I can tell her wats happening :grin:
Oooh I like it when someone can describe what went on in great detail :rascal:
Would it be a vivid and descriptive account. :rascal:
ooo I like to hear indepth details.
I'm only any good under interrogation. If you ask questions, I will answer truthfully, but I'm not good at detailed narration off the cuff.
Looks like it's time to get out the cuffs, tie Fluff down and ask some interesting questions.
Chocolate Fluff?
Ooh you're so masterful <swoon> Yes please :rascal: :twisted:
Ooooooooooooooooooh
You could be my little plaything :twisted:
Cooking what, one wonders.
I have a theory - if you were born at a warm time of year (between late spring and early autumn), you feel the cold more, than those people born between late autumn and early spring. I was a February baby and tolerate the cold far better than my husband, who was born in July. This rule seems to hold true for my own family, I wondered if anyone else could substantiate my theory.
I was a spring baby, and I feel the cold. I also love the spring months when everything is coming to life, but saying that I like all the seasons for different reasons.
I was born in April, apparently the middle of a heatwave in '71.
Cant stand being cold, and it cant get warm enough for me during the summer altho i hate the humidity the british summers usually brings
One of my past employments saw me maintaining a forklift truck fleet in a cold store.
My workshop was a constant 1 degree C. My food consuption rose to cope with the cold.
A warm day in the store was -24 C and the stores typically ran at -32C. It was quite possible to walk through them in your shirtsleeves.
I like walking through the woods in the frosty crunchy leaves, dressed appropriately of course, and coming home to a real fire, hot chocolate and apple cake. But then I don't really feel the cold. So long as my feet stay warm, I'm fine.
In that case i'm off to get another two pairs of socks cos i gotta go to work boo no fair <stamps feet throws toys outta pram!!) :bounce: