 |
|
 |
|
Next: SX on CBS Sunday
|
| Author |
Message |
External

Since: Apr 23, 2006 Posts: 218
|
(Msg. 1) Posted: Sat Feb 10, 2007 11:50 am
Post subject: Life in Brasil Archived from groups: rec>motorcycles>dirt (more info?)
|
|
|
With apologies to Tiago;
SAO PAULO (Reuters) - A 66-year-old Brazilian man wrestled with a 15-
foot (5-metre) anaconda for nearly half an hour to free his grandson
from the snake's crushing death grip, local media reported on Friday.
Matheus Pereira de Araujo, 8, would likely be dead inside the belly of
the 80 pound (35 kg) anaconda if his grandfather had not heard his
screams for help, zoologists said.
Anacondas, the biggest snakes in the world, live in swamps and rivers.
They kill prey by asphyxiation or drowning.
When the snake struck Araujo, who lives in the world's third largest
metropolis of Sao Paulo, he was playing with a cousin on Wednesday in
a creek bed on his grandfather's farm 310 miles (500 km) from the city
in a town called Cosmorama.
"It was very fast. I didn't have time to do anything," the Folha de
Sao Paulo newspaper quoted Araujo as saying. "My grandfather is a hero
-- I was so afraid of dying."
Joaquim Pereira was driving home when he heard the screams of Matheus
and his cousin Flavio, 8, who ran to get help.
Pereira jumped into the ravine and grappled with the snake, which
started coiling around him as well.
"I started fighting the animal and tried to loosen its grip on the
boy's neck but the snake was too strong," Pereira told the Bom Dia
newspaper of Sao Jose do Rio Preto.
Pereira then attacked it with stones and a machete.
"I kept hitting it with the machete but it felt like a rubber tyre, it
wouldn't tear," he said.
He killed it after a long struggle to free the boy, who needed 21
stitches on his chest where the snake bit him.
"It was the most terrible scene that I've seen in my life," Pereira
said. "It was totally coiled around him while he was screaming that he
was dying."
Senator Eduardo Suplicy said Pereira should be honoured by the
Brazilian government for heroism. >> Stay informed about: Life in Brasil |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |  |
External

Since: Nov 26, 2006 Posts: 11
|
(Msg. 2) Posted: Sat Feb 10, 2007 3:37 pm
Post subject: Re: Life in Brasil [Login to view extended thread Info.] Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)
|
|
|
Sound like he needed a sharper machete. A chainsaw would have given
that snake a nice trim in the middle!!!!
On Feb 10, 1:50 pm, "oldfart" <alan.westco....TakeThisOut@gmail.com> wrote:
> With apologies to Tiago;
>
> SAO PAULO (Reuters) - A 66-year-old Brazilian man wrestled with a 15-
> foot (5-metre) anaconda for nearly half an hour to free his grandson
> from the snake's crushing death grip, local media reported on Friday.
>
> Matheus Pereira de Araujo, 8, would likely be dead inside the belly of
> the 80 pound (35 kg) anaconda if his grandfather had not heard his
> screams for help, zoologists said.
>
> Anacondas, the biggest snakes in the world, live in swamps and rivers.
> They kill prey by asphyxiation or drowning.
>
> When the snake struck Araujo, who lives in the world's third largest
> metropolis of Sao Paulo, he was playing with a cousin on Wednesday in
> a creek bed on his grandfather's farm 310 miles (500 km) from the city
> in a town called Cosmorama.
>
> "It was very fast. I didn't have time to do anything," the Folha de
> Sao Paulo newspaper quoted Araujo as saying. "My grandfather is a hero
> -- I was so afraid of dying."
>
> Joaquim Pereira was driving home when he heard the screams of Matheus
> and his cousin Flavio, 8, who ran to get help.
>
> Pereira jumped into the ravine and grappled with the snake, which
> started coiling around him as well.
>
> "I started fighting the animal and tried to loosen its grip on the
> boy's neck but the snake was too strong," Pereira told the Bom Dia
> newspaper of Sao Jose do Rio Preto.
>
> Pereira then attacked it with stones and a machete.
>
> "I kept hitting it with the machete but it felt like a rubber tyre, it
> wouldn't tear," he said.
>
> He killed it after a long struggle to free the boy, who needed 21
> stitches on his chest where the snake bit him.
>
> "It was the most terrible scene that I've seen in my life," Pereira
> said. "It was totally coiled around him while he was screaming that he
> was dying."
>
> Senator Eduardo Suplicy said Pereira should be honoured by the
> Brazilian government for heroism. >> Stay informed about: Life in Brasil |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |  |
External

