...or other "herbal" leftovers, I'm sure! Anyone want a brownie?
xxxxxxxx wrote: Well now wait a minute..................I was a child of the
'60s............tie-dyed just might work for me.........and it's not like
the '60s didn't come with a fair amount of mildew.........
~~ Mosey ~~
In reference to Chicago area boxers. I don't know how many of 'em, if any,
read this list, but I could easily give ya a dozen or more Chicago boxers
that might've jumped at figuring out a way to do it. There are a lot of
things going on behind the scenes here that arguably might not be called
letterboxing. It's been dubbed Twu Letterboxing With a Twist. A group just
finished up a letterboxing hunt New Year's Eve.
-----Original Message-----
From: letterbox-usa@yahoogroups.com
[mailto:letterbox-usa@yahoogroups.com]On Behalf Of Andrew A
Sent: Monday, January 14, 2008 7:53 AM
To: letterbox-usa@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [LbNA] Dead Horses and Flying Lemurs
Oh my? Are we throwing the shirts that way too?
mizscarlet731 wrote:
Went back and read the orignal post. Not to rain on Amber's parade too much
but here is my
question. How does this involve new people in boxing? I f anyone needs
"prizes" other than
the hike and the box maybe they should geo-cache.
Taking a picture of them holding the t-shirt? Why not just take a picture
of them holding the
box?
Now the question of ink. Have you stamped on fabric before? Not as easy as
one would think.
A tiny bit of moisture with a watercolor marker or dye ink pad and the
shirt would become a
tie-dye mess.
OK, the horse is dead and the lemur has been flung.
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