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The other day I bought a toilet brush. It was too rough for me so today I bought 6 rolls of Charmain toilet paper. Yeah, yeah maybe ok for Chuck Norris and Stomper but not for me. :p:D
 
If a rhino and an elephant had a baby, what would you call it? Elephino!!

I'm sure by now everyone has heard of the newly discovered native fucowee pygmie tribe located in Canada? They have long avoided discovery as their small stature is largely concealed by the lush meter high vegetation common to the region. Unique to the fucowee natives is the practice of jumping, or hopping, over their territorial lands rather than walking. Looking closely you may catch a rare glimse of heads bobbing above the brush. The significance of this practice is not yet understood. Their language is also not yet largely understood, but if you listen closely you may hear a common traditional native call among their people, "wearthefucowee".

(Told to me by a local guide while moose hunting in Canada... in the tone of "interesting local facts". Hook, line, and sinker!)
 
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A guy walks into a bar with a giraffe and says, "A beer and a shot for me, and the same for the giraffe, please." They continue on like this for three rounds. The guy is doing OK, but the giraffe is clearly getting schnokered. It starts swaying back and forth, its feet slip a few times and then it crashes to the floor, passed out cold. The guy pays his tab, steps over the passed-out giraffe and heads for the door. The bartender yells, "Hey, you can't just leave that lyin' there!". The guy yells back, "That's not a lion; that's a giraffe!"
 

I'm sure by now everyone has heard of the newly discovered native fucowee pygmie tribe located in Canada? They have long avoided discovery as their small stature is largely concealed by the lush meter high vegetation common to the region. Unique to the fucowee natives is the practice of jumping, or hopping, over their territorial lands rather than walking. Looking closely you may catch a rare glimse of heads bobbing above the brush. The significance of this practice is not yet understood. Their language is also not yet largely understood, but if you listen closely you may hear a common traditional native call among their people, "wearthefucowee".
I think the jumping, hopping and laughing may be explained by the fact that the grass is tickling their balls. :D
 

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