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Posts Tagged ‘Like’

I like playing online games

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010

 

Many people like to play online games. Many people need to buy eve online isk. Many people think that in the virtual world which you can find in the real world which can not do anything. They can ride a horse galloping in the grasslands, they can ride a giant bird flying in the sky. They can ride the dolphin swim in the sea. These are unthinkable inside the real world

I also like to play online games. We all need eve online iskto play the game. Of course my favorite thing is playing EVE online. My favorite is playing with my friends. I and my friends can form a team, hunt other aircraft in the space can also be with my friends to do tasks to make money.

Of course, you have to earn real money inside the real world, and then go buy eve isk.

But in the online game which not all things are full of interesting, something is boring. For example, you have to constantly hunt out the spacecraft to improve your character’s level. Otherwise, higher than you in the face of the spacecraft when you are likely to become its prey was. In addition to grades other that you should also have is good equipment, you should increase with the grade, you have to update your equipment and make money.

But looking at their training role that sense of achievement in the game which is a lot of conquering the human body can not. When your spacecraft win the people you will feel like your own children grow up the same.

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Free retro video games download like duck hunt

Thursday, August 26th, 2010

Video gaming is something that is deeply driven into the hearts of youth that have grown up in the past few centuries. Growing up in a technology driven society has allowed me to play some of the greatest video gaming systems of all time, the original Nintendo, Sega, dream cast, N64, and all the greats.

The ability for the graphics to get better and better has evolved the games to a much superior quality over the years. This although has no effect on the great ability for the retro video games to stay dear to the hearts of many. The original Super Mario Brothers, Sonic the hedge hog, even Pac man are all great selections for best of all time. But the one game that really was miles head of its time has to be the all time great classic of Duck Hunt.

This game was an original Nintendo product and when looked at now it is quite amazing how it was put together. Nintendo was able to implement technology that was way ahead of its time. Duck hunt was much like the system called Wii that Nintendo has recently came out with. Other great aspects of the classic game included the challenge of taking out those darn ducks. There was also the satisfaction of that little cartoon dog that came up to take away your kills. Duck Hunt also had the best controller on the market. The unmistakeable bright orange gun that was used in the game is a classic. The gun was so unlike anything else on the market at the time it was a favourite then and has become a classic in today’s standards.

Playing Duck hunt will be a classic for years to come, dusting off the original nintendo system and getting out Duck Hunt will always put a smile on everyone’s face.

To get totally FREE retro games online visit www.free-retro-games.info

To download your free retro video games visit www.free-retro-games.info

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How To Write About Something You Know Nothing About and Make It Seem Like You Do

Saturday, August 14th, 2010

I’m too young for World War II, too white and well off to join the native street life, and I’ve never stepped on the back of an Iditarod dog sled, either coming or going. Never lived in a native village in the bush of Alaska or walked ninety miles through the wilderness.

But I know about them.

When my novel required me to be able to present the difficulties, dangers, and human frustrations of the protagonist who did know these things I had to find out what he went through and how he felt and thought and acted in these circumstances.

Books, and doing a portion of each of these, got me through.

I’ve never hunted bear, but I have hunted for sixty years, so hunting the bear was just one step from where I had been. I have seen hundreds of bears while hunting in Alaska, black and brown, but never had the desire to shoot one. You won’t talk to many Alaska bear hunters before you hear about a grizzly that caught and killed a black bear and ate it right there. They also kill and eat smaller brown bears. The grizzly bear is at the top of the food chain until you introduce mankind with a .300 Winchester rifle.

Then, when my protagonist decided to walk ninety miles on a trail along the Chandalar River from Arctic Village to Venetie I fell back on two hikes I have made. One was around and around a municipal track for twenty-four hours for the Walk for Life where I walked fifty-one miles. Another was to hike Resurrection Pass Trail which is either thirty-eight or forty-two miles, depending on which sign you believe, on the longest day of the year-straight through-without camping-in twenty hours. The blisters, dehydration, exhaustion, sour taste of food and water, dullness, and the experience of night travel all come to play in those. Now I’ll admit, forty-two miles isn’t ninety, and one day isn’t four or five days, but you can extrapolate from that and get to the thoughts, feelings, and conditions of someone who did it.

The book shelves in my library/den contain about eighty books on WWII, including Time/Life photo books which depict the photographer’s detail of actions in dreary weather, snow cover, and the weariness of the soldiers. I read six books about the Battle of the Bulge, the Golden Lions Division, and the end of the war in Europe. I also contacted a researcher who sent me details of the POW camps on the Rhine River, and the kind of trees (poplars and willows) that would have been blooming on May 7th, 1945 at the end of the war in Europe.

