Sadness

Frenchy said:
it's dead tonite :cry: :cry:

:grouphug: poor Frenchy

We been visiting miss_rockin's parents........
Its grandpa_rockins bday tomoro........ and their wedding aniversary....
:err: cant visit tomoro important game on telly
But.......
little_rockin fell over and cut his head on a step so had to visit hospital.....


A few steri-strips later and.........
He is all mended now :banana: :banana: :banana:



Amazing what a few sticky plasters can mend LOL
 
rockin_plumber said:
Frenchy said:
it's dead tonite :cry: :cry:

:grouphug: poor Frenchy

We been visiting miss_rockin's parents........
Its grandpa_rockins bday tomoro........ and their wedding aniversary....
:err: cant visit tomoro important game on telly
But.......
little_rockin fell over and cut his head on a step so had to visit hospital.....


A few steri-strips later and.........
He is all mended now :banana: :banana: :banana:

Amazing what a few sticky plasters can mend LOL

it means you won't be here tomorrow neither :|

little_rockin is a real Steve-O :shock: :shock: :shock:
great that he's ok

maybe you should buy that sort of house then :err:

tente_8_5.jpg
 
take a look at this

http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Whali ... oe_Islands

i'm not such a animal lover but this is very sad :x
this is description on the one of pictures:

Whaling in the Faroe Islands. These are Atlantic White-sided Dolphins, on a concrete-floored dock at a small port called Hvalba, which is in the Faroe Islands, in the North Atlantic between Scotland and Iceland. They've been caught for food, as has been done for at least a thousand years, but usually with pilot whales. However, white-sided dolphins are also caught from time to time. On this certain day, 26 August 2006, 223 dolphins were driven in the bay of Hvalba and killed traditionally with knifes at the beach. Then they were carried to the harbour, where the meat and blubber was distributed to all the people for free (like it used to be over the centuries). Birds surround them, just not in the picture. It is best to view the photo in context, as part of the series of images that were taken of the same catch.
 
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