To: cripplecreek
Best to ascribe it to a supernatural cause, instead of simple physics.
Sometimes I wonder if we've really left the 1400s behind.
We're having a witch burning here next week.
/johnny
To: JRandomFreeper
The Gods are angry so they’re trashing my shoreline.
23 posted on
01/31/2014 8:30:47 PM PST by
cripplecreek
(REMEMBER THE RIVER RAISIN!)
To: JRandomFreeper
We're having a witch burning here next week.We burn them just to stay warm. The young plump ones last a while and give of a lot of heat. The old crones go up in a puff of smoke.
To: JRandomFreeper
I agree. Tonight on the Houston news there was a story about a Chubacabra that a guy is trying to trap not far from my house. They showed some good pictures of it and anyone who has ever seen a coyote with mange would recognize what it was.
26 posted on
01/31/2014 8:34:11 PM PST by
Ditter
To: JRandomFreeper
They had a witch burning at the Grammys, does that count?
65 posted on
01/31/2014 10:04:20 PM PST by
Irenic
(The pencil sharpener and Elmer's glue is put away-- we've lost the red wheelbarrow)
To: JRandomFreeper
Does she weigh less than a duck?
92 posted on
02/01/2014 6:26:36 AM PST by
Rides_A_Red_Horse
(Why do you need a fire extinguisher when you can call the fire department?)
To: JRandomFreeper
On my last cruise to Alaska, we passed slowly by the Mendelssohn (spelled wrong) glacier and was told that the Indians called the glacier white thunder. It was constantly booming as the ice cracks and then in a few minutes you looked up and down the length of the glacier and would find it calving. Usually you found it when it hit the water. Sometimes you would be lucky and see a large calving from the top to the bottom...been doing that booming for as long as the glacier was in existence. The glacier is 6 miles long, but the ship was placed so you could see the full 6 miles. Then it moved closer so as to turn around...It sounded exactly like booming thunder...
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