Dear good morning , please this is very urgent , i want us to be good friends and real to know each other very well for an important discussion of moving funds outside Africa Worth's millions of united state dollars , all the original deposit documents that covers this money are with me now ,and i have been in contacts with the finance company where this money was lodged by my father who is now late .
Dear please help me , i don't want my father relations to trace this money and seize it .they have called me many times asking me if i my father tell me any secret about his money in any Bank or in any country, of which i denied he don't tell me any thing , and i am sure they are among the plans that poison my father to death. all will jugde by God .
You know its very hard now to give trust to someone unknown before, So i would love it best if it will be possible for you to visit me here in Africa and we move together to the finance company and transferring all the money to your country and both of us will move to your country .
Please i want you to plan to come and you see all the original of the deposit documents with me and for you to trust me too,
I promise for good relationship with you in your country and i will give you enough money from this money , and you will take me as your brother and set the rest money into investments you know in your country .
Please i will stop here and be waiting to hear from you .
Thanks from
Shula Mbule.
The ride sounds good.
QB must be desolate to go so long without a good bakery in sight or smell. You must plan these trips more carefully.
And piles of seafood, even with linguini underneath, do not substitute for baked goods. I bet she wasn't fooled for one minute.
Dee
18 Oct.
Delaware.
Wind at our backs. Fast riding.
Good wide road very well paved. Dearth of coffee shops. Found one after 20 miles. No good bakery for the entire trip to date.
First rain of trip. 5 minutes worth.
Dinner. Another day, another pile of fresh seafood. Woe is us. A monster would be honored to be shot here. Probably the best preparation and largest sized seafood we have had since leaving NYC.
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Well, I guess those in the know (Bob and Judi), know that those pumpkins were not safe. I can understand that there are no pictures of the aftermath of the pumpkin hunt. The blog would probably have been removed by the authorities.
Now those toward-Ocean City sands look lovely and white and very appealing. Food, in the form of crabs featured. Apparently, the pumpkin fetishist was sated and could go back to a regular diet of pancakes, ham and whatever other fare was being served up that day.
Dee
17 Oct
Delaware border.
Wonderful side trip to Assateague national preserve. Wild horses and deer. Salt marshes and ocean dunes. Worth looking up on web. Better to visit. Island is accessed by bike pedestrian bridge.
The day started off perfectly with good pancakes and country ham; just right, not too salty. Then a ride towards the ocean with the side trip to Assateague.
Lovely ride to Ocean City. Decided to stop here as there is a new Hilton (at a low price as this is off season). Glad we chose this place. Laundry just down the hall and a place called Higgins across the street. Apparently the best place for crabs, according to the other patrons we met there.
Maryland blue crabs, medium size. They are sold by the dozen and size. The ones pictured were $55 a dozen and were a full meal for the two of us; well that and a beer.
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Anyone who knows about Jeff's pumpkin pie fixation at this time of year
would know that he sent Sharon to the pumpkin patch to suss out the one most
suitable for pie making.
JuJu
On 10/18/07, Bob Morgen wrote:
>
> >You did not mention any food. Did you eat?
>
> Funny, I just assumed that QB was heading towards those pumpkins with
> intent.
>
> -Bob
>
> On 10/18/07, Dianne Ellsworth wrote:
> >
> > I am worried. You did not mention any food. Did you eat?
> > At any rate, hope you enjoyed the historic plumbing.
> > Dee
> >
> > -----Original Message-----
> > >From: boogkb@tmo.blackberry.net
> > >Sent: Oct 17, 2007 5:14 AM
> > >To: Vox <980286c3a15f1c66@moblog.vox.com>
> > >Cc: Boogs Sack
> > >Subject: BSMA Berlin Md.
> > >
> > >16 Oct.
> > >
> > >Short ride turned into a long one as we took the "small roads bike
> > route". Scenic and not correctly signposted. Scenic and non linear.
> > >
> > >Berlin is a old town preserved for the tourist trade. Our hotel dates
> > from 1895 and has much of the original plumbing and rooms at current day
> > prices.
> > >
> > >Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile
> >
> >
>
>You did not mention any food. Did you eat?
Funny, I just assumed that QB was heading towards those pumpkins with
intent.
-Bob
On 10/18/07, Dianne Ellsworth wrote:
>
> I am worried. You did not mention any food. Did you eat?
> At any rate, hope you enjoyed the historic plumbing.