Since: Feb 12, 2004 Posts: 364
|
(Msg. 3) Posted: Sat Feb 10, 2007 5:50 pm
Post subject: Re: Life in Brasil [Login to view extended thread Info.] Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)
|
|
|
I've always wondered why people bothered trying to pull a snakes mouth open
and pry them off of someone else when they just don't do well once they're
in pieces.
Tom
"rdnakx250" <pmahaffy.DeleteThis@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:1171150633.828332.129850@v45g2000cwv.googlegroups.com...
> Sound like he needed a sharper machete. A chainsaw would have given
> that snake a nice trim in the middle!!!!
>
>
> On Feb 10, 1:50 pm, "oldfart" <alan.westco....DeleteThis@gmail.com> wrote:
>> With apologies to Tiago;
>>
>> SAO PAULO (Reuters) - A 66-year-old Brazilian man wrestled with a 15-
>> foot (5-metre) anaconda for nearly half an hour to free his grandson
>> from the snake's crushing death grip, local media reported on Friday.
>>
>> Matheus Pereira de Araujo, 8, would likely be dead inside the belly of
>> the 80 pound (35 kg) anaconda if his grandfather had not heard his
>> screams for help, zoologists said.
>>
>> Anacondas, the biggest snakes in the world, live in swamps and rivers.
>> They kill prey by asphyxiation or drowning.
>>
>> When the snake struck Araujo, who lives in the world's third largest
>> metropolis of Sao Paulo, he was playing with a cousin on Wednesday in
>> a creek bed on his grandfather's farm 310 miles (500 km) from the city
>> in a town called Cosmorama.
>>
>> "It was very fast. I didn't have time to do anything," the Folha de
>> Sao Paulo newspaper quoted Araujo as saying. "My grandfather is a hero
>> -- I was so afraid of dying."
>>
>> Joaquim Pereira was driving home when he heard the screams of Matheus
>> and his cousin Flavio, 8, who ran to get help.
>>
>> Pereira jumped into the ravine and grappled with the snake, which
>> started coiling around him as well.
>>
>> "I started fighting the animal and tried to loosen its grip on the
>> boy's neck but the snake was too strong," Pereira told the Bom Dia
>> newspaper of Sao Jose do Rio Preto.
>>
>> Pereira then attacked it with stones and a machete.
>>
>> "I kept hitting it with the machete but it felt like a rubber tyre, it
>> wouldn't tear," he said.
>>
>> He killed it after a long struggle to free the boy, who needed 21
>> stitches on his chest where the snake bit him.
>>
>> "It was the most terrible scene that I've seen in my life," Pereira
>> said. "It was totally coiled around him while he was screaming that he
>> was dying."
>>
>> Senator Eduardo Suplicy said Pereira should be honoured by the
>> Brazilian government for heroism.
>
> >> Stay informed about: Life in Brasil |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |  |
External

Since: Jul 27, 2006 Posts: 51
|
(Msg. 4) Posted: Sat Feb 10, 2007 7:13 pm
Post subject: Re: Life in Brasil [Login to view extended thread Info.] Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)
|
|
|
In article <1171137046.233138.247380 DeleteThis @l53g2000cwa.googlegroups.com>,
"oldfart" <alan.westcoast DeleteThis @gmail.com> wrote:
> With apologies to Tiago;
>
> SAO PAULO (Reuters) - A 66-year-old Brazilian man wrestled with a 15-
> foot (5-metre) anaconda for nearly half an hour to free his grandson
> from the snake's crushing death grip, local media reported on Friday.
>
> Matheus Pereira de Araujo, 8, would likely be dead inside the belly of
> the 80 pound (35 kg) anaconda if his grandfather had not heard his
> screams for help, zoologists said.
>
> Anacondas, the biggest snakes in the world, live in swamps and rivers.
> They kill prey by asphyxiation or drowning.
>
> When the snake struck Araujo, who lives in the world's third largest
> metropolis of Sao Paulo, he was playing with a cousin on Wednesday in
> a creek bed on his grandfather's farm 310 miles (500 km) from the city
> in a town called Cosmorama.
>
> "It was very fast. I didn't have time to do anything," the Folha de
> Sao Paulo newspaper quoted Araujo as saying. "My grandfather is a hero
> -- I was so afraid of dying."
>
> Joaquim Pereira was driving home when he heard the screams of Matheus
> and his cousin Flavio, 8, who ran to get help.
>
> Pereira jumped into the ravine and grappled with the snake, which
> started coiling around him as well.
>
> "I started fighting the animal and tried to loosen its grip on the
> boy's neck but the snake was too strong," Pereira told the Bom Dia
> newspaper of Sao Jose do Rio Preto.
>
> Pereira then attacked it with stones and a machete.
>
> "I kept hitting it with the machete but it felt like a rubber tyre, it
> wouldn't tear," he said.
>
> He killed it after a long struggle to free the boy, who needed 21
> stitches on his chest where the snake bit him.
>
> "It was the most terrible scene that I've seen in my life," Pereira
> said. "It was totally coiled around him while he was screaming that he
> was dying."
>
> Senator Eduardo Suplicy said Pereira should be honoured by the
> Brazilian government for heroism.
That is simply astonishing. Wow. Another minute and it would likely have
been too late. Stuff of movies. Well, scary movies, that is.
Wonder if Tiago ever run over a snake while riding? Or would it be the
other way around? >> Stay informed about: Life in Brasil |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |  |
External

