Brodlach wrote:Worst thought is you were buying your first beer at the pub when she’s being born.![]()
Go for it, if it makes you both happy what does it matter what others think
What matters is she can buy a beer now
Brodlach wrote:Worst thought is you were buying your first beer at the pub when she’s being born.![]()
Go for it, if it makes you both happy what does it matter what others think
wenchbarwer wrote:Brodlach wrote:Worst thought is you were buying your first beer at the pub when she’s being born.![]()
Go for it, if it makes you both happy what does it matter what others think
What matters is she can buy him a beer now
Lightning McQueen wrote:wenchbarwer wrote:I like pineapple on a pizza. I also like pizzas without pineapple. I just like pizza. I have a problem...
Less is best with pizza's IMO, I get pepperoni plus prawns..........................absolutely magnificent.
cracka wrote:Lightning McQueen wrote:wenchbarwer wrote:I like pineapple on a pizza. I also like pizzas without pineapple. I just like pizza. I have a problem...
Less is best with pizza's IMO, I get pepperoni plus prawns..........................absolutely magnificent.
"The Oven" in Strathalbyn does a pizza called the butchers block. It a meat lovers on roids. It's got pepperoni, salami, bacon, beef, chorizo & ham with BBQ sauce base & cheese sauce topping. Our new favourite pizza
PS pineapple does belong on pizza. It's called a ham & pineapple pizza. Duh
Mr Beefy wrote:Putting bbq sauce on a pizza is way worse than pineapple
Mr Beefy wrote:Putting bbq sauce on a pizza is way worse than pineapple
Lightning McQueen wrote:Mr Beefy wrote:Putting bbq sauce on a pizza is way worse than pineapple
Yep, can't see the advantages, putting it on a yiros with some garlic sauce though is a different story.
Psyber wrote:Brodlach wrote:Bum Crack wrote:Anyone here suffer from sleep apnea? I have a test coming up soon as the missus is ready to kill me keeping her up every night snoring and carrying on. I'm always tired during the day and I've had a gutsful. Apparently the sleep apnea machines work wonders. How much are the machines and do they take a bit of getting used to?
Mate of mine has a machine and it really changed his life. More energy, lost weight and feels healthier
Only issue he says (other than getting used to the face mask) is the machine makes a noise all night
I started getting symptoms of sleep apnoea in about 1996, daytime drowsiness, snoring++, rising blood pressure and cholesterol levels. These have all normalised since I started on CPAP in 1999. Some machines are more noisy than others, and mine (Resmed) has never bothered the woman who shares my bed.
Those that automatically drop the pressure as you breathe out are good. I've never needed the humidifier the dealers tend to try to sell you. Mask fit is critical. I've found the nasal pillows dislodge if you roll over in your sleep. I've never needed a full face mask, just the nose mask, but some of the newer very compact models tend to slide around a bit too, and so I use an older one. I've had to alter the straps on some masks as we all have different head shapes and they tend to be made for the average European shape - I have a flatter crown and longer occipital bulge at the back than that.
Hoses are a factor to watch - more modern softer rubber connectors tend to perish sooner.
mighty_tiger_79 wrote:Psyber wrote:Brodlach wrote:Bum Crack wrote:Anyone here suffer from sleep apnea? I have a test coming up soon as the missus is ready to kill me keeping her up every night snoring and carrying on. I'm always tired during the day and I've had a gutsful. Apparently the sleep apnea machines work wonders. How much are the machines and do they take a bit of getting used to?
Mate of mine has a machine and it really changed his life. More energy, lost weight and feels healthier
Only issue he says (other than getting used to the face mask) is the machine makes a noise all night
I started getting symptoms of sleep apnoea in about 1996, daytime drowsiness, snoring++, rising blood pressure and cholesterol levels. These have all normalised since I started on CPAP in 1999. Some machines are more noisy than others, and mine (Resmed) has never bothered the woman who shares my bed.
Those that automatically drop the pressure as you breathe out are good. I've never needed the humidifier the dealers tend to try to sell you. Mask fit is critical. I've found the nasal pillows dislodge if you roll over in your sleep. I've never needed a full face mask, just the nose mask, but some of the newer very compact models tend to slide around a bit too, and so I use an older one. I've had to alter the straps on some masks as we all have different head shapes and they tend to be made for the average European shape - I have a flatter crown and longer occipital bulge at the back than that.
Hoses are a factor to watch - more modern softer rubber connectors tend to perish sooner.
Mounjaro with tirzapetide now approved for treatment
Nah it was the joint on Torrens Rd. From what I could see driving past tonight it was still open.....mighty_tiger_79 wrote:Just quickly caught an incident on the news with an axe at St Clair and a pizza box.... hope the pizza wasnt from the woodville pizza bar with the issues they had during covid
Booney wrote:Barossa woman blows 0.349 at Nuriootpa, how did she get the car moving?
Booney wrote:Barossa woman blows 0.349 at Nuriootpa, how did she get the car moving?
mighty_tiger_79 wrote:the mouthguard option was no good, found i was producing too much saliva
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