Pluggers by Rick McKee for November 14, 2024

  1. 2018 max verstappen s nr 33 red bull rb14 f1 for avatar 3  400x400
    LeftCoastKen Premium Member about 19 hours ago

    Kinda like knowing how to start “Eeny, meeny, miny, moe …” so he ends up choosing what he wanted in the first place?

     •  Reply
  2. Missing large
    juicebruce  about 15 hours ago

    If it was only that easy …

     •  Reply
  3. Nollanav
    DaBump Premium Member about 14 hours ago

    Look up Jud Strunk – Daisy A Day on YouTube — but be sure you have a big box of facial tissues handy while you listen! One of many songs that should never be lost to our society.

     •  Reply
  4. Missing large
    PraiseofFolly  about 13 hours ago

    How have daisies affected human genealogy through the ages?

     •  Reply
  5. Missing large
    GreenT267  about 13 hours ago

    “Daisy, Daisy, give me your answer do” . . . from a song entitled Daisy Bell written in 1892 by British songwriter Harry Dacre and said to be based on the real-life Countess of Warwick, Frances Evelyn ‘Daisy’ Greville.

    This was the first song ever played on/sung by a computer. In 1961, an IBM 7094 at Bell Labs was programmed to sing “Daisy Bell” in the earliest demonstration of computer speech synthesis.

    Daisy, the flower, is also interesting. A daisy is a composite flower, consisting of many individual flowers — small, tubular flowers [disc florets] arranged in a central disc and surrounded by showier, long-petaled ray flowers.

    The disc florets are small, tubular flowers packed closely together to form the central button-like disc. ​ They usually have a slender, tubular flower with five short, evenly spaced, pointed petals around the flower’s edge. Disc florets display three petals fused into an upper lip and two recurving lower petals, which give a rather fluffy look to the disc.

    One or more rows of ​ray flowers​ ​(ray florets)​ surround the disc. The ray flowers are the petals that get pulled out. Each row [or ring] can have between 15 and 30 petals. That’s a lot of pulling.

    //www.Sciencing.com/parts-of-a-daisy-flower-12155734/

     •  Reply
  6. Kay 053021
    kaycstamper  about 12 hours ago

    I remember doing that when I was a kid!

     •  Reply
  7. Irish  1
    Zen-of-Zinfandel  about 12 hours ago

    Plugger can’t do that while sitting on a flimsy tree branch.

     •  Reply
  8. Kirby close up with poppies behind   close cropped
    mistercatworks  about 11 hours ago

    Hope springs eternal … However, sometimes it should come out “She Love Me Not” or as middle-aged folks say, “She’s not that into you.” :)

     •  Reply
  9. Fasseddie
    FassEddie  about 10 hours ago

    They grow a particular blade-count in Murrysville. Or at least they used to. They parked the Redstone Highlands on top of a bunch of them so maybe not as much now.

     •  Reply
  10. Missing large
    wildlandwaters  about 9 hours ago

    if I went out in the garden, picked a flower, and started pulling the petals off, my wife would not love me!

     •  Reply
  11. Animated
    listmom  about 8 hours ago

    Just choose the ones with an odd number of petals.

     •  Reply
Sign in to comment

More From Pluggers