Since: Feb 08, 2007 Posts: 4
|
(Msg. 5) Posted: Sat Feb 10, 2007 7:23 pm
Post subject: Re: Life in Brasil [Login to view extended thread Info.] Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)
|
|
|
Eat Dirt wrote:
>
> "oldfart" <alan.westcoast.RemoveThis@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> With apologies to Tiago;
>>
>> Senator Eduardo Suplicy said Pereira should be honoured by theI will
>> Brazilian government for heroism.
>
> That is simply astonishing. Wow. Another minute and it would likely have
> been too late. Stuff of movies. Well, scary movies, that is.
I will never forget Jon Voight's last scene in Anaconda. At least I
think it was Jon Voight, it was hard to tell what with all the snakeslime.
> Wonder if Tiago ever run over a snake while riding? Or would it be the
> other way around?
Perhaps a dreaded whipsnake...
--
Cheers, Bev
===================================
New sig on order, watch this space. >> Stay informed about: Life in Brasil |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |  |
External

Since: Mar 18, 2005 Posts: 255
|
(Msg. 6) Posted: Mon Feb 12, 2007 4:05 am
Post subject: Re: Life in Brasil [Login to view extended thread Info.] Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)
|
|
|
On 10 fev, 16:50, "oldfart" <alan.westco....TakeThisOut@gmail.com> wrote:
> Senator Eduardo Suplicy said Pereira should be honoured by the
> Brazilian government for heroism.
They should arrest Suplicy. LOL! Damned corrupt politician!!!
This was big news here. Happens once every ice age. Do you know what
the kid said when a reporter later asked if he would go back to that
area? "sure I will, if another snake gets me again, grandpa will
always save me".
There are no sucuri (native brazilian name for anaconda) where I live.
The snakes I find on trails are the 1 meter long coral (very dangerous
poisonous colorful snake, be *very* afraid of this one http://
www.bioterium.com.br/imagens/Serpentes/MicrurusCorallinus.jpg), a few
rattlesnakes and assorted no-poisonous green snakes.
-- Tiago >> Stay informed about: Life in Brasil |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |  |
External

