Can anyone recommend a good vape that is travel friendly and inconspicuous? I like the look of the Omicron v2, for a point of reference. I'm looking to spend up to $200. Thanks in advance.
Uh...yeah, me too. Focus: Is anyone here familiar with Mobile, Alabama? One of my students is moving there for a neurology residency and I haven't been to Bama in ten years. I'd appreciate some basics about the town that Wikipedia can't turn up. Thanks in advance.
I'm looking for a recommendation on some sort of hair styling product. I have straight thick hair and its about medium length and I like to part it on the side but I have a couple of cowlicks and its pretty thick so I'm having trouble finding a product to do what I want. Basically I want something to hold my hair style in place so my bangs aren't falling all over my forehead but I don't want it to leave my hair hard and crunchy if that makes sense. People always tell me I have really soft hair so I want to keep it that way and I don't want it feel greasy and oily and product-y, but I still want my hair to be styled the way I like it. Any recommendations? Please and thank you.
Check out the American Crew line of products. I've got cowlicks too, and I use the Forming Cream. Can be found at CVS, supermarkets, or your local salon. It's a bit pricey, but definitely the best product I've found.
Yep. Born and raised, and will be moving back there again in less than a year. What's he need to know?
The best thing I've found is just styling it while it is moderately damp helps ease the process if you have unmanageable hair when dry, which I do. Trying to correct a cowlick on even semi dry hair is pert near impossible for me. When I was younger, and dumber, I'd glob on the products. I used to try the strongest products available trying to correct my hairs natural wiriness and curl but there just is no fighting it. But through this I've found the stronger Bed Head/Crew type products, wax type, don't work well when your hair or hands are wet so I stay away from them. Now I wet my hair and use sparring amounts of gel. It dries and looks a lot more natural. I usually only style my hair on the weekends and the dime sized amounts I use, shit can last for ever. I fucking hate my hair. No Homo.
Trying to fly from SC to Tampa at the end of April. Seeing as I have flown twice in my life, I am at a loss when it comes to finding cheap flights. I'm told it will be cheapest for me to fly out of Charlotte.
I've been using a combination of Paul Mitchell tea tree leave in conditioner cause that makes my hair really soft and American crew forming cream cause that has the hold I want but usually the American crew stuff dries and makes my hair really hard. Basically what I'm looking for is: Strong hold Not greasy or oily Still keeps my hair soft
You might try American Crew styling clay. I can't find it in stores anymore, but there's plenty online. Good hold, but it doesn't make your hair "hard" at all. Semi matte finish, and it doesn't dry my hair out. Sent from my SAMSUNG-SGH-I727 using Tapatalk 2
I use the American Crew Fiber product. I have thick hair with lots of cowlicks, and it holds my hair in place all day while not having that shiny / gel-ly look. Every product I've used has had an impact on the texture / softness of my hair, but Fiber has had the smallest impact while keeping my hair looking the way I want all day long.
Anyone here have a good working knowledge of the VBA side of Excel? I need to automate something in a spreadsheet which has 7 or so steps and it far exceeds my ability. It's a relatively easy set of processes as the data locations never change and the master templates are already in place. If anyone could help out, I'll send them a copy of the spreadsheet and perhaps we could jump on google chat or something so I can explain what I need done. I'd be willing to throw some cash your way as well if you can help fix the issues I'm having.
Anybody from eastern North Carolina that knows anything about the Washington, NC area? My wife's parents are looking at a vacation home out there on the river. Looks like a decent area with enough to do for weekend trips. The in-laws are up there and will enjoy the slowness and just want to stare at water, etc. It seems that the closest beaches are either down to Atlantic Beach near Beaufort or up to Manteo area of the Outer Banks. Are there good places to go and things to do with toddlers? We've been reading up on the area but would love to get first hand info from people who know the area. Very little decent web presence for restaurants and things to do in the area, etc.
This is a shot in the dark for graphic design ideas, since I'm not the artistic type... I'm part of a local stand-up comedy group affiliated with my university, and we put on shows a couple times every week at regular venues, and post flyers on Facebook and around campus accordingly. Here's the problem: our marketing sucks. Nobody in the group knows much about graphic design, and these flyers and the group's logo are both in desperate need of an overhaul. This is something that the president of the group and I recently sat down and discussed, so we're actively making steps to change the way our group is presented. Does anyone have any recommendations/tips/ideas regarding how to advertise our shows and how to create a logo from scratch? I'm not looking to outsource those steps, of course, but some general ideas on how to approach the creative process would be great. All I know about logos is that the best ones are usually the simplest (Nike swoosh, Mercedes-Benz three-point star, etc), and I'm trying to build around that concept. I found this tutorial in a Google search, and it appears to meet my needs. If anyone has any supplemental advice, I'm all ears.
Are horses' ribs supposed to show, generally? I have no idea but two horses that are kept near us have ribs definitely showing. I'm going to video them tomorrow. again, I know very little about horses, but my gut instinct is usually right on this sort of stuff.
Not just age, but breed, if they're in good shape or not, and what their feeding habits are... I mean, if they're mostly pasture horses, it's normal to lose weight in the winter, be a little thin around the spring and then start putting weight back on. Some breeds are thinner than others. Athletic horses might show a little bit of ribcage. Heck, some coat colors show ribs more readily than others.
-no idea how old -it's winter, but we're in the desert, so should that matter -I don't think they're too athletic I took photos, will try and upload one. We're in horse country, but I"m not involved in that community, and we're new in the area, so I generally don't have anyone local to reach out to. As far as I can tell, the next step is a report to either the local authorities, the county, or the Humane society.
here's a photo. Yes, that's hay, I went out there this morning and there was a fresh pile of it, first time I've seen it...most times, they're eating the grass that grows outside of their enclosure. There doesn't seem to be a large container for water, but there has to be water somewhere, right? This horse and his partner, who looks similar, are in this enclosure day in and day out. I don't want to overreact, and since there was hay there this morning, my sense is that I'll just watch for now. I drive by each day. I feel like if I call authorities, these guys will just end up in a glue factory; I'm guessing the owners are having a hard time financially. they're definitely lonely and bored, but appear to be able to move around ok.
Really hard to tell from that far away. It does sort of appear like there is too much rib showing, but without a higher quality picture or a closer-up picture, I wouldn't feel comfortable judging. Our thoroughbred mix showed a fair amount of rib even when she was at her healthiest, whereas you couldn't find the ribs on our morgan. They're kind of like dogs - all shapes and sizes, and you can tell when they're unhealthy when their coat gets dull or ragged, and their eyes don't look right. The issue of winter still affects the growing season, even in the desert, but it looks like they aren't primarily eating grass. The grass on the edges of a small dirt enclosure isn't supporting two horses. We had two horses in a 2+ acre pasture that was all grass and they mowed that thing flat, plus they got hay each morning and grain twice a day. Horses eat a lot.