I remember when people had to be snowbound for a few weeks before they started getting silly.
mythusmage said:I remember when people had to be snowbound for a few weeks before they started getting silly.
Piratecat said:There's no apostrophe in "PCs". That's cause right there.
Seriously? We had "eating" threads on elves, centaurs, giants, pandas, gorillons, three-toed sloths, trilobites, robozombies, ninjas and flumphs - or it sure felt like it. The PCs thread was the last straw. I closed it to send a message that a few "eating" threads were interesting, but four was too many.
Or, alternatively, I may just be a jerk.
I wonder if you actually comprehend how easy it is to ban someone for the skimpiest of reasons?Fenris said:It was 87 where I live today.![]()
Dog Moon said:Although I'm not even sure what an ur-noodle is! Doesn't sound too good though.
Piratecat said:I wonder if you actually comprehend how easy it is to ban someone for the skimpiest of reasons?
Umbran said:Allow me to enlighten you on the nature of the Ur-Noodle: The Flying Spaghetti Monster
Dog Moon said:Haha. Yeah, I wouldn't want to be that. So calling someone an ur-noodle IS an insult!
Nonlethal Force said:Yeah ... but ask him to describe his beautiful seasonal color changes. Oh, wait. That doesn't happen in places that doesn't receive a periodical cold snap.
There are advantages to living in places burried under a foot of snow for a month or two. We get daffodils and other hardy bulbs that simply can't grow there because the ground doesn't freeze.
I know, I sound like a child of the sixties. But it does make the winter seem a little worthwhile. Besides, I lived in Texas for a year after spending my life north of the Mason-Dixon line. Do you know how messed up I felt when there wasn't a seasonal change? There was summer and not summer. But non of this summer/fall/winter/spring stuff. Don't get me wrong, though. I loved Texas in every other regard.