That's bullshit they don't all live in Byron Bay. At least some of them live in Avalon.Cranked wrote: ↑Fri Jul 05, 2019 9:59 amWhat's this about the mums in Byron Steve. Do they also give you anaphylactic reaction.
https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyl ... d-builders
Where did you surf today ?
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Re: Where did you surf today ?
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Re: Where did you surf today ?
Fcuk, in social situations I can barely speak.Lucky Al wrote: ↑Fri Jul 05, 2019 10:12 amI don't know about that. I think I do alright mostly when on my own, but in social situations my graces often abandon me. I blame other people.
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Re: Where did you surf today ?
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Re: Where did you surf today ?
What does that mean?steve shearer wrote: ↑Fri Jul 05, 2019 10:08 amI know some of those gals.
The create intense ambiguities in me.
Trev wrote:I have always had a lot of time for Dick
smnmntll wrote:Got one in the mouth once, that was pretty memorable
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Re: Where did you surf today ?
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Re: Where did you surf today ?
Influencers! Once the first one succumbs to steve's charms they will all be queuing up
“I don’t necessarily agree with everything I say ”— Marshall McLuhan
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Re: Where did you surf today ?
Same here - that just sucked the life force out of me.
Anyway will their husbands now be known as "Furfies" ?
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Re: Where did you surf today ?
No, they will soon be known as ex-husbands
Re: Where did you surf today ?
Thumb-rests.
Re: Where did you surf today ?
Easy to hang shitt on, but beats the pants off catching a bus in and out of Wynyard two hours a day.
Re: Where did you surf today ?
What is a high-ankle sprain?
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Re: Where did you surf today ?
OK fantastic I was itching to answer this
Above the ankle itself, the two bones of the lower leg are wrapped and held in place by a large ligament sheath called the syndesmosis. This is kind of key to the integrity of the ankle joint itself.
A "high ankle sprain" is a sprain or complete rupture of the syndesmosis, such that the two bones (the tibia and fibula) are either loosened or completely drift apart and the joint is thus compromised.
It's a fcuking cnut of an injury. If the syndesmosis is completely ruptured it usually requires surgery, involving pinning the two bones back into their normal positions vis a vis each other while the ligament heals correctly. This takes two months or so during which your movements are pretty limited -- when you've got two titanium screws through those bones, you don't want to be twisting around on that ankle for instance. They then pluck out the screws and after a couple more weeks you can begin to return to normal movement.
If you don't get the surgery and the rupture is mis-diagnosed, the injury can go on irritating you for years.
The high ankle sprain is an impact injury usually requiring considerable force suddenly applied to the base of the ankle or the heel along with a twisting movement. NRL players, trail riding motorbikers, and people who surf Pipe and other thick hard-breaking reef waves are typical sufferers.
It often accompanies other lower leg injuries in various fracture patterns. I fully did it when suffering a severe version of what they call a Maisonneuve fracture of the right fibula and ankle, surfing in Hawaii a few years back. Every ligament in the ankle ruptured along with the syndesmosis and I broke the fibula up near the knee, along with the tibia at the base and the ankle bone they call the medial malleolus which still has pins in it.
So there.
Above the ankle itself, the two bones of the lower leg are wrapped and held in place by a large ligament sheath called the syndesmosis. This is kind of key to the integrity of the ankle joint itself.
A "high ankle sprain" is a sprain or complete rupture of the syndesmosis, such that the two bones (the tibia and fibula) are either loosened or completely drift apart and the joint is thus compromised.
It's a fcuking cnut of an injury. If the syndesmosis is completely ruptured it usually requires surgery, involving pinning the two bones back into their normal positions vis a vis each other while the ligament heals correctly. This takes two months or so during which your movements are pretty limited -- when you've got two titanium screws through those bones, you don't want to be twisting around on that ankle for instance. They then pluck out the screws and after a couple more weeks you can begin to return to normal movement.
If you don't get the surgery and the rupture is mis-diagnosed, the injury can go on irritating you for years.
The high ankle sprain is an impact injury usually requiring considerable force suddenly applied to the base of the ankle or the heel along with a twisting movement. NRL players, trail riding motorbikers, and people who surf Pipe and other thick hard-breaking reef waves are typical sufferers.
It often accompanies other lower leg injuries in various fracture patterns. I fully did it when suffering a severe version of what they call a Maisonneuve fracture of the right fibula and ankle, surfing in Hawaii a few years back. Every ligament in the ankle ruptured along with the syndesmosis and I broke the fibula up near the knee, along with the tibia at the base and the ankle bone they call the medial malleolus which still has pins in it.
So there.
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Re: Where did you surf today ?
Oh it's a classic air injury too.
Re: Where did you surf today ?
https://www.instagram.com/p/BzDJ44ggIg5/steve shearer wrote: ↑Fri Jul 05, 2019 10:08 amI know some of those gals.
The create intense ambiguities in me.
To root and to hate at the same time.
Looks like they have made onto the Beetoota Advocate
https://www.betootaadvocate.com/headlin ... u3JbW1x7Is
Trev wrote:I have always had a lot of time for Dick
smnmntll wrote:Got one in the mouth once, that was pretty memorable
Re: Where did you surf today ?
Thanks Nick, pretty sure I don't have that, but I'll shine a really bright torch down there tonight.
Re: Where did you surf today ?
Which has become the buzzword for any lower leg injury during NRL games this season ...
Syndesmosis syndesmosis syndesmosis syndesmosis syndesmosis syndesmosis syndesmosis syndesmosis syndesmosis syndesmosis syndesmosis syndesmosis syndesmosissyndesmosis syndesmosis syndesmosis syndesmosis syndesmosis syndesmosis syndesmosis syndesmosis syndesmosis syndesmosis syndesmosis syndesmosis syndesmosis syndesmosis syndesmosis syndesmosis syndesmosis syndes-fucking-mosis !
The moving finger writes and having writ moves on ... now all thy piety nor wit shall lure it back to cancel even half a line ... nor all thy tears wash out a single word of it.
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