Capt'n Midnight wrote: » :pac:
silverharp wrote: » millionaire shinners cutting off a clamp instead of paying the fine.
Thargor wrote: » Buying a small safe and leaving it in the communal fridge at work, stingy or genius?
Thargor wrote: Buying a small safe and leaving it in the communal fridge at work, stingy or genius?
pilly wrote: » It depends. Is it for money or food?
montyrebel wrote: » only 999 different combinations to open it, be cracked before the end of the month imo
everlast75 wrote: » It's used for cold, hard cash :pac:
DaeryssaOne wrote: » I'm guessing it's for assets that have been frozen
blue note wrote: » My hurling club ran a sports predictor and a lad in my office won it. It was probably about €10 entry and he got €350 back from it. Then we were running a Christmas Raffle at the same time as we were giving out the prizes. €2 a ticket - I assumed he'd buy a tenners worth since he'd just had the good fortune from the club. Na, he was alright. Not even a token €2 ticket. On the other side of it, the guy who came 2nd in the sports predictor won about €80 and with no affiliation to the club said put it back into the club and bought raffle tickets with it. He then won the raffle - I think it was €400 that year! He kept that. I thought putting the €80 back in was exceptionally generous, so was delighted to see him win the raffle.
BettePorter wrote: » Not sure if this counts as stingey or just plain loopy. I was walking down a quiet residential street in town ...up ahead of me there was a teenage girl about 17 maybe walking in same direction. The bins had just been collected and were scattered about outside the kerb. Without breaking stride as she passed one of the bins she lifted a lid and dropped something into the bin and walked on. It was literally a wrapper or a tissue from what could see and instabtly thought to myself ...well fair play ...A teenager with a bit of manners rather than dropping it at her foot. At this point she cut diagonally across the road and as she did im reaching the bin as the guy who lived in the house was just coming out to take bin in. He'd seen her doing it , glanced in bin and starts hollering after her. Excuse me excuse me ...ye can take your rubbish home with ya ...do ya think it's my job to provide you with blah blah blah. I looked back and she's looking at him like he's crazy and then turned and walked on. In hindsight I wish I'd gone back and told him to get himself some real ****ing problems. What a miserable twat like.
Mongfinder General wrote: » https://touch.boards.ie/thread/2057849801/1/#post106392379 This guy.
evolving_doors wrote: » That guy us broke though!!
Mongfinder General wrote: » And you know this how?
TheElusiveOwl wrote: » Anyone heading to Dublin city from Galway city tomorrow (between 6:30am- 8am) that I could get a lift with? I can't afford to fork out €25 for a bus ticket.
TheElusiveOwl wrote: » A return ticket costs €25 with GoBus (I need to be back in Galway City tomorrow night), so if I can get a lift I will save money. I've bought a return ticket before, it's just too costly. Thank you anyway.
facehugger99 wrote: » It’s part of my job to visit some out of the way places. I’m talking down country lanes, up bog roads and across some fields. It never ceases to amaze me where people will fly tip their rubbish. These are lovely unspoiled areas and someone’s dragged a fridge or some old furniture and fcuked them into a ditch. It struck me even more this morning when I went out with a car full of old stuff to our local recycling center and was charged the princely sum of €7. Not only are people who fly tip their rubbish, absolute scum IMO, they’re also scabby bastards.
evolving_doors wrote: » Cos he said so!