September 2, 2023

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happyhappyhappy
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 year ago

Moss piglet.

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  happyhappyhappy
1 year ago

And water bear.

Officially tardigrade, of course…

And he or she, or both of them with several babies, would easily fit inside this superscript zero: ⁰.

Last edited 1 year ago by SusanSunshine
happyhappyhappy
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Reply to  SusanSunshine
1 year ago

Yup!

MontanaLady
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 year ago

NOSE?

JP Steve
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 year ago

Cute little guys! I used to love watching them walk. How can something that tiny be so coordinated?

happyhappyhappy
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 year ago

Long day dude?

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 year ago

Same expression as the tardigrade.

MontanaLady
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 year ago

NOSE!!

MontanaLady
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 year ago

10 NOSES!

jean VanLeuven
jean VanLeuven
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 year ago

aka daleandkristen

At least we can see BAXTER in our dreams……

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 year ago

I wouldn’t be able to cut him up.

MontanaLady
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 year ago

NOSE!

jean VanLeuven
jean VanLeuven
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 year ago

aka daleandkristen

Now that’s what I call a Cheesecake! Too beautiful to slice.

happyhappyhappy
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 year ago

Love them! I still find them amazing.

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  happyhappyhappy
1 year ago

Me too.

Saint
Saint
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 year ago

We moved from New England to Colorado – far more varieties here and the Broad-Tails are the best – great fun to hear their whirring as they fly by.

mr_sherman
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 year ago

I got my driver’s license in a 1960 corvair.

dennisinseattle
Reply to  mr_sherman
1 year ago

Ralph Nader’s favorite,

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 year ago

Had one, or officially, my ex husband did, cos I didn’t drive it.

We were very young, and hadn’t heard about Ralph Nader, till people started telling us about his book after we bought the car.

We knew nothing about cars. We only knew it was the cheapest car we found, even though it was only about 6 years old .. and we had very little money.

We started to understand what he meant.

Things broke. I’ve never seen another car that just constantly broke.

Wind up a window, the handle broke off in your hand. Windshield wiper broke off in motion.

According to our mechanic, the engine was too powerful for the flimsy body. If you went fast, say, like, not 90 but 65 miles an hour, the whole car shook.

It had a chrome spoiler sticking up through the hood… It broke off on the freeway from the vibration. The whole car had metal fatigue.

Driving through town one day, a plume of oil started shooting up from under the hood. The engine was in back so we didn’t see it at first. Turned out a metal part that attached to a hose had cracked… And Chevy didn’t make the part for sale, it had to be machined.

We finally sold it for $100 to someone who needed parts. I bet he needed parts all right, if he drove a Corvair.

P51Strega
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Reply to  SusanSunshine
1 year ago

My parents had a Corvair for about 5 years. I don’t recall any of the issues you mention. The back seat had a small storage space behind it instead of a shelf. The seat back could be folded down for more storage. We got in a fender-bender and the seat back folded down on me and I somehow ended up with a black-eye. That’s all I remember; I was somewhere between 5 and 9 years old.

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  P51Strega
1 year ago

Maybe ours had a bigger engine?

I just realized I said spoiler when I meant a supercharger…. I think. Whatever, it was chrome, and stuck up out of the hood.

It may have been added by the young guy we bought it from. (A friend of my husband’s younger brother. He’d had an accident in it and one side was dented, with a door from a junked car.)

But you could see how it had cracked the metal and broken off.

I don’t know the how’s or whys… but all that stuff totally happened. I don’t like to admit it, but it was 1970.

….

When the part that held the oil hose broke, we had to leave the car in a gas station for days.

I said driving through town but it was actually in San Rafael, CA and we lived in a tiny town about 45 miles North.

It was out of oil; we were very lucky to neither blow up the engine nor get a ticket.

I think we hitchhiked (!!) home. That’s what young people did back then. Yikes.

It cost us almost half as much to get the part made, I think $200, as we’d paid for the car, which was about $500… and a few months later we sold it for $100 with other problems that I don’t remember.

Last edited 1 year ago by SusanSunshine
SusanSunshine
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 year ago

Meanwhile, this reads like an American ad.

Doesn’t talk about driving the car in France, and mentions cubic feet.

Were they actually trying to sell Corvairs in France, or was this a magazine for ex-pats… or for French speaking Americans?

