Yea, all well and good. But where is the link to their match day thread? Then again, in future, when perusing our match day thread, I am sure I will hear the posts in an irate cockerrnee accent.
They don't produce that much milk, I'm guessing need a lot of sheep to make milk production/cheese worthwhile, plus four are male and I'm not milking them... As mentioned, the wool is worth next to nothing in small quantities... Has to be cleaned and sorted after shearing. I get a small subsidy and tax relief from the government, who want to encourage small farmsteads and keep population out of urban areas, which covers some of the costs.. the reason I got them was that I inherited them from a neighbour, they cut the grass and eat the weeds so maintain the land and planned to sell them eventually... I'm now in a minus on them, ha Ha ha... Not that attached.
Scratch and sniff technology is an amazing innovation Scratch the ball and release the fragrant tones of Phil's leather codpiece...
Judith Love Cohen was an American aerospace engineer who helped create the Abort-Guidance System that rescued the Apollo 13 astronauts. When she went into labor, she went to work. She took a printout of a problem she was working on to the hospital. She called her boss and said she finished the problem and gave birth to Jack Black Cohen’s engineering career began in 1952, when she worked as a junior engineer at North American Aviation. After graduation from USC Viterbi School of Engineering in 1957, she went on to work at Space Technology Laboratories. Space Technology Laboratories eventually became TRW (acquired by Northrop Grumman in 2002). She stayed with the company until her retirement in 1990. Her engineering work included work on the guidance computer for the Minuteman missile. Cohen was born into a Jewish family in Brooklyn, New York. By fifth grade, her classmates were paying her to do their math homework. She was often the only girl in her math classes, and decided she wanted to become a math teacher. By age 19, she was studying engineering in college, and dancing ballet in the Metropolitan Opera Ballet company in New York. She received a scholarship to Brooklyn College to major in math, but realized she preferred engineering. After two years at Brooklyn College, Cohen married and moved to California, working as a junior engineer for North American Aviation, attending the University of Southern California (USC) at night1. She said that she went through both her BS and MS programs at USC without ever meeting another female engineering student.
China’s ‘most inconvenient convenience store' https://edition.cnn.com/travel/shin...iffside-convenience-store-intl-hnk/index.html