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Poop [CLOSED]
Ryanator20x6 Yellow Sparx Gems: 1848
#1 Posted: 21:26:37 10/06/2013 | Topic Creator
Sauce
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Hello from Seattle

ask.fm/RyanNeely889
DummyZ Gold Sparx Gems: 2844
#2 Posted: 21:30:40 10/06/2013
Ewww.
TorchSheep Emerald Sparx Gems: 3251
#3 Posted: 21:46:00 10/06/2013
...um....

OPEN THE DOOR, GET ON THE FLOOR!
EVERYBODY DO THE DINOSAUR! :0
somePerson Diamond Sparx Gems: 8399
#4 Posted: 21:46:04 10/06/2013
What a crap topic.
Kariana Emerald Sparx Gems: 3057
#5 Posted: 21:46:53 10/06/2013
Why does this topic exist?
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KrazyKari.deviantart.com
DragonCamo Platinum Sparx Gems: 6606
#6 Posted: 21:48:41 10/06/2013
Stupid Topic? I know what to do.....
[User Posted Image]
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Gay 4 GARcher
TorchSheep Emerald Sparx Gems: 3251
#7 Posted: 21:48:45 10/06/2013
Quote: Kariana
Why does this topic exist?


85% of S&N Topics in a nutshell.
Kariana Emerald Sparx Gems: 3057
#8 Posted: 21:50:10 10/06/2013
Quote: TorchSheep
Quote: Kariana
Why does this topic exist?


85% of S&N Topics in a nutshell.

....true.
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KrazyKari.deviantart.com
kardonis Platinum Sparx Gems: 6366
#9 Posted: 21:52:07 10/06/2013
what this is I don't even
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I used to be THE Bowser, now I'm just an awkward girl
LevanJess Emerald Sparx Gems: 3516
#10 Posted: 22:29:18 10/06/2013
[User Posted Image].....
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but i love it all smooth
Starfire Dragon Platinum Sparx Gems: 5302
#11 Posted: 22:52:26 10/06/2013
Is it me or does this topic stink PU smilie
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My Dragon Art & Stuff
PSN: Starfire--Dragon
Ryanator20x6 Yellow Sparx Gems: 1848
#12 Posted: 01:05:13 11/06/2013 | Topic Creator
Quote: Mr. Popo
Tangerines! smilie



Simmer down there, Gummy.
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Hello from Seattle

ask.fm/RyanNeely889
Edited 4 times - Last edited at 01:21:19 11/06/2013 by Ryanator20x6
spyro and sonic Diamond Sparx Gems: 8298
#13 Posted: 01:15:04 11/06/2013
****.
Ryanator20x6 Yellow Sparx Gems: 1848
#14 Posted: 01:15:28 11/06/2013 | Topic Creator
Quote: spyro and sonic
****.



I like stars!

