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Surefire Tricks To Impress A Younger Lady
By Joe Spencer · 15 years ago
The most important thing to remember when dating a younger girl is to know how they think. They are looking for certain attributes in a man. In fact, due to their younger excitement seeking nature, ...
The Cry Of The Flying Horse
By David Bunch · 15 years ago
A Mississippi newspaper recently told its subscribers that "The flying horse is an odd creature with a long brown body about two feet long, its tail is bushy and hangs down like a horse's switch, ...
Against The Blue October Sky
By David Bunch · 15 years ago
The common acorns of the white oak group are smooth, light brown without any markings, and have none of the woolly covering beneath the thin shell as other acorns do. The white oak cup scales ...
Beautifully Shaded With Red
By David Bunch · 15 years ago
The most interesting and perhaps most easily found of all the winged fruits are the paired samaras or keys of the maples. Each kind has two seeds protected by veined, thin coverings that expand into ...
Can't Be Seen, Even With A Magnifier
By David Bunch · 15 years ago
In the last week of May I have found the bigtoothed aspen catkins open, the two valves of the capsule rolled back, and, clinging to the withered catkin, the bunches of hairs containing the minute ...
Scattering The Fruits Of The Trees
By David Bunch · 15 years ago
Most fruits of the forest tree, whether the seeds are comparatively heavy like those of the ash, or very light like those of the elm, are furnished with wings of various forms so as to ...
The Purpose Of The Tree
By David Bunch · 15 years ago
Fruits of our common forest trees, though sometimes as inconspicuous and nearly as fleeting as the flowers that produced them, offer such ingenious contrivances for our admiration that they rival them, not in exquisite delicacy ...
Choosing A Stately Bird
By David Bunch · 15 years ago
Forty-three of our States and the District of Columbia have selected a bird to represent them as an emblem. In the majority of the States this popularly-chosen avian representative has been officially recognized and in ...
May The Good Work Go On
By David Bunch · 15 years ago
In the general scheme of gardening for pleasure, a background of green is always necessary for a proper display of color in our delphiniums. Recently the writer saw a background consisting of a wall covered ...
All Praise The Tidy Sand-Hopper
By David Bunch · 15 years ago
The seaweed that drifts ashore on the daily tide will be reduced to fibers. The shell will be purged of its content. The bones of the fish will be cleaned, and the crab's claw hollowed. ...
Male Chastity FAQ - The Seven Most Commonly Asked Questions
By Sarah Jameson · 15 years ago
In this quick Male Chastity FAQ I want to tackle the 7 most pressing questions couples who read my Free guide and blog ask me over and over again.
There is a lot more to ...
Plankton: Nourishing Soup-Stock Of The Sea
By David Bunch · 15 years ago
That vast and estimable dame we know as the ocean has a determined antipathy for all untidiness. So varied and prolific is the life she nurtures that death and dissolution are forever in her tides. ...
The High Wall Of Lava
By David Bunch · 15 years ago
All of the comparatively few scientists who have visited the elephant seal beach of Guadalupe Island have been struck by the almost total absence of females and young; yet the herd is increasing. Fifteen years ...
Elephants Of The Sea
By David Bunch · 15 years ago
My dream to see the famous elephant seals of Guadalupe Island seemed entirely out of reach on numerous occasions. Five times I had started for the Island, but on each occasion something came up to ...
Motion Pictures Are Worthless Without Motion
By David Bunch · 15 years ago
The majority of the birds of prey nest early in the spring. One of the common species of North America is the red-shouldered hawk, Buteo lineatus lineatus, which builds its homes from the Atlantic to ...
The Hairy Sand Ant
By David Bunch · 15 years ago
The so-called wood-boring wasps, Trypoxylon, which are not borers at all, but merely users of holes in any convenient substance, possess very weak poison, as I well know from having had it demonstrated upon me ...
Less Inclined To Rob The Hive
By David Bunch · 15 years ago
Is the toxicology of honeybee stings understood? Does the food of this bee have anything to do with the severity of the poison? It is known that summer aster yields honey that is slightly bitter; ...
Bees & Wasps: Both Social, And Solitary
By David Bunch · 15 years ago
Are there any more vivid memories of childhood than those of the berry picking and swimming expeditions that were turned into swift, ragged retreats by hornets, bumble-bees and yellow-jackets? These "ladies"-for only the females have ...
The Innately Beautiful Forms Of Nature
By David Bunch · 15 years ago
In the lowly cabbage, the fragrant onion, the more aristocratic artichoke there is utility. They boast vitamins and nourishment, but are they beautiful? Offhand one would smile tolerantly and reply, "Well, hardly,"-proving the fallacy of ...
A Beauty Much Appreciated
By David Bunch · 15 years ago
Of the orchids, dainty tribe of practical jokers, one of the cleverest is the magenta-flowered grass pink, Calopogon pulchellus. She invites a flying guest to dine and places before him artificial viands. She gives him ...