Bullet heads

Amen to that Finny, its no different to us lot here of course.

We start off with a thread on .300 Win mags and end up bullschitting about wtf is a good tyre for a phuckn wheelbarrow..world leaders down here at that it seems.
 
This thread amazes me in that there are 90 odd replies yet some one can post up a great photo of a fallow/muntie/roe etc and would be lucky to get 2 replies.
It seems to me that many members just want to argue about this and that and have more interest in mundane schit like tyres and what dress to wear lol ha ha :D:lol::) Don`t get upset now boys.

...don’t forget winching!
 
I used to correctly call them bullets, until I realised how much I could wind up a few highly strung individuals by calling them heads! I now never refer to them as bullets, the type of people that get wound up about such things get on my nerves
 
This thread amazes me in that there are 90 odd replies yet some one can post up a great photo of a fallow/muntie/roe etc and would be lucky to get 2 replies.
It seems to me that many members just want to argue about this and that and have more interest in mundane schit like tyres and what dress to wear lol ha ha :D:lol::) Don`t get upset now boys.

Don't forget to include the ducks and pigeons.....:stir:

The keyboard round reaches far beyond the horizon...:old:





Tim.243
 
I used to correctly call them bullets, until I realised how much I could wind up a few highly strung individuals by calling them heads! I now never refer to them as bullets, the type of people that get wound up about such things get on my nerves ��


So you refer to them by the wrong name just so that, by winding them up, you are able to identify particular people who get on your nerves?

Unless you actually enjoy people getting on your nerves, I'd have thought it more sensible to use the correct term. That way, you might find yourself interacting with some people who wouldn't have got on your nerves but for the fact you'd assumed a pretence of lowest-common-denominator ignorance on purpose to wind them up.

No-one likes a wind-up merchant.
:)
 
I thought the word was spelled Whinging. And was used to differentiate between those ex-british immigrants born down-under and those that arrived a few years later...

Ah yes, that old chestnut. These days however, I’m pretty sure the ones that got left behind in England are the ones that whinge the loudest!
 
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