Since: Nov 16, 2006 Posts: 12
|
(Msg. 7) Posted: Mon Feb 12, 2007 4:12 pm
Post subject: Re: Life in Brasil [Login to view extended thread Info.] Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)
|
|
|
I HATE SNAKES!!!
>With apologies to Tiago;
>
>SAO PAULO (Reuters) - A 66-year-old Brazilian man wrestled with a 15-
>foot (5-metre) anaconda for nearly half an hour to free his grandson
>from the snake's crushing death grip, local media reported on Friday.
>
>Matheus Pereira de Araujo, 8, would likely be dead inside the belly of
>the 80 pound (35 kg) anaconda if his grandfather had not heard his
>screams for help, zoologists said.
>
>Anacondas, the biggest snakes in the world, live in swamps and rivers.
>They kill prey by asphyxiation or drowning.
>
>When the snake struck Araujo, who lives in the world's third largest
>metropolis of Sao Paulo, he was playing with a cousin on Wednesday in
>a creek bed on his grandfather's farm 310 miles (500 km) from the city
>in a town called Cosmorama.
>
>"It was very fast. I didn't have time to do anything," the Folha de
>Sao Paulo newspaper quoted Araujo as saying. "My grandfather is a hero
>-- I was so afraid of dying."
>
>Joaquim Pereira was driving home when he heard the screams of Matheus
>and his cousin Flavio, 8, who ran to get help.
>
>Pereira jumped into the ravine and grappled with the snake, which
>started coiling around him as well.
>
>"I started fighting the animal and tried to loosen its grip on the
>boy's neck but the snake was too strong," Pereira told the Bom Dia
>newspaper of Sao Jose do Rio Preto.
>
>Pereira then attacked it with stones and a machete.
>
>"I kept hitting it with the machete but it felt like a rubber tyre, it
>wouldn't tear," he said.
>
>He killed it after a long struggle to free the boy, who needed 21
>stitches on his chest where the snake bit him.
>
>"It was the most terrible scene that I've seen in my life," Pereira
>said. "It was totally coiled around him while he was screaming that he
>was dying."
>
>Senator Eduardo Suplicy said Pereira should be honoured by the
>Brazilian government for heroism.
Bill & Debbie Smith
"The Slow Group"
97 -- 250KDX (Son-in-Law)
04 -- XR400 (Grandpa)
04 -- TTR125E (Debbie)
04 -- CRF150 (Family)
04 -- CRF50 (David)
05 -- CRF50 (Anthony)
06 -- 250 Quad (The two wheel handicapped people in our group) >> Stay informed about: Life in Brasil |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |  |
External

Since: Jul 27, 2006 Posts: 51
|
(Msg. 8) Posted: Fri Feb 16, 2007 12:03 am
Post subject: Re: Life in Brasil [Login to view extended thread Info.] Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)
|
|
|
In article <45CE8C49.9060704.DeleteThis@gmail.com>,
The Real Bev <bashley101+a@gmail.com> wrote:
> I will never forget Jon Voight's last scene in Anaconda. At least I
> think it was Jon Voight, it was hard to tell what with all the snakeslime.
Here's a better one for you: catch Snakes on a Plane, with Samuel L
Jackson. Pretty damn good.
If you thought that these snakes (in this case computer generated but
try not to let this take away from this very cool movie) were over
aggressive in how they bit their human victims, it is actually quite
accurate. The next day after seeing the movie on PPV (just last week) I
happen to catch some documentary where a guy was bit on the stomach by a
cobra. Those things really bit to kill. After that I didn't think the
computer snakes were too unreal, if that makes sense. >> Stay informed about: Life in Brasil |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |  |
External

Since: Apr 23, 2006 Posts: 218
|
(Msg. 9) Posted: Fri Feb 16, 2007 1:20 am
Post subject: Re: Life in Brasil [Login to view extended thread Info.] Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)
|
|
|
Away back in my youth, I had a buddy that loved snake hunting. We
would grab a twelve pack of beer and head out to Borrego Springs in
the middle of the night to look for snakes lying in the middle of the
blacktop road where it was warm. Mostly we were looking for the
poisonous pit vipers like rattle daddies. My friend was driving and
would see on and slam on his brakes, stopping with the headlights on
the snake. He would then jump out with his Maglight flashlight and
walk over to the snake blinding it with the light. In one quick move
he put the flashlight right down on the head of the snake and grabbed
the snake by the neck just behind the head and pick it up. He had a
pillow case he dropped it into. Of we would go looking for the next. I
never needed to get closer than say ten feet to any snake that could
potentially kill me but my friend had no fear. He never got bit
either. He just had a natural sense for these things.
On Feb 15, 11:41 pm, CrashTestDummy <f.j.bradfordREM....DeleteThis@verizon.net>
wrote:
> On Fri, 16 Feb 2007 00:03:52 -0700, Eat Dirt <s....DeleteThis@spam.pissoff>
> wrote:
>
> >...if that makes sense.
>
> It doesn't, you Canuck loser! Now shut the hell up!
>
> But seriously...
>
> I saw "Snakes on a Plane" with my wife and I must say the
> "Anaconda" comparison is about right... both were bad B-movies in my
> opinion. Right up there with "Lake Placid" and "Arachnophobia."
>
> I can't, in good conscious, recommend this to anyone. Sorry E.D.
>
> Fred Bradford - CrashTestDummy
> f.j.bradfordREM....DeleteThis@verizon.net >> Stay informed about: Life in Brasil |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |  |
External

