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pokeplayer984

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In another topic, you mentioned that your family is crazier than The Mythbusters.  Seriously, how crazy can they be?

(Note: I will fell no ill will of you if you decide to not answer this for any reason whatsoever.)


Pangaea

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Well, it was mainly a joke, :lol and to my knowledge none of us are clinically insane (though note the words “to my knowledge” :p), but we all have our quirky characteristics that add up to make us a pretty nutty bunch, especially my siblings and I when all two or more at least one of us is in a playful mood (it often becomes contagious). The fact that my two brothers and I regularly practice Three Stooges routines (gently) on one another should be evidence enough. :lol There's also been times when we've applied whipped cream to each other's faces in various manners (from pie tins, to spraying from the bottle, to simply throwing handfulsófor a long time there was a patch of white on a sheltered area of brick wall outside our local food court where such an incident occurred), physically dragged one another down the hallway, dumped enormous piles of blankets on one another from the top of the stairs, and so on. Then there's the fact that my sister has basically invented her own language (well, pidgin language, anyway)ówhich can be extremely difficult to understand as the only noun it apparently contains is “gerbil”, and has a seemingly endless supply of improvised nicknames for our cat; my youngest brother can hardly look at a pile of fried chicken without pointing out one that he thinks looks like the Loch Ness Monster (he has an incredible artistic talent for imagining and designing bizarre and outlandish creaturesóboth on paper and in computer programs such as Sporeósome of which he originally encounters in dreams); my other younger brother is difficult to describe, but he has long had a reputation as the nut of the household (and that’s saying something), whose antics in the past have ranged from deliberately running into walls, to dancing around inanely, to producing some of the goofiest sounds and facial expressions imaginable (and yet he is also a brilliant and talented individual whom I greatly admire); our parents are slightly more normal, but they both have their oddball characteristics, and are habitual wisecrackers tendency (and my dad has been known to make some pretty bizarre shopping investments . . . such as a banana holder); and I . . . well, you already know me :p (sometimes I question my OWN sanity).

Heck, even our cat is nuts; his strange habits include galloping down the hall at lightning speeds, rushing in front of or into your feet when you least expect it, attacking people's feet (but only when they have socks on, it seems), and staring at you, arching his back, and then bolting like this (without the telling precursory action of taking a long, slow step in the direction he's going to go) :bolt for no apparent reason.

Okay, maybe we’re more weird than crazy, but you see my point. :P:



Pronounced "pan-JEE-uh". Spelled with three A's. Represented by a Lystrosaurus.


Amaranthine

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Cancerian Tiger

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Are there any Black bears in your area :)?


Pangaea

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Quote from: Rat_lady7,Jun 25 2010 on  11:34 PM
Hey Pangaea what is your opinion about these creatures?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Axolotl
I love axolotls! :DD (Actually, I’m fond of salamanders and other amphibians in general.) I think they’re cute, and fascinating as well, particularly in that they can regenerate limbs and are neotenic, retaining their juvenile form even when they reach sexual maturity, but able to change to a more conventional adult salamander form if their pool dries up. It’s sad that they’re so rare in the wild. :(

I can't recall having ever had a dream with axolotls in it, but last April I got to see some live ones at the Palm Beach Zoo in Florida, which I immediately became attached to. Here are some photos:




The tank was somewhat dim, and the non-albino axolotls were harder to get good pictures of. This is the best I could come up with.

Quote from: Cancerian Tiger,Jun 26 2010 on  12:29 AM
Are there any Black bears in your area :)?
Oh yeah. :yes We don’t see them very often, but we’ve found our garbage can overturned a number of times, :lol and have had a few glimpses of them over the years. Two years ago we were outside the house with our (since deceased) dog, who started barking at something. It turned out to be a black bear that had apparently been raiding our trash in broad daylight. We saw it fleeing (well, moving away; as I recall it wasn’t going very fast) along the side of the road, and ran into the woods when we got closer (I think our dog had gotten off her leash and was trying to chase it). We could still see it walking through the woods (which were fairly open) from the road for a while, but it was gone by the time one of us was able to retrieve a camera from the house.

