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Fantastic word game

In the town where I live, it's damned cold and I absolutely hate it.


(Nah, quad, had a fever but it's gone. Got a bad cough and sore throat. I'm miserable.)
 
Shoe you wear, book you read.

(Travel Tip: Take a chance on those beach front fish shacks when in Jamaica. Looks are deceiving, what seems like a petrie dish for disease, is really one of the best, and least expensive, examples of true Jamaican cooking.)
 
To offer to me a great job and a great place to live in a warm tropical climate would pretty much lead me to be at your beck and call for the rest of our natural lives.


(I really hate winter, cold, snow, cold, winter, and snow. Did I mention I hate snow and cold?)
 
To be at your beck and call for the rest of our natural lives is where I would be if anyone would be crazy enough to give me a chance.

(WMC: Sorry to hear that you are feeling so low. I hope you are doing the usual, forcing liquids and keeping warm. When really ill, I find moaning and groaning gives me a psychological boost--and, as I am alone, no one but the cat is disturbed by my pathetic wails of distress. Have you tried Vicks vapo-rub and steaming those clogged passages clear? Garlic soup is a folk remedy said to reduce the severity of a cold, and should be taken once daily. Boil three or four cloves of chopped garlic in a cup of water. Garlic contains antiseptic and antispasmodic properties, besides several other medicinal virtues. Five drops of garlic oil combined with a teaspoon of onion juice, and diluted in a cup of water, should be drunk two to three times a day. This has also been found to be very effective in the treatment of common cold. Also it keeps vampires at bay.)
 
Chance is something one should not rely on when playing Russian roulette.

(WMC: I too hope you are feeling better soon. Skip the garlic soup and start inhaling the fumes of a strong brandy. If you are really down, a snort or two also wouldn't hurt your condition.)
 
LasVegasRadioJunky said:
Chance is something one should not rely on when playing Russian roulette.

(WMC: I too hope you are feeling better soon. Skip the garlic soup and start inhaling the fumes of a strong brandy. If you are really down, a snort or two also wouldn't hurt your condition.)

Russian Roulette is the name of a show on the Game Show Network.

(hey, WMC - skip the brandy and the snort - go with the garlic soup, you're better off... :))
 
Network with your friends and you will come out of it with all kinds of handy dandy shiny new methods towards feeling better.


(But garlic soup?? <shudder> I think I'd rather have someone sucking my neck but thanks anyway, Anyacat. ;) )
 
All kinds of handy dandy shiny new methods towards feeling better pale in comparison to garlic soup.

(Travel Tip: Apparently you have never dined at the Stinking Rose in San Francisco. Everything on the menu of the North Beach eatery is made with garlic, although the faint of heart and vampires may order their entree sans garlic. I hear there is now a second restaurant in Beverly Hills. The garlic ice cream is yummy. Meanwhile, you are missing the medicinal properties of garlic, and garlic soup is not as bad as it sounds. I also recommend the Gilroy Garlic Festival, held each July in Gilroy, CA.)
 
Anyacat said:
.

(Travel Tip: I also recommend the Gilroy Garlic Festival, held each July in Gilroy, CA.)

(If I ever travel to Gilroy, CA, I will definitely stop at the Festival.)

Soup, according to Campbell's, is MMM MMM GOOD.
 
MMM MMM good is the garlic ice cream from the Gilroy Garlic festival,I've been there,The Garlic Capital of California.
 
kenrayc said:
MMM MMM good is the garlic ice cream from the Gilroy Garlic festival,I've been there,The Garlic Capital of California.

(Yikes, let's get way past that sentence, if you can call it that, as quickly as possible before Linguistics Czar raptus sees it. :p :eek: )


The Garlic Capital of California becomes just another warm California town once the garlic is packed away for another year.
 
Another year stands before us with equal opportunities for fortune or folly.

(Travel tip: Highway 50 in Nevada is called the loneliest road in America because for 287 miles between Carson City and Ely you will see desert and the unpopulated remains of mining camps. Free survival kit are available at various locations in every town along the way. After completing the survival kit, travelers may receive a survival certificate, a Route 50 lapel pin, and a bumper sticker announcing that they have survived this "uninteresting and empty" road. Highway 50 roughly parallels the Pony Express Trail and remains of the route are visible for much of the way. Make sure you have food and water just in case and be sure to tell someone where you are going. The trip takes about 6 seemingly endless hours.)
 
Folly isn't something I can afford to run into so I'll take fortune any day of the week.


(Anyacat, any travel tips on Puerto Rico? Never been there, may never get there, but I feel like I need to know something about Puerto Rico travel. :) )
 
Humanity is often over rated.

(Travel Tip: I have never been to Puerto Rico, so I had to call someone who had. I know, for example, that San Juan is the oldest city under the US flag and that the Spanish repulsed Francis Drake sometime in the 16th century. So apparently there is more than one old fort you might want to see. However, my friend recommended Catano, which is across the bay from San Juan. There you'll find a Bacardi run plant that offers free tours and rum cocktails. And there's Punta Salinas Beach. He also recommended Aleli by the Sea, a relatively inexpensive guest house in San Juan, which is walking distance from the major hotels, casinos and restaurants. The rooms are air conditioned, they have a sun deck on the beach and guests are free to use the kitchen and living room. There is also maid service--I asked.)
 


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