Since: May 01, 2005 Posts: 1644
|
(Msg. 10) Posted: Fri Feb 16, 2007 6:14 am
Post subject: Re: Life in Brasil [Login to view extended thread Info.] Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)
|
|
|
On 16 Feb 2007 01:20:50 -0800, "oldfart"
<alan.westcoast.TakeThisOut@gmail.com> wrote:
>Away back in my youth, I had a buddy that loved snake hunting. We
>would grab a twelve pack of beer and head out to Borrego Springs in
>the middle of the night to look for snakes lying in the middle of the
>blacktop road where it was warm. Mostly we were looking for the
>poisonous pit vipers like rattle daddies. My friend was driving and
>would see on and slam on his brakes, stopping with the headlights on
>the snake. He would then jump out with his Maglight flashlight and
>walk over to the snake blinding it with the light. In one quick move
>he put the flashlight right down on the head of the snake and grabbed
>the snake by the neck just behind the head and pick it up. He had a
>pillow case he dropped it into. Of we would go looking for the next. I
>never needed to get closer than say ten feet to any snake that could
>potentially kill me but my friend had no fear. He never got bit
>either. He just had a natural sense for these things.
At the end of the night, what did he do with his bag of snakes?
----
Go fast and aim for where the trees aren't.
---- >> Stay informed about: Life in Brasil |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |  |
External

Since: Apr 29, 2005 Posts: 762
|
(Msg. 11) Posted: Fri Feb 16, 2007 7:41 am
Post subject: Re: Life in Brasil [Login to view extended thread Info.] Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)
|
|
|
On Fri, 16 Feb 2007 00:03:52 -0700, Eat Dirt <spam RemoveThis @spam.pissoff>
wrote:
>...if that makes sense.
It doesn't, you Canuck loser! Now shut the hell up!
But seriously...
I saw "Snakes on a Plane" with my wife and I must say the
"Anaconda" comparison is about right... both were bad B-movies in my
opinion. Right up there with "Lake Placid" and "Arachnophobia."
I can't, in good conscious, recommend this to anyone. Sorry E.D.
Fred Bradford - CrashTestDummy
f.j.bradfordREMOVE RemoveThis @verizon.net >> Stay informed about: Life in Brasil |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |  |
External

Since: Apr 23, 2006 Posts: 218
|
(Msg. 12) Posted: Fri Feb 16, 2007 9:53 pm
Post subject: Re: Life in Brasil [Login to view extended thread Info.] Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)
|
|
|
Thankfuly we just let them all go. We were in their home, not ours,
and they wern't hurting anything. They just gladly wiggled off into
the desert. OF
On Feb 16, 3:14 am, scrape <scrapeNOTHA... RemoveThis @nc.rr.com> wrote:
> On 16 Feb 2007 01:20:50 -0800, "oldfart"
>
> <alan.westco... RemoveThis @gmail.com> wrote:
> >Away back in my youth, I had a buddy that loved snake hunting. We
> >would grab a twelve pack of beer and head out to Borrego Springs in
> >the middle of the night to look for snakes lying in the middle of the
> >blacktop road where it was warm. Mostly we were looking for the
> >poisonous pit vipers like rattle daddies. My friend was driving and
> >would see on and slam on his brakes, stopping with the headlights on
> >the snake. He would then jump out with his Maglight flashlight and
> >walk over to the snake blinding it with the light. In one quick move
> >he put the flashlight right down on the head of the snake and grabbed
> >the snake by the neck just behind the head and pick it up. He had a
> >pillow case he dropped it into. Of we would go looking for the next. I
> >never needed to get closer than say ten feet to any snake that could
> >potentially kill me but my friend had no fear. He never got bit
> >either. He just had a natural sense for these things.
>
> At the end of the night, what did he do with his bag of snakes?
>
> ----
> Go fast and aim for where the trees aren't.
> ---- >> Stay informed about: Life in Brasil |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |  |
External

