whittle boats
Posted June 30, 2007
By admin
Time Left:
From GROUPON in Orange County
Time Left:
From GROUPON in Orange County
Time Left:
From GROUPON in Orange County
Time Left:
From GROUPON in Las Vegas
Time Left:
From GROUPON in Denver
Time Left:
From GROUPON in Phoenix
Time Left:
From GROUPON in Orange County
Time Left:
From GROUPON in Orange County
Time Left:
From GROUPON in Orange County
Time Left:
From GROUPON in Abilene, TX

do you have a favorite uncle?
I remember how my great-uncle Jerry would sit on the porch and whittle all day long.
Once he whittled me a toy boat out of a larger toy boat I had. It was almost as good as the first one, except now it had bumpy whittle marks all over it.
And no paint, because he had whittled off the paint.
Good ol’ uncle jer
NObody knows jack handey
No, but I have recently discovered I have a neice, we got on like a house on fire, and then some.
I have to inquire what the exact kinship relation is.
I think it is all above board.
Fun is fun and she certainly is, but I don’t want it to get too redneck.
Regal 4060 Whittle Boats
|
|
Grey Wolves of Eriboll $19.79 The surrender of the German U-boat fleet at the end of World War II was perhaps the principal event in the war’s endgame which signified to the British people that peace really had arrived. It is little known that the majority of the surrenders of U-boats on active west-European sea patrols in May 1945 were supervised in Loch Eriboll, an isolated sea loch on Scotland’s far north-westernmost coast…. |
|
|
Palm Oil and Small Chop $19.91 Palm oil is the quintessence of West Africa – it is complex, an acquired taste and reckoned to be rather unhealthy. Small chop is the addition of ingredients that make it palatable for European taste. From the unique perspective of working aboard merchant ships trading to the area, the author provides a viewpoint of the first 25 years of West African independence – it is simultaneously the story o… |
|
|
Postcards from the Edge: Remote British Lighthouses in Vinta $22.17 We’ve been sending one another postcards for well over a century now – usually brief messages to our friends and family telling them about the weather on our holidays or where we’re visiting next on our travels. A hundred years ago we sent postcards with more serious messages – important, personal information about births, marriages and deaths, urgent requests for help, or just to keep in touch be… |









