I have a question.

[UP!] Shouted
Joined 08/12/2018
Posts 700
03:18 AM 16/01/2019
How much wood could a Woodchuck chuck if a Woodchuck could chuck wood.


[doge] Square
Joined 17/08/2017
Posts 52,408
03:35 AM 16/01/2019
"Unanswered questions don't always sit right with people. In 1988, state wildlife conservation officer Richard Thomas of New York attempted to figure out just how much a wood a woodchuck could chuck, had one had the opportunity to do so. Woodchucks don't actually chuck (throw) wood, of course, but, being a burrowing rodent, they do know well how to toss around some dirt. So Thomas took to calculating a typical size of a woodchuck burrow, which consists of three rooms and a tunnel leading to it that is 6 inches wide and extends 25 to 30 feet. He determined that 35 square feet of soil needed to be excavated to create such a burrow. Knowing that a cubic foot of soil weighs 20 pounds, that would come out to be 700 pounds of dirt that a woodchuck can chuck, and leading, by extension, to an answer to what was then an 85-year-old question, that should a woodchuck be so inclined, he could chuck about that many pounds of wood as well."


[BH] Test6086
Joined 08/01/2018
Posts 7,457
04:55 AM 16/01/2019
Well never learn this wellll time to learn new thing to be smart


slime
Joined 23/11/2018
Posts 6,672
10:57 AM 16/01/2019
i have no clue


Kaiokeno
Joined 02/11/2017
Posts 5,819
11:45 AM 16/01/2019
Quote from Square , 03:35 AM 16/01/2019
"Unanswered questions don't always sit right with people. In 1988, state wildlife conservation officer Richard Thomas of New York attempted to figure out just how much a wood a woodchuck could chuck, had one had the opportunity to do so. Woodchucks don't actually chuck (throw) wood, of course, but, being a burrowing rodent, they do know well how to toss around some dirt. So Thomas took to calculating a typical size of a woodchuck burrow, which consists of three rooms and a tunnel leading to it that is 6 inches wide and extends 25 to 30 feet. He determined that 35 square feet of soil needed to be excavated to create such a burrow. Knowing that a cubic foot of soil weighs 20 pounds, that would come out to be 700 pounds of dirt that a woodchuck can chuck, and leading, by extension, to an answer to what was then an 85-year-old question, that should a woodchuck be so inclined, he could chuck about that many pounds of wood as well."
"Unanswered questions don't always sit right with people. In 1988, state wildlife conservation officer Richard Thomas of New York attempted to figure out just how much a wood a woodchuck could chuck, had one had the opportunity to do so. Woodchucks don't actually chuck (throw) wood, of course, but, being a burrowing rodent, they do know well how to toss around some dirt. So Thomas took to calculating a typical size of a woodchuck burrow, which consists of three rooms and a tunnel leading to it that is 6 inches wide and extends 25 to 30 feet. He determined that 35 square feet of soil needed to be excavated to create such a burrow. Knowing that a cubic foot of soil weighs 20 pounds, that would come out to be 700 pounds of dirt that a woodchuck can chuck, and leading, by extension, to an answer to what was then an 85-year-old question, that should a woodchuck be so inclined, he could chuck about that many pounds of wood as well."


[doge] Square
Joined 17/08/2017
Posts 52,408
12:17 PM 16/01/2019
Quote from Kaiokeno , 11:45 AM 16/01/2019
Quote from Square , 03:35 AM 16/01/2019
"Unanswered questions don't always sit right with people. In 1988, state wildlife conservation officer Richard Thomas of New York attempted to figure out just how much a wood a woodchuck could chuck, had one had the opportunity to do so. Woodchucks don't actually chuck (throw) wood, of course, but, being a burrowing rodent, they do know well how to toss around some dirt. So Thomas took to calculating a typical size of a woodchuck burrow, which consists of three rooms and a tunnel leading to it that is 6 inches wide and extends 25 to 30 feet. He determined that 35 square feet of soil needed to be excavated to create such a burrow. Knowing that a cubic foot of soil weighs 20 pounds, that would come out to be 700 pounds of dirt that a woodchuck can chuck, and leading, by extension, to an answer to what was then an 85-year-old question, that should a woodchuck be so inclined, he could chuck about that many pounds of wood as well."

