Chat
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- Posts: 761
- Joined: Sun Jul 05, 2020 9:23 am
Re: Chat
My parents had a cat who would always choose my father's knee if he was reading the paper, naturally sitting on top of the paper and my mother's if she was knitting, naturally ... He liked to be the centre of attention and knew he was beautiful and also enjoyed posing so that the sun highlighted his ginger stripes so that passers by would exclaim, "What a lovely cat!!"
Re: Chat
Thank You so much everyone!!!
Re: Chat
One place I where I worked for a while, and not a weather office!, had the help desk staffed with a person like this:
I used to get stopped in the hall and people would whisper in my ear, "I'm having a computer problem. Could YOU help me and don't tell xxx."
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- Posts: 9
- Joined: Thu Sep 10, 2020 1:34 am
Re: Chat
Hey All!
There is a great seminar next week that many folks might be interested in, given by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute: The stories we tell: Sea stories from ancient oral traditions to modern day pirates https://www.whoi.edu/ocean-encounters/
There is a great seminar next week that many folks might be interested in, given by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute: The stories we tell: Sea stories from ancient oral traditions to modern day pirates https://www.whoi.edu/ocean-encounters/
Re: Chat
It sounds gripping...I've just been catching up on the history of the Sea Peoples. I'd love to register for it but I'm pretty sure I'd be asleep in my chair though at 7.30 PM ESTFutureOceanScientist wrote: ↑Sat Oct 03, 2020 3:01 pm Hey All!
There is a great seminar next week that many folks might be interested in, given by the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute: The stories we tell: Sea stories from ancient oral traditions to modern day pirates https://www.whoi.edu/ocean-encounters/
Re: Chat
Winter camping can be great. My son, who was in about Grade Six, went out with his outdoor ed. class for a two or three day camp in the dead of winter with temperatures in the minus 30's to -40. They took a candle, matches, a jam tin, a knife and a snare wire. They were being led by a legendary First Nations trapper who taught them how to build shelters, stay warm, snare rabbits and other small game and stay alive in the bush until help arrived.