CigarBanter
Cigar Banter => Daily Cigar Deals Discussion => Topic started by: CigarBanter on January 28, 2025, 04:50:26 AM
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Happy Tuesday! In between insults we'll occasionally discuss cigars. Join in and perhaps learn something along the way. Warning: don't proceed if you have thin skin but don't be afraid to post either... And welcome aboard!
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Morning, twofers.
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Joe:
HC Series Blue Barber Pole Toro - 20/47.50
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Sis:
Door #1 - Montecristo Espada Guard (Toro) - 5/29.99
Door #2 - 95+ Rated Showcase Sampler - 12/64.99
4 x Aging Room Quattro Nicaragua Maestro (6.0"x52) '96' Rated
4 x La Aroma de Cuba Mi Amor Duque (5.2"x56) '95' Rated
4 x Rocky Patel Decade Robusto (5.0”x50) '95' Rated
Door #3 - La Herencia Cubana CORE Toro - 10/39.99
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Morning, twofers.
Good morning DaveDave.
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First commute day of the week for me. No, I haven't straightened out my license crap. Shhh.
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First commute day of the week for me. No, I haven't straightened out my license crap. Shhh.
I'm calling the fuzz!
When do you get that squared away?
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First commute day of the week for me. No, I haven't straightened out my license crap. Shhh.
I'm calling the fuzz!
When do you get that squared away?
They're currently busy helping ICE round up the migrants.
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First commute day of the week for me. No, I haven't straightened out my license crap. Shhh.
I'm calling the fuzz!
When do you get that squared away?
To answer your question, I don't know. I have to figure out a day where my wife can take off and drive me to a DMV that is available.
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First commute day of the week for me. No, I haven't straightened out my license crap. Shhh.
I'm calling the fuzz!
When do you get that squared away?
They're currently busy helping ICE round up the migrants.
Which is good, cause now the MAGAverse can do all the jobs they were worried the immigrants were taking from them, like fruit picking and janitorial.
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First commute day of the week for me. No, I haven't straightened out my license crap. Shhh.
I'm calling the fuzz!
When do you get that squared away?
To answer your question, I don't know. I have to figure out a day where my wife can take off and drive me to a DMV that is available.
What a pain.
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First commute day of the week for me. No, I haven't straightened out my license crap. Shhh.
I'm calling the fuzz!
When do you get that squared away?
To answer your question, I don't know. I have to figure out a day where my wife can take off and drive me to a DMV that is available.
What a pain.
Yup. I'm not even going into the details because it just isn't interesting.
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First commute day of the week for me. No, I haven't straightened out my license crap. Shhh.
I'm calling the fuzz!
When do you get that squared away?
To answer your question, I don't know. I have to figure out a day where my wife can take off and drive me to a DMV that is available.
What a pain.
Yup. I'm not even going into the details because it just isn't interesting.
I remember once when the kids were little, I forgot about renewing my car's registration and it was like 2 or 3 months past due. Just completely forgot about it because life was so hectic. Got pulled over for it and normally, it's a must-tow situation as far out of date as it was. But luckily, we had all 3 kids in the car, so the cop had mercy on us and let us go. Went straight to the DMV to get it settled.
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First commute day of the week for me. No, I haven't straightened out my license crap. Shhh.
I'm calling the fuzz!
When do you get that squared away?
Maybe he'll get deported...
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First commute day of the week for me. No, I haven't straightened out my license crap. Shhh.
I'm calling the fuzz!
When do you get that squared away?
To answer your question, I don't know. I have to figure out a day where my wife can take off and drive me to a DMV that is available.
What a pain.
Yup. I'm not even going into the details because it just isn't interesting.
And your penance for this egregious violation is that you have to go in person to the NJDMV! Oh, I'm sorry, MVC.
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Sorry I'm late. Lots of rabbit holes to stumble down this morning.
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Today is Tuesday, Jan. 28, the 28th day of 2025
with 337 to follow.
The moon is waning. Morning stars are Jupiter, Mars, Mercury and Uranus. Evening stars are Jupiter, Mars, Saturn, Uranus and Venus.
On this date in history:
In 1986, the Space Shuttle Challenger exploded 72 seconds after launch from Cape Canaveral, killing all seven crew members, including civilian teacher Christa McAuliffe.
also:
In 1547, Henry VIII died and 9-year-old Edward VI became king of England.
In 1782, the U.S. Congress authorized creation of the great seal of the United States.
