With any luck, SailAweigh.
Thanks to Lee, indiscriminately spreading her ... buffistadom.
Plan what to do, what to wear (you can never go wrong with a corset), and get ready for the next BuffistaCon: San Francisco, May 19-21, 2006! Everything else, go here! Swag!
With any luck, SailAweigh.
Thanks to Lee, indiscriminately spreading her ... buffistadom.
katefate, did you get the package I sent you?
Ya know, they have horse drawn carriages in New Orleans, too.
Technically they're mule-drawn carriages. I'm not sure how to say mule in French, nor how they take to groping.
katefate, did you get the package I sent you?
Yes, you big sweetie! Thank you so much - it was a lovely surprise. I posted about it last night in Goodbye and Good Riddance. More smoochies to you here.
I posted about it last night in Goodbye and Good Riddance.
I just caught up over there. Glad it arrived intact. Mwah!
I'm not sure how to say mule in French, nor how they take to groping.
Stubbornly, I'd presume.
Curse you, wee Matt! I was gonna say that.
Stubbornly, I'd presume.
This may account for the fact that the only way to get a mule is to mate a horse with a donkey.
This may account for the fact that the only way to get a mule is to mate a horse with a donkey.
If you want to get technical, a jack with a mare, so if you're arranging species by who's the top, you're crossing a donkey with a horse. (A stallion/jennet is technically a hinny.)
Is there a practical difference between a mule and a hinny?
Is there a practical difference between a mule and a hinny?
Slight, as hinnies tend to be smaller on account of the donkey momma thing. They're far less common than mules proper for various reasons, that included. (Stallions covering jennets tend to be less successful in terms of conception than jacks on mares, so that's probably the big one.)