I wish I were in the office to jump up and down with other people.
'Touched'
Natter 65: Speed Limit Enforced by Aircraft
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, pandas, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
I can't really spill -- it will be public information at some point.
We're other people!
::jumps up and down::
"people like you too much, you must be doing too much work" - not even kidding.
not said to me, but still said.
ita, insent.
I found myself taking a spoon at Chipotle and had to remind myself why and then put it back.
I keep a camping set of cutlery in my desk drawer--a sorta flat fork, spoon, and knife that slot together. Very handy. I still get plastic cutlery more often than I should. Bad environmentalist.
Talked to Marketing, and although our new company website goes up next Monday we don't have a logo or colour scheme yet. They only agreed on the name a week ago. I'd hate to have to work under those conditions.
Thanks, tommy!
No prob.
I think we may have gotten hosed off by the babas who had encased us in mud. Moldovans are not as shy about nudity as Americans. The mineral baths had minimal privacy, and one of my fellow (male) volunteers went around taking pictures. That dude liked to be naked more than anyone I've ever known.
Connie, that's horrible.
The polluted water comes from a drilling technique known as hydraulic fracturing, or "fracking," in which millions of gallons of water, sand and chemicals are blasted into each well to fracture tightly compacted shale and release trapped natural gas.
Yeah, well, the shale isn't all they're frakking.
But fracking a horizontal well requires huge amounts of water — up to 5 million gallons per well, compared with 50,000 gallons in some conventional wells.
And here's another question - are they using *potable* water for the "fracking?" Because that alone is a horrifying waste. They better be using treated water from waste treatment plants.
Once the rock is fractured, some of the water — estimates range from 15 to 40 percent — comes back up the well.
When it does, it can be five times saltier than seawater and laden with dissolved solids such as sulfates and chlorides, which conventional sewage and drinking water treatment plants aren't equipped to remove.
Duh. That's not going to cause any problems, nooo...
No harm to aquatic life was reported, though high levels of salts and other minerals can kill fish and other creatures, regulators say.
Who's monitoring the wildlife, how are they monitoring, and are they monitoring indicator species?
I can't really spill -- it will be public information at some point.
Fine, be a tease! ;) We wait anxiously.