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OP
old hand
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re: "...always good to have another West Islander back in the fold."
Don't force me to bring the Bledisloe Cup into the conversation. Or the Rugby League tests. Or the cricket. Do you guys HAVE any swimmers? There haven't been any runners since John the Schnoz retired. And your netballers only won because of a one-woman South African team.
More than happy to be friends with your lot on the 25th of April (or when you're playing the old foe) - after that it's by appointment.
Remember - your people ONCE were warriors.
Hehehehehe
stales
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Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
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your people...Bledisloe Cup...Rugby League tests...cricket
Mind you, stales, as an US'n I'm strictly neutral here.
Dunno what all this jabbering about cups and tests and insects is about. Around here if it's a cup it's parbly got coffee in it (we're more likely to call it a mug, however); I din't know you had to pass some kind of test to play (is that the right verb here?) Rugby and we got crickets but we got grasshoppers and cicadas, too.
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Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
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A wonderful bird is the pemmican, whose craw holds as much as a semi can.
With absolutely no apologies to Ogden Nash. None. Zip.
TEd
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What is a beef jerky? Is this name connected with 'sense 1', and if so, who would eat such a snack?
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Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
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A hundred years or more ago, when canning and refrigeration had not been invented, and salt was quite expensive or not locally available, beef in small strips could be dried and taken on long trips by explorers, for example. This was called beef jerky. Life sustaining, but definitely not a gourmet treat.
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Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
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Dr. Bill has described this treat quite well. It is very hard to chew but there are those who like it in small quantities.
In the '70s I had a young friend who was bitten by a rattlesnake. The doctor he got had just read an article suggesting that the best thing to do for a snake bite was to leave it alone. Either he had not read the entire article or there were other mitigating (sic) circumstances, but my friend barely survived the experience. He had gotten to the stage where he was lying at death's proverbial door in the hospital, unwilling to eat hospital food. His parents, knowing his like for beef jerky brought him a tavern size jar of the disgusting little things. He devoured about two-thirds of the stuff. The protein rush combined with the flushing effect of the massive quantities of sodium (they are quite salty) and the water he had to drink to quench the thirst they inspired in him cleared his system of the buildup of toxins from the medical mishandling and dragged him kicking and screaming away from death's proverbial door.
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old hand
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old hand
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who would eat such a snack?There was a meat store near our old place where you could buy beef or chicken jerky. My husband really liked it. I even found the chicken stuff bearable myself. (So did the cat, who ate through the bag to nibble on the jerky one day when we were out! )
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and speak to anyone from Seth Efrica!
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Carpal Tunnel
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No, of course its not releated to 'sense 1' and as for who would eat such a snack?[ it interesting how food, once prepared as way of preserving it, can now be viewed as good in its own right. Pickles-- or sour kraut, or salt cod-- and jerky in all its forms ( some are just salted and dried, others are spiced and smoked dry) have become food that are enjoyed to some degree as much as the fresh foods they are made from. [almost a rant]
it seems to me to be part of the same impulse that in the beheading thread, wanted to replace the term beheading with a latin term or greek term.. as if some how, giving the word game a fancier name made it "more important"
I think that if the people of the cultures that first produced beef jerky where given the option of canned meat (even something like spam), or portable refridgeration, and fresh or frozen meat, they would have abandoned jerky in a NY minute!
It is a fondness for the good old days. a kind of mythical experience. Jerky is interesting because it is a snack food-- not the only from of protein you'll see 4 months..
I am sure Dr. Bill remembers from his early training, how prevalent stomach cancer once used to be-- the most common cancer.. as refridgeration became available, stomach cancer became less and less common.. when fresh, healthfull food became the norm, the cancer all but disappeared--
We mythically harken towards the good old days that weren't really all that good-- and give word games latin and greek names-- to some how make them less like fun-- and more "scholarly" -- and so justify our playing them![/almost a rant]
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