I laughed so hard I almost rear-ended him
Now that’s a place with a good burger. Had forgotten all about Mr C’s.
Closest to $6 / gal I could find online was 5 L of Franzia at Target for $12.99.
That works out to $9.83 / gal. Cheaper even than “two buck chuck” but still more expensive than gas.
Now maybe on a military base where there’s no state tax on the wine…. Of course there’s no tax on the gas either…
There are plenty of companies that do this!
Seriously!
Here is one:
The pockets are HYUGE. I have been able to put my kindle in one of those pockets.
I find Duluth clothing to generally have more pockets than other brands.
Drove the car to church, shocked when the priest told him to get the H out there
Have you see the article about the find of polar explorer Ernest Shackleton’s ship HMS Endurance.
From the article I read:
The ship, which sank in 1915, is 3,008 meters (1.9 miles or 9,842 feet) deep in the Weddell Sea, a pocket in the Southern Ocean along the northern coast of Antarctica, south of the Falkland Islands.
The bold emphasis is mine. Does Antarctica have anything but a northern coast?
I see your point. All the antarctic coast is, by definition, northern coast.
Yes (see map below)
Not so . . .
One might note that there are lots of east-facing and west facing coasts in the Ross and Weddell Seas. They’re just not in a form that other continents have.
But I do agree that the majority of the coast line is north-facing.
But if I said something was in the Atlantic Ocean off the southern coast of the United States would you think I was talking about somewhere off the coast of Connecticut or Rhode Island?
Not that far from New Zealand to Brazil
I had a car that was so old and beat up, that when the tank was empty I declared it totaled
The US doesn’t contain a pole . . . and suffers from the use of Euclidean geometry when traveling along lat & long lines as an approximation of what is actually traveled in an elliptical geometry space.
The same cannot be said in Antarctica; so I don’t think it appropriate to use the same “thinking” when discussing directional references.