> Dee
>
> -----Original Message-----
> >From: boogkb@tmo.blackberry.net
> >Sent: Oct 17, 2007 5:14 AM
> >To: Vox <980286c3a15f1c66@moblog.vox.com>
> >Cc: Boogs Sack
> >Subject: BSMA Berlin Md.
> >
> >16 Oct.
> >
> >Short ride turned into a long one as we took the "small roads bike
> route". Scenic and not correctly signposted. Scenic and non linear.
> >
> >Berlin is a old town preserved for the tourist trade. Our hotel dates
> from 1895 and has much of the original plumbing and rooms at current day
> prices.
> >
> >Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile
>
>
I am worried. You did not mention any food. Did you eat?
At any rate, hope you enjoyed the historic plumbing.
Dee
16 Oct.
Short ride turned into a long one as we took the "small roads bike route". Scenic and not correctly signposted. Scenic and non linear.
Berlin is a old town preserved for the tourist trade. Our hotel dates from 1895 and has much of the original plumbing and rooms at current day prices.
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And excuse me for further stating the obvious, but reducing the calorie
count is hardly relevant to BSMA, as it is clear that the entire purpose
is not biking but rather the intake of mass calories in the form of
seafood and baked goods.
-Libby
________________________________
From: Dianne Ellsworth [mailto:ellswortha@earthlink.net]
Sent: Tuesday, October 16, 2007 9:15 AM
To: Bob Morgen; Trudell, Libby (TS USA)
Cc: ellswortha@earthlink.net; boogkb@tmo.blackberry.net;
980286c3a15f1c66@moblog.vox.com; jwgrey@netbox.com
Subject: Re: BSMA. Pokomoke
Ah, yes. Well, calorie-counters do take note.
-----Original Message-----
From: Bob Morgen
Sent: Oct 16, 2007 3:35 AM
To: "Libby.Trudell@thomson.com"
Cc: ellswortha@earthlink.net, boogkb@tmo.blackberry.net,
980286c3a15f1c66@moblog.vox.com, jwgrey@netbox.com
Subject: Re: BSMA. Pokomoke
Excuse me for stating the obvious, but evidently Starbuck's pain
au raison only has one raisin in it. This is probably to keep the
calorie count down.
-Bob
On 10/16/07, Libby.Trudell@thomson.com
wrote:
Pas de raisins, in my case, vs raison d'etre
-----Original Message-----
From: Dianne Ellsworth [mailto:ellswortha@earthlink.net]
Sent: Monday, October 15, 2007 6:29 PM
To: boogkb@tmo.blackberry.net; Vox; Boogs Sack
Subject: Re: BSMA. Pokomoke
Real-To: Dianne Ellsworth
Jeff,
One thing I must say--on this trip in particular--I have
been struck by
the fact that you have mentioned (and visited) more
towns of which I've
never heard than I can remember hearing from your
previous trips.
I guess that shows my unfamiliarity with towns along the
Southern/Eastern coastline. Of course, there may be
many more
towns/mile on the East Coast than in the less populated
reaches of
Minnesota. Still.
Now,
From the department of
"you-can-find-anything-you-want-on-Google's
restaurant":
1) "Starbucks Pain Au Raison", from a calorie-counting
site (not
Starbuck's own though)
2) Kelloggs Raisin Bran Individual Box, Kelloggs Raisin
Crunch Bran
Individual Bowl, Kelloggs Raison Bran Crunch Bulk,...",
from a food
service site
and my personal favorite
3)"pain's raison d'etre", from an scholarly article on
pain & pain
management
And I thought I was being facetious? In any event, the
real pain raison
(which I know Jeff loves), should be pain aux raisins, I
believe, just
so you know I know.
Libby doesn't really want to know about raisins in any
form (so skip
this whole part of the message, Libby).
Cheers,
Dee
-----Original Message-----
>From: boogkb@tmo.blackberry.net
>Sent: Oct 15, 2007 5:35 PM
>To: Vox <980286c3a15f1c66@moblog.vox.com>, Boogs Sack
>
>Subject: BSMA. Pokomoke
>
>15. Oct.
>
>Maryland. Poke claims to be the friendliness city.
>
>Wonderful ride through Puncateague, Onancoke ( a town
with many many
large cemetaries) and other rural Eastern shore
villages.
>
>Coffee and local history, as well as a good discussion
on the number of
Baptist churches and other sects. The Raisan Bran (in
Dee' words).
>
>Country ham with eggs as a sandwich, pumkin pie,
manhatten clam
chowder, all at a Stiuckey's.
>
>
>Sent via BlackBerry from T-Mobile