"Unanswered questions don't always sit right with people. In 1988, state wildlife conservation officer Richard Thomas of New York attempted to figure out just how much a wood a woodchuck could chuck, had one had the opportunity to do so. Woodchucks don't actually chuck (throw) wood, of course, but, being a burrowing rodent, they do know well how to toss around some dirt. So Thomas took to calculating a typical size of a woodchuck burrow, which consists of three rooms and a tunnel leading to it that is 6 inches wide and extends 25 to 30 feet. He determined that 35 square feet of soil needed to be excavated to create such a burrow. Knowing that a cubic foot of soil weighs 20 pounds, that would come out to be 700 pounds of dirt that a woodchuck can chuck, and leading, by extension, to an answer to what was then an 85-year-old question, that should a woodchuck be so inclined, he could chuck about that many pounds of wood as well."
"Unanswered questions don't always sit right with people. In 1988, state wildlife conservation officer Richard Thomas of New York attempted to figure out just how much a wood a woodchuck could chuck, had one had the opportunity to do so. Woodchucks don't actually chuck (throw) wood, of course, but, being a burrowing rodent, they do know well how to toss around some dirt. So Thomas took to calculating a typical size of a woodchuck burrow, which consists of three rooms and a tunnel leading to it that is 6 inches wide and extends 25 to 30 feet. He determined that 35 square feet of soil needed to be excavated to create such a burrow. Knowing that a cubic foot of soil weighs 20 pounds, that would come out to be 700 pounds of dirt that a woodchuck can chuck, and leading, by extension, to an answer to what was then an 85-year-old question, that should a woodchuck be so inclined, he could chuck about that many pounds of wood as well."


[im] zss
Joined 30/09/2018
Posts 17,201
12:42 PM 16/01/2019
Idk


Porfus
Joined 03/12/2018
Posts 3,041
01:52 PM 16/01/2019
Quote from Square , 12:17 PM 16/01/2019
Quote from Kaiokeno , 11:45 AM 16/01/2019
Quote from Square , 03:35 AM 16/01/2019
"Unanswered questions don't always sit right with people. In 1988, state wildlife conservation officer Richard Thomas of New York attempted to figure out just how much a wood a woodchuck could chuck, had one had the opportunity to do so. Woodchucks don't actually chuck (throw) wood, of course, but, being a burrowing rodent, they do know well how to toss around some dirt. So Thomas took to calculating a typical size of a woodchuck burrow, which consists of three rooms and a tunnel leading to it that is 6 inches wide and extends 25 to 30 feet. He determined that 35 square feet of soil needed to be excavated to create such a burrow. Knowing that a cubic foot of soil weighs 20 pounds, that would come out to be 700 pounds of dirt that a woodchuck can chuck, and leading, by extension, to an answer to what was then an 85-year-old question, that should a woodchuck be so inclined, he could chuck about that many pounds of wood as well."

"Unanswered questions don't always sit right with people. In 1988, state wildlife conservation officer Richard Thomas of New York attempted to figure out just how much a wood a woodchuck could chuck, had one had the opportunity to do so. Woodchucks don't actually chuck (throw) wood, of course, but, being a burrowing rodent, they do know well how to toss around some dirt. So Thomas took to calculating a typical size of a woodchuck burrow, which consists of three rooms and a tunnel leading to it that is 6 inches wide and extends 25 to 30 feet. He determined that 35 square feet of soil needed to be excavated to create such a burrow. Knowing that a cubic foot of soil weighs 20 pounds, that would come out to be 700 pounds of dirt that a woodchuck can chuck, and leading, by extension, to an answer to what was then an 85-year-old question, that should a woodchuck be so inclined, he could chuck about that many pounds of wood as well."

