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You do not need a cat tree
Take a 24x24 cardboard box
Cut 1 hole in each side 3” round
Toss the box in a corner and they will yuck it up for hours

Wad some tin foil in little balls and they will act like it is the best present every
 
I walked into a Save a Lot store a couple days ago and they had stacks of canned vegetables with a sign that said $.25 each. I was already mostly checked out when I saw the sign and stacks, so I grabbed one flat. As you can see, they didn't ring up for a quarter each. They rang up 5 for 50 cents. which means that the flat of 12 was $1.20. For a few reasons, I was running late and needed to get going, but with the idea that I would go back and get more. I did go back later and got more, but they must have changed the price to $.25 a can. Still a deal.


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I walked into a Save a Lot store a couple days ago and they had stacks of canned vegetables with a sign that said $.25 each. I was already mostly checked out when I saw the sign and stacks, so I grabbed one flat. As you can see, they didn't ring up for a quarter each. They rang up 5 for 50 cents. which means that the flat of 12 was $1.20. For a few reasons, I was running late and needed to get going, but with the idea that I would go back and get more. I did go back later and got more, but they must have changed the price to $.25 a can. Still a deal.


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Wow, You just triggered a memory and Inthank you for the warm feeling

When we first got married we were happy but struggling as all young couples do
My Dad would show up on an early Saturday morning with a flat of canned veggies, drop them off saying he had bought too much. Another time he showed up with a set of tires that fit my truck, said he bought new ones and I could have the old ones, The old ones were almost new
I miss that old Man
 
Wow, You just triggered a memory and Inthank you for the warm feeling

When we first got married we were happy but struggling as all young couples do
My Dad would show up on an early Saturday morning with a flat of canned veggies, drop them off saying he had bought too much. Another time he showed up with a set of tires that fit my truck, said he bought new ones and I could have the old ones, The old ones were almost new
I miss that old Man
I wish I wasn't running late and would have taken the time to get a few flats when I was there when I realized that a can of vegetables was $.10. I don't think we will ever see a price like that again. Even a quarter per can was such a deal.
 
I saw a photo on another platform, got curious and did a little research. It was an amazing story of a girl named Simone Segouin....
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Simone Segouin, Mostly Known By Her Codename, Nicole Minet, Was Only 18-Years-Old When The Germans Invaded. Her first act of rebellion was to steal a bicycle from a German military administration, and to slice the tires of all of the other bikes and motorcycles so they couldn't pursue her. She found a pocket of the Resistance and joined the fight, using the stolen bike to deliver messages between Resistance groups. She was an extremely fast learner and quickly became an expert at tactics and explosives. She led teams of Resistance fighters to capture German troops, set traps, and sabotage German equipment. As the war dragged on, her deeds escalated to derailing German trains, blocking roads, blowing up bridges and helping to create a German-free path to help the Allied forces retake France from the inside. She was never caught. Segouin was present at the liberation of Chartres on August 23, 1944, and then the liberation of Paris two days later. She was promoted to lieutenant and awarded several medals, including the Croix de Guerre. After the war, she studied medicine and became a pediatric nurse. She is still going strong at 96.

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A year later...
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The French Partisan died Feb. 21 at a nursing home in Courville-sur-Eure.
by Claire Barrett 2/24/2023

Simone Segouin was famously captured in film by Robert Capa during a mopping up action in Paris, 1944. (Robert Capa/LIFE Photograph Collection)

She was an oddity, an enigma to Life magazine war correspondent Jack Belden. Covering the news from the French city of Chartres in August 1944 with soldiers from Gen. George S. Patton’s Third Army, this woman stood out from the pulsating crowd, jeering at those having their heads shorn for consorting with the Germans.

