LaurenShaw
LaurenShaw
LaurenShaw

Philly is similar to your cats. She'll maybe snuggle with me 15-20 minutes a day, but the rest of the day she's near me. If I'm sitting on the couch she'll sit on the back of the couch on the other end, if I'm in bed she'll lay at the foot of the bed, and she'll follow me from room to room. I wish she were a little

He might be! He's very social, definately has a different personality to different people too.
It's weird the shelter me his whole tragic story, someone just dropped this ugly patchy skinny kitten (he really wasn't the cutest thing there, but he purred so loudly!) on their doorstep and he was all sick and all he could

I've had my shaggy black domestic long hair since he was 4 weeks old, now he's 11. When I got him he was sick with a cold, he was a day from getting put down so he wouldnt infect other cats at the shelter, I had to feed him myself.

What a sweet little face!

I've a Weegie (Dude) and he's basically me if I were to wake up in a cat's body tomorrow. They're the best cats ever.

I see a pattern here. Meet Loki.

Both of my cats are similar. One is a solid ragdoll we adopted and the other is a shaggy long hair domestic we also adopted. We chose them because of the personalities. Both are like puppies and can really be described as nice, docile, pleasant little creatures. Neither lashes out violently, grows, or shows any

I should probably post a picture of the turtle lair I cooked up. It's not so much a lair as it is an underground harbour: part of it's built from a disused subway car. I'm quite proud of it…or I will be when I finish it.

So not true. My son loves the theme sets and will build them with instructions but they do not last long. Soon he is pulling pieces off of them to build his own things. His star wars ship had been turned into cars, houses, robots, etc.

I actually completely disassembled a licensed recently, on the basis that having bought it I realised it wasn't that great. But it's okay, because by combining it with my own pieces I've made it into some far better- and totally unique. It's not based on any particular iteration of TMNT, but it has some overlap.

I agree with them.

The problem now is that they're creating a rift between regular Lego and the snazzy, bright-and-shiny Lego sets. Kids being kids, they're gonna want to get the sets of their favourite movie/cartoon/character/whatever. But if they get, say, a tub of generic Lego, most of them are going to be disappointed (and their

Depends on several factors- what style of sword, what time period, what fighting style, and of course, which expert you ask. No one knows for certain how they fought, because no one alive was there, and while good for reconstruction purposes the fighting manuals are universally regarded as no substitute for a living

That is why I think it was either a heirloom or ceremonial weapon. like sabers are today and the officer's saber is unchanged form the civil war design.

This beautiful blade must have had an interesting history. Stylistically, this isn't a late medieval sword at all, but may have been several hundred years old by the time Ivan got his hands of it. It is reminiscent of the types of swords the old Rus carried.

"...it is not time for immortal blade swingers."

That is the quote of the day. Somehow, I must work this into conversation at work today.

Oh, I take no issue with taking hits stunning one. Because it totally does (fought in armor a couple times myself, but I'm new, I practice with a guy who does Armored Combat League). I just take issue with the idea of LOTR style "oh no I'm dead!" Immediate kills with armor on. Or that most of the time a blunt

Plus, a lot of the time, the actors are only shot from the waist up. Which is why they don't put as much time into designing the shoes as they do the hair.

Thanks for the insights; much appreciated.