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What Wood You Do

What Wood You Do

by Adam Huber on July 8, 2019 at 6:22 pm
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Discussion (15) ¬

  1. Rhea
    Rhea
    July 8, 2019, 6:30 pm | # | Reply

    Can’t recall if we’ve seen him before, but that is one great Stephen King Bug.

    • BugFanNo1Million
      BugFanNo1Million
      July 8, 2019, 9:07 pm | # | Reply

      Completely agree!

    • mrgawe
      mrgawe
      July 8, 2019, 9:07 pm | # | Reply

      +1

    • Vampire
      Vampire
      August 5, 2019, 10:28 pm | # | Reply

      I still cannot find the like button.

  2. Rat
    Rat
    July 8, 2019, 10:18 pm | # | Reply

    You’re just like the birdies
    They’re as hungry as you
    When they get the munchies
    They sure like you too!

  3. Marquar
    Marquar
    July 9, 2019, 10:08 am | # | Reply

    Is putting bits of dead tree around a living tree really any creepier than what many humans do? We (most of us) use hunks of dead animal flesh on a daily basis. It isn’t the same species of flesh, but I doubt you custom match your mulch to the tree being mulched.

    • Carl
      Carl
      July 9, 2019, 10:29 am | # | Reply

      What do use dead animal flesh for? Even assuming you meant animal meat, what do we use that for besides food? And on a daily basis?

      • Rat
        Rat
        July 10, 2019, 5:17 am | # | Reply

        Basically all parts of animals can and will be used. From rare or semi-rare products like ambergris (in perfume), silk and pearls, to things as ubiquitous as tallow or leather (check your shoes): the list of applications for parts of dead animals is long. And that’s indeed aside of the fact that many humans consume meat, bones, offal, lard, eggs and more on a daily basis. Many, many, many humans.

        Check out https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_product to get some idea.

      • Rat
        Rat
        July 10, 2019, 1:25 pm | # | Reply

        Basically, all parts of animals can and will be used. From rare or semi-rare products like ambergris (in perfume), silk and pearls, to things as ubiquitous as tallow or leather (check your shoes): the list of applications for parts of dead animals is long. And that’s indeed aside of the fact that many humans consume meat, bones, offal, lard, eggs and more on a daily basis. Many, many, many humans.

        Check out https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Animal_product to get some idea.

      • Dinwar
        Dinwar
        July 11, 2019, 5:02 pm | # | Reply

        Well, some makeups contain fish scales. Mostly shiny lipsticks.

        So not only do some people use animal parts, but they use them in mating displays.

  4. Longherin
    Longherin
    July 9, 2019, 1:51 pm | # | Reply

    On one hand, yes, on the other…

    I don’t think that I, a Chinese, would be any less ok with handling big, meaty blocks of Frenchmen mixed with slices of Londoner.

  5. Mange Kitty
    Mange Kitty
    July 9, 2019, 9:43 pm | # | Reply

    I just realized that Bug’s antennae have gotten so skinny they barely look like bugs. This makes me sad. 🙁

    • DTIBA
      DTIBA
      July 9, 2019, 11:42 pm | # | Reply

      Fricker, if you are getting upset over antenna breadth, your priorities are severely warped. Adam is free to draw his bugs however the frick he wants, and change over the years is to be expected. The thinness of Bug’s antennae is no more upsetting a change than the thinness of Garfield’s face, or the paddedness of Hobbes’ forepaws. If you will not raise potests against Watterson for changing Hobbes’ design, then you have no business raising protests against Huber for changing Bug’s design.

      • Potests
        Potests
        July 16, 2019, 2:00 pm | # | Reply

        Sheesh.

    • Alpha-Sigma
      Alpha-Sigma
      July 9, 2019, 11:44 pm | # | Reply

      You’ve gotta be kidding. The absence of antennae has been established as equating to human baldness; antennae becoming skinny must be reflective of hair thinning.

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