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Grumpy Gramps wrote:Yep, when it comes to precision movements, human is better than chimp.
Russell wrote:Grumpy Gramps wrote:Yep, when it comes to precision movements, human is better than chimp.
If that makes you feel better, so be it...
"Let's stop bad and live correctly! !" (悪いことは止めて正しく生きましょう!!)
Sage Buster 48727 (サギバスター 48727)
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matsuki wrote:Still no replacement for a spine....
legion wrote:matsuki wrote:Still no replacement for a spine....
they are from a completely different world
Coligny wrote:
legion wrote:Good argument against being a vegetarian. You eat the moose or the moose eats your cabbage patch.
Grumpy Gramps wrote:What's wrong with escargots?
mom.me wrote:
The bane of many gardeners, slugs and snails enjoy munching on vegetation. If you've walked outside in the morning and seen the shiny trails leading to your garden, you know one of these guys was sampling your greenery. Snails and slugs have more in common than differences.
Mollusks of the Land
Slugs and snails are mollusks, the same family of creatures claiming oysters, octopus, squid and clams. There are more than 60,000 species of snails and slugs. The varieties living in the sea begin life as larvae floating about in plankton. Land and freshwater slugs and snails typically hatch from eggs.
moar...
"Taste all the same": Nope.Grumpy Gramps wrote:Escargots, takoyaki, oysters, slugs; once fried and all ketchuped up, they taste all the same, no?
Grumpy Gramps wrote:Learned something new, thanks
Taro Toporific wrote:Grumpy Gramps wrote:Learned something new, thanks
Yep. Pond slime cooked on a flat rock tastes much better than slugs and serves as a both a protein and vegetable.
Actually, a lot of the slimier seaweed you get served in Japan tastes the same as cooked pond slime, which is marketed as a healthy super-food, "euglena".
PS: A lot of grubs taste just fine when roasted---I've tricked Mrs. Taro and her family on the rice ranch in Shikoku into eating them.
Russell wrote:legion wrote:Good argument against being a vegetarian. You eat the moose or the moose eats your cabbage patch.
Rather than your cabbages being eaten by a moose, it is more often the case that they are eaten by slugs.
Now I want to see how consistent you are in your principles...
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