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Freeoples Thread 338
Posted on 10/25/2002 10:15:00 AM PDT by Mo1
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To: ValerieUSA
Funkle!!!
To: null and void
Isn't Yum Yum what you say after eating cat?
To: ValerieUSA
LOL! I'm always envious of my wife's adventures, she manages to have a fun all the time. But she will be riding my horsey and she's starting to refer to him with the "my" word.
To: ValerieUSA
I'm going to the casa...tired of this Saturday office stuff, besides, I think I hear cold beer clinking in the refrig. The garden guy is painting the pool today so I need to check up on him. He asked me if he should paint the pool first or mow the lawn first? If he painted the pool then mowed the lawn, you may see my picture on CNN.
To: null and void
Nully is the king of funkles.
To: null and void
Funkling is something I never would do.
To: Cuttnhorse
I promise to be Funkle-Free in 2003.
To: null and void
But, for now...why not pick the forbidden fruit of the Funkle Tree?
To: Cuttnhorse
Why not?
To: null and void
Marking my spot ... I got caught up watching the Rally on c=span and gott nothing done today
Grrrrr ... BBL
130
posted on
10/26/2002 1:01:35 PM PDT
by
Mo1
To: Cuttnhorse
That looks like a promise made to be broken *L*
To: ValerieUSA
"Home" at last. I always put home in quotes when referring to the house I am living in when not at HOME, the USA type HOME.
To: ValerieUSA
When the weather is nice down here, it is really nice. I've got the maid, (domestic slave my wife calls her) taking clothes and shoes out of the closets...many have mold. Man it is damp here.
To: Servant of the Nine
How are things with you Swervie...haven't talked for awhile. I snuck over the border for a couple of weeks and was out of contact. It was nice to be back in the US. Was in the Lead-Deadwood area of S. Dakota. Pretty place.
The company has a mine in Lead that we are in the process of closing. It operated for 125-years and produced 40-million ounces of gold. I went down to the lowest level of the mine...8,000 feet below the surface, about 3,000 feet below sea level. Still lots of gold down there, just too expensive to get it to the surface. The shafts are so small, can't break up the big rubber-tired equipment small enough to get it down to the deepest levels. Some families in the area have several generations who have worked at the mine. Interestingly, the mine was the largest employer in the entire state, which says more about South Dakota, than it says about the mine.
To: Cuttnhorse
I think mold is last year's accessory - keep up with the fashion trends! This year everyone who is anyone will be wearing cobwebs on their clothes.
To: Cuttnhorse
Gold is being left deep in the ground? That's so sad....
To: ValerieUSA
Their production costs were getting over $300 an ounce. When it gets that high you're better off putting production money in the bank, or buying Enron stock.
To: ValerieUSA
What was really sad was how the guys still working there talked about the mine...like an old friend. Some of the employees had worked there over 30-years...many their only employer.
To: Cuttnhorse
I don't suppose there are new mines being started near there...
To: ValerieUSA
Console yourself with the thought that she probably had a boring, bland lunch (even if it isn't true *L*).I'm sure she had a great lunch...I've got enough frequent flyer miles now that I fly the little queen first class. The digs are pretty nice in the front of the airplane...they serve a much better grade of peanuts than they do in cattle-class.
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