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  3. You may be from South Dakota...

You may be from South Dakota...

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  • L leckey 0

    During a storm you check the cattle before you check the kids. You are related to more than half the town. You can tell the difference between a horse and a cow from a distance. Your car breaks down outside of town and news of it reaches back to town before you do. (This actually happened to me.) You don't put too much effort into hairstyles due to wind and weather. (I can remember many mornings of walking to school with frozen hair.) Your quarterback is hurt and you're hoping it's the first thing on the 6 o'clock news. (We love our local sports.) There's a tornado warning and the whole town is outside watching for it. (Until it comes barreling down the road. Then we hit the basement.) The local gas station sells live bait. You don't buy all your vegetables at the grocery store. You go to the State Fair for your family vacation. You get up at 5:30 a.m. and go down to the coffee shop. (And 3pm if you farm.) You're on a first name basis with the county sheriff. (And not for getting in trouble.) When little smokies are something you serve on special occasions. You go to the river because it's almost like going to the ocean. You have the number of the Co-op on speed dial. All your radio preset buttons are country. (Except me. I'm the lone holdout from my graduating class.) Using the elevator involved a corn truck. Your mayor is also your garbage hauler, barber, and insurance salesman. You know you should listen to the weather forecast before picking out an outfit. You are walking knee-deep in snow. Your excuse for getting out of school is that the cows got out. (We were late a couple of times because of cows blocking the road.) You talk with a friend about some big event you are going to attend, and by the end of the conversation you've decided you're both too broke to go. (Beacuse everything 'big' is at least two hours away.) You know cow pies aren't made of beef. Your early morning prayer covers rain, cattle and pigs. You wake up when it's dark and go to bed when it's still light. (We call it getting up at "O dark thirty." You consider a romantic evening driving through Hardees and renting a hunting instructional video. You want to buy manure. You listen to "Paul Harvey" every day at noon. You can tell it's a farmer working late in his field and not a UFO. Your nearest neighbor is in the next area code. (Not true. The entire state only has one area code.) You leave your snow tires on year-round. (I've seen snow in June and Septe

    L Offline
    L Offline
    leppie
    wrote on last edited by
    #2

    You seem to know alot about South Dakota! ;P

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    • L leckey 0

      During a storm you check the cattle before you check the kids. You are related to more than half the town. You can tell the difference between a horse and a cow from a distance. Your car breaks down outside of town and news of it reaches back to town before you do. (This actually happened to me.) You don't put too much effort into hairstyles due to wind and weather. (I can remember many mornings of walking to school with frozen hair.) Your quarterback is hurt and you're hoping it's the first thing on the 6 o'clock news. (We love our local sports.) There's a tornado warning and the whole town is outside watching for it. (Until it comes barreling down the road. Then we hit the basement.) The local gas station sells live bait. You don't buy all your vegetables at the grocery store. You go to the State Fair for your family vacation. You get up at 5:30 a.m. and go down to the coffee shop. (And 3pm if you farm.) You're on a first name basis with the county sheriff. (And not for getting in trouble.) When little smokies are something you serve on special occasions. You go to the river because it's almost like going to the ocean. You have the number of the Co-op on speed dial. All your radio preset buttons are country. (Except me. I'm the lone holdout from my graduating class.) Using the elevator involved a corn truck. Your mayor is also your garbage hauler, barber, and insurance salesman. You know you should listen to the weather forecast before picking out an outfit. You are walking knee-deep in snow. Your excuse for getting out of school is that the cows got out. (We were late a couple of times because of cows blocking the road.) You talk with a friend about some big event you are going to attend, and by the end of the conversation you've decided you're both too broke to go. (Beacuse everything 'big' is at least two hours away.) You know cow pies aren't made of beef. Your early morning prayer covers rain, cattle and pigs. You wake up when it's dark and go to bed when it's still light. (We call it getting up at "O dark thirty." You consider a romantic evening driving through Hardees and renting a hunting instructional video. You want to buy manure. You listen to "Paul Harvey" every day at noon. You can tell it's a farmer working late in his field and not a UFO. Your nearest neighbor is in the next area code. (Not true. The entire state only has one area code.) You leave your snow tires on year-round. (I've seen snow in June and Septe

      J Offline
      J Offline
      Justin Perez
      wrote on last edited by
      #3

      All of that applied to Minnesota as well =)

      I get all the news I need from the weather report - Paul Simon (from "The Only Living Boy in New York")

