ok i'm really confuzzled on the whole getting a permit, then going to drivers ed, and when to do wut. so i'm 15 rite now, can ne1 explain to me the steps to getting a drivers lisence, and can i drive if i get a permit but am not 16 yet?btw, i live in america
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Drivers lisence
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Refer to this thread... Here
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I don't know about your state specifically, but in Nebraska, all you really needed to drive with the instructor was an ID card. He preferred, however, that you had a Learner's Permit.
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Yeah because in Nebraska, if you screw up, you just end up in a corn field.
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Hey, you might hit a 1200 pound cow. Speaking of cows, I stuck my hand in one's stomach the other day, while it was still alive. The stomach compartment my hand was in was HUGE. I got my whole arm in and I didn't touch the bottom! And no, I didn't stick my hand in through the butt, because EVERYONE (who doesn't know the anatomy of a cow) asks that. I stuck it in through a hole in the left side, since the stomach is right there. And I was wearing a sleeve. The stomach contents had an interesting smell.
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OK. I'll bite... WHY???
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thats, uh, interesting
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I've seen that but never stuck my hand in
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That deserves a WTF
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sometimes refered to as "window cows". They have a large grommet like sleve sugically installed which creates a window between the rumen and the outside world. Fairly common tool in vetrinary schools.
The students can observe the activity of the working stomach as well as retreive samples.
The cows seem rather unbothered by the whole experience but they are stoic creatures. -
Thank you for that... honestly. I like random information like that...Back to the thread subject at hand...
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In reply to:
honestly. I like random information like that.
no problemo! you know I'm the man for that! lol
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Why? Because it is, indeed, for the students at the university, and it's to study how cows digest their food, what effects certain foods have on the stomach, and just so that you can say you stuck your whole arm in a cow's stomach. No, it doesn't bother the cows, and the lucky ones that get a hole in the side are usually always indoors, and are not up for market... They die of natural causes, or because a vet had to put them down due to sickness or whatever. They have a pretty easy life compared to the normal beef cows.
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Are they licensed to drive cars?