Beautiful meer and hound!Smoking Dark Flake Scented in the Cinar meer View attachment 356320
Pointing Gerbil being a crackhead
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Beautiful meer and hound!Smoking Dark Flake Scented in the Cinar meer View attachment 356320
Pointing Gerbil being a crackhead
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Enjoyed a tasty golden delicious apple, and am smoking year 2012 Anniversary Kake in a smooth burgundy medium bend 1979 Chippendale (Charatan second) Rhodesian 49 with a black vulcanite saddle stem. Smokes as well as a first and worth the $19.95 I paid for it all those years ago. I may end the day with this smoke. Been busy this morning: emptied the dishwasher and put some dirty dishes in, mylared some tobacco, found a bunch of pencil xeroxes from The Golden Pelican series I did years ago, and stuffed them in a recycle bag along with some old Archie scripts. The "penciler" did a weak job, and I had a lot of extra work to do as a result. Have a bunch of paper in the studio to go through, but that'll wait.
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The only way a comic book script would have any kind of value was if it was an old one with some importance. Even then, only a serious collector would pay little for it. I have never seen anybody sell pencil xeroxes, and the only kind I'd think that would have any value at all would be if they were from a big time older artist like Kirby or Adams.I would think the photocopies and Archie scripts could have some kind of resale value; maybe it’s too much trouble to find a buyer? Or is there an abundance of them floating out there and zero market?
The only way a comic book script would have any kind of value was if it was an old one with some importance. Even then, only a serious collector would pay little for it. I have never seen anybody sell pencil xeroxes, and the only kind I'd think that would have any value at all would be if they were from a big time older artist like Kirby or Adams.
Another afternoon pruning apple trees and sawing logs for seasoning... so, a break with the Peterson Irish Army 999 and Peterson's Irish Cask with a little MacBaren's HH Old Dark Fired in the bottom, plus a mug of rooibos. I was joined by the neighbour's cat, Little Miss (as Warrior Princess Cassie wasn't there to chase her away). Little Miss is an utter tart: she would have me believe that she loves me most in the whole world, but it was only because her feet were cold. Anyway, she didn't stay long on my lap: I think it's the Perique she dislikes. Next time, I'll see if she prefers the Old Dark Flake on its own.
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@Scottmi Hope you're alright!Enjoying a Significant Wind Event today, with morning coffee and HU Director's Cut in the Gefapip Giant.
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Surprised have not lost power...yet.
p.s. it is really noisy out here on the porch!
@MisterBadger I've been sawing logs this morning & yesterday; got Jane some more and took the Old Poets at Ashover some. Every time I go to Ashover I end up carrying logsAnother afternoon pruning apple trees and sawing logs for seasoning... so, a break with the Peterson Irish Army 999 and Peterson's Irish Cask with a little MacBaren's HH Old Dark Fired in the bottom, plus a mug of rooibos. I was joined by the neighbour's cat, Little Miss (as Warrior Princess Cassie wasn't there to chase her away). Little Miss is an utter tart: she would have me believe that she loves me most in the whole world, but it was only because her feet were cold. Anyway, she didn't stay long on my lap: I think it's the Perique she dislikes. Next time, I'll see if she prefers the Old Dark Flake on its own.
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That was my favorite from your recent acquisitions! Very nice!Started my day with some Swiftcurrent Coffee from Ravenwood and The Country Squire collaboration View attachment 356334View attachment 356335View attachment 356336in a Bewlay Double Bore
- Not any more. Where we used to live, down south in Hampshire, I had Kingston Black, Tom Putt, Brown Snout, Dabinett, White Norman and Foxwhelp on some land belonging to a friend, but he sold up and I lost access. I then went to work on a local farm with an orchard where we had cider pressing days (and also apple-tree wassailing on Twelfth Night), but the orchard there was mainly dessert apples which, in my opinion, don't make for good cider (I mean, the alcoholic product we have in England). When we moved up to the mid-Wales borders six years ago (the northernmost limit of cider country), I had to sell the cider press, as moving it that distance along with all our other stuff, would have been problematic.do you grow for cidar? I have a couple that seem to be popular with cidarheads, Ashmead's Kernel and Chestnut. looking to add a Pitmaston Pineapple which is from the Isles somewhere