In 1958, the Lego Group received a patent for its toy building blocks. Read about the many Lego-related Guinness World Records here.
In 1965, British Queen Elizabeth II accepted a new national flag design for Canada that included a red maple leaf in its center.
In 1974, Israel lifted its siege of Suez City and turned over 300,000 square miles of Egyptian territory to the United Nations, ending an occupation that had begun during the October 1973 war.
In 1980, six Americans hidden for three months in the Canadian Embassy in Tehran were smuggled out of Iran by Canadian diplomats. The so-called "Canadian Caper" was featured in the 2012 movie Argo.
In 1982, kidnapped U.S. Army Brig. Gen. James Dozier was rescued in Padua, Italy, after being held 42 days by Italian Red Brigades militants.
In 1985, dozens of the biggest names in popular music recorded "We Are the World," royalties of which benefited the starving people of Africa.
In 1997, five former police officers in South Africa admitted to killing anti-apartheid activist Stephen Biko, who died in police custody in 1977 and whose death had been officially listed as an accident.
In 2004, the chief U.S. weapons inspector in Iraq told congressional government officials "were almost all wrong" in believing Iraq had weapons of mass destruction and called for an outside independent investigation of the apparent intelligence failure.
In 2009, the World Health Organization said more than 3,000 people died of cholera during an outbreak in Zimbabwe.
In 2024, three U.S. service members died and dozens of others were injured in a drone strike in Jordan.
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Today's Birthdays
Those born on this date are under the sign of Aquarius. They include:
Roman Catholic St. Thomas Aquinas in 1225;
English King Henry VII in 1457;
Cuban revolutionary/poet Jose Marti in 1853;
writer Sidonie-Gabrielle "Colette" in 1873;
artist Jackson Pollock in 1912;
musician Acker Bilk in 1929;
artist Claes Oldenburg in 1929;
actor Alan Alda in 1936 (age 89);
actor Susan Howard in 1943 (age 82);
NBA coach Gregg Popovich in 1949 (age 76);
Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa, king of Bahrain, in 1950 (age 75);
filmmaker Frank Darabont in 1959 (age 66);
musician Dan Spitz (Anthrax) in 1963 (age 62);
musician DJ Muggs (Cypress Hill) in 1968 (age 57);
musician Rakim (Eric B. & Rakim) in 1968 (age 57);
musician Sarah McLachlan in 1968 (age 57);
comedian/journalist Mo Rocca in 1969 (age 56);
musician Jeremy Ruzumna (Fitz and the Tantrums) in 1970 (age 55);
Supreme Court Associate Justice Amy Coney Barrett in 1972 (age 53);
musician Brandon Bush (Train) in 1973 (age 52);
musician Rick Ross in 1976 (age 49);
musician Joey Fatone (NSYNC) in 1977 (age 48);
musician Big Freedia in 1978 (age 47);
musician Nick Carter (Backstreet Boys) in 1980 (age 45);
actor Elijah Wood in 1981 (age 44);
musician J. Cole in 1985 (age 40);
actor Tom Hopper in 1985 (age 40);
actor Calum Worthy in 1991 (age 34);
actor Will Poulter in 1993 (age 32);
musician Maluma in 1994 (age 31);
actor Ariel Winter in 1998 (age 27);
actor Whitney Peak in 2003 (age 22);
musician/actor That Girl Lay Lay in 2007 (age 18).
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Today's Over/Under is 7
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Sorry I'm late. Lots of rabbit holes to stumble down this morning.
Morning, StumblinDave.
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Today's Over/Under is 7
8
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Morning, muchachos.
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Morning, muchachos.
Morning, Page2Raz.
