Let me guess... You read the articles?Man shows his wife and article in a women's magazine called "how to better understand your husband" and she couldn't figure out why he was reading women's magazine.....
Nope.I wonder if I can get high with a magnifying glass, a straw and the sun....
Nope.
But add to the equation.....
If it's truly a question based only on hedonistic ideology then the answer is only if you find loops fun... I do not. Therefore I would rather go faster as I enjoy speed more than loops and choose track A... of course if I also had to share my stash will all the survivors. ... I would choose track B and tuff out the loop so I would have more stash and less demand on the stash.
im still working this one out, should be simple but the more i think about it the more i think i should think some more about it, i think. im leaning towards letting the trolley do what it was going to do anyway and adopt (or make) 5 kids with track A person to replace the loop bumps on track B.
im still working this one out, should be simple but the more i think about it the more i think i should think some more about it, i think. im leaning towards letting the trolley do what it was going to do anyway and adopt (or make) 5 kids with track A person to replace the loop bumps on track B.
Not bees. Wasps! Bees are beneficial pollenators... wasps do not pollenate.I couldn't find the thread for the weird phenomena. No not Trump. But still weird.
Don't want to tempt fate, but...
July 4, I discover a nest of yellow jackets
while clipping the hedges at the front entrance and while they sting me.
I run. Fall clumsily. I bruise my knee.
Two weeks plus later, I finally defeat the bees, but not without increasing knee pain daily as I maneuver up and down, in and out, left and right, side to side in my battle to pry the nest from the tight knit branches of the all embracing shrubbery.
Today I awake, nest gone, no bee battles to wage, and ... my knee is feeling good!
The fig wasps would like a word with you...Not bees. Wasps! Bees are beneficial pollenators... wasps do not pollenate.
However...
Yellow jacket wasps feed their young liquefied insects, with caterpillars, flies and spiders comprising the largest food groups during most of the summer.
There are also benefits to yellowjacket venom....
I deal with 4 varieties of wasps every year.... yellowjacket wasps being the most aggressive (in my experience)
Additional random thought...
Nothing will make you feel more like a samurai than swatting a few attacking yellowjackets out of mid-air with a stick of wood just trying to get to your front door. (Personal experience)
... at least they aren't hornets.