Sailors returning from the Andes to Spain with silver presumably brought maize and potatoes for their own food on the trip.[4] Historians speculate that leftover tubers (and maize) were carried ashore and planted: "We think that the potato arrived some years before the end of the 16th century, by two different ports of entry: the first, logically, in Spain around 1570, and the second via the British isles between 1588 and 1593 ... we find traces of the transport of potatoes travelling from the Canaries to Antwerp in 1567 ... we can say that the potato was introduced there [the Canary islands] from South America around 1562 ... the first written mention of the potato [is] ... a receipt for delivery dated 28 november 1567 between Las Palmas in the Grand Canaries and Antwerp."[5] Basque fishermen from Spain used potatoes as ships' stores for their voyages across the Atlantic in the 16th century, and introduced the tuber to western Ireland, where they landed to dry their cod. In 1553, in the book Crónica del Peru, Pedro Cieza de Leon mentions he saw it in Quito, Popayán, and Pasto in 1538. The English privateer Sir Francis Drake, returning from his circumnavigation, or Sir Walter Raleigh's employee Thomas Harriot[6] are commonly credited with introducing potatoes into England. In 1588, botanist Carolus Clusius made a painting of what he called "Papas Peruanorum" from a specimen in the Low Countries; in 1601 he reported that potatoes were in common use in northern Italy for animal fodder and for human consumption.[7]
The Spanish had an empire across Europe, and brought potatoes for their armies. Peasants along the way adopted the crop, which was less often pillaged by marauding armies than above-ground stores of grain. Across most of northern Europe, where open fields prevailed, potatoes were strictly confined to small garden plots because field agriculture was strictly governed by custom that prescribed seasonal rhythms for plowing, sowing, harvesting and grazing animals on fallow and stubble. This meant that potatoes were barred from large-scale cultivation because the rules allowed only grain to be planted in the open fields.[8] In France and Germany government officials and noble landowners promoted the rapid conversion of fallow land into potato fields after 1750. The potato thus became an important staple crop in northern Europe. Famines in the early 1770s contributed to its acceptance, as did government policies in several European countries and climate change during the Little Ice Age, when traditional crops in this region did not produce as reliably as before.[9][10] At times when and where most other crops failed, potatoes could still typically be relied upon to contribute adequately to food supplies during colder years.[11]
In France, at the end of the 16th century, the potato had been introduced to the Franche-Comté, the Vosges of Lorraine and Alsace. By the end of the 18th century it was written in the 1785 edition of Bon Jardinier: "There is no vegetable about which so much has been written and so much enthusiasm has been shown ... The poor should be quite content with this foodstuff."[12] It had widely replaced the turnip and rutabaga by the 19th century.[13]
French physician Antoine Parmentier studied the potato intensely and in Examen chymique des pommes de terres (Paris, 1774) showed their enormous nutritional value. King Louis XVI and his court eagerly promoted the new crop, with Queen Marie Antoinette even wearing a headdress of potato flowers at a fancy dress ball. The annual potato crop of France soared to 21 million hectoliters in 1815 and 117 million in 1840, allowing a concomitant growth in population while avoiding the Malthusian trap. Although potatoes had become widely familiar in Russia by 1800, they were confined to garden plots until the grain failure in 1838–1839 persuaded peasants and landlords in central and northern Russia to devote their fallow fields to raising potatoes. Potatoes yielded from two to four times more calories per acre than grain did, and eventually came to dominate the food supply in eastern Europe. Boiled or baked potatoes were cheaper than rye bread, just as nutritious, and did not require a gristmill for grinding. On the other hand cash-oriented landlords realized that grain was much easier to ship, store and sell, so both grain and potatoes coexisted.[14]


Antoine Parmentier holding New World plants, François Dumont 1812
Throughout Europe, the most important new food in the 19th century was the potato, which had three major advantages over other foods for the consumer: its lower rate of spoilage, its bulk (which easily satisfied hunger), and its cheapness. The crop slowly spread across Europe, such that, for example, by 1845 it occupied one-third of Irish arable land.[citation needed] Potatoes comprised about 10% of the caloric intake of Europeans.[citation needed] Along with several other foods that either originated in the Americas or were successfully grown or harvested there, potatoes sustained European populations.[15]
In Britain, the potato promoted economic development by underpinning the Industrial Revolution in the 19th century. It served as a cheap source of calories and nutrients that was easy for urban workers to cultivate on small backyard plots. Potatoes became popular in the north of England, where coal was readily available, so a potato-driven population boom provided ample workers for the new factories. Marxist Friedrich Engels even declared that the potato was the equal of iron for its "historically revolutionary role.[7] The Dutch potato-starch industry grew rapidly in the 19th century, especially under the leadership of entrepreneur Willem Albert Scholten (1819–92).[16]
In Ireland, the expansion of potato cultivation was due entirely to the landless laborers, renting tiny plots from landowners who were interested only in raising cattle or in producing grain for market. A single acre of potatoes and the milk of a single cow was enough to feed a whole Irish family a monotonous but nutritionally adequate diet for a healthy, vigorous (and desperately poor) rural population. Often even poor families grew enough extra potatoes to feed a pig that they could sell for cash.[17]
A lack of genetic diversity from the low number of varieties left the crop vulnerable to disease. In 1845, a plant disease known as late blight, caused by the fungus-like oomycete Phytophthora infestans, spread rapidly through the poorer communities of western Ireland, resulting in the crop failures that led to the Great Irish Famine.[18]
The Lumper potato, widely cultivated in western and southern Ireland before and during the great famine, was bland, wet, and poorly resistant to the potato blight, but yielded large crops and usually provided adequate calories for peasants and laborers. Heavy dependence on this potato led to disaster when the potato blight quickly turned newly harvested potatoes into a putrid mush. The Irish Famine in the western and southern parts of Ireland between 1845–49 was a catastrophic failure in the food supply that led to approximately a million deaths from famine and (especially) diseases that attacked weakened bodies, and to massive emigration to Britain, the U.S., Canada and elsewhere.[19] During the famine years roughly one million Irish immigrated, this tide was not turned until the 20th century, when Ireland's population stood at less than half of the pre-famine level of 8 million.
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Hello from Seattle