A few years previously, we saw a younger black bear (judging by its disproportionately large ears :lol) in the woods behind our garage (very close to the location of the sighting I mentioned before). We might have seen it on the ground originally, but it quickly climbed up a tree. In both of these cases, of course, we were cautious about not getting too close to the bear.



Pronounced "pan-JEE-uh". Spelled with three A's. Represented by a Lystrosaurus.


Saft

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Don't think this has been asked but do you have a specific favourite dinosaur?

What countries have you been to?  Or if not, what countries would you like to visit?


Pangaea

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Quote from: Saft,Jun 30 2010 on  08:25 AM
Don't think this has been asked but do you have a specific favourite dinosaur?
As a matter of fact, I was just marveling that no one had asked this question a few posts ago! :lol

I honestly can't choose a specific favorite dinosaur. There are so many that I find interesting, and I can't compare how much I like one versus another. One potential contender, however, is Therizinosaurus (the long-clawed herbivorous theropod I discussed in that earlier post). I've been a fan of this dinosaur since the fifth grade (though my level of interest in dinosaursóand in specific speciesóhas fluctuated considerably since then). I definitely tend to gravitate to the “weirder” dinosaurs, like the buck-toothed Incisivosaurus, long-fingered Epidendrosaurus and four-winged Microraptor “Guido” gui (left and right in this image, respectively), and bristly Tianyulong, but I also have a nostalgic fondness for the “classics”: T. rex, Stegosaurus, Triceratops, and so on (some of which were actually quite weird themselves). Lately I've also been very interested in the horned dinosaurs (ceratopsians), which have recently been discovered to have undergone bizarre developmental changes over the course of their lives, the horns and skull bones actually changing shape as the dinosaur grew. Sauropods (“longnecks”), dromaeosaurs (“raptors”), oviraptorosaurs (the group Ruby belongs to), Dilophosaurus (the crested theropod inaccurately portrayed as a small, frilled venom-spitter in Jurassic Park), Ankylosaurus and its relatives, certain hadrosaurs like Parasaurolophus, and good ol’ egg-stealing Struthiomimus are also up there. And that’s not even going into pterosaurs and other prehistoric creatures that were not dinosaurs themselves.


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What countries have you been to? Or if not, what countries would you like to visit?
Rat_lady7 asked me a very similar question some time back. My answer pretty much covers what you're asking. ;) As I've never left the U.S., I'd probably be interested in visiting almost any other country (especially one where I could see wildlife), so long as there wasn't a high risk of me being killed, injured, kidnapped, imprisoned, etc. (For instance, I wouldn't want to visit a country where there was a war going on, even if it offered fantastic wildlife viewing opportunities; apparently this is a genuine concern for many nature documentary crews and international field biologists).



Pronounced "pan-JEE-uh". Spelled with three A's. Represented by a Lystrosaurus.


pokeplayer984

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Ever had an alcoholic drink before?


Pangaea

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Yep, I’ve had a few. I’ve stopped bothering keeping track of how many alcoholic beverages I’ve tried, and which kinds, but overall I’m not too fond of them. Too bitter for me (most of them taste like mouthwash, in my opinion :p), and I don’t like the way some of them burn my tongue. :x I didn’t even have my first taste of an alcoholic drink until weeks after my 21st birthday. It was a tiny sip of a glass of red wine at a restaurant, which had me immediately searching for something to overpower the taste. :lol So far, the only alcoholic drink I’ve found agreeable is champagne. I had a couple of glasses of it at my graduation commencement dinner; I liked the fizziness and the fact that it wasn’t too bitter. It’s just as well that I don’t like most kinds of alcohol, though; if I really enjoyed the stuff, I might be liable to drink too much of it. And I would definitely not enjoy being drunk.



