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Yeah, I took my first mother-in-law down a tidal river in a smallish boat and she found a piece of driftwood. When we got back she showed the FIL and said, "I bet I can get a hundred bucks for this." Jack replied, "Hazel, you can nail two 2x4's together, call it art, and eventually some fool will give you a hundred bucks for it."These are retail, but there's retail and then there's retail.
I was watching one of the auction guns and it just kept getting relisted every week. Same damn gun, same damn reserve. They figure some douchbag will come along.
It used to be Bo Derek, but have you seen her lately?What's a 10?![]()
https://www.beachesofnormandy.com/d...il&utm_term=0_c789992310-e7db3711e6-405910375
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The new design had several advantages. One, it could be put on easily and fast, without having to fiddle with laces. Two, laces could easily become undone and then get entangled in a moving part inside the tank, or even drag the wearer’s foot into a piece of machinery. Three, the leather boots lacked the nylon that was present in many other boots and in the laces. This was important, because the nylon could melt while the crew was escaping from a burning vehicle (or if simply the boot touched a hot ejected shell casing), causing burn wounds. Four, crewmen could get outside the perform maintenance on the tank in mud without the eyelets getting clogged by the mud, and without the muddy boots becoming hard to unlace. And fifth, the strapped boots set less tightly on the foot; this was important to tank crews who often spent extended periods of time sitting inside their vehicle, and whose blood circulation would have been impaired by tighter boots.
My father was a tech Sargent in a tank. Landed at Normandy on D-day +6 and was one of the first tanks across the Rhine. SALUTE ! It's a wonder I am here, he escaped his burning tank three times.
Salute indeed!!!
My dad was too young for WW2. His outing was Korea, but he was USN stationed in the Atlantic. They chased more Soviet subs, it seems, both real and imaginary. My granddad, however, went to the Philippines at the tender age of 39.
I'd prefer those shoes in black.
My grandfather was gassed in WW1 and had health issues the rest if his life. He barely got a wiff before he could get his mask on.
I got a MP Shield and really like it. It is small, light and doesn't print, and was cheap.Wife likes their M&P Shield. She has tiny hands and it fits her perfectly. So... if you gotta buy something for a girl, it's a good bet.
I love this, but must say, she must have an imagined hunting situation in her head. Have a coyote going for your livestock on a fast run and see how many rounds it takes to stop it. A bolt action with a five round clip is not going to get it done especially if your 16 year old daughter is doing the shooting to protect her prized lamb.