| MEMBER SINCE: |
08/07/2008 23:53:04 |
| LAST LOGIN: |
09/18/2009 21:08:58 |
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Depends on my mood...HIPHOP/Dance Music if I'm out clubbing, Foot-stompin' country (not twangy shit), 80's, Alternative, Heavy Metal, and good ol' Rock & Roll...
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Stephen King is always a favorite, I also like true crime books...
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Whitetail hunting is my favorite. I've got to say that moose hunting is a "pissah" too...been lucky enough to have been on three hunts so far with another coming up in Sept. I won the moose lottery for a Sept.Bull hunt in WMD 11...PSYCH. I also enjoy bird hunting,ATVing,hiking,camping, snowmobiling...just about anything outdoors. Hell, I can just go sit in the woods and be in my glory, lol.
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CSI is probably the fave (Forensics have always fascinated me)...I like watching the medical shows on TLC (especially the plastic surgery and trauma shows), Trading Spaces is a cool show too...(I get right into decorating/interior design).Also,watching the Red Sox getting their ASSES KICKED by the YANKEES...
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My Mother, My Grandmother (I miss you Nan), and my beautiful daughters...
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Huntress2U Huntress got a Doe Tag....
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In a nutshell...
stubborn,independent,honest,loving,caring,divorced mother of four. (What else can I say?...lol)
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Huntress2U has 237 friend(s)
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Thank you for the add. Goodluck on the moose hunt. Happy hunting and may all your shots be straight and true!
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So this is what people mean when they talk about horn porn.lol.Thanks for the add and I hope you have a rockin season.
Natural Facts about the Lotus & the Water Lily
Although there is a botanical distinction, the lotus and water lily are often used interchangeably in folklore and mythology. Generally lotus refers to the water lily of India or the plant depicted in sacred art and stories, while the water lily is more often used by naturalists. As an example of the confusion, the World Book actually has two entries, one for the lotus, one for the water lily, both clearly referring to the same plant and neither referring to the other entry.
The lotus of India belongs to the Nelumbo genus (Nelumbo is the Sinhalese name for the plant). It has large flowers and leaves that sometimes grow up above the water. The plant's thorny stalk discourages fish from nibbling on it. The upper cupule or fleshy capsule of the lotus dries out at maturity and separates from the plant. Floating about, it scatters seed from the many perforated holes in its surface.
In Asia, there is only one species of lotus with red and white blooms. Yet early Buddhist scriptures, referring to the seven precious lotuses, mention blue and yellow flowers. The water lily, native to Egypt, has blue flowers but the yellow-flowered water lily is native to North America. This mystery may be addressed in this Buddhist sutra:
"The lotuses of heaven can change according to people's wishes, flowering when needed. In this way they bring joy to the hearts of all. There is no need to declare one false and the other real. Both are called the wondrous lotus flower."
The water lily belongs to the Nympha genus, derived from the same word as Nymph. The Greek word nymph, besides being used to describe the feminine spirits of water and trees, also means something young and budding (like the larva of certain insects) and is the name for the labia minora. In Europe, the common white water lily, the one painted by Monet, is nympha alba while in North America, we're more familiar with nuphar lutea, the yellow water lilies, also called spatterdocks or cow lilies. The English sometimes call the plant "brandy bottle" because the flowers smell like stale wine which attracts flies, the pollinators for the plant.
According to Chelsie Vandaveer, the Amazon Water Lily (victoria amazonica) imprisons its pollinators. The pure white flowers open in the evening and release a fragrance like pineapples. Beetles attracted by the smell find their way to the pale flowers on the dark water and feast on the central petals, while the flower closes over them. Then the anthers ripen and shed their pollen all over the trapped beetles. By the second evening, the flowers have turned pink and lost their fragrance. They open again and release the pollen-covered beetles which fly off in search of more white flowers with that incredible fragrance. Thus the lily is never self-pollinated since it can only be pollinated when the flower is white and fragrant. I love this description of the flower that changes colors and fragrances overnight, all in the service of sex. No wonder it's considered a magical plant.
Think you're my first friend from Maine. Very nice to meet you!
TK
Have a Great Day AND HAVE A ICE COLD SODA WATER ON ME - MY FRIEND, DONT DRING OUT OF THE
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Your Welcome!