Pronounced "pan-JEE-uh". Spelled with three A's. Represented by a Lystrosaurus.


Amaranthine

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Hey Pangaea, do you think you could look and review a bit of "The Last Untime"? Do take your time with it, I just wanted to know your input about it.




The Chronicler

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Which states have you been to? Which ones would you like to visit?

"I have a right to collect anything I want. It's just junk anyway."
- Berix

My first fanfiction: Quest for the Energy Stones
My unfinished and canceled second fanfiction: Quest for the Mask of Life
My currently ongoing fanfiction series: LEGO Equestria Girls



Pangaea

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Quote from: Rat_lady7,Jul 1 2010 on  12:17 PM
Hey Pangaea, do you think you could look and review a bit of "The Last Untime"? Do take your time with it, I just wanted to know your input about it.
I suppose so. I'm a little concerned, however, that I won't like the story due to its dark tone and the direction it appears to be headed (as evidenced by the introduction). :unsure:


Quote from: The Chronicler,Jul 1 2010 on  02:03 PM
Which states have you been to?
Let me see . . . not counting states in which I’ve only been to airports, or flown over on my way to other states, I think the following list covers most of them:

ï New Hampshire: My grandma used to live there.

ï Florida: That’s where my grandma lives now.

ï Connecticut: My mother used to have family there; since then they’ve all either died or moved out of state.

ï New Jersey: My uncle and his wife live there.

ï Wisconsin: My family’s taken vacations to Milwaukee and Wisconsin Dells.

ï Illinois: A few years ago, my mother went on a business trip to Chicago, and the whole family went with her.

ï New York: I’ve been to NYC a few times to visit the American Museum of Natural History.

ï Rhode Island: Went there on two separate occasions to visit Block Island, an island off its coast. It’s the closest I’ve ever come to leaving the country.

ï Maryland: Remember my trip to Washington, D.C. last summer? ;)

ï Minnesota: My home state. :p


Quote
Which ones would you like to visit?
Here's a few I can think of just off the top of my head:

ï Wyoming/Montana/Idaho: Yellowstone National Park! :DD

ï California: Lots of sites I’d like to see there: the tar pits at Rancho La Brea, Sequoia National Park, the San Diego Zoo, etc.

ï Alaska: I want to see glaciers and Arctic wildlife before it’s all gone. :cry

ï Texas: Bat headquarters (Seriously! Bat Conservation International is based there :p). I’d love to see one of their free-tailed bat roosts. If visitors aren’t allowed at Bracken Cave, then I’d settle for the Congress Avenue Bridge in Austin.

Oh, and, of course, it’d be nice to have a chance to meet some other GOF members in person (in those states and others). :yes



Pronounced "pan-JEE-uh". Spelled with three A's. Represented by a Lystrosaurus.


Caustizer

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Do you live in the country, or in a city?


Amaranthine

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Amaranthine

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And another thing, do you know anything about prehistoric plants? I want to write a scene where one of the characters is using medicine from the plants. I know it's LBT, but I want to be as accurate as I possibly can when it comes to the plants of that day.




Pangaea

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Quote from: Caustizer,Jul 6 2010 on  07:00 PM
Do you live in the country, or in a city?
I live pretty close to an urban area (there's a small shopping center within a half mile of my house, and it's probably only a ten-or-fifteen-minute drive to the middle of town), but I can't say I live IN a city, or even a suburb. My house is surrounded by woods on three sides (though you a couple of neighboring houses are visible through them), and a row of trees blocks the side facing the road. We also have a very large yard. So I guess I would say neither. :p

