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Uh, hello?!! Thanks for having me


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  On 7/7/2011 at 11:52 PM, acid1 said:

I like this guy already. Has a cool name and a cool disposition. A world traveler who is in tune with gaia... oddly enough choosing watmm as his online sanctuary. I'm feeling more sophisticated by the second.

 

I like how everyone also told him to :rtfm: even after he claimed he did so. He's already becoming aware of our patterns, probably figuring us all out piece by piece, but he's just chilling and soaking up the atmosphere. Its all good!

 

Enjoy WATMM NapTime, and remember to not take anything too seriously.

it's like he knows the inner workings of the Magi....

So, what you're saying is you haven't read the rules?

"They're about guns, lasers, robots with laser guns in space. Monsters from the future. Explosions. Sylvester Stallone doing a backflip on top of a spike while Robocop carries a ghost up a mountain. Bombs and swords and that... IDM is awesome."

Guest ruiagnelo
  On 7/8/2011 at 2:05 AM, sirch said:
  On 7/8/2011 at 1:34 AM, ruiagnelo said:

Plaid actually have a great role supporting watmm!

 

ahem, they only link to their own subforum, for obvious reasons, not the whole site!

 

 

..and welcome to you, Napland.. Hello :)

 

Plaid's subforum leads to the whole watmm, including the ahem... legendary ... BoC subforum.

Guest sirch
  On 7/8/2011 at 2:13 AM, ruiagnelo said:
  On 7/8/2011 at 2:05 AM, sirch said:
  On 7/8/2011 at 1:34 AM, ruiagnelo said:

Plaid actually have a great role supporting watmm!

 

ahem, they only link to their own subforum, for obvious reasons, not the whole site!

 

 

..and welcome to you, Napland.. Hello :)

 

Plaid's subforum leads to the whole watmm, including the ahem... legendary ... BoC subforum.

 

click the link on their site and it brings you to their subforum, a free forum to discuss and read about Plaid.

that's hardly "a great role supporting watmm!", imho. :)

I like hello threads from new members, they carry so much hope with them. Which hopefully then translates to renewed vitality for the threads and by extension, us crusty old bastards.

 

also :rtfm:

A member of the non sequitairiate.

  On 7/8/2011 at 2:31 AM, delet... said:

I like hello threads from new members, they carry so much hope with them. Which hopefully then translates to renewed vitality for the threads and by extension, us crusty old bastards.

 

also :rtfm:

 

agreed. I wonder which ones are dupes though. not that I really care because they are usually fun. the hardcore one was classic.

unfortunately the Plaid forum is the lure we use to identify the people we don't want in our community. You lose.

After this I listened to geogaddi and I didn't like it, I was quite vomitting at some tracks, I realized they were too crazy for my ears, they took too much acid to play music I stupidly thought (cliché of psyché music) But I knew this album was a kind of big forest where I just wasn't able to go inside.

- lost cloud

 

I was in US tjis summer, and eat in KFC. FUCK That's the worst thing i've ever eaten. The flesh simply doesn't cleave to the bones. Battery ferming. And then, foie gras is banned from NY state, because it's considered as ill-treat. IT'S NOT. KFC is tourist ill-treat. YOU POISONERS! Two hours after being to KFC, i stopped in a amsih little town barf all that KFC shit out. Nice work!

 

So i hope this woman is not like kfc chicken, otherwise she'll be pulled to pieces.

-organized confused project

this place was getting cobwebby so im glad theres finally a new person welcome to watmm have a nice time

 

:)

barnstar.gifofficial

sup barnstar of coolness

  On 7/7/2011 at 11:10 PM, NapLand said:

 

so I'm looking forward to having my finger on the pulse of the year 2000.

 

 

fixd

 

btw

 

read the rules

:cerious:

Guest hahathhat

Krill (singular and plural) or euphausiids are small, shrimp-like marine crustaceans that belong to the order (or suborder) Euphausiacea. These small invertebrates are important members of the zooplankton, particularly as food for baleen whales, manta rays, whale sharks, crabeater seals and other pinnipeds, and a few seabird species that feed almost exclusively on them. The name krill also may be used in a limited sense to refer to the genus Euphausia or even just the species Euphausia superba.

 

As this taxonomic group advances in its individual need of growth, maintenance, and survival, it also fulfills a larger purpose for the ecosystem and for humans. Krill are considered keystone species near the bottom of the food chain because they feed on phytoplankton and to a lesser extent other zooplankton, converting these into a form suitable for many larger animals for whom krill makes up the largest part of their diet. In the Southern Ocean (or Antarctic Ocean), one species, the Antarctic Krill Euphausia superba, makes up a biomass of hundreds of millions of tons, similar to the entire human consumption of animal protein. Over half of this biomass is eaten by whales (such as blue whales and fin whales), seals, penguins, squid, and fish each year, and replaced by growth and reproduction. Most of the species display large daily vertical migrations making a significant amount of biomass available as food for predators near the surface at night and in deeper waters during the day.

 

In providing for a very rich ecosystem, these small creatures also add to the aesthetic pleasure of humans, who delight in sightings of whales, seals and other marine life. But krill also provide direct economic benefit for people. Commercial fishing of krill is done in the Southern Ocean and in the waters around Japan. The total global production amounts to 150 – 200,000 metric tons annually, most of this from the Scotia Sea. Most krill is used for aquaculture and aquarium feeds, as bait in sport fishing, or in the pharmaceutical industry. In Japan and Russia, krill is also used for human consumption and known as okiami in Japan.

 

The name krill comes from the Norwegian word krill meaning “young fry of fish.”

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