windhund116
Senior Airman
- 360
- Jul 3, 2017
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I'm guessing the British groundhog was rather flimsy?
I thought that was a french ground hog
Licence build. You can tell the difference by taking a close look a the cockpit canopy.I thought that was a french ground hog
I thought that was scotch you're not supposed to drink at the computer.I thought I had learned not to drink coffee at the computer.
Yes but what's that got to do with Groundhogs?Wasn't the P39 a more-or-less "stop-gap" fighter, as used in the early stages of the SWPA? At least, until more advanced fighters could be employed?
Later American groundhogs were fitted with an internal nut supply in each front paw, had a spare nut sack in its stomach and could carry three years supply of nuts in bags made of disposable brown paper. They could walk further than any other groundhog without stopping.
I think this answer is totally NUTS!Later American groundhogs were fitted with an internal nut supply in each front paw, had a spare nut sack in its stomach and could carry three years supply of nuts in bags made of disposable brown paper. They could walk further than any other groundhog without stopping.
Didn't this upset the center-of-gravity?
Only on the first few days of the holiday, dancing and other means of showing off were restricted until all bags and additional nut sacks were emptied.Didn't this upset the center-of-gravity?
British groundhogs would never travel so stayed at home aggressively attacking anything trying to steal its nuts.I'm guessing the British groundhog was rather flimsy?