Oh you nailed it - that sort of humour is how we* roll around here.
*Mostly me
Oh you nailed it - that sort of humour is how we* roll around here.
*Mostly me
Either someone ragequit a cardgame by the lake or I missed a very elaborate magic trick…
I’m leaning toward magic, based on the swirling green Disney villian smoke…
Dr. Facilier, is that you?
Or a canoe tipped over?
It lives!
Actually the store has been closed for 7 or 8 years and has since become a house of worship. The sign had been covered with black paint (and is way more discernible in these photos than with human eyes [mine, anyway]). Evidently someone turned the sign’s timer back on.
Also, yard visitor:
Full of gamblers?
Finished installing a pull-up bar and the instructions never specified if, how nor why to use these lock washers. (There were exactly enough bolts, nuts & flat washers.) Moreover, these wrenches didn’t fit anything.
See also:
hudnut (HUD nut) - n. The bolt left over when one has finished reassembling a bicycle or car engine [1]
Liked for just this!
Tip yer canoe, and the gamblers too!
So, I didn’t already post this? I’ve lived about a mile or so from this street sign for almost 20 years, and just got around to taking a picture.
I think it’s really cool when people plant and take care of trees on the streets, especially when they choose fruit trees.
Jabuticaba (or Plinia) is the edible fruit of the jabuticabeira (Plinia cauliflora) or Brazilian grapetree. The purplish-black, white-pulped fruit grows directly on the trunk of the tree. It is eaten raw or used to make jellies, jams, juice or wine. The tree, of the family Myrtaceae, is native to the states of Rio de Janeiro, Minas Gerais, Goiás and São Paulo in Brazil. Related species in the genus Myrciaria, often referred to by the same common names, are native to Brazil, Argentina, Pa The na...
My wife woke me up in the wee hours to see the moon, which was, in her words different. Well, it had an unusual appearence indeed. It had a red hue and was surrounded by a strange fog.
The newspapers are saying that it was caused by the smoke of the Amazon fires.
Segundo especialista, circulação atmosférica fez com que nuvem de fumaça chegasse à Região Sul do Brasil.
Rapid deforestation has made the rainforest more vulnerable to flames, experts say
The newspapers are saying that it was caused by the smoke of the Amazon fires.