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Phanatic posted:Sure it is. Just not in bottles. We get Elder on draft in Philly not constantly, but with some regularity, and we get Younger on rare occasions. OK, change my post to "Except for some cities getting kegs here and there, it isn't sold outside of pours at bars on the east coast". Also, as a former Philly resident of many years, boy am I jealous of how much of a good beer town (minus the generally crummy liquor laws..) it has become in the last few years, ugh. I Dont Like You fucked around with this message at 22:03 on Apr 5, 2012 |
# ? Apr 5, 2012 21:58 |
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# ? May 13, 2024 06:30 |
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Phanatic posted:Sure it is. Just not in bottles. We get Elder on draft in Philly not constantly, but with some regularity, and we get Younger on rare occasions. I've had it once. I found a slightly out of season bottle once while I was in Aspen. Very good, but certainly not the white unicorn it is perceived to be. Having said that, I would have a perma-erection if I had it on tap here in Chas. Am I going to be slapped if I think Golden Monkey is better than Allagash's Tripel? I know the Allagash is much revered, but that's two domestic tripel's I like better (New Belgium and Victory).
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# ? Apr 5, 2012 23:49 |
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Phanatic posted:Sure it is. Just not in bottles. We get Elder on draft in Philly not constantly, but with some regularity, and we get Younger on rare occasions. I'm pretty sure I bought a bottle of Pliny when I was in Pittsburgh last year? I guess I could be misremembering... Speaking of Pliny I'm gonna cross post from the beer trading thread since this is a bit time sensitive and I got no replies there: Is fresh Pliny easy to find right about now? I've got a coworker/beer buddy whose wife had their first kid last night, and he mentioned to me a day or two ago how he's never had any Pliny and would love to get his hands on a bottle. He's coming back to work early next week and I'd love to surprise him with a bottle or two of it, if possible. Any goons able to hook me up quick?
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 00:04 |
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Hopefully someone in Ca'll respond, but in CO, it's pretty much a "I'll give you a couple if I have any and you've been a fine customer to me" thing. Chiefly this is because if they do it any other way, up on eBay it all goes. It is an all-year beer, however, so while scarce, it's always there.
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 00:21 |
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SUPER HASSLER posted:Hopefully someone in Ca'll respond, but in CO, it's pretty much a "I'll give you a couple if I have any and you've been a fine customer to me" thing. Chiefly this is because if they do it any other way, up on eBay it all goes. Yeah I didn't expect to have any difficulty getting any, I was just hoping to get some ASAP and I know sometimes there seem to be lulls in shipments of it. I actually posted a thread on BA and someone told me of a beer store in CA that had it and may ship it to Michigan. Turns out they did, bottled two days ago, and now I've got 4 of them on my way to me. If anyone's interested, here's their site: http://blackwellswines.com/
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 01:18 |
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Sirotan posted:Yeah I didn't expect to have any difficulty getting any, I was just hoping to get some ASAP and I know sometimes there seem to be lulls in shipments of it. I actually posted a thread on BA and someone told me of a beer store in CA that had it and may ship it to Michigan. Turns out they did, bottled two days ago, and now I've got 4 of them on my way to me. How much was shipping, if you don't mind me asking? They have pretty reasonable prices on the RR sours, I kinda want to get some!
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 01:21 |
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Kudosx posted:How much was shipping, if you don't mind me asking? They have pretty reasonable prices on the RR sours, I kinda want to get some! I paid for 3rd day air which was $33, but ground would have been $20 for the four bottles.
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 01:23 |
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Sirotan posted:I paid for 3rd day air which was $33, but ground would have been $20 for the four bottles. Ah, that's not too bad actually. I might have to order a bunch of sours for my birthday in a month!
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 01:26 |
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Kudosx posted:How much was shipping, if you don't mind me asking? They have pretty reasonable prices on the RR sours, I kinda want to get some! Those sours seem expensive to me for 375s.
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 01:59 |
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Cointelprofessional posted:Those sours seem expensive to me for 375s. I thought that was standard pricing for those sours, but I'm not from CA so I guess I can't speak too much. I know Jolly Pumpkin sours can get pretty expensive, I've paid $10/375 for some JP.
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 02:19 |
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Unless someone invents a way to make good sour beer besides "let it sit in a barrel for like 3 years" they are going to stay pricey. Unless you go totally hog wild like New Belgium--who just increased their already considerable barrel capacity by like 4x--it's just a low volume, high price business.
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 03:00 |
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Kudosx posted:I thought that was standard pricing for those sours, but I'm not from CA so I guess I can't speak too much. I know Jolly Pumpkin sours can get pretty expensive, I've paid $10/375 for some JP. Really? I guess I have it pretty good then. My JPs are 750's that range from $10-15, from Bam Biere to Madrugada Obscura. I've been getting into sours over the past few months and I feel like I've reached a threshold. I'm reluctant to buy anything that's over $15 dollars a bottle, even though I've tried most of the offerings below that for my area. I would be disappointed if that's what those RR sours cost because even a 750 of La Folie is only $14 or Rodenbach's are $9. Docjowles posted:Unless someone invents a way to make good sour beer besides "let it sit in a barrel for like 3 years" they are going to stay pricey. Unless you go totally hog wild like New Belgium--who just increased their already considerable barrel capacity by like 4x--it's just a low volume, high price business. I'm so looking forward to that, but they won't be around for another couple of years. That's why I've started to make my own sours. That way, after upfront carboy costs, I'll be able to make 22 750s for $30 which will save me a ton of money. I already spend too much on those lip puckering libations. Cointelprofessional fucked around with this message at 03:27 on Apr 6, 2012 |
# ? Apr 6, 2012 03:25 |
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Kudosx posted:I thought that was standard pricing for those sours, but I'm not from CA so I guess I can't speak too much. I know Jolly Pumpkin sours can get pretty expensive, I've paid $10/375 for some JP. They look about correct for what I paid on my trip to San Francisco.
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 03:29 |
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Cointelprofessional posted:Really? I guess I have it pretty good then. My JPs are 750's that range from $10-15, from Bam Biere to Madrugada Obscura. I've been getting into sours over the past few months and I feel like I've reached a threshold. I'm reluctant to buy anything that's over $15 dollars a bottle, even though I've tried most of the offerings below that for my area. I can get Bam Biere and a bunch of other standard JP's for $10-$15 a 750, but I've paid $10/375 for Bambic #1/#2, and I believe other rare JPs go for the same.
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 03:29 |
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Kudosx posted:I can get Bam Biere and a bunch of other standard JP's for $10-$15 a 750, but I've paid $10/375 for Bambic #1/#2, and I believe other rare JPs go for the same. Anything from JP in a 330 (they are actually 330ml, not 375), with the exception of the new Oro de Calabazas in 330s, is a limited brewery-only release and $10 is about the price I pay and I'm local to their brewery and cafe. You're getting them at a good price.
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 03:45 |
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LeeMajors posted:Am I going to be slapped if I think Golden Monkey is better than Allagash's Tripel? I know the Allagash is much revered, but that's two domestic tripel's I like better (New Belgium and Victory). Not by me at least. I think Victory may have the best American made tripel in all honesty. I've drank it near 100 times but never properly out of a proper glass while evaluating it. I've drank it hundreds of times to get drunk, or out of dirty bar lines in shaker glasses, but the first time I drank it out of a tulip I realized how great of a beer it was, not just a cheap drunk night. Flying Fish's Exit 4 comes close, but it's a different presentation and flavor profile to really compare in my opinion. It did with a GABF Gold though in 2009 if that means anything. I just cracked open an Oak Aged Unearthly by Southern Tier, whoever said it was a sweeter Unearthly was right. Where the gently caress is the hops in this? If I drank it blind I would think it was an oak aged barleywine, and no not the west coast styles. I am not drain pouring it, but gently caress is it a horrible sweet mess.
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 04:26 |
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Midorka posted:Not by me at least. I think Victory may have the best American made tripel in all honesty. I've drank it near 100 times but never properly out of a proper glass while evaluating it. I've drank it hundreds of times to get drunk, or out of dirty bar lines in shaker glasses, but the first time I drank it out of a tulip I realized how great of a beer it was, not just a cheap drunk night. well it is oak aged and hops fade over time... That's why I'm not the biggest fan of wood aged Ipa, kinda defeats the point of an IPA in my opinion
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 04:35 |
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Sirotan posted:I'm at Jolly Pumpkin right now and I just have to tell someone that I'm drinking Biere de Mars on tap and it's probably the most prefect beer I've ever had. Holy poo poo. I wish I could sit here and drink this all night. Drink this beer now if you can. We're going up on Saturday. I hope they still have some!
