that will not settle the argument Beau and I had, however.
Natter 71: Someone is wrong on the Internet
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Like bird guides, that's clear but probably won't help me with identification in the wild.
I can't watch the video at work, but my dividing line has always been icing, I think. If it's iced (completely, not with a drizzle of something) it's a cupcake.
Now I want a cupcake.
Seriously, I have got to be the most suggestible person in the world. It's a good thing there aren't, like, drugs commercials, or I'd be all, mmm, crack, that sounds good...
So I'm home from my little trip to Colorado, which was lovely except for spending way too much time in transit. Especially yesterday, between the snowstorm and my flight being cancelled. Bah.
OTOH, sledding with a 5-year-old is more fun than almost anything. So fun.
No news on the job here even though sequestration hits on Friday. On Wednesday, a former coworker's company is having a reception, and I think I shall go, and network. Bah.
Network like hell, Consuela.
Network like the wind! You deserve better management.
Consuela, or other people who climb, canb you tell me what a belayer is? I'm not sure this writer is using it correctly.
canb you tell me what a belayer is
A belayer is the person at the other end of the rope from the climber. The rope is run through a friction device clipped to the belayer's harness, and the belayer can stop the climber from falling, or lower them slowly. The belayer can be above the climber or below them, depending on the setup.
I assume the term comes from the naval usage, where "belay" is to stop, or so I understand.
Does that help? If not, feel free to give me the context.