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Maggie’s Motivational Pic Thread v2.0 - - New Rules - See Post #1

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No 10mm…

Ackshually, that’s pineapple in a plantation environment. Here’s pineapple in a natural environment:

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And since you don’t like pineapple on pizza, here’s pizza on pineapple:

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Tough to keep it healthy in the Oregon winter and inside, but here is a Pineapple Plant I started. I rooted a starter and transplanted it into this so It's going into it's 2nd summer right now.
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Yeah. I wonder how many Britts woof this down and not realize the "consequences" of their actions:



PS, Mel Brooks provided "social commentary" on this scene in subsequent DVD/Blu-Ray releases. I guess it was his satirical statement on the matter. He stated:



It is said that Brooks made them turn up the volume when filming the scene and leave it up so that the farts wouldn't be drowned out by the audience laughing at it. I can testify to this. My father took me to see the movie in a theater on Martha's Vineyard right after its release. Everyone (including Dad) just lost it and laughed like crazy. So much so, that whenever the movie plays on TV late night (in the NY/NJ market), he still chuckles pretty hard during that scene,. In the Chicago market, they dubbed in Horses neighing...... Ugggggghhh. :mad:

I used to live about a 1000 yards from where that movie was filmed. (Rosamond, CA) Took me a few years to realize it. Something about the mountains. One night after cooking some steaks on the grill, I wanted to watch something funny with my meal and loaded my Blazing Saddles DVD. At the opening scene when they were laying track, it clicked. That's right here! Got some pictures from out there I have to dig up and scan (for later) Also found a railroad spike out there one day that I have.
If anybody wants to google earth the location. Rosamond, CA to the end of 35th Street West . It's been over forty years but, you'll recognize the terrain.
 
That I think you’re a bottom bitch? well that’s an obvious answer. It’s only gay to be bottom bitch, prison rules…and taliban
You are obsessed with gay sex more than any person I’ve witnessed , which ain’t many.
Go away 👋
 
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  • Haha
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Tough to keep it healthy in the Oregon winter and inside, but here is a Pineapple Plant I started. I rooted a starter and transplanted it into this so It's going into it's 2nd summer right now.
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Very early next spring, throw a few apple peels into the center to encourage blossoming (the pineapple). The fruit take a long time to mature. Don’t pick/cut until it starts to get yellow on the fruit. Then, depending upon how many critters are in your area, either pick it and let it ripen in a sunny window or leave it on the plant until you can smell it up close.

Either way, let it set and ripen on the counter until it’s dark yellow. Twist the top off and set it to dry for replanting and cut it up. Yum. Sweetest pineapple you’ll ever eat.
 
Very early next spring, throw a few apple peels into the center to encourage blossoming (the pineapple). The fruit take a long time to mature. Don’t pick/cut until it starter to get yellow on the fruit. Then, depending upon how many critters are in your area, either pick it and let it ripen in a sunny window or leave it on until you can smell it up close.

Either way, let it set and ripen on the counter until it’s dark yellow. Twist the top off and set it to dry for replanting and cut it up. Yum. Sweetest pineapple you’ll ever eat.
Nasty
 
  • Haha
Reactions: lash
Very early next spring, throw a few apple peels into the center to encourage blossoming (the pineapple). The fruit take a long time to mature. Don’t pick/cut until it starts to get yellow on the fruit. Then, depending upon how many critters are in your area, either pick it and let it ripen in a sunny window or leave it on the plant until you can smell it up close.

Either way, let it set and ripen on the counter until it’s dark yellow. Twist the top off and set it to dry for replanting and cut it up. Yum. Sweetest pineapple you’ll ever eat.
Then slice it up and put it on a pizza.
 
MORE footage of the 06/05/25 Lubbock-Morton F4 tornado. The final stages of this monster as it is dissipating. Notice the flaring out of the base into a stovepipe and finally into the 'vacuum cleaner attachment' shape that is more characteristic with a weak landspout common in the drier western states of Colorado and New Mexico than a supercell tornado. When the base of the funnel is wider than the column, that indicates a weak rotation. From observation here, the ground wind speed of the final form of the Morton twister is probably in the high F1 to low F2 range before it dissipated entirely. The unusually low precipitation characteristic of the Morton storm meant that observers on the ground were treated to an almost completely unobstructed view of the ENTIRE storm cell structure, complete with it's inflow and outflow regions and the central meso core, which is extremely rare. At one point (captured in the video here), the entire column looked like the mushroom cloud of a nuclear detonation, showing the sheer power of that updraft core extending up from the ground and into the still-maturing cell above.

The Morton F4 was just one of up to 7 confirmed OTG (on the ground) on that day in the Morton region but the strongest one was mostly isolated in open fields, doing little damage though the parent storm was a prolific hail producer and it's low precipitation nature prompted fire warnings to be issued for some parts of the region as well due to the danger of lightning triggered brush fires. The other storms in the outbreak have accounted for serious injuries and at least 1 fatality northeast of Lubbock.




One common misconception is that "you cannot tell the strength of a tornado, even a rope thin one, just by looking at it". That is false, IF you know what you are looking for, and that is the base of the rotation. If the base is flared outward like a trumpet bell or a vacuum attachment with very fuzzy appearance due to loose dust hovering around it, it is weak. Usually indicating rotation of 70mph or lower, which is the average speed, and appearance of most non-supercell landspouts in the western states. However, if the base narrows to a fine V point, also known as a "drillbit", that is EXTREMELY dangerous. Drillbits are routinely observed with rope thin vortices and these are usually spinning at F3 all the way up to F5 like the infamous Edmonton, Canada rope F5, which ripped a farmhouse clean off it's foundations. Another danger associated with violent, narrow drillbits is that they can "wedge out" with no warning, ie., turning from a rope thin column into a mile-wide wedge in a matter of seconds, as in the cases of Jarrell, TX in 1997, Moore, OK, 2013, and most recently, Lake City AR, 2025.
 
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