Forum Replies Created
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bsrsharma
Participantalthough probably legal
How so? If something is attached to the house structure, it belongs to the house. Sounds like plain burglary to me.
bsrsharma
Participantalthough probably legal
How so? If something is attached to the house structure, it belongs to the house. Sounds like plain burglary to me.
bsrsharma
Participantalthough probably legal
How so? If something is attached to the house structure, it belongs to the house. Sounds like plain burglary to me.
bsrsharma
Participantalthough probably legal
How so? If something is attached to the house structure, it belongs to the house. Sounds like plain burglary to me.
bsrsharma
Participantalthough probably legal
How so? If something is attached to the house structure, it belongs to the house. Sounds like plain burglary to me.
June 3, 2008 at 8:35 AM in reply to: OT: Group of Kentucky students take horses to school as solution to high gas prices #215970bsrsharma
ParticipantI don’t know why they didn’t think of bicycles, mopeds or scooters before resorting to animal power. Even at $10 per gallon, with a moped or scooter getting 100+ MPG, a 10 mile ride to school costs only a buck. I think a veterinarian’s bill for the animal can set them off badly in comparison!
June 3, 2008 at 8:35 AM in reply to: OT: Group of Kentucky students take horses to school as solution to high gas prices #216053bsrsharma
ParticipantI don’t know why they didn’t think of bicycles, mopeds or scooters before resorting to animal power. Even at $10 per gallon, with a moped or scooter getting 100+ MPG, a 10 mile ride to school costs only a buck. I think a veterinarian’s bill for the animal can set them off badly in comparison!
June 3, 2008 at 8:35 AM in reply to: OT: Group of Kentucky students take horses to school as solution to high gas prices #216079bsrsharma
ParticipantI don’t know why they didn’t think of bicycles, mopeds or scooters before resorting to animal power. Even at $10 per gallon, with a moped or scooter getting 100+ MPG, a 10 mile ride to school costs only a buck. I think a veterinarian’s bill for the animal can set them off badly in comparison!
June 3, 2008 at 8:35 AM in reply to: OT: Group of Kentucky students take horses to school as solution to high gas prices #216105bsrsharma
ParticipantI don’t know why they didn’t think of bicycles, mopeds or scooters before resorting to animal power. Even at $10 per gallon, with a moped or scooter getting 100+ MPG, a 10 mile ride to school costs only a buck. I think a veterinarian’s bill for the animal can set them off badly in comparison!
June 3, 2008 at 8:35 AM in reply to: OT: Group of Kentucky students take horses to school as solution to high gas prices #216132bsrsharma
ParticipantI don’t know why they didn’t think of bicycles, mopeds or scooters before resorting to animal power. Even at $10 per gallon, with a moped or scooter getting 100+ MPG, a 10 mile ride to school costs only a buck. I think a veterinarian’s bill for the animal can set them off badly in comparison!
June 2, 2008 at 5:25 PM in reply to: OT: Group of Kentucky students take horses to school as solution to high gas prices #215577bsrsharma
ParticipantThis is the second news item of animals substituting machines (A Tennessee farmer is using mules to plow). The story tells about feeding horses but doesn’t tell who cleans up after them. In the days before automobiles, how were the cities keeping their streets clean?
June 2, 2008 at 5:25 PM in reply to: OT: Group of Kentucky students take horses to school as solution to high gas prices #215663bsrsharma
ParticipantThis is the second news item of animals substituting machines (A Tennessee farmer is using mules to plow). The story tells about feeding horses but doesn’t tell who cleans up after them. In the days before automobiles, how were the cities keeping their streets clean?
June 2, 2008 at 5:25 PM in reply to: OT: Group of Kentucky students take horses to school as solution to high gas prices #215688bsrsharma
ParticipantThis is the second news item of animals substituting machines (A Tennessee farmer is using mules to plow). The story tells about feeding horses but doesn’t tell who cleans up after them. In the days before automobiles, how were the cities keeping their streets clean?
June 2, 2008 at 5:25 PM in reply to: OT: Group of Kentucky students take horses to school as solution to high gas prices #215715bsrsharma
ParticipantThis is the second news item of animals substituting machines (A Tennessee farmer is using mules to plow). The story tells about feeding horses but doesn’t tell who cleans up after them. In the days before automobiles, how were the cities keeping their streets clean?
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