Quote from: Rat_lady7,Jul 7 2010 on  10:20 PM
Hey Pangaea, how are you doing?
I'm a little frantic right now. The remainder of this week and the one following it are going to be crazy. I have a dental checkup tomorrow (and I’m anxious about the condition of my teeth). On Saturday my parents are leaving town, so my siblings and I will be in charge of taking care of everything around the house for a few days. My birthday is next Wednesday (the same day my parents get back), so I’ll have to decide what we’re going to do to celebrate. And at the end of next week my older younger brother is leaving to study abroad in Fiji for his fall college semester, so we’ll want to make the most of the remaining time we’ll have with him. And there are still a lot of threads on the GOF I want to post in, not to mention the reviewing I need to do in the Fanart and Fanfiction section (Earlier tonight I applied a heavy dose of hand to my forehead when I noticed that you had answered my question about how to review your fanfic over three days ago. :slap). So yeah, I’ve got a lot on my mind (which seems to have very little space these days :unsure:).

Your other question will require me to do a bit of memory-refreshing research in order to provide you with a satisfactory answer, and seeing as it’s both late and there are things I need to get done before I go to sleep, I hope you don’t mind if I answer it tomorrow (well, technically today, July 8th, but my definition of “tomorrow” is “when I wake up from sleep” :p).



Pronounced "pan-JEE-uh". Spelled with three A's. Represented by a Lystrosaurus.


Saft

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How old were you when you became interested in dinosaurs?  Is there anything that triggered your interest in them?  

How is the Sasquatch?


Pangaea

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Sorry this took longer than expected. :oops My Internet connection decided to stop working last night (while I was in the middle typing GOF posts, no less :bang).

Quote from: Rat_lady7,Jul 8 2010 on  12:01 AM
And another thing, do you know anything about prehistoric plants? I want to write a scene where one of the characters is using medicine from the plants. I know it's LBT, but I want to be as accurate as I possibly can when it comes to the plants of that day.
Just earlier on the day you asked that question, my younger brother and I were looking at a book on trees, and I had told him that I wished I knew more about Mesozoic plants. :rolleyes Granted, I probably know more than the layperson, but that’s not enough for me. :p From what I know, The Land Before Tme isn’t that scientifically accurate in its portrayal of Mesozoic flora, and considering that it depicts dinosaurs from all stages of the Mesozoic living side-by-side, you probably don’t need to worry too much about the plants being from a particular period. That said, from what I researched, it seems that the dominant plants during the Triassic and Jurassic periods were ferns, tree ferns, cycads, cycadeoids, ginkgoes, and conifers. Flowering plants became common in the Cretaceous period.

ï Cycads and cycadeoids (Cycadophyta): Primitive, woody-stemmed plants with tough, palm-like leaves. Some have spherical stems (almost like giant, unopened pinecones), others treelike. Cycadeoids (order Bennettitales) are extinct today.

ï Ferns and tree ferns (Pteridophyta): Tree ferns (order Cyatheales) have their fronds on the top of tree trunk-like stalks, as much as 50 feet (15 meters) tall in some species.

ï Horsetails (Equisetaceae): Ancient relatives of ferns, which may consist of a thin stem with whorls of hairlike branches (hence the common name) or a thicker, unbranched, segmented stalk. More information (and perhaps the world’s first poem about them) here. ;)

ï Ginkgoes (Ginkgoaceae): The only ginkgo species alive today, Ginkgo biloba, is very similar to its ancestors in the Mesozoic. It is a large tree that is dioecious (having either male or female reproductive structures, as opposed to both, like most plants), with fan-shaped leaves that turn yellow in the fall, and fleshy, light yellow-brown, fruit-like seeds that, when ripe, supposedly smell like butter that has long passed its expiration date.

ï Conifers: Cone-bearing trees such as redwoods, cypresses, and Araucariaceae. The latter is represented today by three genera: Wollemia (the so-called Wollemi pine), Agathis (New Zealand’s kauri or dammar tree) and Araucaria (the fantastically named monkey-puzzle tree :lol), all of which had extremely similar ancestors during the Mesozoic.

