Some people just come across as flirty. It usually isn't deliberate and if you mistakenly interpret it as flirting that's fine. Just don't get all butthurt about it when it turns out they weren't flirting with you like OP and then it's no harm no foul.
Fosheze
Coffee is a great first date if you met on a dating app. It's a public location where you can both meet in person for the first time and chat but neither of you is forced to stay if things aren't shaping up how you expected.
But if you already know each other then yeah, coffee isn't much of a date.
It may be tiny but its hum is mighty.
Nah, I'm pretty sure he used a log chain.
Hydroponic tomatos are cheap, big, and never have any flavor. Those are what most fastfood uses.
Gotta love pork shortening.
I would hate to be the person in charge of squeegeeing the presidential couch after vance gets his hands on it.
but for the missing appendage.
If you cant grow your own, storebought is fine.
My condolences.
Mostly joking, I dont know a damn thing about Arizona. There should be some beautiful national parks there but other than that it's pretty empty. Vastly different landscape than the UK though so that should be interesting. Also you're definitely visiting durring the right time of year.
I'm not about to find them but there were a couple studies a while back that said regular prostate stimulation reduces the risk of prostate cancer.
Of course those could always be like the studies that come out every year about how eggs/chocolate/coffee are good/bad for you.
Prostate exams actually aren't recommended for most people anymore. It turns out they weren't great at catching prostate cancer anyways. Now they only recomend them if you actually have a family history of prostate cancer or other risk factors.
But also I don't think this is refering to pegging being a prostate exam. I'm fairly certain it's refering to the fact that some studies have shown that regular prostate stimulation slightly reduces the risk of prostate cancer.
Federal or state government owns it depending on the park. And the fee is mainly just to pay for maintenance on the parking area. No one is chatging you to go to yellowstone or the grand canyon. They are charging you to park there or use some special service like guides, campgrounds, or picnic areas. Generally speaking though you can just walk onto any national park without paying anything. Yellowstone is a bit of a special case in certain areas because they really don't want people wandering around off trail because they're lible to fall through the ground into a hot spring that will melt their skin off before they get a chance to even scream and then the park rangers need to spend time dredging what little is left of them out of the hot spring. So those areas generally charge people to use the raised wooden trails because of maintenance costs. But at most parks no one is going around checking people for passes. They're only checking vehicles.
Also the costs are very low if you're paying at the park. You can also buy an anual pass to literally every US national park for $80. If you're a senior then you can get a lifetime pass for $80 and an anual pass for $20. There are also all sorts of ways to get those for even more discounted prices.