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21st June 07, 10:37 AM
#21
Today, I'm going to see my chiropractor. Then I'm doing some food shopping and preparing to do some grilling for a family gathering tonight.
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21st June 07, 12:19 PM
#22
Originally Posted by furrycelt
i wear a kilt everyday all the time. ok that isn't 100% accurate. i do NOT wear pants or shorts or any type of bifurcated garment at all, ever!
also, i don't wear kilts if i am going to do some dirty/dangerous work. i don't have enough kilts yet so that i can sacrifice one to getting ripped and stained. like i didn't wear a kilt to do a brake job on my car recently.
So you do dirty/dangerous work naked? Sounds like one time when a pair of pants would come in handy.
Adam
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21st June 07, 12:30 PM
#23
Originally Posted by arrogcow
So you do dirty/dangerous work naked? Sounds like one time when a pair of pants would come in handy.
ah yes, i see your point. i hath been caught by mine own ill vetted exposition. mea culpa.
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21st June 07, 01:40 PM
#24
So, if one wears overalls over his kilt . . .
Meow, somebody drinks their milk from a saucer,
Just so you know that didn't pass over everybody's head.
Peace.
heh . . . must be informative and enlightening whenever possible.
[B]Barnett[/B] (House, no clan) -- Motto [i]Virescit Vulnere Virtus[/i] (Courage Flourishes at a Wound)
[B]Livingston(e)[/B] (Ancestral family allied with) -- Motto [i]Se je puis[/i] (If I can)
[B]Anderson[/B] (married into) -- Motto [i]Stand Sure
[/i][b]Frame[/b] Lanarkshire in the fifteenth century
[url="http://www.xmarksthescot.com/photoplog/index.php?u=3478"]escher-Photoplog[/url]
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21st June 07, 02:48 PM
#25
when travelling in the old cars I own I always have overalls with me incase of breakdown wear over kilt no bother at all
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21st June 07, 03:01 PM
#26
For me...an average day in a kilt includes free beers and marriage proposals.
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21st June 07, 03:16 PM
#27
Originally Posted by Don Patrick
Anyone ride a motorcycle? How do you handle that in a kilt? Just curious, I'm beginning the process of obtaining my first kilt - and do ride extensively.
while not a motorcycle, i do commute full time on a vintage p series vespa. the idea of just keeping everything covered up kilted is a little hard to imagine. let alone the thought of sliding across pavement with nothing separating my bum from the asphalt. ouch ouch ouch
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21st June 07, 04:30 PM
#28
Originally Posted by sputnik
while not a motorcycle, i do commute full time on a vintage p series vespa. the idea of just keeping everything covered up kilted is a little hard to imagine. let alone the thought of sliding across pavement with nothing separating my bum from the asphalt. ouch ouch ouch
ay mate,
two wheels and a motor, handlebar and a rider. It's a motorcy
cle.
The idea of keeping everything covered up kilted is not a problem for me. Now, for sliding along the pavement on m'bum, I've designed this method. I don't.
Of course someone of yall could say it's inevitable that you'll eventually have an accident. I say, "You crash, I'll learn from your blood."
Like I said before, I let others speak for themselves about their cycling fears. I speak for myself when it comes to what I ride while wearing clothing.
Go, have fun, don't work at, make it fun! Kilt them, for they know not, what they wear. Where am I now?
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21st June 07, 04:36 PM
#29
Most everyone has covered the day to day of being kilted.
Some of the difference are:
"I love hearing eyeballs click!" Said frequently to my wife by myself while out in public.
"The question" and the myriad ways of asnwering it.
Ladies really seem to go out of thier way to talk to "the guy in the kilt".
I would say that in my experience, I recieve five positive comments for every one "nice skirt."
The hatred of putting a pair of p*nts after a day or two of being kilted.
This is just the start of the the benefits of wearing a kilt.
In closing, know what tartan you are wearing(if any) because you will be asked.
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21st June 07, 09:07 PM
#30
god i love this community already
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