Posted on 12/24/2004 8:51:48 AM PST by Mo1
Payback?
I'm just a griller, and "No" I failed to have any good orange fiber, though we did have our juice this morning.
There are a ton of tiny oranges in all the stores - did Valencia have a bumper crop this year?
What is up with all those baseball sized oranges?
I'm not sure what it got to today, but I know it was at least 54. I saw that on a time and temperature thingy.
Thank you -- she is very happy.
logarithm...that's when it was revealed to me that math would not be my future means of earning a meaningful living.
What a doll....and what a face!
She is a pretty girl.
Excuse me I am not with it tonight I am busy running to the thron!
.
"So, don't they say that when there's a big earthquake there's usually one on the opposite side of the globe? Because the closest big fault opposite this one seems to be the New Madrid..."
Oh no.
Be well soon, Resty.
Whoa!
Total news to me on this concept - but it makes some sense.
Stay as safe as you can up there, Libby.
I've seen that posted elsewhere. In accepting the things I cannot change I won't spend any time worrying about it though :^)
I would understand if I bought her kid those kind of toys
But I didn't ... I always bought ones they could actually use
No, I was talking about what freepers were discussing
When I went to bed, it was shortly after the news of the quake was posted and freepers were talking about a possible tsunamis could follow from a quake of that size
I don't know if or how many die because of the quake itself
I haven't listen/read any news since before dinner and the count at that time was 12,000
Oh Libby .. {{HUGS}}
I could always send my kiddies over your way :0)
The 400 terrified residents in the town of New Madrid (Missouri) were abruptly awakened by violent shaking and a tremendous roar. It was December 16, 1811, and a powerful earthquake had just struck. This was the first of three magnitude-8 earthquakes and thousands of aftershocks to rock the region that winter.
Severe shaking accompanied the powerful New Madrid earthquakes that struck during the winter of 1811-1812. By winter's end, few houses within 250 miles of the Mississippi River town of New Madrid (Missouri) remained undamaged.
Survivors reported that the earthquakes caused cracks to open in the earth's surface, the ground to roll in visible waves, and large areas of land to sink or rise. The crew of the New Orleans (the first steamboat on the Mississippi, which was on her maiden voyage) reported mooring to an island only to awake in the morning and find that the island had disappeared below the waters of the Mississippi River. Damage was reported as far away as Charleston, South Carolina, and Washington, D.C.
Wohooo ... Nice Rock she's got there
Congrats on the wonderful news!!
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