Saint
Saint
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 year ago

I once read that the Corvair “greenhouse” was the inspiration for the visual design of the BMW 1600-02 automobiles.

MontanaLady
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Reply to  Saint
1 year ago

1 was a ford gal until we got our first honda touring car in the mid-10’s

dennisinseattle
Reply to  Saint
1 year ago

I could see that.

happyhappyhappy
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 year ago

OZ? 🙂

More_Cats_Than_Sense
Reply to  happyhappyhappy
1 year ago

Looks like ’02’ to me.

MontanaLady
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 year ago

NOSE!

happyhappyhappy
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1 year ago

I got four tonight. I’ll try for more tomorrow.

More_Cats_Than_Sense
Reply to  happyhappyhappy
1 year ago

I found seven on a quick run through. I’ll try again later.

JP Steve
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Reply to  More_Cats_Than_Sense
1 year ago

So my six isn’t too bad?

happyhappyhappy
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1 year ago

MontanaLady
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Reply to  happyhappyhappy
1 year ago

NOSES!

dennisinseattle
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1 year ago

I don’t remember Martin Denny. Down in the Boondocks made a big impression on me.

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  dennisinseattle
1 year ago

I remember I liked the song, but I’d never be able to tell you who sang it.

And even back then, it was confusing, cos “down in” the boondocks made no sense. They seem to be using it for the bad part of town.

My dad used that word a lot, as criticism. It means way out in the country, far from a city, especially someplace rural or primitive.

He was proudly a city boy and hated to stay anywhere he called “out in the boondocks”, or “in the boonies”.

Marge
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Reply to  SusanSunshine
1 year ago

Hi, Susan, it might not be so nice to live in the boondocks… German word is “Pampa”, or “in Hinter-Pfui-Teufel”, or “am Arsch der Welt” and that is not a got region to be there. Maybe you will re-translate the german words – I dare not to do, because some are dirty words. 😉

Last edited 1 year ago by Marge
Tigressy
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Reply to  Marge
1 year ago

“jwd” – “janz weit draußen”.
“Datasibirsk” – Siemens Neuperlach (Munich)…

Tigressy
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1 year ago

Is that Owl Kitty? And Snow’s kittens?

SusanSunshine
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1 year ago

Good evening, Cleopals and Puzzlefans!

If you’ve been puzzled by today’s puzzle, it’s ok… So was I, for a bit.

I was afraid i wouldn’t be able to solve it, and i’d have to get help from Stel.

But gradually, my eyes acclimated, and differences began to form themselves out of the mist … till I had all 10!

So you can do it!

.. ..

Enjoy all the funny kitties and pups while you find ten differences… and just think about what a scene of devastation we’d be seeing if one of the dogs were Cleo, and she’d brought some of her usual firepower!

Then when you’re ready….

Click HERE for the solution!

comment image

BTW if you happen to see “Sept 9th” in the link, don’t worry about it being the wrong week’s puzzle. I made a typo when I named it.

I didn’t notice till I’d uploaded it to PostImage.

I renamed it Sept 2nd and tried to re-upload it… But PostImage refuses to change the name of a file it has already saved. Sigh….

Tigressy
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Reply to  SusanSunshine
1 year ago

Oh – got all ten. Nice!

Saint
Saint
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Reply to  SusanSunshine
1 year ago

Ten here as well, though I sure I wasn’t going to be successful!

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  Saint
1 year ago

That’s how I felt, then it somehow came together.

P51Strega
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Reply to  SusanSunshine
1 year ago

Aw well, got 8. The big question though, is where did that kitty at the top get the fish?

mr_sherman
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Reply to  SusanSunshine
1 year ago

I found all ten last night through the course of three or four observances.

MontanaLady
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Reply to  nighthawks
1 year ago

we call them ”grandma’s legs”.

SusanSunshine
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Reply to  MontanaLady
1 year ago

Eggs or bacon… or bacon and eggs?

P51Strega
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1 year ago

Airshow Day! It’s an evening show. Flying starts at 5, and as the sun goes down the planes swap their smoke for sparklers and the show continues until 9pm.

jean VanLeuven
jean VanLeuven
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1 year ago

aka daleandkristen

Lord have mercy for a boy Down in the Boondocks!!!!!

What a treat!

happyhappyhappy
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1 year ago

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