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Today's Birthdays
Those born on this date are under the sign of Aquarius. They include:
Roman Catholic St. Thomas Aquinas in 1225;
English King Henry VII in 1457;
Cuban revolutionary/poet Jose Marti in 1853;
writer Sidonie-Gabrielle "Colette" in 1873;
artist Jackson Pollock in 1912;
musician Acker Bilk in 1929;
artist Claes Oldenburg in 1929;
actor Alan Alda in 1936 (age 89);
actor Susan Howard in 1943 (age 82);
NBA coach Gregg Popovich in 1949 (age 76);
Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa, king of Bahrain, in 1950 (age 75);
filmmaker Frank Darabont in 1959 (age 66);
musician Dan Spitz (Anthrax) in 1963 (age 62);
musician DJ Muggs (Cypress Hill) in 1968 (age 57);
musician Rakim (Eric B. & Rakim) in 1968 (age 57);
musician Sarah McLachlan in 1968 (age 57);
comedian/journalist Mo Rocca in 1969 (age 56);
musician Jeremy Ruzumna (Fitz and the Tantrums) in 1970 (age 55);
Supreme Court Associate Justice Amy Coney Barrett in 1972 (age 53);
musician Brandon Bush (Train) in 1973 (age 52);
musician Rick Ross in 1976 (age 49);
musician Joey Fatone (NSYNC) in 1977 (age 48);
musician Big Freedia in 1978 (age 47);
musician Nick Carter (Backstreet Boys) in 1980 (age 45);
actor Elijah Wood in 1981 (age 44);
musician J. Cole in 1985 (age 40);
actor Tom Hopper in 1985 (age 40);
actor Calum Worthy in 1991 (age 34);
actor Will Poulter in 1993 (age 32);
musician Maluma in 1994 (age 31);
actor Ariel Winter in 1998 (age 27);
actor Whitney Peak in 2003 (age 22);
musician/actor That Girl Lay Lay in 2007 (age 18).
Six.
That's a pretty low percentage for me. Maybe I should have known Susan Howard, since I loved the show "The Paper Chase." But she was always "that girl from that show," y'know? Rick Ross is a name I've heard a lot, probably heard his music, but never really paid attention. I thought I remembered Nick Carter and Jessica Simpson being all over the news years ago, and I had a vague image of him in my head, but when I looked him up there was no way I'd have named him if you'd shown me a picture - and then I realized it was Nick Lachey and Jessica Simpson. I almost gave myself Thomas Aquinas, but then it occurred to me that if you showed me a depiction of Aquinas and a depiction of Thomas a Kempis I wouldn't be sure enough which was which. So...six.
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Morning, muchachos.
Morning, Page2Raz.
Morning, Dave.
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Still page 2?
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I was reading a couple of days ago that Warren Buffett and Berkshire Hathaway sold something like $160B worth of stock last year, and only bought $6B worth, which leaves the company sitting on somewhere between $350-$400B dollars in cash. Buffett is among those that think the market is overvalued. It makes sense that he'd sit on cash reserves to watch for corrections to offer real buying opportunities.
I've been pondering how to imitate that on the "real world" scale, and whether it even makes sense for an "average" investor to try to build up cash reserves.
My state retirement and health savings account are pretty much set-and-forget. It's the time of year I'm making the maximum allowed contribution to a Roth IRA. I've got an emergency fund that's approaching 9 months' worth of expenses stashed in a high-yield savings account at 4.3% There's a dedicated account for home and auto repairs and improvements that gets topped up on a regular basis. I don't have any unsecured debt, so the rest of what doesn't go out in expenses usually goes into a brokerage account. It's this last bit that I'm wondering about. That brokerage account usually returns better than the 4.3% or less I can get in savings interest. So it's a no-brainer, right?
But the market is overvalued by any traditional definition, and a lot of voices are saying to expect middling returns on the market in the next few years, and I am five-to-seven years from retirement. Maybe I should build up some cash reserves to take advantage of any market corrections that happen?
Any of y'all trying to build up cash?
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First commute day of the week for me. No, I haven't straightened out my license crap. Shhh.
I'm calling the fuzz!
When do you get that squared away?
To answer your question, I don't know. I have to figure out a day where my wife can take off and drive me to a DMV that is available.
What a pain.
Yup. I'm not even going into the details because it just isn't interesting.
I remember once when the kids were little, I forgot about renewing my car's registration, and it was like 2 or 3 months past due. Just completely forgot about it because life was so hectic. Got pulled over for it and normally, it's a must-tow situation as far out of date as it was. But luckily, we had all 3 kids in the car, so the cop had mercy on us and let us go. Went straight to the DMV to get it settled.
That would be great, except that they'd turn me away without an appointment. The closest one to my house that does this particular type of work, doesn't have an appointment available before March 13th. And supposedly, there is no way to escalate it. So now I find myself searching for which DMV has the soonest appointment. I'm likely to end up near Philly.
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I was reading a couple of days ago that Warren Buffett and Berkshire Hathaway sold something like $160B worth of stock last year, and only bought $6B worth, which leaves the company sitting on somewhere between $350-$400B dollars in cash. Buffett is among those that think the market is overvalued. It makes sense that he'd sit on cash reserves to watch for corrections to offer real buying opportunities.
