Ever have a loved one sleep in your hand?
It feels great.
N Sperlo wrote: Ever have a loved one sleep in your hand? It feels great.
I had Chinchillas for a while. That is how I got them. Buffy liked to curl up on me.
JamesMcD wrote:914Driver wrote:No fibulas. And what is holding these bones together?
I was wondering how the feet fit down in that bucket.
914Driver wrote: It's a fixer upper.
Oh yeah, well I can go one better. How about fixer up boat, burned down and washed out dock.
About 5 miles from my place.
It's also kinda famous.
In reply to Flight Service:
This was the first time ace really curled up on me. We were becoming better buddies. Then he bit my nose.
Watching the "Rat Channel" with the kids and there's a new Cars TV movie called "The Radiator Springs 500 1/2" and been trying to think why one of the main characters looks so familiar.
Oh wait, that's right.
phaze1todd wrote: Watching the "Rat Channel" with the kids and there's a new Cars TV movie called "The Radiator Springs 500 1/2" and been trying to think why one of the main characters looks so familiar. Oh wait, that's right.
In case there are some unaware of the significance of this vehicle, it's "Old Red". #01 of the original monocoque Manx production run of 11. This is the same Manx that Bruce Meyers and Ted Mangels used to break the record for Tijuana to La Paz, which led to the Mexico 1000 the next year (which begat the Baja 1000). Mangels, along with Vic Wilson won the first Mexico 1000 that year in another Manx and Meyers entered a Meyers Tow'd which DNF.
phaze1todd wrote: Watching the "Rat Channel" with the kids and there's a new Cars TV movie called "The Radiator Springs 500 1/2" and been trying to think why one of the main characters looks so familiar. Oh wait, that's right.
I can not find this short!!! very frustrating
HappyAndy wrote:Flight Service wrote:Big brass ones keep the CoG low and inside.
Kenny Roberts runs a race school, the first thing everyone has to do is ride an XR100 with bald tires and no brakes on a clay oval till they hit a specific time. It's called sensation conditioning, learning what to do when the rear steps out like that and it's a big part of how he won everything in sight way back when. Vid from his flattrack training:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Sak0otCZGqo&feature=related
I notice these bikes have brakes.
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