P&L- Nope. Never wanted to do that to a kid. But I've wanted to do it plenty to grown up pricks that do that to kids. After all, it's grown up pricks like that who do that to kids that create kids that grow up to be grown up pricks that slap kids.
Ogrrre- It looked to me like it was just a kid being a kid. It amounts to the same thing as slapping your male dog for pissing on the flowers. Dogs are going to do what dogs do. So are kids.
I will always side with a kid over a grown up prick. No apologies about that.
I see splitters advertised and they always use some soft wood. If ya really want to impress me throw some of the wood you speak of in it. Do they use soft cuz it won't split the big stuff?
Elm is the worst. My brother and one of the other owners tried to hand split a 14" round about 24" long at camp last year. took them 7-8 minutes using two wedges and an 8 lb sledge.
A good splitter'll run you about a grand or so and have a 25 ton ram. The one shown here looks to be upwards of 40 ton. Prolly split train tracks. Ohio Guy
My ex BIL worked for the Rail Roads, out of Flint area, here in MI. His job was going out and setting train cars back on the tracks, when they came off, on their way to as far away as Chicago. That is how they would ship cars throughout the country, via the Rail Roads. When they had multiple cars come off, instead of hooking the air lines back up via the manifold, they would run an air hose, often through entire length of the train, sometimes many cars. They would have to then run the train back to Swartz Creek, a city near Flint. Totally illegal, using a temporary line, like that. I was at the Swartz Creek plant once, where they were getting ready to load up the rail cars, with Suburbans. They had perhaps a 5 acre parking lot, completely full of nothing but brand new Chevy Suburbans. It was the most impressive automobile thing that I have ever seen. To see all of those brand new, never driven Suburbans, together, was just cool. You don't realize just how beautiful they are, until you see them.
#10 is a prick. Big time.
ReplyDeleteTell us you've never wanted to do that.
DeleteElmo, the little bastard deserved that slap. Maybe it will teach him to mind his own business.
DeleteP&L- Nope. Never wanted to do that to a kid. But I've wanted to do it plenty to grown up pricks that do that to kids. After all, it's grown up pricks like that who do that to kids that create kids that grow up to be grown up pricks that slap kids.
DeleteOgrrre- It looked to me like it was just a kid being a kid. It amounts to the same thing as slapping your male dog for pissing on the flowers. Dogs are going to do what dogs do. So are kids.
I will always side with a kid over a grown up prick. No apologies about that.
That's how the press treats Americans.
Delete"Get out of the way. I'm directing the discourse, the agenda, and dictating the outcome."
*WE* are who should be doing the bitch slapping.
FrankP
#4 perfect loop,
ReplyDelete#5 is unusually erotic,
#10 is what we need more of.
-arc
I agree that #10 we need more of.
DeleteDamn, but Freud would've had fun telling you what your dreams mean!
DeleteGot enough of those in Canada. Take as many as you like.
Delete#1 I'd love to feed that splitter some of the ancient gnarly twisted hard maple we had to take down a few years ago.
ReplyDeleteProvided I could start the thing from a safe distance...
I see splitters advertised and they always use some soft wood. If ya really want to impress me throw some of the wood you speak of in it. Do they use soft cuz it won't split the big stuff?
DeleteElm is the worst. My brother and one of the other owners tried to hand split a 14" round about 24" long at camp last year. took them 7-8 minutes using two wedges and an 8 lb sledge.
DeleteNemo
A good splitter'll run you about a grand or so and have a 25 ton ram. The one shown here looks to be upwards of 40 ton. Prolly split train tracks. Ohio Guy
DeleteI've got a splitter that will cut that gnarly old shit crosswise.
Delete#2 Bitchslappin' a gator? Ballsy.
ReplyDeleteIs anyone else strangely turned on by #5?
#5, did they have a cigarette afterwards?
ReplyDelete#3: gotta be smarter than the equipment.
ReplyDelete#9 - Cool battery tester. You have a link to buy one?
ReplyDeleteMy ex BIL worked for the Rail Roads, out of Flint area, here in MI. His job was going out and setting train cars back on the tracks, when they came off, on their way to as far away as Chicago. That is how they would ship cars throughout the country, via the Rail Roads.
ReplyDeleteWhen they had multiple cars come off, instead of hooking the air lines back up via the manifold, they would run an air hose, often through entire length of the train, sometimes many cars. They would have to then run the train back to Swartz Creek, a city near Flint. Totally illegal, using a temporary line, like that.
I was at the Swartz Creek plant once, where they were getting ready to load up the rail cars, with Suburbans. They had perhaps a 5 acre parking lot, completely full of nothing but brand new Chevy Suburbans. It was the most impressive automobile thing that I have ever seen. To see all of those brand new, never driven Suburbans, together, was just cool. You don't realize just how beautiful they are, until you see them.
#9 https://www.amazon.com/Battery-Tester-Checker-Seven-batteries/dp/B00M93QQ3G/ref=zg_bs_14244451_31?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1&refRID=B2NTNWAE6WKEBGCBG3C3
ReplyDelete