I've been pondering how to imitate that on the "real world" scale, and whether it even makes sense for an "average" investor to try to build up cash reserves.
My state retirement and health savings account are pretty much set-and-forget. It's the time of year I'm making the maximum allowed contribution to a Roth IRA. I've got an emergency fund that's approaching 9 months' worth of expenses stashed in a high-yield savings account at 4.3% There's a dedicated account for home and auto repairs and improvements that gets topped up on a regular basis. I don't have any unsecured debt, so the rest of what doesn't go out in expenses usually goes into a brokerage account. It's this last bit that I'm wondering about. That brokerage account usually returns better than the 4.3% or less I can get in savings interest. So it's a no-brainer, right?
But the market is overvalued by any traditional definition, and a lot of voices are saying to expect middling returns on the market in the next few years, and I am five-to-seven years from retirement. Maybe I should build up some cash reserves to take advantage of any market corrections that happen?
Any of y'all trying to build up cash?
Sounds like you're doing ok. I'm just trying to make ends meet at this point. Besides maxing out my 403(b), I'm saving $0.
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Today's Birthdays
Those born on this date are under the sign of Aquarius. They include:
Roman Catholic St. Thomas Aquinas in 1225;
English King Henry VII in 1457;
Cuban revolutionary/poet Jose Marti in 1853;
writer Sidonie-Gabrielle "Colette" in 1873;
artist Jackson Pollock in 1912;
musician Acker Bilk in 1929;
artist Claes Oldenburg in 1929;
actor Alan Alda in 1936 (age 89);
actor Susan Howard in 1943 (age 82);
NBA coach Gregg Popovich in 1949 (age 76);
Hamad bin Isa al-Khalifa, king of Bahrain, in 1950 (age 75);
filmmaker Frank Darabont in 1959 (age 66);
musician Dan Spitz (Anthrax) in 1963 (age 62);
musician DJ Muggs (Cypress Hill) in 1968 (age 57);
musician Rakim (Eric B. & Rakim) in 1968 (age 57);
musician Sarah McLachlan in 1968 (age 57);
comedian/journalist Mo Rocca in 1969 (age 56);
musician Jeremy Ruzumna (Fitz and the Tantrums) in 1970 (age 55);
Supreme Court Associate Justice Amy Coney Barrett in 1972 (age 53);
musician Brandon Bush (Train) in 1973 (age 52);
musician Rick Ross in 1976 (age 49);
musician Joey Fatone (NSYNC) in 1977 (age 48);
musician Big Freedia in 1978 (age 47);
musician Nick Carter (Backstreet Boys) in 1980 (age 45);
actor Elijah Wood in 1981 (age 44);
musician J. Cole in 1985 (age 40);
actor Tom Hopper in 1985 (age 40);
actor Calum Worthy in 1991 (age 34);
actor Will Poulter in 1993 (age 32);
musician Maluma in 1994 (age 31);
actor Ariel Winter in 1998 (age 27);
actor Whitney Peak in 2003 (age 22);
musician/actor That Girl Lay Lay in 2007 (age 18).
Today's Over/Under is 7
Nine.
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First commute day of the week for me. No, I haven't straightened out my license crap. Shhh.
I'm calling the fuzz!
When do you get that squared away?
To answer your question, I don't know. I have to figure out a day where my wife can take off and drive me to a DMV that is available.
What a pain.
Yup. I'm not even going into the details because it just isn't interesting.
I remember once when the kids were little, I forgot about renewing my car's registration, and it was like 2 or 3 months past due. Just completely forgot about it because life was so hectic. Got pulled over for it and normally, it's a must-tow situation as far out of date as it was. But luckily, we had all 3 kids in the car, so the cop had mercy on us and let us go. Went straight to the DMV to get it settled.
That would be great, except that they'd turn me away without an appointment. The closest one to my house that does this particular type of work, doesn't have an appointment available before March 13th. And supposedly, there is no way to escalate it. So now I find myself searching for which DMV has the soonest appointment. I'm likely to end up near Philly.
That's crazy. Here, you walk in and take a number, so to speak. In fact, once, the lady at the door made me go through the sign up via text option despite the place being empty. Of course, I was immediately called and just gave her a look as I went to the counter. But apparently, it can get far more irritating. Sheesh.
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Still page 2?
Page 3.
