aaron rhodes / Texts
Order by: date ↓ - rating ↑I meant "illustrate", darn it to heck!
This is hilarious! I must learn how to walk in stilts.
I am looking to start a game of hiding and seeking. It is "man hunt" in which there is one seeker and many hiders. Once a hider has been caught by a seeker that hider becomes a seeker. Rinse and repeat until all are caught. The final hider being the best! Game time limit negotiable. Message me if you are interested!
Update: (6-28-06)
There are 3 players in total who has expressed an interest in playing a game of hide and seek. Just a few more people and we will have enough to play!
What were their facial expressions? Were they in disgust at the strength of the booze? or were they giving you the stink eye? Please elaborate. It is a funny tale!
I see it!
Currently, my roomate and I are going to be building a homemade set of stilts from our local hardware store supplies. I would very much enjoy the help of someone who is tecnically inclined who would help me document, set up and carry out said task. Message me if you are interested.
Tastes do vary, and I, for one, do not taste a 'perceptable' difference from coca-cola I to coca-cola II. I think bonnie should join SF0. Perhaps you should invite her to our consumer advocacy group.
There is a cereal bath they have to relieve itching. It looks like oat meal. Thankfully it tastes like it too!
There is a formula for determining population size in a mark and recapture method.
First you catch and mark members of a population and then you release them. You return at an incremental period.
Then, you recapture from the population. I don't know how it works but, the amount you captured the first time multiplyed the number you captured the second time divided by the number of subjects having markings captured the second time give an accurate representation of the population size. It is called the "mark and recapture method"