the rednecks in washington look a lot like
Last edited by eleven bravo (2010-10-05 20:24:19)
Tu Stultus Es
Last edited by eleven bravo (2010-10-05 20:24:19)
KCD isn't. i will say, it's a beautiful place . . .eleven bravo wrote:
everybody ive ever met from washington state was incredibly pale. Ill bet $7.48 that newbie is incredibly pale
Yes. But I'll take the rain over the 87 degree, 95% humidity weather in Puerto Rico. My girlfriend loved it. My Swedish blood doesn't do heat.eleven bravo wrote:
i bet its raining
Last edited by JohnG@lt (2010-10-05 20:37:48)
Last edited by eleven bravo (2010-10-05 20:42:13)
I was advanced guard coming home and didn't realize that this meant two straight weeks on the wash rack in DOHA cleaning my entire companies vehicles to customs standards December in Kuwait is fucking cold, add in cold water from the wash rack and I was straight miserable for two weeks.eleven bravo wrote:
fuck that I hate the god damn rain with a passion reserved only for rapists, ugg boots and sarah palin. I just think about all my tramatic experiences as grunt in the field with the rain. or in iraq when it rained. or when i was in the mounted section of the platoon when it rained in the motor pool. or when I had to go to the wash rack. or when I was in OSUT at benning when it rained.
I bet that wash rack is still semi-radioactiveJohnG@lt wrote:
I was advanced guard coming home and didn't realize that this meant two straight weeks on the wash rack in DOHA cleaning my entire companies vehicles to customs standards December in Kuwait is fucking cold, add in cold water from the wash rack and I was straight miserable for two weeks.eleven bravo wrote:
fuck that I hate the god damn rain with a passion reserved only for rapists, ugg boots and sarah palin. I just think about all my tramatic experiences as grunt in the field with the rain. or in iraq when it rained. or when i was in the mounted section of the platoon when it rained in the motor pool. or when I had to go to the wash rack. or when I was in OSUT at benning when it rained.
Myth.Trotskygrad wrote:
I bet that wash rack is still semi-radioactiveJohnG@lt wrote:
I was advanced guard coming home and didn't realize that this meant two straight weeks on the wash rack in DOHA cleaning my entire companies vehicles to customs standards December in Kuwait is fucking cold, add in cold water from the wash rack and I was straight miserable for two weeks.eleven bravo wrote:
fuck that I hate the god damn rain with a passion reserved only for rapists, ugg boots and sarah palin. I just think about all my tramatic experiences as grunt in the field with the rain. or in iraq when it rained. or when i was in the mounted section of the platoon when it rained in the motor pool. or when I had to go to the wash rack. or when I was in OSUT at benning when it rained.
http://www.gulflink.osd.mil/du/du_tabi.htmJohnG@lt wrote:
Myth.Trotskygrad wrote:
I bet that wash rack is still semi-radioactiveJohnG@lt wrote:
I was advanced guard coming home and didn't realize that this meant two straight weeks on the wash rack in DOHA cleaning my entire companies vehicles to customs standards December in Kuwait is fucking cold, add in cold water from the wash rack and I was straight miserable for two weeks.
Trotskygrad wrote:
http://www.gulflink.osd.mil/du/du_tabi.htmJohnG@lt wrote:
Myth.Trotskygrad wrote:
I bet that wash rack is still semi-radioactive
When the ECC team started work in mid-September 1991, approximately two-thirds of the North compound remained uncleared, and due to the UXO threat, no one was permitted into those areas. It took the ECC team two months to get these areas cleaned up.
but I bet there's still weak amounts of radioactivity due to the long half-life of uranium.JohnG@lt wrote:
When the ECC team started work in mid-September 1991, approximately two-thirds of the North compound remained uncleared, and due to the UXO threat, no one was permitted into those areas. It took the ECC team two months to get these areas cleaned up.
There is radioactivity everywhere on earth. Sunlight is radioactive. Calm yourself Mr. Conspiracy Theorist.Trotskygrad wrote:
but I bet there's still weak amounts of radioactivity due to the long half-life of uranium.JohnG@lt wrote:
When the ECC team started work in mid-September 1991, approximately two-thirds of the North compound remained uncleared, and due to the UXO threat, no one was permitted into those areas. It took the ECC team two months to get these areas cleaned up.
Welcome to the tropics. Wait for the flooding when powerboats are the only means to get around...SEREMAKER wrote:
we did a little trip across the hills in Thailand during july ..... after the 1st step, it opened up and poured on us for the next 6 days ....... non-stop
One of the most radioactive places on Earth is a tourist beach in Brazil. Lots of granite in the area or something to that effect.JohnG@lt wrote:
There is radioactivity everywhere on earth. Sunlight is radioactive. Calm yourself Mr. Conspiracy Theorist.Trotskygrad wrote:
but I bet there's still weak amounts of radioactivity due to the long half-life of uranium.JohnG@lt wrote:
Trotskygrad wrote:
http://www.gulflink.osd.mil/du/du_tabi.htm
not my 1st venture in the tropicsIlocano wrote:
Welcome to the tropics. Wait for the flooding when powerboats are the only means to get around...SEREMAKER wrote:
we did a little trip across the hills in Thailand during july ..... after the 1st step, it opened up and poured on us for the next 6 days ....... non-stop
I lived on Kodiak Island for a spell. It rained constantly -or snowed. Nasty extreme weather. Grey more then blue skies. I got stir crazy and gave up caring about getting soaked to the bone every time I went outside. I had a blast. Top shelf fishing and hunting....eleven bravo wrote:
the rain god is a pussy
Not to nitpick, but sunlight is radiation, not radioactive.JohnG@lt wrote:
There is radioactivity everywhere on earth. Sunlight is radioactive. Calm yourself Mr. Conspiracy Theorist.