Gopher Gary: Knock KnockGenesis: I know it's you Gary... you can come in, just don't leave muddy foot prints everywhereGopher Gary: Genesis: Damn it Gary!!!!!
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it is well known that PMS Elle is evil.
I think you'd fit in a 12" or at least a 16" firework mortar
You win this thread because that's most unsettling to even think about.
Quote from: Lucifer on September 02, 2007, 01:59:15 PMthe O-Master does a really, really good impression of a flying snail.Has he posted a pic of himself with Calandale I should not be made aware of?
the O-Master does a really, really good impression of a flying snail.
thank the gods for school, eh?
Quote from: Lucifer on September 03, 2007, 01:49:38 AMthank the gods for school, eh? And Xan is finally starting pre-school tomorrow, that will be fucking weird.
AAARRSE!! the kids are back The holiday time table we have clearly says Monday the 3rd of September, but they must have changed it before they broke up for the summer and not bothered to make sure Adam brought his letter home about it (despite me telling them several times to give the letters to his younger sister who is more reliable they still insist on giving them to the eldest child). We weren't the only ones that didn't know they'd changed it either
OK, was there a horror movie where "Every breath you take" was played during a fantastically creepy the-killer-is-in-the-warehouse type scene, or am I remembering something else and Hollywood still needs to make a movie with such a scene? (Or were there more than one?)
Also, a cover version of the song is used extensively in the film "Cat's Eye."
"Every breath you take"
Wills Point, Texas - Most spiders are solitary creatures. So the discovery of a vast web crawling with millions of spiders that is spreading across several acres of a north Texas park is causing a stir among scientists and park visitors.Sheets of web have encased several oak trees and are thick enough in places to block out the sun in Lake Tawakoni State Park east of Dallas.The gossamer strands, slowly overtaking a lakefront peninsula, emit a fetid odor, perhaps from the dead insects entwined in the silk. The web whines with the sound of countless mosquitoes and flies trapped in its folds.Allen Dean, a spider expert at Texas A&M University, has seen a lot of webs, but even he described this one as "spooky, kind of like Halloween."Dean and other scientists said they had never seen a web of this size outside of the tropics.The web may be a combined effort of social cobweb spiders. But their large communal webs generally take years to build, experts say, and this web was formed in just a few months.Or it could be a striking example of what is known as ballooning, in which lightweight spiders throw out silk filaments to ride the air currents.Mike Quinn, the state biologist who distributed the online photos, said record-breaking rains have caused outbreaks of crickets and caterpillar larvae. Quinn said the rains might have something to do with the web.