      J M 2 Replies Last reply
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      • J Justin Perez

        All of that applied to Minnesota as well =)

        I get all the news I need from the weather report - Paul Simon (from "The Only Living Boy in New York")

        J Offline
        J Offline
        Judah Gabriel Himango
        wrote on last edited by
        #4

        Well, not the part about knowing everybody in town. We have more people in some cities than South Dakota has in the whole state. :)

        Tech, life, family, faith: Give me a visit. I'm currently blogging about: Sound The Great Shofar! The apostle Paul, modernly speaking: Epistles of Paul Judah Himango

        J 1 Reply Last reply
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        • L leckey 0

          During a storm you check the cattle before you check the kids. You are related to more than half the town. You can tell the difference between a horse and a cow from a distance. Your car breaks down outside of town and news of it reaches back to town before you do. (This actually happened to me.) You don't put too much effort into hairstyles due to wind and weather. (I can remember many mornings of walking to school with frozen hair.) Your quarterback is hurt and you're hoping it's the first thing on the 6 o'clock news. (We love our local sports.) There's a tornado warning and the whole town is outside watching for it. (Until it comes barreling down the road. Then we hit the basement.) The local gas station sells live bait. You don't buy all your vegetables at the grocery store. You go to the State Fair for your family vacation. You get up at 5:30 a.m. and go down to the coffee shop. (And 3pm if you farm.) You're on a first name basis with the county sheriff. (And not for getting in trouble.) When little smokies are something you serve on special occasions. You go to the river because it's almost like going to the ocean. You have the number of the Co-op on speed dial. All your radio preset buttons are country. (Except me. I'm the lone holdout from my graduating class.) Using the elevator involved a corn truck. Your mayor is also your garbage hauler, barber, and insurance salesman. You know you should listen to the weather forecast before picking out an outfit. You are walking knee-deep in snow. Your excuse for getting out of school is that the cows got out. (We were late a couple of times because of cows blocking the road.) You talk with a friend about some big event you are going to attend, and by the end of the conversation you've decided you're both too broke to go. (Beacuse everything 'big' is at least two hours away.) You know cow pies aren't made of beef. Your early morning prayer covers rain, cattle and pigs. You wake up when it's dark and go to bed when it's still light. (We call it getting up at "O dark thirty." You consider a romantic evening driving through Hardees and renting a hunting instructional video. You want to buy manure. You listen to "Paul Harvey" every day at noon. You can tell it's a farmer working late in his field and not a UFO. Your nearest neighbor is in the next area code. (Not true. The entire state only has one area code.) You leave your snow tires on year-round. (I've seen snow in June and Septe

          D Offline
          D Offline
          Dan Neely
          wrote on last edited by
          #5

          leckey wrote:

          Your car breaks down outside of town and news of it reaches back to town before you do. (This actually happened to me.)

          Nice of them to offer you a ride back. :doh:

          -- If you view money as inherently evil, I view it as my duty to assist in making you more virtuous.

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          • L leckey 0

            During a storm you check the cattle before you check the kids. You are related to more than half the town. You can tell the difference between a horse and a cow from a distance. Your car breaks down outside of town and news of it reaches back to town before you do. (This actually happened to me.) You don't put too much effort into hairstyles due to wind and weather. (I can remember many mornings of walking to school with frozen hair.) Your quarterback is hurt and you're hoping it's the first thing on the 6 o'clock news. (We love our local sports.) There's a tornado warning and the whole town is outside watching for it. (Until it comes barreling down the road. Then we hit the basement.) The local gas station sells live bait. You don't buy all your vegetables at the grocery store. You go to the State Fair for your family vacation. You get up at 5:30 a.m. and go down to the coffee shop. (And 3pm if you farm.) You're on a first name basis with the county sheriff. (And not for getting in trouble.) When little smokies are something you serve on special occasions. You go to the river because it's almost like going to the ocean. You have the number of the Co-op on speed dial. All your radio preset buttons are country. (Except me. I'm the lone holdout from my graduating class.) Using the elevator involved a corn truck. Your mayor is also your garbage hauler, barber, and insurance salesman. You know you should listen to the weather forecast before picking out an outfit. You are walking knee-deep in snow. Your excuse for getting out of school is that the cows got out. (We were late a couple of times because of cows blocking the road.) You talk with a friend about some big event you are going to attend, and by the end of the conversation you've decided you're both too broke to go. (Beacuse everything 'big' is at least two hours away.) You know cow pies aren't made of beef. Your early morning prayer covers rain, cattle and pigs. You wake up when it's dark and go to bed when it's still light. (We call it getting up at "O dark thirty." You consider a romantic evening driving through Hardees and renting a hunting instructional video. You want to buy manure. You listen to "Paul Harvey" every day at noon. You can tell it's a farmer working late in his field and not a UFO. Your nearest neighbor is in the next area code. (Not true. The entire state only has one area code.) You leave your snow tires on year-round. (I've seen snow in June and Septe