In his September 4, 1944, article titled “The Girl Partisan of Chartres,” the veteran correspondent described Nicole Minet (her nom de guerre) in adulatory terms:

...Her blonde hair fell over a sun-browned face in a careless disarray and this, with her full lips and a rather sultry expression gave to her obviously young face the appearance of a charming hoyden. She was clad in a light-brown jacket and a cheap flowered skirt in many hues which ended just above her knees. Her legs were bare and brown. About her arm went a ribband bearing the legend FTPF [Francs-Tireurs et Partisans Français]. In the waistband of her skirt was stuck a small revolver...


The “charming hoyden” consented to an interview with Belden but was quickly whisked away by fellow partisans.

Thankfully for Belden, and for history, the two bumped into one another the following day.

The 18-year-old, later identified as Simone Segouin, was captured in film by famed wartime photographer Robert Capa during the Liberation of Paris on August 29th, 1944. The image of Segouin holding an MP-40 submachine gun all the while in shorts, a checkered shirt and a beret — led her to become the face of the French Resistance during the Second World War.

And while the female resistance fighter’s bravery and partisan actions is legendary in itself, the iconic photograph came to symbolize the hodge-podge nature of the French Partisans and how a simple French country girl could wreak havoc on the Goliath that was Nazi Germany.

According to The Washington Post, Segouin was born to a farming family in the village of Thivars, near Chartres, on Oct. 3, 1925. Her father had fought in the French army against the Germans during World War I. After the German occupation of France began in May and June of 1940, her father sided with the anti-Nazi resistance, and partisans used his farm as a hideout.

The then 17-year-old was discovered in March 1944 by Lieut. Roland, a former engineer in the merchant marines before the war. Roland soon became chief of a group of 40 men operating near Eure-et-Loir and recognized the need for a girl or woman to do liaison work for, as Belden writes, “they can often get places where a man might be suspect.”

“I studied her for a while to see what were her feelings,” Roland relayed to Belden. “When I discovered she had French feelings I told her little by little about the work I was doing. I asked her if she would be scared to do such work. She said, ‘No. It would please me to kill Boche [a derogatory French word for German soldiers].’”

According to The Washington Post, Segouin and Boursier worked together for months, blowing up bridges and derailing trains carrying German troops or munitions. The teenager exchanged messages with other resistance members on a German bicycle she had stolen and repainted. The bike, which she called her “reconnaissance vehicle,” was filled with baguettes and allowed for blonde-haired innocent-looking Seqouin to move about German-occupied territory without suspicion.

While working in such close proximity to one another, and although he was 20 years her senior, Segouin and Boursier became lovers. Although never marrying the two would have six children together before splitting in the mid 1950s.

For her wartime actions, she was promoted to lieutenant in 1946 and, along with other resistance fighters, was awarded the prestigious Croix de Guerre.

“Nothing pleased Nicole so much as the killing of the Germans,” Belden wrote. “I could find no traces of what is conventionally called toughness in Nicole. After routine farm life, she finds her present job thrilling and exhilarating. Now that the war is passing beyond her own home district she does not think of going back to the farm. She wants to go with the Partisans and help free the rest of France.” She went on to do just that.

Simone Segouin, 1944. (U.S. Army/National Archives)


https://www.historynet.com/simone-segouin-famed-french-resistance-fighter-dies-at-97/
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I am no surfer. These are the big waves that riders get dropped off into them by wave runners. If you look closely, you can see surfers dropping down the face, a few in the air and wave runners up top.
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I am no surfer. These are the big waves that riders get dropped off into them by wave runners. If you look closely, you can see surfers dropping down the face, a few in the air and wave runners up top.
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I declare balderdash!

People on he waves in the background are as 5hose in the foreground.

See here

You have violated the theme of this thread.
:rolleyes:

Ben
 
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We had the lovely pleasure of having gypsy moths two years ago. This is a picture our property line. We had our property sprayed with a naturally occurring enzyme, our neighbors did not. It was a very surreal view, very apocalyptic. Click on the picture for the full effect.
 

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From the set of "The Great Escape"
L to R:
James Coburn
John Sturgis (Director/Producer)
Steve McQueen
Charles Bronson

Someone will let me know if I did not get them correct!! :)

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