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I was reading a couple of days ago that Warren Buffett and Berkshire Hathaway sold something like $160B worth of stock last year, and only bought $6B worth, which leaves the company sitting on somewhere between $350-$400B dollars in cash. Buffett is among those that think the market is overvalued. It makes sense that he'd sit on cash reserves to watch for corrections to offer real buying opportunities.
I've been pondering how to imitate that on the "real world" scale, and whether it even makes sense for an "average" investor to try to build up cash reserves.
My state retirement and health savings account are pretty much set-and-forget. It's the time of year I'm making the maximum allowed contribution to a Roth IRA. I've got an emergency fund that's approaching 9 months' worth of expenses stashed in a high-yield savings account at 4.3% There's a dedicated account for home and auto repairs and improvements that gets topped up on a regular basis. I don't have any unsecured debt, so the rest of what doesn't go out in expenses usually goes into a brokerage account. It's this last bit that I'm wondering about. That brokerage account usually returns better than the 4.3% or less I can get in savings interest. So it's a no-brainer, right?
But the market is overvalued by any traditional definition, and a lot of voices are saying to expect middling returns on the market in the next few years, and I am five-to-seven years from retirement. Maybe I should build up some cash reserves to take advantage of any market corrections that happen?
Any of y'all trying to build up cash?
Sounds like you're doing ok. I'm just trying to make ends meet at this point. Besides maxing out my 403(b), I'm saving $0.
Well, it wasn't my intent to get into a measuring contest. ;) If you're maxing out your 403(b), I expect you're equaling my state contributions and my Roth IRA contributions. So that's not nothing. My state contributions were set 21 years ago, and I was in a very different place then than now, so they're lower than they should be and I can't change them unless I take a job at a different agency, which I've chosen not to do. I started the Roth to make up for the minimal state contribution level.
You and I are at different places in life, T. I'm done raising kids and paying for college. All I have to do right now is plan for retirement.
That I have a spouse that is frugal to the far fringes of fanatical parsimony makes life easier. I've almost got her talked into taking a trip to Europe or Hawaii, maybe. But if I tried to turn that into a yearly thing like many of our friends, well...there'd be a search on for my eviscerated corpse. Whatever. She doesn't bitch about me buying guitars or guns.
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I was reading a couple of days ago that Warren Buffett and Berkshire Hathaway sold something like $160B worth of stock last year, and only bought $6B worth, which leaves the company sitting on somewhere between $350-$400B dollars in cash. Buffett is among those that think the market is overvalued. It makes sense that he'd sit on cash reserves to watch for corrections to offer real buying opportunities.
I've been pondering how to imitate that on the "real world" scale, and whether it even makes sense for an "average" investor to try to build up cash reserves.
My state retirement and health savings account are pretty much set-and-forget. It's the time of year I'm making the maximum allowed contribution to a Roth IRA. I've got an emergency fund that's approaching 9 months' worth of expenses stashed in a high-yield savings account at 4.3% There's a dedicated account for home and auto repairs and improvements that gets topped up on a regular basis. I don't have any unsecured debt, so the rest of what doesn't go out in expenses usually goes into a brokerage account. It's this last bit that I'm wondering about. That brokerage account usually returns better than the 4.3% or less I can get in savings interest. So it's a no-brainer, right?
But the market is overvalued by any traditional definition, and a lot of voices are saying to expect middling returns on the market in the next few years, and I am five-to-seven years from retirement. Maybe I should build up some cash reserves to take advantage of any market corrections that happen?
Any of y'all trying to build up cash?
Sounds like you're doing ok. I'm just trying to make ends meet at this point. Besides maxing out my 403(b), I'm saving $0.
Well, it wasn't my intent to get into a measuring contest. ;) If you're maxing out your 403(b), I expect you're equaling my state contributions and my Roth IRA contributions. So that's not nothing. My state contributions were set 21 years ago, and I was in a very different place then than now, so they're lower than they should be and I can't change them unless I take a job at a different agency, which I've chosen not to do. I started the Roth to make up for the minimal state contribution level.
You and I are at different places in life, T. I'm done raising kids and paying for college. All I have to do right now is plan for retirement.
That I have a spouse that is frugal to the far fringes of fanatical parsimony makes life easier. I've almost got her talked into taking a trip to Europe or Hawaii, maybe. But if I tried to turn that into a yearly thing like many of our friends, well...there'd be a search on for my eviscerated corpse. Whatever. She doesn't bitch about me buying guitars or guns.