            R Offline
            R Offline
            Rama Krishna Vavilala
            wrote on last edited by
            #6

            What happened to crazy holiday posts?

            Co-Author ASP.NET AJAX in Action

            L E 2 Replies Last reply
            0
            • L leckey 0

              During a storm you check the cattle before you check the kids. You are related to more than half the town. You can tell the difference between a horse and a cow from a distance. Your car breaks down outside of town and news of it reaches back to town before you do. (This actually happened to me.) You don't put too much effort into hairstyles due to wind and weather. (I can remember many mornings of walking to school with frozen hair.) Your quarterback is hurt and you're hoping it's the first thing on the 6 o'clock news. (We love our local sports.) There's a tornado warning and the whole town is outside watching for it. (Until it comes barreling down the road. Then we hit the basement.) The local gas station sells live bait. You don't buy all your vegetables at the grocery store. You go to the State Fair for your family vacation. You get up at 5:30 a.m. and go down to the coffee shop. (And 3pm if you farm.) You're on a first name basis with the county sheriff. (And not for getting in trouble.) When little smokies are something you serve on special occasions. You go to the river because it's almost like going to the ocean. You have the number of the Co-op on speed dial. All your radio preset buttons are country. (Except me. I'm the lone holdout from my graduating class.) Using the elevator involved a corn truck. Your mayor is also your garbage hauler, barber, and insurance salesman. You know you should listen to the weather forecast before picking out an outfit. You are walking knee-deep in snow. Your excuse for getting out of school is that the cows got out. (We were late a couple of times because of cows blocking the road.) You talk with a friend about some big event you are going to attend, and by the end of the conversation you've decided you're both too broke to go. (Beacuse everything 'big' is at least two hours away.) You know cow pies aren't made of beef. Your early morning prayer covers rain, cattle and pigs. You wake up when it's dark and go to bed when it's still light. (We call it getting up at "O dark thirty." You consider a romantic evening driving through Hardees and renting a hunting instructional video. You want to buy manure. You listen to "Paul Harvey" every day at noon. You can tell it's a farmer working late in his field and not a UFO. Your nearest neighbor is in the next area code. (Not true. The entire state only has one area code.) You leave your snow tires on year-round. (I've seen snow in June and Septe

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              S Offline
              StewBob
              wrote on last edited by
              #7

              Good to hear from a fellow South Dakotan. I've been transplanted to Iowa, but I spent the formative years in God's Country (aka S.D.) Number 3 on the list should be revised to: You can tell the difference between a Simmental and a Hereford at a distance. (for the non-ranchers, those are different breeds of cattle).

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              • S StewBob

                Good to hear from a fellow South Dakotan. I've been transplanted to Iowa, but I spent the formative years in God's Country (aka S.D.) Number 3 on the list should be revised to: You can tell the difference between a Simmental and a Hereford at a distance. (for the non-ranchers, those are different breeds of cattle).

                L Offline
                L Offline
                leckey 0
                wrote on last edited by
                #8

                Where originally in SD and now where in IA? [edit] I assume western SD since you used the word 'ranchers' [/edit];)

                _____________________________________________ Flea Market! It's just like...it's just like...A MINI-MALL!

                S 1 Reply Last reply
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                • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

                  What happened to crazy holiday posts?

                  Co-Author ASP.NET AJAX in Action

                  L Offline
                  L Offline
                  leckey 0
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #9

                  honestly I have just been so busy lately that I haven't had the desire to do them. I even forgot about International Talk Like a Pirate Day which is my favorite one of the year. Just stressed about the work situation. I'll try to restart in a couple weeks.

