April 20, 2025

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JP Steve
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Reply to  nighthawks
4 days ago

Wot a fiecre little pussycat…!

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  nighthawks
4 days ago

Hey!
You stop that right now!

It’s Easter Sunday…. aren’t you supposed to go lie down with a lamb or something?

Nicely!

Not in your belly.

JP Steve
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Reply to  nighthawks
4 days ago

..

Night-2
happyhappyhappy
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Reply to  JP Steve
4 days ago

Very good!

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  JP Steve
4 days ago

Good job!

Arfside
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Reply to  nighthawks
4 days ago

Interesting. Probably not haute-couture on display, more on the order of middle-class normal peoples’ daily wear.

More_Cats_Than_Sense
Reply to  nighthawks
4 days ago

OK, looking at the photo, the first thing I could definitely say is that it is a Great Western Railway (GWR) locomotive (By the shape of the cylinder wrappers), but the picture size and resolution made it hard to see the number on the smokebox door. Could work out that the first number was a ‘7’, and the second looked a bit like a ‘6’ (Spoiler: It wasn’t), but the last number was definitely a ‘2’. The main thing is it had to be one of the preserved locos, which limits the field somewhat.

Doing a bit of digging through the GWR numbering system, and enlarging the picture a bit, I came up with the number ‘7812’, which parses to GWR 7800 ‘Manor’ 4-6-0 class, Number 7812 ‘Erlestoke Manor’. The loco is at the Severn Valley Railway, which would have complicated things if I hadn’t worked out the last number as they have three ‘Manors’ there, and one of them, ‘Hinton Manor’ is number 7819.

happyhappyhappy
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Reply to  nighthawks
4 days ago

Good boy!

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  happyhappyhappy
4 days ago

Boy?

happyhappyhappy
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Reply to  SusanSunshine
3 days ago

…oops…

JP Steve
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Reply to  nighthawks
4 days ago

❀

Arfside
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Reply to  nighthawks
4 days ago

OK, your story, or a story from someone whom you knew? Bravo for Mollie in any case! Don’t leave us hanging!

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  Arfside
4 days ago

The whole thing… photo plus text… is contained in an image, not something Nighthawks himself typed.

A magazine clipping, a snip from a website….
I imagine it’s been floating around the Internet till its origins are lost.

JP Steve
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Reply to  nighthawks
4 days ago

OMG! I’m glad I didn’t get old like they did!

Arfside
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Reply to  JP Steve
4 days ago

Sure enough! We must have gone through a time machine to take us back to when we were about 35 or 40, right? Love those time machines!

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  JP Steve
4 days ago

What is this “old” of which you speak?

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  nighthawks
4 days ago

I suppose most of you recognize them….

I wondered about their actual ages, since time didn’t seem to have been particularly kind to them in the bottom one….

I discovered that I’d always been wrong about which of them was older…

Their birthdates….
Al Pacino April 25th 1940… Happy 85th, Al, this coming Thursday! … and Robert DiNiro, August 17th, 1943 … so 82 next August.

And phew… they’re both older than me!

I also discovered that they’re friends, and have reprised this photo over and over, till it’s sort of a meme.

You can find them at various ages….

Last edited 4 days ago by SusanSunshine
SusanSunshine
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Reply to  SusanSunshine
4 days ago

Like this:

5f7985a522b7cdd6a45f2958d54970a6
Tigressy
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Reply to  SusanSunshine
4 days ago

OK – So I was right about them but couldn’t believe the latter aged so badly over the last five years!

Some treats…
Great humor! – I had completely forgotten Charlie Cox starred in “Stardust”, too!

JP Steve
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Reply to  nighthawks
4 days ago

This is right in my neighborhood, and I’ve never heard of it!

happyhappyhappy
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Reply to  JP Steve
4 days ago

Ya gotta go check it out for us!

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  JP Steve
4 days ago

You must live in an interesting neighborhood, if its hiding something like this.

How well do you really know those people in apartment
83?

JP Steve
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Reply to  SusanSunshine
3 days ago

The ones with the pet boogeyman? They’re fine…

JP Steve
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Reply to  nighthawks
4 days ago

Hernias can be a tricky tool to use if you’re not trained in their proper use…

JP Steve
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Reply to  nighthawks
4 days ago

I’ve done plumbing. It always takes three trips!

Arfside
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Reply to  nighthawks
4 days ago

Face Palm!!!

mr_sherman
mr_sherman
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Reply to  nighthawks
4 days ago

If he’s lucky, he might be able to push up on the hinge pins and remove the door that way.

Tigressy
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Reply to  nighthawks
4 days ago

Just install a curtain.

happyhappyhappy
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Reply to  Tigressy
3 days ago

πŸ˜€

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  nighthawks
4 days ago

You can’t get to the screws, so if the hinges don’t have the kind of pins you can pull out, what do you do?

