

Radgina
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Everything posted by Radgina
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Does nobody else agree that this shit has gone on for long enough !!! We all have views, some different , some the same but arguing like fucking children on a Newcastle message board is not going to change anything for fuck sake. !! Take it to your MP or local shrink ...
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Ahem....... No she's not due until the back end of July I think, whereas wor lass is due on the 14th June but could drop any day now! So did Smoothys missus have her sprog then? 150201[/snapback] Can i just clear this up, wor lass isn't due until the end of July but thanks for the "best wishes etc", SMO's lass is now overdue. I've offfered to go down and try and get her started off with a good old fashioned back scuttling, what with me having that bit of extra length in the unit department, strangely he politely declined the offer, even though his lass seemed extremely keen on the idea. I mean, what are friends for? 150278[/snapback] or he could try one of LM's curry recipes..
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Oh no they are totally different. I dont know of any lasses that poo on a strange loo. If the loo is really strange and looks a bit yuck then Id hover, though id not hover on that outside loo 150184[/snapback] totally agree....and its a right problem if you're on your hols 150202[/snapback] So do you take immodium constantly when on holiday and just dump it all when you get back ?? I find this really strange as long as the toilet is clean then I don't see the problem. You could always carry around a pack of those toilet seat cover thingys or failing that an antiseptic spray or something...
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what gets me is mine is one of the 3, I know my loo thats why I wont use it 150199[/snapback] Get the Domestos out...
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for the love of God...WHY ???? 150193[/snapback] It was my boyfriend's idea. I don't think this relationship is working out. 150196[/snapback] Bin him... thats just sadism that is !!
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I'll be sure to let you know first if that ever happens. 150195[/snapback] Thanks
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for the love of God...WHY ????
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So then...if you were in a pub and an attak of the squits came over you would you just cack your pants or use the "unfamiliar" loo ???
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Oh no they are totally different. I dont know of any lasses that poo on a strange loo. If the loo is really strange and looks a bit yuck then Id hover, though id not hover on that outside loo 150184[/snapback] I do if you needs one you haves to go.....
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I have some face paints and temporary tattoo's......
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i didnt know that Brock and i live in Devon 149917[/snapback] I don't live in Devon but all my family are from there so I frequent it. You don't have to be so disappointed. 149919[/snapback] I thought maybe you had been "visiting"...
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I seriously don't think I could live down South - or in London itself at least. I find the rudeness and ignorance quite outstanding. Having said that - I was coming back from Oz last month and struggling badly with a very heavy suitcase on the stairs of a tube station and a kind bloke did offer to carry it for me. That is the only time I've ever experienced any kind of goodwill from London peeps. 149894[/snapback] come down to the real south, we're not so bad here Except when the grockles and students make our summer a misery Foreign students just cant queue 149900[/snapback] Whats a "grockle" ??? 149903[/snapback] its our word for tourists 149904[/snapback] thought it was a "gippo" or "pikey"....nice word tho ... 149906[/snapback] yes its definitely a local word but, now here i go...whats a pikey? A tramp? 149911[/snapback] Pikey is a gypsy or "traveller", there are many finer words for tramp in this neck of the woods
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I seriously don't think I could live down South - or in London itself at least. I find the rudeness and ignorance quite outstanding. Having said that - I was coming back from Oz last month and struggling badly with a very heavy suitcase on the stairs of a tube station and a kind bloke did offer to carry it for me. That is the only time I've ever experienced any kind of goodwill from London peeps. 149894[/snapback] come down to the real south, we're not so bad here Except when the grockles and students make our summer a misery Foreign students just cant queue 149900[/snapback] Whats a "grockle" ??? 149903[/snapback] its our word for tourists 149904[/snapback] thought it was a "gippo" or "pikey"....nice word tho ...
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I seriously don't think I could live down South - or in London itself at least. I find the rudeness and ignorance quite outstanding. Having said that - I was coming back from Oz last month and struggling badly with a very heavy suitcase on the stairs of a tube station and a kind bloke did offer to carry it for me. That is the only time I've ever experienced any kind of goodwill from London peeps. 149894[/snapback] come down to the real south, we're not so bad here Except when the grockles and students make our summer a misery Foreign students just cant queue 149900[/snapback] Whats a "grockle" ???
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Morning Wor lad is in Prague for the weekend so I have the freedom of the city and can't think of a single thing to do ( well at least not something that does not involve a beer garden and a few cold Stella's !!) Will see how the fancy takes me ....
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looking forward to this interview!!!!
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Holy Sweet Jesus
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the Czechs for me ..