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 04:35 |
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lazerwolf posted:well it is oak aged and hops fade over time... Speaking of wood aged IPAs, what is everyone's opinion on CCB's wood aged IPAs? I've heard they're much, much better than your typical wood aged IPAs, but I don't have access to CCB so I have no experience with them.
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 04:39 |
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lazerwolf posted:well it is oak aged and hops fade over time... It's not even a matter of the hops fading, I made a mistake buying this to begin with as the original version had almost no hops over the caramel taste as it was.
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 04:46 |
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Kudosx posted:Speaking of wood aged IPAs, what is everyone's opinion on CCB's wood aged IPAs? I've heard they're much, much better than your typical wood aged IPAs, but I don't have access to CCB so I have no experience with them. I've only had humidor ipa and it tastes like its name suggests. Lots of cedar flavor, it was definitely different than anything I've ever had. Not sure if I liked it or not
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 04:46 |
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Humidor IPA is awesome. I struggled to get down Oak Aged Unearthly, yet I can down growlers of Humidor IPA like it ain't no thing. White Oak Jai Alai isn't quite as good as the Humidor in my opinion, but it's still a good beer.
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 05:00 |
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That's good to hear about the Red Poppy. Much like last year, it's popping up in L.A. all over the place. At around $16 a bottle, I'm probably only going to end up with 2 or so bottles. I still have one from last year sitting around getting some age on it. Thinking of doing a birthday trip down to S.D. this weekend and hitting up Stone, Lost Abbey, Ballast Point and Pizza Port. So I guess I can try it on tap to also compare it.
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 05:04 |
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Aopeth posted:I live out in the desert, so if I want to get good beer on tap I have to drive at least two hours. I am (choose a color) with envy, though, because that sounds amazing! I have not yet had their Madrugada Obscura, but I loved Clutch from New Belgium, so I will be certain to seek this out. Madrugada Obscura is much better than Clutch, IMO. Definitely try some if you can you can get your hands on it.
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 05:24 |
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Haha, don't get too excited about New Belgium heading east. The new brewery won't be online until 2015!
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 05:35 |
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Had Sculpin on tap tonight, and while it's a decent beer, I'm a bit confused why everyone's freaking out over it. Seems like another case of Oberon to me. Also, I'll hop on the Golden Monkey train too. I'd had it quite a few times as just a plain budget beer during my early craft beer days, but a month ago I randomly bought a six at a grocery store and tried it again. Either my palate developed substantially or they changed their formula over the past year or two. I honestly didn't remember it tasting like it does. Not one bit.
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 05:59 |
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Docjowles posted:Haha, don't get too excited about New Belgium heading east. The new brewery won't be online until 2015! Maybe it's just me, but I don't think very many people get at all excited about anything to do with new belgium beyond a "eh, well at least it's not bud" at a mediocre restraunt/bar/sports game.
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 06:11 |
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Does anyone else think Colette by Great Divide is just too mild? I love pretty much any saison you put in front of me but I just kept wishing it had something aggressive about it. I feel bad for anyone in this world who does not have ready access to Tank 7.
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 06:43 |
Why are people here against drainpouring beer. Is it some pride thing. If it sucks, it sucks. You've already wasted the money on a bad beer whether you dump it or not. Why submit yourself to something that sucks. There's a lot of good beer out there, don't drink the ones you dislike, else you become some loathesome jaded RB/BA ticker
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 11:39 |
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I completely missed out on KBS this year but I'm still curious about the style. What are some good bourbon barrel aged imperial stouts I can find in southeastern North Carolina? I've had Dragon's Milk and it was way too sweet for me, tasted more like Bailey's than beer.
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 13:28 |
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internet celebrity posted:I completely missed out on KBS this year but I'm still curious about the style. What are some good bourbon barrel aged imperial stouts I can find in southeastern North Carolina? I've had Dragon's Milk and it was way too sweet for me, tasted more like Bailey's than beer. by you, definitely hit foothills' cafe royale if you can find it. i thought it was about as good as KBS and it's a coffee stout, so it's less sweet. if you get firestone walker by you, look for parabola when it comes out (probably get out around june). but parabola is going to be on the bigger/sweeter side.
