Good grief, what a diva. :roll: I've never heard of anybody so picky about the temperature of their eye drops. You're a special little snowflake, aren't you? Stay out of those smoky, dusty old salebarns and you wouldn't need drops in your eyes.redrobin said:Here's a pointer I've learned.
If you hate eye drops as bad as I do, drop the eye drop bottle in warm water and heat it to 98.6 and you'll never feel them hit your eyes.
You're welcome
Good idea. I've never told you this but in 1984 I was an eye model for one of those fancy New York magazines. I'm careful with these money makers. I might need to quit farming and cattle and go back to modeling.Texan said:for you to let that hillbilly woman hold the bottle under her armpit to get it just right before she puts them in for you and draws your bathwater. LOL
Better than puttin' it between her legs! :shock: :lol:Texan said:Good grief, what a diva. :roll: I've never heard of anybody so picky about the temperature of their eye drops. You're a special little snowflake, aren't you? Stay out of those smoky, dusty old salebarns and you wouldn't need drops in your eyes.redrobin said:Here's a pointer I've learned.
If you hate eye drops as bad as I do, drop the eye drop bottle in warm water and heat it to 98.6 and you'll never feel them hit your eyes.
You're welcome
What if you get it too hot and damage your eyes? Maybe it would be safer for you to let that hillbilly woman hold the bottle under her armpit to get it just right before she puts them in for you and draws your bathwater. LOL
I don't mind admitting that you're tougher than I am, lavacarancher. If I had to go back to baling without a cab, I'd probably either hire a custom baler or start buying my hay. Hope you get a chance to upgrade one of these days, assuming that's what you want to do. I know there are still some guys that enjoy open station tractors for everything, and you might be one of those. I'm sure not one of them.lavacarancher said:Better than puttin' it between her legs! :shock: :lol:
Thanks for the tip, RR. Just finished my hay baling and I can tell you that running a baler with an open station tractor in a 35 MPH north wind is gonna' put dirt and everything else in places you didn't even know you had places. Good grief my eyes took a beating.
Texan said:I don't mind admitting that you're tougher than I am, lavacarancher. If I had to go back to baling without a cab, I'd probably either hire a custom baler or start buying my hay. Hope you get a chance to upgrade one of these days, assuming that's what you want to do. I know there are still some guys that enjoy open station tractors for everything, and you might be one of those. I'm sure not one of them.lavacarancher said:Better than puttin' it between her legs! :shock: :lol:
Thanks for the tip, RR. Just finished my hay baling and I can tell you that running a baler with an open station tractor in a 35 MPH north wind is gonna' put dirt and everything else in places you didn't even know you had places. Good grief my eyes took a beating.