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First I got left out of the sweepstake and now people steal my gardening ideas. Xenophobic right-wing, warmonging Brits tbh And I think this thread was crying for an advice of how to cut daisies... Delighting in Daisies A garden chock full of nothing but daisies would be pretty boring. But that doesn't mean we shouldn't plant at least two-dozen more varieties than we do now. Daisies represent what's so right about gardening. They're wonderful, cheerful, exuberant flowers, simple, sophisticated and every compliment in between. They're often the first blooms young children pick to give to their mothers. And yet, daisies never stop speaking to the child in most of us. Planting daisies in abundance is equivalent to hanging a floral "welcome to my garden" plaque on the front gate. And at the opposite end of the trowel that's weeding them, most likely rests the hand of a gardener who's open, friendly, sharing, and ... smiling. Nature must consider daisies one of her finer accomplishments--and justifiably so--because she provides us with such a dazzling array of daisies and daisy-like flowers. Gardeners can select from a rainbow of colors in any number of sizes. Many are perennial, though there are lots of annual daisies, too. "Daisy" is rather a generic term referring to blooms with a central "disk," made up of hundreds of tiny fertile flowers, surrounded by delicate, brightly-colored "rays," or petals. Because each multiple flower resembles a single bloom (at least to our eyes, if not to the insects that pollinate them), daisies were for years known as "composites" and embraced by the family Compositae. Botanists could no longer abide it, however. Several years ago, daisies were switched to the aster family, Asteraceae. Indeed, many of them do look like asters ... or is it the other way around? With a little planning, your garden need never be without some daisies blooming, from early spring until well after frost. Jump-start the season with the daisy-like blooms of Anemone blanda. They're not really daisies, but they'll fool passersby. Plant the tiny anemone bulbs in fall for long-lasting early spring blooms in white or blue. Following soon after Anemone blanda comes the English daisy (Bellis perennis). This species is generally recognized as the original "daisy" (from the Old English "day's eye"), referring to the way the charming pink and white blossoms open with the sun. Bellis perennis combines joyfully with forget-me-nots in the spring garden. Also a bit temperamental is the short-lived fleabane daisy (Erigeron spp.). Beautiful blue aster-like blossoms are so sweet, however, and sprawly plants bloom for such a long time each spring that fleabane seems worth the trouble. It's not a regular in my garden, but I start some every few years just to renew by relationship with this old friend. Into the heat of the summer we plunge--a glorious time for daisies! The snow-white petals of Shasta daisy (Leucanthemum superbum) wink a cheerful greeting from the perennial border, where they cavort splendidly with daylilies of all shades. I like 'Becky' the best, for stout stems that don't need staking, but 'Alaska' and 'Switzerland' have their share of fans, too. 'Snowcap' is a dwarf variety. Perfect for cottage gardens are the tall yellow stems of golden marguerite daisies (Anthemis tinctoria). Tireless bloomers in the bright summer sun, perhaps they wear themselves out, because individual plants last only a couple of years. Prolong their stay in your garden by cutting back spent flower stems (the same is true for most types of daisies) to the basal leaves and making frequent divisions of small offshoots. No space for a perennial border? Container gardeners can choose from a lively selection of annual daisies. Charming in a windowbox or large urn is the cascading foliage of African daisy (Osteospermum ecklonis). I'm partial to the white form, for the metallic blue "eye" is unique, but the newer purple variety seems a bit more generous with its blooms. Gerbera daisies are handsome annuals and available in a host of classy colors--the deep salmon has no rival. To get around the fact that Gerberas are rather stingy with their flowers, try combining them in containers with pretty herbs or the delicate blooms of baby's breath. Early autumn is when daisies really shine, thanks in no small part to the very special Nippon daisy (Nipponanthemum nipponicum). Bold semi-succulent foliage gives rise to 3-foot flower stems covered with large snow-white blooms. Combine them with the gracious blue mounds of late-blooming Aster x frikartii (another daisy-like plant) and the golden sprays of 'Fireworks' goldenrod for a spectacular conclusion to the floral season. (Lindsay Bond Totten, a horticulturist, writes about gardening for Scripps Howard News Service.) 147316[/snapback] aaahhhh...daisies...I loves em...
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just waht the house needs, another plastic auld bird whose husband bought her way into the house for her ....no fun there then..
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one booted ou the night and one lucky KitKat winner goes in when one of the housemates picks a lucky golden ball , 35 balls each number corresponding to a KitKat winner...
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Couldn't PP make you an animated one? B- tbh 146961[/snapback] I did ask him but he was " busy"....
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...am enjoying it immensely...