Yeah, I have to admit I'd totally eat the meat too.
Spike's Bitches 48: I Say, We Go Out There, and Kick a Little Demon Ass.
[NAFDA] Spike-centric discussion. Lusty, lewd (only occasionally crude), risqué (and frisqué), bawdy (Oh, lawdy!), flirty ('cuz we're purty), raunchy talk inside. Caveat lector.
I wouldn't eat the deli meat, unless maybe I cooked it. A friend got really sick thinking it was fine to eat the luncheon meat she left out overnight. The yogurt is probably fine, but I would give it a good smell first.
The deli meat's package is bulging tight, so im calling it bacteria. The yogurt I'm probably eating.
The deli meat's package is bulging tight, so im calling it bacteria.
Oh, that can't be good. I'd toss it, too, and I'm pretty cavalier about iffy food. (See also the I-Shouldn't-Have-Made-That-Salmon incident of 2006.)
That sounds like an easy decision.
Yep, it was.
All three cats are on the bed with me. A rare and unstable situation. Radioactive, even. Any moment, a random cat will shoot off, returning the bed element to its stable two-cat state.
As predicted, the three-cat system has a half-life of approximately one minute. Stability restored.
You're lucky there weren't a large number of three-cat beds nearby. You could have had a chain-reaction and cat-splosion.
It's a risk one has to take in the field of cat science. Cat-splosions are always a possibility. Several researchers have been overcome by the resulting fur fallout.
Have you discovered a difference in fur half-life between the different cat elements in your study?