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 13:33 |
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internet celebrity posted:I completely missed out on KBS this year but I'm still curious about the style. What are some good bourbon barrel aged imperial stouts I can find in southeastern North Carolina? I've had Dragon's Milk and it was way too sweet for me, tasted more like Bailey's than beer. i'm wondering if danbanana means Williamsburg Alewerks' Cafe Royale, which is indeed very good and not too heavy on the barrel/booze side of the equation. unfortunately, you're going to be incredibly lucky to find any at this point, as it came out months ago and is their most popular and highly-rated beer.
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 14:18 |
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funkybottoms posted:i'm wondering if danbanana means Williamsburg Alewerks' Cafe Royale, which is indeed very good and not too heavy on the barrel/booze side of the equation. unfortunately, you're going to be incredibly lucky to find any at this point, as it came out months ago and is their most popular and highly-rated beer. crap. sorry, funky's right: that's williamsburg. BUT that means i can point out foothills' barrel aged people's porter (which is good). and sexual chocolate, which i've never had but have been told is very good.
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 14:25 |
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You might find Sexual Chocolate on tap somewhere, maybe. Greensboro had a keg of it on tap last weekend. No bottles left.
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 14:41 |
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My local beer bar had a release party for sexual chocolate. It was good but it wasn't the mind-blowing life changing elixer of a beer they made it out to be. If it was aged on bourbon barrel oak chips I couldn't taste it at all.
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 14:50 |
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internet celebrity posted:I completely missed out on KBS this year but I'm still curious about the style. What are some good bourbon barrel aged imperial stouts I can find in southeastern North Carolina? I've had Dragon's Milk and it was way too sweet for me, tasted more like Bailey's than beer. It's not bourbon barrel aged but have you has any of the oaked yeti varieties? I'm not too sure if there is a year round available bourbon aged stout or at least one that doesn't cost you an arm and a leg or doesn't fly off the shelves the day after its stocked
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 14:54 |
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lazerwolf posted:It's not bourbon barrel aged but have you has any of the oaked yeti varieties? I'm not too sure if there is a year round available bourbon aged stout or at least one that doesn't cost you an arm and a leg or doesn't fly off the shelves the day after its stocked Weyerbacher Heresy is inexpensive and readily available around release. Hoppin' Frog Barrel Aged B.O.R.I.S. is on the pricier side, but seems to be fairly available as well.
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 15:19 |
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Julio Cesar Fatass posted:Does anyone else think Colette by Great Divide is just too mild? I love pretty much any saison you put in front of me but I just kept wishing it had something aggressive about it. Saison is a pretty broad style. Colette is a really yeasty example, Tank 7 is really sweet, others can be spicy or dry. Colette is also not a "big beer". It's definitely a warm afternoon beer.
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 15:26 |
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internet celebrity posted:My local beer bar had a release party for sexual chocolate. It was good but it wasn't the mind-blowing life changing elixer of a beer they made it out to be. If it was aged on bourbon barrel oak chips I couldn't taste it at all. I was not quite as impressed by this year's batch. Managed to find some at Woody's in Raleigh back in February after every other bar around had killed theirs. It just wasn't as smooth or chocolatey to me as last year's was. Last year I was able to do a vertical of '10 and '11 Sexual Chocolate and '11 was by far the best. Also lazerwolf is spot on with his recommendation of the various Yetis, they're all tasty. The Espresso variety is particularly great if you can find it. I haven't had Chocolate Yeti yet but I hope to one of these days. The Saucer did a bunch of BBA stuff for their anniversary party last month, highlights being Big Boss Big Operator and Duck-Rabbit Milk Stout. Neither imperials, true, but holy god the BBA Duck-Rabbit was heavenly. They did a BBA Sweet Josie Brown too which was interesting. sourchat: Had a Rodenbach Grand Cru last night, greatly enjoyed that. I likened it to drinking Sour Straws and someone else said it was like drinking Warheads (in a good way). Definitely a good sipping beer, which was good because I got there late and only had time for one so I made it count.
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 15:47 |
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# ? May 13, 2024 06:30 |
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Looks like a new distributor is in Maine. We now get Green Flash, Goose Island, and Six Point. I hear tell Founders and Lagunitas are on the way. I also picked up a single Hoptimum today. Will enjoy tonight.
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# ? Apr 6, 2012 17:04 |