Random Picture Thread

Homebrew Talk - Beer, Wine, Mead, & Cider Brewing Discussion Forum

Help Support Homebrew Talk - Beer, Wine, Mead, & Cider Brewing Discussion Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
ePWZnSb.gif

Tease.
 
Those of you who are baseball fans will understand why this is funny.
USATSI_9444433.vadapt.980.high.49.jpg
 
Mebbe, though why a crapload of crap would blow the crap out of that tanker is a solid question.

Otoh, mebbe a self-heating tanker of asphalt coating on the way to a job and a PRV decided it was a good day to fail?

Cheers! :eek:

Faulty vacuum relief. Fermenting, off gassing poop. Defective latches. Improperly latched latches.
 
Ok, you're likely playin', but...

Vacuum relief? Clearly that tank blew OUT, not in. So scratch that one.
And latches? "We don't need no stinking latches!" ;)

As for fermenting poop, at least we're talking positive-pressure scenarios again. But you'd think a honey truck could make it from septic tank to disposal site before things got all eruptive and ****...

Cheers! :D
 
Adrián Beltré does not like having his head touched. He freaks the F out anytime someone touches his head.

^True fact^
When he played for Boston, players were egging each other to touch his head and when it happened all hell would break loose in the dugout :D

Cheers!
 
^True fact^
When he played for Boston, players were egging each other to touch his head and when it happened all hell would break loose in the dugout :D

Cheers!

It's to the point now that every time he has an RBI or home run everyone touches his head. And I think they are having a Beltre bobble head at the Ballpark in the next few weeks where his helmet comes off.
 
It might actually be. Google got a ton of hits on the image. Here's one:

"Admiral 'Spike' Blandy and his wife celebrate the testing of the largest thermonuclear device ever tested by the United States at Bikini Atoll on March 1, 1946"

Some more details here, and nuclear goats...
http://arstechnica.com/information-...k-at-the-bikini-nuclear-tests-70-years-later/

Goats were restrained on the decks of target ships during the Able test to measure the health impact of exposure. The two goats shown were aboard the transport ship Niagra; they were far enough from the detonation to have survived.

wgwfbbj4u3anb55rtfd7.jpg
 
Back
Top