But there is a tool (sort of) known as a snake, and an associated procedure known as snaking a drain or pipe. Is there anything like that for ostrich, or emu, or whatever that bird is?
(But no, I don’t really want to hear about the origins of the verb “goose”.)
Is the ostrich even necessary? The snake could see for himself if there was a clog or not.
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I like the aside to the bear.
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But there is a tool (sort of) known as a snake, and an associated procedure known as snaking a drain or pipe. Is there anything like that for ostrich, or emu, or whatever that bird is?
(But no, I don’t really want to hear about the origins of the verb “goose”.)
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“Is the ostrich even necessary? The snake could see for himself if there was a clog or not.”
Perhaps the ostrich deals with problems that are NOT clogs. This case IS a clog, though, and thus falls to the snake to handle.
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So a creature that eats bugs finds booger’s disgusting?
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Mark M, that was my thought, too. Boogers are just protein, the baby shoudn’t have cared a bit.
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Ostriches are (wrongly) know to stick their heads in the ground. So this one sticks its head into whatever in order to see what’s there and report it.
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Maybe it’s just a typo, but I thought “Kevin & Kell” should have been tagged as a “Saturday Morning Ewe“.
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@Chak: Maybe it was the principle of the thing. Like when you order a Coke from the drive thru and it turns out to be Diet.
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Tom T – I thought it was a sheep?
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