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Wordle 1,319 4/6
⬛⬛⬛⬛⬛
⬛⬛⬛🟨⬛
⬛⬛🟨⬛⬛
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
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Connections: Sports Edition
Puzzle #127
🔵🟣🟣🟣
🔵🟣🟣🟣
🟣🟣🟣🟣
🟢🟢🟢🟢
🟡🟡🟡🟡
🔵🔵🔵🔵
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Connections
Puzzle #597
🟦🟦🟦🟦
🟨🟨🟨🟨
🟩🟩🟩🟩
🟪🟪🟪🟪
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Strands #331
“Stable supply”
🔵🟡🔵🔵
🔵🔵🔵
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Connections: Sports Edition
Puzzle #127
🔵🟣🟣🟣
🔵🟣🟣🟣
🟣🟣🟣🟣
🟢🟢🟢🟢
🟡🟡🟡🟡
🔵🔵🔵🔵
I had a dickens of a time with this.
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Connections: Sports Edition
Puzzle #127
🟢🟢🟢🟢
🟣🟣🟣🟣
🔵🟡🟡🟡
🔵🟡🟡🟡
🟡🟡🟡🟡
🔵🔵🔵🔵
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Wordle 1,319 6/6*
⬛⬛⬛🟨🟨
⬛⬛⬛🟩🟩
⬛⬛⬛🟩🟩
⬛⬛🟨🟩🟩
⬛🟩🟩🟩🟩
🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩
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No extras
Strands #331
“Stable supply”
🔵🟡🔵🔵
🔵🔵🔵
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Connections: Sports Edition
Puzzle #127
🔵🟣🟣🟣
🔵🟣🟣🟣
🟣🟣🟣🟣
🟢🟢🟢🟢
🟡🟡🟡🟡
🔵🔵🔵🔵
I had a dickens of a time with this.
I don't know ow much about the sport in the yellow category, which didn't help.
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Failed Connections. I would swear I tried all the blue group together at one point, but I only ended up with yellow. 🤔
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Still page 2?
Page 3.
Indeed.
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and...
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Mild evening after hitting 60 today. Flirting with 70 tomorrow.
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Sheesh, blew right through 75K, Should have bought myself a cake.
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Connections: Sports Edition
Puzzle #127
🔵🟣🟣🟣
🔵🟣🟣🟣
🟣🟣🟣🟣
🟢🟢🟢🟢
🟡🟡🟡🟡
🔵🔵🔵🔵
I had a dickens of a time with this.
I don't know ow much about the sport in the yellow category, which didn't help.
I do know about the sport, and there were three obvious clues. But that fourth one was really a stretch. I guessed it, but then I was like, "you have GOT to be kidding me."
This was a lame-ass puzzle.
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Cain Daytona
(https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/20250129/70987b846242f4a5033912b7ab07e3ab.jpg)
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Connections: Sports Edition
Puzzle #127
🟣🟣🟣
🟣🟣🟣
🟣🟣🟣🟣
🟢🟢🟢🟢
🟡🟡🟡🟡




I had a dickens of a time with this.
I don't know ow much about the sport in the yellow category, which didn't help.
I do know about the sport, and there were three obvious clues. But that fourth one was really a stretch. I guessed it, but then I was like, "you have GOT to be kidding me."
This was a lame-ass puzzle.
Agreed.
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HGTV reminder.
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Connections
Puzzle #597
🟩🟩🟩🟩
🟦🟦🟦🟦
🟨🟨🟨🟨
🟪🟪🟪🟪
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and...
I think Sarah McLachlan's "Angel" is one of the saddest, most beautiful and most lonely songs ever written. I was asked to learn it for a memorial service several years ago for a young man who'd committed suicide, and it took me a lot of rehearsal to ensure that I could get through it without choking up.
If you don't know, the song was written about the overdose death of Jonathan Melvoin.
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Connections: Sports Edition
Puzzle #127
🔵🟣🟣🟣
🟡🟡🟡🟡
🔵🔵🔵🔵
🟢🟢🟢🟢
🟣🟣🟣🟣
didn't know his nomber...
-
and...
I think Sarah McLachlan's "Angel" is one of the saddest, most beautiful and most lonely songs ever written. I was asked to learn it for a memorial service several years ago for a young man who'd committed suicide, and it took me a lot of rehearsal to ensure that I could get through it without choking up.
If you don't know, the song was written about the overdose death of Jonathan Melvoin.
Had to look him up.