleworth collection, many years ago, they had some fantastic originals.
(I traveled the 50 odd miles or so in an Isetta Bubble car. Some very nice Americans were amazed that I was driving such a thing on the public highways!)
repleo wrote:
And now these weapons are in the hands of two madmen who believe they are invulnerable and infallible !!!!
"Mirror mirror, on the wall, who is the maddest of them all?"
I don't really need an answer, thanks.
It is OK, the mighty trump says that Global Warming is not real.
So.
The wet, draughty thing is not really there.
(My thoughts are with all those affected, it is regularly windy where I live, so I do have an idea of what it is like.)
I laughed!!
Perhaps it's because I'm a bit weird.
Pics, or it didn't happen!!
The British inscription "A soldier of the great war, known unto god," on the WW1 headstones of unidentfied soldiers; was written by Rudyard Kipling.
Well, he wasn't lying, was he!
(But, he was being a lawyer. How much did he charge the person he was trying to rent the house from, for that discusion??)