Since: Apr 29, 2005 Posts: 762
|
(Msg. 13) Posted: Sat Feb 17, 2007 7:53 am
Post subject: Re: Life in Brasil [Login to view extended thread Info.] Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)
|
|
|
On Fri, 16 Feb 2007 23:50:01 -0700, Eat Dirt <spam.RemoveThis@spam.pissoff>
wrote:
>Try Clerks II. Never saw the fist one but this second one is hilarious.
>Dude that works at a fast food joint store is a total loser and he plays
>the part so damn well it is just plain funny. Tremors was too funny too.
>Fred Ward stole the show.
Funny you should mention that, I'm a big Kevin Smith fan. I saw
Clerks when it first came out and I'd rank it in my top 10 movies of
all time. The guy that plays Randall is *much* younger in the first
one, as is Jason Mewes. Of course the original Clerks was a 1994
release, so it stands to reason that young men would've aged a bit in
12 years.
More Kevin Smith movies:
Clerks
Chasing Amy
Mall Rats
Dogma
Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back
The original Clerks is still the best, to me, and I highly
recommend it if you like these kind of movies. They're not for
everyone, but if you liked Clerks II you'll probably enjoy it.
PS - I discovered Kevin Smith about the same time I discovered Billy
Bob Thornton, whom I also enjoy. He's got unbelievable range. From
"Johnny Tyler" in Tombstone, to "Karl Childers" in Slingblade, to
"Darrell" in U-Turn, to "Russell Bell" in Pushing Tin, to "Hank
Grotowski" in Monster's Ball.
Fred Bradford - CrashTestDummy
f.j.bradfordREMOVE.RemoveThis@verizon.net >> Stay informed about: Life in Brasil |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |  |
External

Since: Jan 19, 2007 Posts: 21
|
(Msg. 14) Posted: Sat Feb 17, 2007 9:50 pm
Post subject: Re: Life in Brasil [Login to view extended thread Info.] Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)
|
|
|
On Feb 17, 9:10 pm, "Jeff Deeney" <jeff.nospam.dee....RemoveThis@hp.com> wrote:
> Check out the original 1960's Batman movie. Adam West &
> Burt Ward absolutely rock!
>
> Riddler: "What weighs 6 ounces, sits in a tree, and is very dangerous?"
>
> Robin: "A sparrow with a machine gun"
>
> I was in tears. That movie was way ahead of it's time.
"'Scuse me, while I whip this out!"
--Sheriff Bart
(Mel Brooks was so far ahead of his time, he made Spaceballs) >> Stay informed about: Life in Brasil |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |  |
External

Since: Nov 16, 2006 Posts: 309
|
(Msg. 15) Posted: Sun Feb 18, 2007 4:10 am
Post subject: Re: Life in Brasil [Login to view extended thread Info.] Archived from groups: per prev. post (more info?)
|
|
|
"Eat Dirt" <spam RemoveThis @spam.pissoff> wrote in message
news:spam-5846BA.20221016022007@isis.cybersurf.net...
> In article <0inat2hab5fro7h4lnk110r6198o87thqn RemoveThis @4ax.com>,
> CrashTestDummy <f.j.bradfordREMOVE RemoveThis @verizon.net> wrote:
>
> Oh please, you gonna tell me you don't enjoy sitting back and just plain
> enjoying a B movie? Nothing like letting go of all worries, logic and
> standards and just sit back and watch the tube. B movies are great cause
Check out the original 1960's Batman movie. Adam West &
Burt Ward absolutely rock!
Riddler: "What weighs 6 ounces, sits in a tree, and is very dangerous?"
Robin: "A sparrow with a machine gun"
I was in tears. That movie was way ahead of it's time.
-Jeff Deeney- DoD#0498 NCTR UTMA BRC COHVCO AMA
'99 ATK 260LQ-Stink Wheels '94 XR650L-HellSickle
We don't stop riding because we get old, we get old because we stop riding. >> Stay informed about: Life in Brasil |
|
| Back to top |
|
 |  |
| Related Topics: | The ABCs of life - http://www.siemprevida.com/abc.htm James 00CR250
Chinese Product Shelf Life - I just had some leftover shrimp fried rice for lunch (and two cups of coffee). I was reading the interesting threads about politics and stuff and posting and eating at the same time. Then I kinda got to wondering, Exacty what kind of shelf-life does..
Dirtbike group saves someone's life (for real) - It happened on TT, and made the news. A DRZ rider had only satelite internet available in a remote area and was able to get Careflight to fly in and save someone's life. He posted distress messages to the TT DRZ group and was able to get someone to make....
"slightly" used gear oil color ? - Hi all, I just drained the oil on my '99 YZ250. I replaced it about 4 weekends ago (Golden Spectro W80) so it has maybe 8-12 hours of riding at the local MX tracks. What color should I expect the oil to be ? I was surprised to see how dark greyish it..
In search of 2 stroke engine! - Any year, any size (smaller is better though). Must start. Can anyone help??? replay to my address, just be sure to take out AT and DOT. Thank you! |
|
You can post new topics in this forum You can reply to topics in this forum You can edit your posts in this forum You can delete your posts in this forum You can vote in polls in this forum
|
|
|
|
 |
|
|