Last One To Post Here Wins

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Then don't sign up to receive them. ;)
 
eaglesaquarium said:
Then don't sign up to receive them.
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I stopped about a week later cos they hacked me off. :)
 
Got an offer on my 5 gallon fluval chi :) a tad lower than I wanted hoping they accept my counter.
 
Sold my 5 gallon fluval chi to a fellow forum member as well, SamB. Thank you :)
 
I'd just like to point out to Blondie and TallTree that the UK is currently in the midst of a heatwave, the weather is glorious (by our standards), temps in the low 30s (Celsius), and that anything hotter than that is too hot (as Evilsaquarium found out in Arizona).
 
And I win for my BBQ last night, when I cooked home-made turkey burgers, filled with finely chopped pepper, spring onions, sweetcorn and basil leaves, and with a home-made honey and mustard glaze. Deeeeeee-lish.
 
:sad:

the_lock_man said:
And I win for my BBQ last night, when I cooked home-made turkey burgers, filled with finely chopped pepper, spring onions, sweetcorn and basil leaves, and with a home-made honey and mustard glaze. Deeeeeee-lish.
 
BTW, that's "grillin'" not "BBQ"ing.  You can get shot in the "South" for claiming that's BBQ.  :no:
 
From wikipedia:
 


Barbecue (also barbeque, BBQ and barbie) is a method and apparatus for char grilling food in the hot smoke of a wood fire, usually charcoal fueled. In the United States, to grill is to cook in this manner quickly, while barbecue is typically a much slower method utilizing less heat than grilling, attended to over an extended period of several hours.
This is a 'grill'
grll-chrcoal1.jpg

 
Used for "grilling" - cooking at relatively high heat for brief period of time.
 
This is a smoker:
smoker-hero.jpg

This is used to cook "BBQ", at low heat using SMOKE for extended period of time (usually 4+ hours).
 
Ah. Thank you. I am now educaterised.
 
As far as I'm concerned, a barbie is an outside grill wot uses charcoal. Simpler. I like simple.
 
Simple doesn't always equal better.  ;)  Sometimes there's a reason for different terms.
 
As a science teacher, I focus on being accurate when describing things.  Speed & velocity are similar, but not the same. :p  They mean different things, and should be used correctly.
 
 
Kind of like the difference between nitrite and nitrate.  Seems like a minor difference to some, but to fishkeepers, there's a HUGE difference between the two!
 
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