I never understood all the hue and cry over baby seal fur until I finally got to touch one at the Baltimore Aquarium's kid exploratorium, where they had a baby seal pelt.
It was wonderfully soft. I understand now why people like them so much.
I was chuckling at the comment in the other thread about Roger Moore making homophobic comments. Last night my teenage son found and played this movie on Netflix:
I thought they used the pelts of baby seals for that now.
ReplyDeleteGerry
I was going to say alpaca hair, but that's too sustainable.
ReplyDeleteI bet the polishing compound is hippie tears.
ReplyDeleteCan't find "Like" button...
ReplyDeleteI never understood all the hue and cry over baby seal fur until I finally got to touch one at the Baltimore Aquarium's kid exploratorium, where they had a baby seal pelt.
ReplyDeleteIt was wonderfully soft. I understand now why people like them so much.
No, the polishing medium should be the albumin from Spotted Owl eggs.
ReplyDeleteRe spotted owl eggs,taste like chicken
ReplyDeletebillf said...
ReplyDeleteRe spotted owl eggs,taste like chicken
I didn't think so. I thought they tasted more like duck.
Well, they taste like duck if you eat them off elephant ivory plates with sea turtle fillets on the side.
ReplyDeleteI was chuckling at the comment in the other thread about Roger Moore making homophobic comments. Last night my teenage son found and played this movie on Netflix:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.imdb.com/title/tt0285462/
Roger Moore was acting!
"Well, they taste like duck if you eat them off elephant ivory plates with sea turtle fillets on the side."
ReplyDelete3:47 PM, August 30, 2013
Without the sea turtle filets, and eating fried deer steak and white gravy and grits off Corelle plates, the spotted owl eggs taste more like turkey.
That'll teach those tree-hugging fuzzy bunny loons to mess with us... maybe.