well, my old dog would have just looked like that at the squirrel, the new dog would have gone nuts. he barks at dogs on TV and the noise of the wind outside. yeah, he is cute, and she loves him to death. but he does get a bit on your nerves at times.
Number 3. The ‘levanter’ easterly wind blowing over the ‘Rock' of Gibraltar. Since 1720 ‘Gib’ has been a British Overseas Territory. Since WWII there has been a very strong connection with the US military that remains to this day. Ike Eisenhower referred to Gib as ‘little England.’ In 1720, heavily outnumbered Royal Marines fought the Spanish for control of the Rock. The place is steeped in history. Gib remains a cracking run-ashore, and well worth a visit.
Unfortunately I dont believe compensation has a thing to do with it. Consideration for others and their property is deficient in this individuals culture.
Got a new FedEx delivery gal, the last "guy" had gages in the ears, tats everuwhere, no personality (never heard a word from him) and buried the van up to the rear bumper in the neighbors' lawn last spring.
#1 Those are the fragile packages, I'll bet. #3 The rock of Gibraltar. A great example of what happens when the air temperature drops to the dew point. #9 The next Tonya Harding? Al_in_Ottawa
#3 I used to watch the clouds form along the Avila mountain over Caracas. The westerly wind accelerated in the folds of the mountain cooling the air past its dew point.
The runway often suffers from cross winds. Plenty of private jets use the RW through the day, with only a couple of passenger jets in attendance. The British Govt and the Royal Air Force own the airfield. RAF fast jets and transport aircraft (Airbus A400M Atlas) use the RW daily.
well, my old dog would have just looked like that at the squirrel, the new dog would have gone nuts. he barks at dogs on TV and the noise of the wind outside. yeah, he is cute, and she loves him to death. but he does get a bit on your nerves at times.
ReplyDelete#1 notice all the delivery boyz...
ReplyDeleteI'm seeing a common theme on #1
ReplyDelete#7. Uh-oh…..that’s a BIG squirrel !!!
ReplyDeleteNumber 3. The ‘levanter’ easterly wind blowing over the ‘Rock' of Gibraltar. Since 1720 ‘Gib’ has been a British Overseas Territory. Since WWII there has been a very strong connection with the US military that remains to this day. Ike Eisenhower referred to Gib as ‘little England.’ In 1720, heavily outnumbered Royal Marines fought the Spanish for control of the Rock. The place is steeped in history. Gib remains a cracking run-ashore, and well worth a visit.
ReplyDelete#1: Pay peanuts, get monkeys
ReplyDeleteUnfortunately I dont believe compensation has a thing to do with it. Consideration for others and their property is deficient in this individuals culture.
DeleteGot a new FedEx delivery gal, the last "guy" had gages in the ears, tats everuwhere, no personality (never heard a word from him) and buried the van up to the rear bumper in the neighbors' lawn last spring.
DeleteHaven't had a mutilated box since she started.
#5 - I'd have that same response.
ReplyDelete#1 Those are the fragile packages, I'll bet.
ReplyDelete#3 The rock of Gibraltar. A great example of what happens when the air temperature drops to the dew point.
#9 The next Tonya Harding?
Al_in_Ottawa
Those ‘rillas in #8 would have fit right in my college dorm
ReplyDeleteJFM
#5 BONER!!
ReplyDelete#6 - Tent weights are a must. And you need 25 - 50 pounds per tent leg.
ReplyDelete#1, #8 and #9 all have something in common.
ReplyDelete#3 I used to watch the clouds form along the Avila mountain over Caracas. The westerly wind accelerated in the folds of the mountain cooling the air past its dew point.
ReplyDeleteMore great what the hell and damn that hurt memes
ReplyDelete#1, Shines gonna shine as we say around here.
ReplyDelete#3 anyone else wonder why the plane was either landing or taking off with the wind --instead of into the wind ??
ReplyDeleteThe wind at the peak may not be blowing in the same direction as it is at sea level.
DeleteThe runway often suffers from cross winds. Plenty of private jets use the RW through the day, with only a couple of passenger jets in attendance. The British Govt and the Royal Air Force own the airfield. RAF fast jets and transport aircraft (Airbus A400M Atlas) use the RW daily.
Delete#1 And they were all black....
ReplyDelete