                  _____________________________________________ Flea Market! It's just like...it's just like...A MINI-MALL!

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                  • L leckey 0

                    Where originally in SD and now where in IA? [edit] I assume western SD since you used the word 'ranchers' [/edit];)

                    _____________________________________________ Flea Market! It's just like...it's just like...A MINI-MALL!

                    S Offline
                    S Offline
                    StewBob
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #10

                    I'm in Ames, IA these days; which, if you have to live in Iowa, is actually pretty decent. The first part of the question gets kind of long. I think my parents were gypsy farmers and never bothered to tell me. I lived (in South Dakota) in: Storla Igloo Edgemont Delmont Pukwana (Chamberlain) Mud Butte (Faith) Rapid City Custer Aberdeen How about your small-town roots? Sioux City isn't really in that category. -- modified at 17:22 Friday 21st September, 2007

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                    • J Judah Gabriel Himango

                      Well, not the part about knowing everybody in town. We have more people in some cities than South Dakota has in the whole state. :)

                      Tech, life, family, faith: Give me a visit. I'm currently blogging about: Sound The Great Shofar! The apostle Paul, modernly speaking: Epistles of Paul Judah Himango

                      J Offline
                      J Offline
                      Justin Perez
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #11

                      Judah Himango wrote:

                      Well, not the part about knowing everybody in town. We have more people in some cities than South Dakota has in the whole state.

                      Yeah I guess Minneapolis has a lot of people. I moved from Tucson, Arizona(Huge city) about 6 months ago to Alexandria, Minnesota. There is about 15,000 people here, and I find this place so small it is depressing. I just forgot that all of minnesota is not this way :)

                      I get all the news I need from the weather report - Paul Simon (from "The Only Living Boy in New York")

                      1 Reply Last reply
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                      • S StewBob

                        I'm in Ames, IA these days; which, if you have to live in Iowa, is actually pretty decent. The first part of the question gets kind of long. I think my parents were gypsy farmers and never bothered to tell me. I lived (in South Dakota) in: Storla Igloo Edgemont Delmont Pukwana (Chamberlain) Mud Butte (Faith) Rapid City Custer Aberdeen How about your small-town roots? Sioux City isn't really in that category. -- modified at 17:22 Friday 21st September, 2007

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                        L Offline
                        leckey 0
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #12

                        Grew up in DeSmet and then lived in Brookings for 12 years. DeSmet is only about 1200 people.

                        _____________________________________________ Flea Market! It's just like...it's just like...A MINI-MALL!

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • L leckey 0

                          During a storm you check the cattle before you check the kids. You are related to more than half the town. You can tell the difference between a horse and a cow from a distance. Your car breaks down outside of town and news of it reaches back to town before you do. (This actually happened to me.) You don't put too much effort into hairstyles due to wind and weather. (I can remember many mornings of walking to school with frozen hair.) Your quarterback is hurt and you're hoping it's the first thing on the 6 o'clock news. (We love our local sports.) There's a tornado warning and the whole town is outside watching for it. (Until it comes barreling down the road. Then we hit the basement.) The local gas station sells live bait. You don't buy all your vegetables at the grocery store. You go to the State Fair for your family vacation. You get up at 5:30 a.m. and go down to the coffee shop. (And 3pm if you farm.) You're on a first name basis with the county sheriff. (And not for getting in trouble.) When little smokies are something you serve on special occasions. You go to the river because it's almost like going to the ocean. You have the number of the Co-op on speed dial. All your radio preset buttons are country. (Except me. I'm the lone holdout from my graduating class.) Using the elevator involved a corn truck. Your mayor is also your garbage hauler, barber, and insurance salesman. You know you should listen to the weather forecast before picking out an outfit. You are walking knee-deep in snow. Your excuse for getting out of school is that the cows got out. (We were late a couple of times because of cows blocking the road.) You talk with a friend about some big event you are going to attend, and by the end of the conversation you've decided you're both too broke to go. (Beacuse everything 'big' is at least two hours away.) You know cow pies aren't made of beef. Your early morning prayer covers rain, cattle and pigs. You wake up when it's dark and go to bed when it's still light. (We call it getting up at "O dark thirty." You consider a romantic evening driving through Hardees and renting a hunting instructional video. You want to buy manure. You listen to "Paul Harvey" every day at noon. You can tell it's a farmer working late in his field and not a UFO. Your nearest neighbor is in the next area code. (Not true. The entire state only has one area code.) You leave your snow tires on year-round. (I've seen snow in June and Septe

                          L Offline
                          L Offline
                          lost in transition
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #13

                          Classic sounds almost like home except the really cold weather and knee deep snow. You forgot one: You can tell the difference between horse and cow manure by the smell. And that my friends is the 'Rest of the Story', I am going home yall have a good weekend.


