Do you think you'll be able to re-wrap, Aimee? Or will you want to keep it and play with it yourself?
Meanwhile, a wee (3.4) earthquake just had us wondering what the odd jobbers dropped.
Xander ,'Help'
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risque (and frisque), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
Do you think you'll be able to re-wrap, Aimee? Or will you want to keep it and play with it yourself?
Meanwhile, a wee (3.4) earthquake just had us wondering what the odd jobbers dropped.
Aimée! Set a good example!
Oh now should I start now???
Yes, open it, to ensure her safety, and then re-wrap it, like any good mother would.
Yes! I like this plan. Now, I have to convince Joe of it.
Do you think you'll be able to re-wrap, Aimee? Or will you want to keep it and play with it yourself?
I could do both.
Well, I'm basically sitting on top of the fault line in a big concrete box, so not surprising that we felt it. It was just one swift thump.
I guess no tsunami watch for SoCal then. That was fun, that one time.
I'm basically sitting on top of the fault line in a big concrete box,
That should so be a carnival ride.
Didn't feel a thing in Oakland. Hrumph. I feel like I missed out.
Nothing in downtown SF either.
I once worked in a big concrete box that bounced so much they had to keep repositioning the window panes in the fancy steel grid facade. The builders had figured the rubber seals would be sufficient to keep the panes of glass in place (you'd think). But Utah gets so many micro (and not so micro) shocks that the constant vibration shimmied the windows out of position.
The joys of living on primordial lake bottom on top of multiple faultlines.