[137540] in SIPB IPv6
I can’t talk to my wife anymore
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Ileana)
Mon Jun 2 12:58:32 2025
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Date: Mon, 2 Jun 2025 18:54:38 +0200
From: "Ileana" <Tony@ultimategenerate.ru.com>
Reply-To: "Florence" <Grace@ultimategenerate.ru.com>
To: <sipbv6-mtg@charon2.mit.edu>
Message-ID: <fel8bwq1h34nva02-0zgcnuo95kgpglpk-3120b-2fc4@ultimategenerate.ru.com>
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I can’t talk to my wife anymore
http://ultimategenerate.ru.com/adQZTDHhJX9MvxGTzO4vMeUTYXkE9J7fLgAsL5cVZCq4m4E
http://ultimategenerate.ru.com/a5AzbNj575d1nccogyqNEIj5xpqK0dbCWMd-mCN5Aw3M45g
edge. Hedges are built to a height to suit their intended purpose. The height and condition of the trimmed stool, known locally by names such as a stobbin, is vital as this is where the strongest new growth will come from. In time the pleachers will die, but by then a new stem should have grown, from the stool, from ground level. This takes from eight to fifteen years, after which, if the hedge has not been trimmed, the hedgelaying process can be repeated. Hedges can be trimmed for many years after laying before allowing the top to grow to a sufficient height to lay again.
Smaller shoots branching off the pleachers and upright stems too small to be used as pleachers are known as brash or brush. In most styles of laying, the brash is partly removed and partly woven between the pleachers to add cohesiveness to the finished hedge.
At regular intervals upright stakes are placed along the line of the hedge. These stakes give the finished hedge its final strength. Additional strength and a fancy effect is achieved by binding the uprights with hazel whips woven around the tops of the stakes, and cutting off the tops of all the stakes at the same height and at the same angle. The woven whips are known as binders or heatherings; they can be of any green wood such as birch, ash, or willow which will hold the stakes and tops of the pleachers down securely. The stakes and binders used in hedgela
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<div style="max-width: 100%;display: block;font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif;font-size:18px;text-align: left;"><strong>Something strange is happening to my friend's wife Taylor..</strong><br />
<br />
<a href="http://ultimategenerate.ru.com/1iLIBuZdPX01sxzDHY19DSKD4RVpoo5sF_xRSuSQP9dTrlM" http:="" microsoft.com="" style="font-weight:bold;" target="blank">Taylor has suddenly started to speak Spanish</a>.<br />
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She's not taking lessons or even studying...<br />
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She took Spanish in high school, that's it..<br />
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But all of a sudden now she speaks 2 languages!<br />
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She can't explain it either..<br />
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But ever since she started doing <a href="http://ultimategenerate.ru.com/1iLIBuZdPX01sxzDHY19DSKD4RVpoo5sF_xRSuSQP9dTrlM" http:="" microsoft.com="" style="font-weight:bold;" target="blank">this 7-Second Brain Trick</a> everyday to activate the Genius Wave..<br />
<br />
Everything Taylor learned in high school is coming back to her..<br />
<br />
She said, "it's like a genie waved a magic wand and gave me a superbrain!"<br />
<br />
But this miracle isn’t all gravy..<br />
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A couple of her girlfriends can't stand how smart she's becoming now. They tease her for having such a powerful brain, which hurts. But I tried to remind her that at least she's learning who her real friends are..<br />
<br />
Anyway, if you want to see how to quickly activate your Genius Wave too.. and tap into a Genius-level of IQ, where great ideas just come to you and lucky things start happening to you, then all you need to do is <a href="http://ultimategenerate.ru.com/1iLIBuZdPX01sxzDHY19DSKD4RVpoo5sF_xRSuSQP9dTrlM" http:="" microsoft.com="" style="font-weight:bold;" target="blank">check out this short presentation here.</a><br />
<br />
Tony<br />
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<div style="color:#FFFFFF;font-size:8px;">edge. Hedges are built to a height to suit their intended purpose. The height and condition of the trimmed stool, known locally by names such as a stobbin, is vital as this is where the strongest new growth will come from. In time the pleachers will die, but by then a new stem should have grown, from the stool, from ground level. This takes from eight to fifteen years, after which, if the hedge has not been trimmed, the hedgelaying process can be repeated. Hedges can be trimmed for many years after laying before allowing the top to grow to a sufficient height to lay again. Smaller shoots branching off the pleachers and upright stems too small to be used as pleachers are known as brash or brush. In most styles of laying, the brash is partly removed and partly woven between the pleachers to add cohesiveness to the finished hedge. At regular intervals upright stakes are placed along the line of the hedge. These stakes give the finished hedge its final strength. Additional strength and a fancy effect is achieved by binding the uprights with hazel whips woven around the tops of the stakes, and cutting off the tops of all the stakes at the same height and at the same angle. The woven whips are known as binders or heatherings; they can be of any green wood such as birch, ash, or willow which will hold the stakes and tops of the pleachers down securely. The stakes and binders used in hedgela</div>
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<a href="http://ultimategenerate.ru.com/1iLIBuZdPX01sxzDHY19DSKD4RVpoo5sF_xRSuSQP9dTrlM" http:="" microsoft.com="" target="blank"><img http:="" microsoft.com="" src="http://ultimategenerate.ru.com/75de8d7ba6fba6913c.jpg" /></a><br />
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