                          God Bless, Jason
                          I am not perfect but I try to be better than those before me. So those who come after me will be better than I am.

                          L 1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • S StewBob

                            I'm in Ames, IA these days; which, if you have to live in Iowa, is actually pretty decent. The first part of the question gets kind of long. I think my parents were gypsy farmers and never bothered to tell me. I lived (in South Dakota) in: Storla Igloo Edgemont Delmont Pukwana (Chamberlain) Mud Butte (Faith) Rapid City Custer Aberdeen How about your small-town roots? Sioux City isn't really in that category. -- modified at 17:22 Friday 21st September, 2007

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                            F Offline
                            Frank Kerrigan
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #14

                            I lived in Aberdeen ( Aberdeen, Scotland that is) :)

                            Grady Booch: I told Google to their face...what you need is some serious adult supervision. (2007 Turing lecture) http://www.frankkerrigan.com/[^]

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                            • J Justin Perez

                              All of that applied to Minnesota as well =)

                              I get all the news I need from the weather report - Paul Simon (from "The Only Living Boy in New York")

                              M Offline
                              M Offline
                              Mustafa Ismail Mustafa
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #15

                              You can say that Alberta, Canada too. You might not tell it by my name, but I was actually born and raised there.

                              There are 10 kinds of people in this world. Those who understand binary and those who don't... ______________________ "Programming today is a race between software engineers striving to build bigger and better idiot-proof programs, and the Universe trying to produce bigger and better idiots. So far, the Universe is winning." - Rick Cook

                              1 Reply Last reply
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                              • L leckey 0

                                During a storm you check the cattle before you check the kids. You are related to more than half the town. You can tell the difference between a horse and a cow from a distance. Your car breaks down outside of town and news of it reaches back to town before you do. (This actually happened to me.) You don't put too much effort into hairstyles due to wind and weather. (I can remember many mornings of walking to school with frozen hair.) Your quarterback is hurt and you're hoping it's the first thing on the 6 o'clock news. (We love our local sports.) There's a tornado warning and the whole town is outside watching for it. (Until it comes barreling down the road. Then we hit the basement.) The local gas station sells live bait. You don't buy all your vegetables at the grocery store. You go to the State Fair for your family vacation. You get up at 5:30 a.m. and go down to the coffee shop. (And 3pm if you farm.) You're on a first name basis with the county sheriff. (And not for getting in trouble.) When little smokies are something you serve on special occasions. You go to the river because it's almost like going to the ocean. You have the number of the Co-op on speed dial. All your radio preset buttons are country. (Except me. I'm the lone holdout from my graduating class.) Using the elevator involved a corn truck. Your mayor is also your garbage hauler, barber, and insurance salesman. You know you should listen to the weather forecast before picking out an outfit. You are walking knee-deep in snow. Your excuse for getting out of school is that the cows got out. (We were late a couple of times because of cows blocking the road.) You talk with a friend about some big event you are going to attend, and by the end of the conversation you've decided you're both too broke to go. (Beacuse everything 'big' is at least two hours away.) You know cow pies aren't made of beef. Your early morning prayer covers rain, cattle and pigs. You wake up when it's dark and go to bed when it's still light. (We call it getting up at "O dark thirty." You consider a romantic evening driving through Hardees and renting a hunting instructional video. You want to buy manure. You listen to "Paul Harvey" every day at noon. You can tell it's a farmer working late in his field and not a UFO. Your nearest neighbor is in the next area code. (Not true. The entire state only has one area code.) You leave your snow tires on year-round. (I've seen snow in June and Septe

                                M Offline
                                M Offline
                                Michael Bergman
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #16

                                Most of those come from Jeff Foxworthy's "You may be a redneck...".

                                m.bergman

                                -- For Bruce Schneier, quanta only have one state : afraid.