About fifteen years before I wrote the book I was a passenger in a small plane that landed at Arctic Village. The Chandalar River, the village setting, and the remoteness stayed in my mind after we dropped off a young man who was to meet one of his school teachers and kayak down the river.

There is a giant file cabinet in a writer’s mind that holds things like the smell of the dust on the road into town, the hordes of mosquitoes, the easy laughter and humor of the resident natives, the one store and the squeak of the screen door spring. These mental scenes were added to, cut up, and reassembled into the village life of my protagonist.

Most of the questions from readers come from the native street life and the Iditarod. Did I participate in each of these? No. I didn’t and don’t want to either. But I did watch and follow their actions from my car and on foot.

I have been accosted many times on the street by natives, and others, under the influence of alcohol. Even followed an intrepid attorney down a dark stairway into the bowels of the Gospel Mission looking for a certain fellow, a scene that slammed itself onto my memory for all time. And over the course of my lifetime I have watched people whose lives have been influenced by alcohol. Have seen their constant struggle to get it, hide it, deny it, and then try to clean up and either win or lose.

Usually it’s AA that brings them back to society. They provide the common knowledge, the history of addiction, and the comradeship of help to get out. There are a few who simply turn their back on it or get in places where alcohol is not available or are lifted out by love of their fellow man and/or a woman. Such is my protagonist, Bill Williams, the son of an Irish immigrant and a native woman.

When I wrote about the dog sled training and racing and then the Iditarod, I pulled scenes and facts out of my head from thirty years of watching dog sled races in Alaska; read a dozen books about raising dogs, training dogs, running dogs, and various races that featured techniques learned that favored the winners.

Then, I had the wonderful experience of talking to the 1978 Iditarod Winner, Dick Mackey, who has written a book, ONE SECOND TO GLORY, that details his close win in that race. He helped me by phone through out the race segment and when I was finished, read the race portion for any errors I had made. If any remain, they are all my fault.

I also got to spend a number of hours with Norman Vaughan, who was in his mid-nineties by that time. He had previously mushed dogs in Antarctica for Admiral Byrd, in Greenland, on the Iditarod trail and in the Presidential Inaugural parade. He loved to talk about dog racing and volunteered to read my book but time caught up with him in the reading department and he never got around to it. He died this year having lived 100 years and five days.

There are a lot of ways to write about something you know nothing about, but I think you’ll find the above methods worked for me.

Jim Misko is the author of the Alaska-based novel, For What He Could Become. Jim lives in Alaska where he hunts, fishes, canoes, and writes.

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Hunting Colorado’s Biggest Game Bird / How to Hunt Elk / Why Do Elk Bugle? / How to Bugle Like an Elk / Cimarron State Wildlife Area / Piceance State Wildlife Area / The Great Gate Caper

Monday, July 19th, 2010

Hunting Colorado’s Biggest Game Bird / How to Hunt Elk / Why Do Elk Bugle? / How to Bugle Like an Elk / Cimarron State Wildlife Area / Piceance State Wildlife Area / The Great Gate Caper

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Treat a loved one with an unusual luxury item like A Boar Bristle Hairbrush

Tuesday, July 6th, 2010

Part One

He had taught Classics at a community college in upstate New York for a few years before I met him, so I wasn’t surprised he knew more about the history of the boar and the boar bristle hairbrush than I did. He was certainly smart, but he was quirky too and that’s what drew me to him. We only dated for a few weeks, but he always had unusual gifts for me. There had been a salesman who used to call around my childhood neighborhood. My mom never gave him the time of day. Bearing that in mind, my prejudices having been retained since childhood, I was surprised that their product range would contain anything resembling a nice gift for me.

I had served a latte to the Classics tutor the first day I spoke to him and I noticed that he was reading Chapman’s translation of Homer’s Odyssey.

“It’s a good book,” I told him.
“The original’s better,” was his response.
“The original?”
“In Ancient Greek.”
“I wouldn’t know,” I said. “What part are you on?”

He glanced up at me then, and for the first time he smiled.
“Odysseus has returned home. Eurycleia has just realised it’s him while she washes his feet.”
“She recognizes the scar?”
“That’s right. The old scar on his leg he got during a boar hunt, many years before.” His eyes lit up. He seemed impressed that I knew a little of the story. “What’s your name?” he asked then.

We dated for a few weeks. He was in town for the summer months researching a historical novel. He said the novel dealt in part with the Pony Express and I’d told him about my love of horses and how I couldn’t afford one right now, but as soon as I graduated from night school and had a “proper job”, I was going straight to the local stables to buy a share in a horse to take out riding and to groom and to brush down in the evenings. He asked me what I’d brush it down with. He asked the most ridiculous questions sometimes. He told me I should use a quality hairbrush, more specifically one of their great boar bristle hairbrushes, that they made some top quality products.

