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Posts
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Everything posted by trophyshy
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You're on fire tonight. nor would I piss on you if you were. sorry that was harsh, I probably would.
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You're on fire tonight. nor would I piss on you if you were.
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erm, don't most dogs walk? When you take them out for walk, for instance?
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I for one welcome Kevolution, although I wouldn't welcome Eto'o, I don't trust anyone with an apostrophe in their name.
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And in Genoa, it is the custom to stand with one foot in a bucket, pin a live frog to one's shoulder braid, and go 'Bibble' at passers-by.
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23 hours 46 minutes. 14 minutes in the back pocket. Its a canny challenge like. Strarted up Snowdon at 2 am yesterday in the pitch dark, was already shagged from the other two and zero sleep. I just had 12 hours sleep and now my legs essentially feel like concrete.
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Must be a woman. Where's yer Wiki link man? Unfortunately little info on there, but a google search revealed he likes to text Alex while watching porn. http://z7.invisionfree.com/toonchat/index.php?showuser=47 Case closed.
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Must be a woman. Where's yer Wiki link man?
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Go on there Kashley lad, hates the moslems and the kikes!
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A moonquake is the lunar equivalent of an earthquake, i.e., a quake on the Moon. Moonquakes are much less common and weaker than earthquakes. Information about moonquakes comes from seismometers placed on the Moon by Apollo astronauts from 1969 through 1972. The instruments placed by the Apollo 12, 14, 15 and 16 missions functioned perfectly until they were switched off in 1977. According to NASA, there are at least four different kinds of moonquakes[1]: * Deep moonquakes (~700 km below the surface, due to tidal stresses from Earth and Sun) * Meteorite impact vibrations * Thermal moonquakes (the frigid lunar crust expands when sunlight returns after the two week lunar night) * Shallow moonquakes (20 or 30 kilometers below the surface, may be caused by large rims on young craters slumping) The first three kinds of moonquakes mentioned above tend to be mild; however, shallow moonquakes can register up to 5.5 on the Richter scale. Between 1972 and 1977, twenty-eight shallow moonquakes were observed. On Earth, quakes of magnitude 4.5 and above can cause damage to buildings and other rigid structures. Vibration from shallow moonquakes usually continues for more than ten minutes compared to around one or two minutes on Earth. The moonquakes are much longer than earthquakes because there is no water on the Moon. Water weakens rocks through chemical weathering causing different minerals to expand. This makes the ground act like a sponge and so the vibrations are soon absorbed making the earthquake end sooner. The Moon does not absorb the vibrations as quickly as the Earth as it is more rigid and so keeps vibrating for longer, extending the moonquakes far beyond the biggest earthquakes. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moonquake and a moon tsunami? Are people even reading the answers? See the boldybit. lol and a robber button?
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A moonquake is the lunar equivalent of an earthquake, i.e., a quake on the Moon. Moonquakes are much less common and weaker than earthquakes. Information about moonquakes comes from seismometers placed on the Moon by Apollo astronauts from 1969 through 1972. The instruments placed by the Apollo 12, 14, 15 and 16 missions functioned perfectly until they were switched off in 1977. According to NASA, there are at least four different kinds of moonquakes[1]: * Deep moonquakes (~700 km below the surface, due to tidal stresses from Earth and Sun) * Meteorite impact vibrations * Thermal moonquakes (the frigid lunar crust expands when sunlight returns after the two week lunar night) * Shallow moonquakes (20 or 30 kilometers below the surface, may be caused by large rims on young craters slumping) The first three kinds of moonquakes mentioned above tend to be mild; however, shallow moonquakes can register up to 5.5 on the Richter scale. Between 1972 and 1977, twenty-eight shallow moonquakes were observed. On Earth, quakes of magnitude 4.5 and above can cause damage to buildings and other rigid structures. Vibration from shallow moonquakes usually continues for more than ten minutes compared to around one or two minutes on Earth. The moonquakes are much longer than earthquakes because there is no water on the Moon. Water weakens rocks through chemical weathering causing different minerals to expand. This makes the ground act like a sponge and so the vibrations are soon absorbed making the earthquake end sooner. The Moon does not absorb the vibrations as quickly as the Earth as it is more rigid and so keeps vibrating for longer, extending the moonquakes far beyond the biggest earthquakes. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moonquake and a moon tsunami?
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I am a Bottom Inspector, Operating Thetan IV
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if there was an earthquake on the moon would it be called a moonquake?
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Like mash, ey?
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KASHLEY CAVES IN OVER QUR'AN CARTEL! The fat, tight lipped fucking racist!
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Can you tell me how much a kilo of llama wool goes for in Bolivia? Not sure about bolivia, but here you go.... http://members.aol.com/cnorwoo627/llamawool.html about £45 a kilo. Not too bad really.
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Can you tell me how much a kilo of llama wool goes for in Bolivia?
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Perhaps if you were game enough to get the ball rolling, Torres, you might engender a modicum of enthusiasm from the board to answer your query. What the fuck d'yee do man?
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Sad thing is when i read that i instantly thought "bet they do fuck all about it", which will no doubt be the case they have to tbf, they have the evidence, the person, the witness, the victim, no excuse to not follow through, at last it's time for this smiley - closed.
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can you please pass that on mate?
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What is the crappiest city you've visited in England?
trophyshy replied to Torres's topic in General Chat
STEVENAGE! AAAAARGH! -
Silage is mentioned. Silage is fermented, high-moisture fodder that can be fed to ruminants (cud-chewing animals like cattle and sheep) or used as a biofuel feedstock for anaerobic digesters. It is fermented and stored in a process called ensilage, and usually made from grass crops, including maize or sorghum, using the entire plant, not just the grain. Silage can be made from many other field crops, and other terms (oatlage for oats, haylage for alfalfa) can be used. Maize is corn. A supplement though, in small quantities, not their main food source, which is grass. To be fair NZ does feel a little like the fifties.
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New Zealand is a world leader in agricultural research and advisory services. Pastoral agriculture is practiced throughout New Zealand with beef cattle predominating in the Far North, dairying in Waikato and Taranaki, and Sheep farming with cattle in the hills and in the south of the North Island. In the South Island sheep farming is the main form of pastoral agriculture with a sprinkling of beef cattle farmed in the high and hill country and wetter flat areas and some dairying on the flat land of both coasts. Livestock are rarely housed, but feeding of small quantities of supplements such as hay and silage can occur, particularly in winter. Grass growth is seasonal, largely dependent on location and climatic fluctuations but normally occurs for between 8-12 months of the year. Stock are grazed in paddocks, often with moveable electric fencing around the farm. Lambing and calving are carefully managed to take full advantage of spring grass growth. Grasslands have been developed to the extent that the best sheep farms can carry up to 25 sheep per hectare throughout the year. http://www.sheepworld.co.nz/SheepFarming.htm Corn not mentioned once here or anywhere else I could see.