Ah, missed that, thank you for pointing it out!
It's not mentioned in the article, but the reason the pawpaw isn't more widespread is because it doesn't ship or keep well. Several years ago there were some attempts to get it distributed by freezing it and it sounds like a lot of the uses in the article are as an ingredient in something else.
Sounds nice, like there's an opening that's just right for me
As a person who tried a friend's watermelon wine and helped them pour it all down the drain that some day, I'm glad your melon experience went well.
"Add to your library" is my guess.
Plus it has markers for variable types just like Esperanto has suffixes for parts of speech. Wall was a linguist, after all.
Esperanto always struck me as more perl-like with each part of speech having its own suffix like perl has $ for scalars, @ for arrays, and % for hashes. Though perl is probably more like a bunch of pidgins...
Yep, information about this stuff is an individual solution to a systemic problem.
my developments
What developments? You're just speculating about something that is currently impossible.
why wouldn't you try?
You're not seeking a way to alleviate the actual circumstances, you're engaging in escapism. That's fine, but don't cloak whatever this is with the mantle of science.
That first "paper" doesn't have anything even vaguely academic about it, it's just musings on the physiology of flighted birds without any eye towards the consequences of or technology for making those changes, let alone anything that remotely justifies the possibility of those processes happening over 4 years.
It sucks that your body is broken, but given that we currently do not have to technology to fix it, why bother with the fantasy that technology can make it into something completely different?
This almond one.
Hibiscus is really good, too 🌺 So sour and really good cold. I miss it but can't really have it anymore because of its effects on blood pressure.
And one more that's got licorice, coriander, cinnamon, ginger, anise and mallow blossoms. Especially good for winter or when I've got a cold
Seems like green washing for software.
What lead you to seek diagnosis?
Are you taking corrective meds?
How does or did it impact your everyday life?
While my first instinct was A, that leaves the tie dragging along the ground, so for a long tie I'd have to go with B so the tie doesn't get all dirty. Best of both worlds work be a bow tie in position A.
I'm not talking about the consumption of animals here, to be clear. What I'm talking about is spending days and a bunch of money planning to kill something, doing the killing, and skinning/eviscerating what was killed, and often displaying the stuffed corpse. Hunters and fishers refuse to admit they're obsessed with taking pleasure in killing something.
Miss me with the "tradition" stuff, it's just peer pressure from the dead and a fallacious argument. Don't tell me it's to eat, like I said, I'm not talking about the consumption here, so please prove to me you are literate by not bringing up that point. And don't tell me you're respectful to the animals you kill; I don't believe the planning, stalking, and killing is a good way to show respect.
My tools serve me, not the other way around. It's not worth the time and effort to wash by hand or sharpen on a whetstone. I don't need an expensive knife to cook at home. A pull through sharpener and honing steel are adequate. Get the right material and you don't have to worry about the metal in the dishwasher.
Blocking a user hides their content in comments, but it still shows up in inbox when viewing all as well as in comment chains in the profile view. It would be great if blocked users didn't show up in these places.
Let me know if there's more info needed.
Co-op dungeon crawl the monster-ridden Old West mines and frozen Targa otherworld.
Western setting where a new gold rush for dark stone pits gunslingers, lawmen, saloon girls, etc against tentacles, the undead, mutated gangsters, snakemen, and lost technology as they travel between worlds.
It's coop and there are different missions, most of which have randomly generated maps that are created from a deck on you explore, giving it endless replayability. Characters gain experience, skill, and gear but also can become injured or mutate (nothing the church or surgeon in town can't fix for a price).
It also has tons of expansions. While the physical games add up in cost and require a lot of organizing, you can give it a try on tabletop simulator.
There's even a Japanese themed set that can combine with the Western ones.
When I was doing some cleanup and running into enemies in old areas, it made me realize how slow combat is and why. If you have timed blocks, it has to be slow to give players time to react to attacks, so every enemy attack animation ends up being long and they all add up.