“Their boar bristle hairbrush is second to none,” he told me, with the earnestness of an ad man. That made me laugh. I told him how I was prejudiced against Fuller since my childhood. I told him about the hairbrush salesman and how my mom wouldn’t let him inside her door. That made him laugh.

 

The Fuller Brush Company has been in business since 1906, and offers safe, environmentally friendly products for keeping your home and your body clean. Visit http://www.fuller-brush-products.com or Call # 1-800-992-1089

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I am not an animal I just like Hunting Pigs

Friday, May 28th, 2010

The right to own a firearm has always been a very controversial issue in the United States. While guns are for safety, they often fall into the wrong hands. The saying guns don’t kill people, people kill other people is very true. The reality is that firearms are just another tool that people can use in ways that it wasn’t intended for. Firearms have continued to get a bad rap with the widely publicized sniper attacks at various locations throughout the United States.

A firearm is defined as a weapon that fires either single or multiple shots at high velocity. This is possible by the gases burned. This gas is called gun powder. The item released from the weapon is called a bullet.

One of the most popular uses of firearms is hunting. Hunting is an avid sport. The time of firearm used in hunting depends on the preference of the individual and the type of game they are hunting. Likewise, there are many types of ammunition to choose from as well.

Keeping your firearm clean is key to keeping it working properly. Waste products accumulate in the gun as you use it. Residue can affect how your shot is dispensed. It is important that you are well trained in safety both for using firearms and for cleaning them. Accidents happen all the time when these safety rules are not religiously enforced.

Firearms range in price from a few hundred dollars to thousands of dollars. Early war time firearms can be very costly. They are often purchased by gun collectors. Gun shows are a great place to purchase such items as well as to explore the various types of firearms out there.

Firearms are a viable market throughout the world. The key is to use them responsibly. Always store the firearm and the ammunition separately to prevent accidents from happening. Gun locks are also a valuable safety guard, especially if you have children in the house. No matter how careful you are, their curiosity might get the best of them when you are not around.

Paul Ingersole is an Australian based business person who enjoys writing.Paul discovered a great system that makes small continuous recurring profits using the internet.You can see Google Sniper at Paul’s website

http://www.guruswipe.com

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Big black bear in New York doesn’t like the hounds bear hunting

Sunday, May 2nd, 2010


My cousin, and his friend were training there hounds in New York. The second bear you see is a big old boar, and he’s mean.The big old bear almost bails out of the tree right onto Anthony’s head some scary shit.

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Mountain House Mexican Rice & Chicken Pro-Pak Freeze Dried 1 Person Pouch – Like MRE Food / Meal for Hiking, Camping, Fishing, Hunting and Outdoor Recreation

Sunday, May 2nd, 2010

  • Hearty 16oz serving. 470 to 560 calories per serving
  • Boil water, add to pouch, wait 8-9 minutes and enjoy
  • Convenient stand up zipper pouch
  • Compact vacuum pouch
  • 0g Trans fat

Product Description
Mountain House Mexican Rice & Chicken Pro-Pak Freeze Dried 1 Person Pouch – Like MRE Food / Meal for Hiking, Camping, Fishing, Hunting and Outdoor Recreation… More >>

Mountain House Mexican Rice & Chicken Pro-Pak Freeze Dried 1 Person Pouch – Like MRE Food / Meal for Hiking, Camping, Fishing, Hunting and Outdoor Recreation

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The Guarded Secrets To Hunting Like A Pro: Learn The Secrets Of Hunting Game And Experience The Ultimate Thrill In Your Hunting Trip As You Learn To Hunt Like A Pro

Saturday, April 3rd, 2010

Product Description
A newbie in the sport of hunting or just looking to improve your skills? This all-inclusive book will help you learn the basics as you get started. You’ve been a hunting fan for awhile now? Learn new techniques and current information to enhance your hunting skills. Whatever your skill level on the sport, if you enjoy hunting, there is always room to perfect the art. Understand a brief prehistory of hunting so you can understand man’s primitive instincts to hunt. … More >>

The Guarded Secrets To Hunting Like A Pro: Learn The Secrets Of Hunting Game And Experience The Ultimate Thrill In Your Hunting Trip As You Learn To Hunt Like A Pro

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German Shepherd Dog hops like bunny rabbit hunting lizards

Thursday, March 11th, 2010


Kaine having a blast hunting lizards in the desert. This footage is from September 14, 2008 (Kaine’s 2nd Birthday). I love how he pounces the lizards at the end, like a wolf hunting mice in the snow:). The song used is “Josie has the Upperhand,” by Josh Woodward Thank you for the honors: #87 – Most Discussed (Today) – Pets & Animals #93 – Top Rated (Today) – Pets & Animals

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