me chicken? go for it, do your best, I dare you
Have undressed in your consulting room, what's your next move?
Have you been swimming in cold water?
There is nothing wrong with your eye sight.
Then maybe you should have YOUR eyes checked
Why, I can see you standing there grinning.
Yes, you're shaking all over.
If I am cold, can you warm me up

:wink:
Sure can baby, let me take you in my furry arms, and give you a big koala bear hug.
I don't know if koala fur is soft since I have never petted one
Well here is your chance, why not give it a try, go on, pat him on the head and tell me what it feels like.
Now how could anyone turn down such an offer a?
Well Izzie, if you're interested, be my guest. :wink:
Just a minute, lets get a few things clear: Are you a typical Victorian Koala (formerly P. cinereus victor) which has longer, thicker fur, is a darker, softer grey, often with chocolate-brown highlights on the back and forearms, and has a more prominently light-coloured ventral side and fluffy white ear tufts.
Or a typical and New South Wales Koala weighing 12 kg for males and 8.5 kg for females. In tropical and sub-tropical Queensland, however, the Koala is smaller (at around 6.5 kg for an average male and just over 5 kg for an average female), a lighter often rather scruffy grey in colour, and has shorter, thinner fur.
In Queensland the Koala was previously classified as the subspecies P. cinereus adustus, and the intermediate forms in New South Wales as P. cinereus cinereus.
So, which is to be?
Which would you like him to be?
(Hey Baaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaby - are you not working today!)
It's Martin Luther King Jr day today and a holiday for many. However this oil don't pump itself, so I am hard at work. Did I mention I was at work?
Tryagain wrote:Just a minute, lets get a few things clear: Are you a typical Victorian Koala (formerly P. cinereus victor) which has longer, thicker fur, is a darker, softer grey, often with chocolate-brown highlights on the back and forearms, and has a more prominently light-coloured ventral side and fluffy white ear tufts.
Or a typical and New South Wales Koala weighing 12 kg for males and 8.5 kg for females. In tropical and sub-tropical Queensland, however, the Koala is smaller (at around 6.5 kg for an average male and just over 5 kg for an average female), a lighter often rather scruffy grey in colour, and has shorter, thinner fur.
In Queensland the Koala was previously classified as the subspecies P. cinereus adustus, and the intermediate forms in New South Wales as P. cinereus cinereus.
So, which is to be?
Try did you help make the movie Monty Python?
Morning all......my dog let me sleep in
Mornin' TTH, what did your dog let you sleep in?