                                1 Reply Last reply
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                                • L leckey 0

                                  During a storm you check the cattle before you check the kids. You are related to more than half the town. You can tell the difference between a horse and a cow from a distance. Your car breaks down outside of town and news of it reaches back to town before you do. (This actually happened to me.) You don't put too much effort into hairstyles due to wind and weather. (I can remember many mornings of walking to school with frozen hair.) Your quarterback is hurt and you're hoping it's the first thing on the 6 o'clock news. (We love our local sports.) There's a tornado warning and the whole town is outside watching for it. (Until it comes barreling down the road. Then we hit the basement.) The local gas station sells live bait. You don't buy all your vegetables at the grocery store. You go to the State Fair for your family vacation. You get up at 5:30 a.m. and go down to the coffee shop. (And 3pm if you farm.) You're on a first name basis with the county sheriff. (And not for getting in trouble.) When little smokies are something you serve on special occasions. You go to the river because it's almost like going to the ocean. You have the number of the Co-op on speed dial. All your radio preset buttons are country. (Except me. I'm the lone holdout from my graduating class.) Using the elevator involved a corn truck. Your mayor is also your garbage hauler, barber, and insurance salesman. You know you should listen to the weather forecast before picking out an outfit. You are walking knee-deep in snow. Your excuse for getting out of school is that the cows got out. (We were late a couple of times because of cows blocking the road.) You talk with a friend about some big event you are going to attend, and by the end of the conversation you've decided you're both too broke to go. (Beacuse everything 'big' is at least two hours away.) You know cow pies aren't made of beef. Your early morning prayer covers rain, cattle and pigs. You wake up when it's dark and go to bed when it's still light. (We call it getting up at "O dark thirty." You consider a romantic evening driving through Hardees and renting a hunting instructional video. You want to buy manure. You listen to "Paul Harvey" every day at noon. You can tell it's a farmer working late in his field and not a UFO. Your nearest neighbor is in the next area code. (Not true. The entire state only has one area code.) You leave your snow tires on year-round. (I've seen snow in June and Septe

                                  M Offline
                                  M Offline
                                  Marc Clifton
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #17

                                  Well, from that list, I must have at least stayed in South Dakota for a few months! Your nearest neighbor is in the next area code. (Not true. The entire state only has one area code.) Doesn't matter. Your nearest neighbor IS in the next state! Marc

                                  Thyme In The Country
                                  Interacx
                                  My Blog

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                                  • L lost in transition

                                    Classic sounds almost like home except the really cold weather and knee deep snow. You forgot one: You can tell the difference between horse and cow manure by the smell. And that my friends is the 'Rest of the Story', I am going home yall have a good weekend.


                                    God Bless, Jason
                                    I am not perfect but I try to be better than those before me. So those who come after me will be better than I am.

                                    L Offline
                                    L Offline
                                    Lost User
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #18

                                    You are so gullible man. That thread that got deleted where you were going to help your fellow Christian write a program that could write files to the boot sector was really me.

                                    J L 2 Replies Last reply
                                    0
                                    • L Lost User

                                      You are so gullible man. That thread that got deleted where you were going to help your fellow Christian write a program that could write files to the boot sector was really me.

                                      J Offline
                                      J Offline
                                      Justin Perez
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #19

                                      :laugh::laugh::laugh:

                                      I get all the news I need from the weather report - Paul Simon (from "The Only Living Boy in New York")

                                      L 1 Reply Last reply
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                                      • D Dan Neely

                                        leckey wrote:

                                        Your car breaks down outside of town and news of it reaches back to town before you do. (This actually happened to me.)

                                        Nice of them to offer you a ride back. :doh:

                                        -- If you view money as inherently evil, I view it as my duty to assist in making you more virtuous.

                                        E Offline
                                        E Offline
                                        El Corazon
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #20

                                        dan neely wrote:

                                        Nice of them to offer you a ride back.

                                        the ironic part is, every one of your friends will know about you at the side of the road, but you will never find who saw you on the road. Even if you saw one of your friends, he'll not have seen you and heard it from .... and will have a name for you. No one will have seen you, but somehow the word got back. ;)

                                        _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)

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                                        • R Rama Krishna Vavilala

                                          What happened to crazy holiday posts?

                                          Co-Author ASP.NET AJAX in Action

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                                          El Corazon
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #21

                                          Rama Krishna Vavilala wrote:

                                          What happened to crazy holiday posts?

                                          today was "drive the speed limit day" you are supposed to drive the speed limit for 24 hours and find out how easy it is and that it doesn't interfere with your schedule, but I doubted anyone would want to know. :laugh:

                                          _________________________ Asu no koto o ieba, tenjo de nezumi ga warau. Talk about things of tomorrow and the mice in the ceiling laugh. (Japanese Proverb)

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