Slice through the hinge with your trusty Sawzall?

More_Cats_Than_Sense
Reply to  SusanSunshine
4 days ago

Errr, you can get to the screws, they’re only hidden when the door is closed.

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  More_Cats_Than_Sense
3 days ago

Um… yeah…. I must have forgotten.

Just open the door, would you, so I can do that?

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  SusanSunshine
3 days ago

Now I’m confused.

Saucy pointed out that I was calling it closed, when it’s open.

I was thinking of when the door itself opened out flat, not when the doorway is open.

I guess these doors only have screws on the edge…

Mine has a plate (wing?) on the inside of the folded door…. Ie on the back of the door.

Last edited 3 days ago by SusanSunshine
happyhappyhappy
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Reply to  nighthawks
3 days ago

You might be able to remove the pins with the door completely open. That would be better than unscrewing it from the door an trying to re hang it right. The hinged are still aligned right.

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  happyhappyhappy
3 days ago

How are you gonna get the door open?

Saucy1121
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Reply to  SusanSunshine
3 days ago

The door is currently open. If you do manage to get the door off and reinstalled, it’s going to hit the toilet every time you open it. What dingbat designed that in the first place?

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  Saucy1121
3 days ago

You’re right… the door is open.

I thought it was the kind of door that has a hinge screw plate on the back, so you’d have to unfold it, and I was calling that opening it.

But… sigh .. probably not.

Last edited 3 days ago by SusanSunshine
happyhappyhappy
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Reply to  nighthawks
4 days ago

Yes! Yes it happens! πŸ˜€

JP Steve
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Reply to  nighthawks
4 days ago

On the BC ferries people would stand at the rail holding out a slice of bread and the gulls would swoop down and take the bread out of their hand…

JP Steve
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Reply to  JP Steve
4 days ago

Chickadees too!

comment image

happyhappyhappy
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Reply to  JP Steve
4 days ago

I love those guys!

Arfside
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Reply to  happyhappyhappy
4 days ago

My folks had bluejays that would take peanuts from thier hand. One day, my dad tied a string to one. The bluejay had to work for that one, but he got it! Lots of laughs!

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  JP Steve
4 days ago

I had oversized, translucent reddish glasses frames in the 1980s… c’mon, it was that era….

Sometimes when I’d come out my front door in the morning light, hummingbirds would swoop directly at my eyes, I think mistaking me for a hummingbird feeder.

They didn’t do it in the bright sun… only certain times of day.

happyhappyhappy
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Reply to  SusanSunshine
3 days ago

Mom had a muumuu that was guarantied to draw hummers.

JP Steve
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Reply to  happyhappyhappy
3 days ago

Mom would hang our (red) sleeping bags on the clothesline at our summer cottage to air out. The hummers would zoom in to do battle with this six-foot wide opponent!

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  nighthawks
4 days ago

Well….

the words I get are …
Addition, division and koala

Gosh…. Which one doesn’t fit?

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  nighthawks
3 days ago

No, just kinda silly.

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  nighthawks
3 days ago

No hurting Bimbo!

happyhappyhappy
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4 days ago

I got it!
I got all the glittery goodness!
First time in a week. πŸ™‚

happyhappyhappy
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4 days ago

Arfside
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4 days ago

Happy Kiester!

When the time comes, may your transition from life to afterlife be quick and painless, and may you be greeted by all your friends and family!

Easter
More_Cats_Than_Sense
Member
4 days ago

Forbidden Planet (1956). (No point in spoiler-ing it as the title is at the bottom of the poster….).

Based on the Shakespeare play β€œThe Tempest,” Forbidden Planet pioneered several aspects of science fiction cinema. It was the first science fiction film to depict humans traveling in a man-made faster-than-light starship. It was also the first to be set entirely on a planet orbiting another star, far away from Earth and the Solar System. The Robby the Robot character is one of the first film robots that was more than just a mechanical “tin can” on legs; Robby displays a distinct personality and is an integral supporting character in the film. Outside science fiction, the film was ground-breaking as the first of any genre to use an entirely electronic musical score, courtesy of Bebe and Louis Barron.

Forbidden-Planet-1956-Text
Tigressy
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4 days ago

comment image

dorothea
dorothea
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Reply to  Tigressy
4 days ago

Saw this on Ballard St earlier.

Thanks for the smiles, Tigressy.

Have a Happy Easter everyone!

Saint
Saint
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Reply to  Tigressy
4 days ago

Also liked your Bugs ‘Easter’ Bunny on Daddy’s Home. Happy Easter, T.!

SusanSunshine
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3 days ago

I just discovered that my Easter greeting must have never uploaded!

Hope it’s not too late!

oie_AkQnV6BKs7I7
Liverlips McCracken
Liverlips McCracken
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Reply to  SusanSunshine
3 days ago

They look so dignified, even with rabbit ears. Only a basset can pull that off.

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