I will NEVER understand why people want dead animals in their home. This is pure over load and CREEPY!
Bocepheus
In its simplest terms, its leather. Wrapped around styrofoam. No different than the seats in your Jetta, your Tory Burch shoes, or your Kate Spade bag. There are dead animals in your home HWW, they are just hiding behind designer labels.,
Superdave
@hardworkingwoman: Cause deep down, we all have a little nomadic carnivorous top-of-the-food-chain hubris. Embrace it.
CB
I might know who that house belongs to. When I was in college, I apartment and dog sat for a woman who in turn house and dog sat for a family in Meyerland (she paid me a % of what they paid her). They owned a business off of the South Loop and 288 that deals in a particularly useful commodity that everyone sees every day but doesn’t notice. They moved out of their Meyerland home and built new in Bellaire some time in the late 90s, IRRC. The husband was a big game trophy hunter. That trophy room looks a lot like what I saw at the old house.
M
Death Den
Superdave
@CB – I am intrigued…pray thee do tell… “a particularly useful commodity that everyone sees every day but doesn’t notice”
Bocepheus
Medicine. Dude is an MD.
CB
@Superdave – Steel pipe. If you look around, and I mean *really* look, you will see it EVERYWHERE. Every sign pole, every metal fence post, every traffic light, every billboard, etc…
I will NEVER understand why people want dead animals in their home. This is pure over load and CREEPY!
In its simplest terms, its leather. Wrapped around styrofoam. No different than the seats in your Jetta, your Tory Burch shoes, or your Kate Spade bag. There are dead animals in your home HWW, they are just hiding behind designer labels.,
@hardworkingwoman: Cause deep down, we all have a little nomadic carnivorous top-of-the-food-chain hubris. Embrace it.
I might know who that house belongs to. When I was in college, I apartment and dog sat for a woman who in turn house and dog sat for a family in Meyerland (she paid me a % of what they paid her). They owned a business off of the South Loop and 288 that deals in a particularly useful commodity that everyone sees every day but doesn’t notice. They moved out of their Meyerland home and built new in Bellaire some time in the late 90s, IRRC. The husband was a big game trophy hunter. That trophy room looks a lot like what I saw at the old house.
Death Den
@CB – I am intrigued…pray thee do tell… “a particularly useful commodity that everyone sees every day but doesn’t notice”
Medicine. Dude is an MD.
@Superdave – Steel pipe. If you look around, and I mean *really* look, you will see it EVERYWHERE. Every sign pole, every metal fence post, every traffic light, every billboard, etc…