ï Angiosperms (Magnoliophyta): The flowering plants. These have been around since at least the early Cretaceous (~140 million years ago), and comprise most of the familiar plants alive today. Mesozoic examples included the ancestors of modern magnolias, palms, oaks, maples, sycamores, figs, roses, buttercups, and water lilies.

Until recently, it was thought that grasses (Poaceae) did not evolve until long after the Mesozoic. However, sauropod coprolites (fossilized droppings) from India have been found to contain fragments of silica resembling those found in grass stems. This suggests that the ancestors of modern rice and bamboo existed in the late Cretaceous (65 million years ago). From what I have gathered, though, there is no evidence that there were fields of grass like those we are so familiar with today during the time of the dinosaurs, though there was probably some other plant that filled the niche.

As far as I know, however, there is as yet no fossil evidence of a tree species with palmately lobed peltate leaves resembling five-pointed stars. :p

Here are some links that might help as well: ;)

http://fossilnews.com/2000/mezplants/mezplants.html

http://www.projectexploration.org/garden/index.htm

http://www3.hi.is/~oi/Nemendaritgerdir/Aud...Paleobotany.pdf (This one’s a PDF file, and rather scientific, so you might have trouble with it.)


Quote from: Saft,Jul 9 2010 on  11:59 AM
How old were you when you became interested in dinosaurs? Is there anything that triggered your interest in them?
Rat_lady7 asked that question way back when; here is my answer. I don't remember how my interest in dinosaurs got started, and as I discuss in that post, LBT may or may not have been a part of it.

Quote
How is the Sasquatch?
Sasquatch is doing well. Unfortunately, he's become very bold in his outdoor excursions, and has begun bringing home voles and shrews he has caught. Usually they are already dead; on at least one occasion a vole was alive but crippled, and we had to put it out of its misery, the poor thing :cry; and sometimes the animals are uninjured enough to run away once we get Sasquatch to let them go (This has happened a few times with voles, and once with a chipmunk). We've tried to limit the amount of time Sasquatch spends outside, and the distance he travels from the house, but he's become a master of slipping out the door as soon as we open it. Today I tried putting a collar with a bell on him so that his ability to approach prey unheard is reduced, but he clearly hated it and struggled to get it off. Apparently he succeeded, because when someone let him back into the house, the collar was gone (It was designed to break away if it got hooked on a branch or other object; Sasquatch must have managed to unsnap it somehow). I'm just glad we don't live in New Zealand or any other place with rare, vulnerable wildlife.



Pronounced "pan-JEE-uh". Spelled with three A's. Represented by a Lystrosaurus.


Saft

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^
Sorry about Sasquatch's attempts to destroy the wildlife population.  However it is what cats do but as owners, from what you describe, you seem to be trying your best to stoop it.  naturally though, he's a step ahead of you.  Good luck with it.  

Does he still love boxes and other snug places?





Pangaea

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^ Thanks, Saft. Like you said, we're not being too successful at preventing Sasquatch from hunting. We know it's just his nature, but I wish we could have kept him an indoor cat. :neutral

Sasquatch has most definitely retained his love of boxes and bags. :yes Just today he was sitting in a cardboard box, which was just the right height for his head to be visible from the outside. I tried to snap a few pictures, but he jumped out before I could get many good ones.

Also, I can't remember if I've mentioned this before, but several weeks ago Sasquatch caused an avalanche in a precarious pile of clutter in the downstairs living room. There was a bag of recyclables on top of the pile containing an empty soda box, and apparently he tried to jump into the soda box, which caused the bag to slide down, in turn dislodging other objects. The result was a huge (albeit shallow) flood of spilled stuff blocking the entrance of the living room, in the center of which was Sasquatch, stuck face-down in the soda box. :lol It was probably the biggest mess he's yet created. :lol:

Sasquatch is at least a year old at this point, and the most recent pictures I've posted of them are from six months ago. :blink: I'd really better get around to posting more. :unsure:



Pronounced "pan-JEE-uh". Spelled with three A's. Represented by a Lystrosaurus.