Stop in for a cup of coffee

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It's supposed to end around 2100. I will check snow totals in the morning. You have to really think about how to reply to this group..............:lol:

I would say I got at least 8" of SNOW
There is no safe answer, these guys are just twisted enough they could roll a car on a straight road!
 
So tonight is my first try at making “Savechi” (sp?)

IMG_2821.jpeg
 
Keep plenty of Pacifico close at hand! :lol:
Being a predominantly rabbit like eater it is what I always order when we go out to eat Mexican. It is amazing the super wide variety in what it looks like and what it tastes like place to place. I am just not a meat eater kinda guy. In my best Scott @Scott_ 69HemiDart best voice “I am laughing to myself as I type this” thinking there is just no graceful way to post! Hah!
 
Mayhaps


If, mayhap, the word mayhap looks to you like a relative of its synonym perhaps, you perceive correctly. Both ultimately derive from the Middle English noun hap, meaning "chance" or "fortune." Mayhap was formed by combining the phrase "(it) may hap" into a single word (the word maybe, another synonym of mayhap and perhaps, was developed similarly from may and be). Hap in the phrase is a verb essentially meaning "to happen"; the verb hap comes from the noun hap. Perhaps came about when per, meaning "through the agency of," was combined directly with the noun hap to form one word. Today, mayhap is rare, especially compared to the very common maybe and perhaps, but it does show up occasionally, especially in genres of fiction whose characters speak with an old-timey flair.

:lol:
 
Mayhaps


If, mayhap, the word mayhap looks to you like a relative of its synonym perhaps, you perceive correctly. Both ultimately derive from the Middle English noun hap, meaning "chance" or "fortune." Mayhap was formed by combining the phrase "(it) may hap" into a single word (the word maybe, another synonym of mayhap and perhaps, was developed similarly from may and be). Hap in the phrase is a verb essentially meaning "to happen"; the verb hap comes from the noun hap. Perhaps came about when per, meaning "through the agency of," was combined directly with the noun hap to form one word. Today, mayhap is rare, especially compared to the very common maybe and perhaps, but it does show up occasionally, especially in genres of fiction whose characters speak with an old-timey flair.

:lol:
DDaddy reincarnate!
 
SO! I haven't had a haircut since last summer and I have the start of a nice man bun.
Think I'll get it cut after the cold goes away.
You can braid it.

Ok what time should we all be at the bus stop for Steph to pick us up?
My alarm goes off at 5:15. Bus pulls out shortly after that. Be ready I’ll only slow down.
That has to hurt.
Hey everyone has their kinks. We don’t judge here.
C'mon Tike you want me to answer this............................:rofl:
Well Scott got the 8” I was hoping for.
 
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