ask.fm/RyanNeely889
Edited 1 time - Last edited at 01:17:25 11/06/2013 by Ryanator20x6
HotDogAndZap Emerald Sparx Gems: 3531
#15 Posted: 01:18:43 11/06/2013
*~*


what
DragonCamo Platinum Sparx Gems: 6606
#16 Posted: 01:22:42 11/06/2013
Wikipedia, wikipedia, where art thou wikipedia?
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Gay 4 GARcher
DummyZ Gold Sparx Gems: 2844
#17 Posted: 01:30:19 11/06/2013
Quote: HotDogAndZap
*~*


what



This.
Ryanator20x6 Yellow Sparx Gems: 1848
#18 Posted: 01:39:25 11/06/2013 | Topic Creator
Quote: HotDogAndZap
*~*


what



SANTA bubble TUBE! Ahoy matey!
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Hello from Seattle

ask.fm/RyanNeely889
Edited 4 times - Last edited at 01:48:46 11/06/2013 by Ryanator20x6
Kariana Emerald Sparx Gems: 3057
#19 Posted: 02:03:31 11/06/2013
*Leaves topic*
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KrazyKari.deviantart.com
Ryanator20x6 Yellow Sparx Gems: 1848
#20 Posted: 02:05:15 11/06/2013 | Topic Creator
Come back! For the Easter Bunny!
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Hello from Seattle

ask.fm/RyanNeely889
StriderSwag Gold Sparx Gems: 2769
#21 Posted: 02:23:20 11/06/2013
Wow! What an original and funny topic! I'm totally laughing right now! HAHAHA!
Rand O M Gold Sparx Gems: 2223
#22 Posted: 02:30:31 11/06/2013
Quote: Ryanator20x6
Sauce



#swag
Ryanator20x6 Yellow Sparx Gems: 1848
#23 Posted: 02:38:53 11/06/2013 | Topic Creator
Quote: StriderSwag
Wow! What an original and funny topic! I'm totally laughing right now! HAHAHA!



So am I! HAHAHA!
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Hello from Seattle

ask.fm/RyanNeely889
Big Green Platinum Sparx Gems: 6323
#24 Posted: 03:27:27 11/06/2013
Quote: Ryanator20x6
Quote: StriderSwag
Wow! What an original and funny topic! I'm totally laughing right now! HAHAHA!



So am I! HAHAHA!



im laughing because striderswag sucks
Ryanator20x6 Yellow Sparx Gems: 1848
#25 Posted: 17:38:56 11/06/2013 | Topic Creator
Quote: Big Green
Quote: Ryanator20x6
Quote: StriderSwag
Wow! What an original and funny topic! I'm totally laughing right now! HAHAHA!



So am I! HAHAHA!



im laughing because striderswag sucks



Agreed. He needs a diaper change.
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Hello from Seattle

ask.fm/RyanNeely889
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