"Unanswered questions don't always sit right with people. In 1988, state wildlife conservation officer Richard Thomas of New York attempted to figure out just how much a wood a woodchuck could chuck, had one had the opportunity to do so. Woodchucks don't actually chuck (throw) wood, of course, but, being a burrowing rodent, they do know well how to toss around some dirt. So Thomas took to calculating a typical size of a woodchuck burrow, which consists of three rooms and a tunnel leading to it that is 6 inches wide and extends 25 to 30 feet. He determined that 35 square feet of soil needed to be excavated to create such a burrow. Knowing that a cubic foot of soil weighs 20 pounds, that would come out to be 700 pounds of dirt that a woodchuck can chuck, and leading, by extension, to an answer to what was then an 85-year-old question, that should a woodchuck be so inclined, he could chuck about that many pounds of wood as well."
Quote from Googie, 11:45 AM 16/01/2019
"Unanswered questions don't always sit right with people. In 1988, state wildlife conservation officer Richard Thomas of New York attempted to figure out just how much a wood a woodchuck could chuck, had one had the opportunity to do so. Woodchucks don't actually chuck (throw) wood, of course, but, being a burrowing rodent, they do know well how to toss around some dirt. So Thomas took to calculating a typical size of a woodchuck burrow, which consists of three rooms and a tunnel leading to it that is 6 inches wide and extends 25 to 30 feet. He determined that 35 square feet of soil needed to be excavated to create such a burrow. Knowing that a cubic foot of soil weighs 20 pounds, that would come out to be 700 pounds of dirt that a woodchuck can chuck, and leading, by extension, to an answer to what was then an 85-year-old question, that should a woodchuck be so inclined, he could chuck about that many pounds of wood as well


Porfus
Joined 03/12/2018
Posts 3,041
01:53 PM 16/01/2019
Quote from Porfus , 01:52 PM 16/01/2019
Quote from Square , 12:17 PM 16/01/2019
Quote from Kaiokeno , 11:45 AM 16/01/2019
Quote from Square , 03:35 AM 16/01/2019
"Unanswered questions don't always sit right with people. In 1988, state wildlife conservation officer Richard Thomas of New York attempted to figure out just how much a wood a woodchuck could chuck, had one had the opportunity to do so. Woodchucks don't actually chuck (throw) wood, of course, but, being a burrowing rodent, they do know well how to toss around some dirt. So Thomas took to calculating a typical size of a woodchuck burrow, which consists of three rooms and a tunnel leading to it that is 6 inches wide and extends 25 to 30 feet. He determined that 35 square feet of soil needed to be excavated to create such a burrow. Knowing that a cubic foot of soil weighs 20 pounds, that would come out to be 700 pounds of dirt that a woodchuck can chuck, and leading, by extension, to an answer to what was then an 85-year-old question, that should a woodchuck be so inclined, he could chuck about that many pounds of wood as well."

"Unanswered questions don't always sit right with people. In 1988, state wildlife conservation officer Richard Thomas of New York attempted to figure out just how much a wood a woodchuck could chuck, had one had the opportunity to do so. Woodchucks don't actually chuck (throw) wood, of course, but, being a burrowing rodent, they do know well how to toss around some dirt. So Thomas took to calculating a typical size of a woodchuck burrow, which consists of three rooms and a tunnel leading to it that is 6 inches wide and extends 25 to 30 feet. He determined that 35 square feet of soil needed to be excavated to create such a burrow. Knowing that a cubic foot of soil weighs 20 pounds, that would come out to be 700 pounds of dirt that a woodchuck can chuck, and leading, by extension, to an answer to what was then an 85-year-old question, that should a woodchuck be so inclined, he could chuck about that many pounds of wood as well."

"Unanswered questions don't always sit right with people. In 1988, state wildlife conservation officer Richard Thomas of New York attempted to figure out just how much a wood a woodchuck could chuck, had one had the opportunity to do so. Woodchucks don't actually chuck (throw) wood, of course, but, being a burrowing rodent, they do know well how to toss around some dirt. So Thomas took to calculating a typical size of a woodchuck burrow, which consists of three rooms and a tunnel leading to it that is 6 inches wide and extends 25 to 30 feet. He determined that 35 square feet of soil needed to be excavated to create such a burrow. Knowing that a cubic foot of soil weighs 20 pounds, that would come out to be 700 pounds of dirt that a woodchuck can chuck, and leading, by extension, to an answer to what was then an 85-year-old question, that should a woodchuck be so inclined, he could chuck about that many pounds of wood as well."

Quote from Googie, 11:45 AM 16/01/2019
"Unanswered questions don't always sit right with people. In 1988, state wildlife conservation officer Richard Thomas of New York attempted to figure out just how much a wood a woodchuck could chuck, had one had the opportunity to do so. Woodchucks don't actually chuck (throw) wood, of course, but, being a burrowing rodent, they do know well how to toss around some dirt. So Thomas took to calculating a typical size of a woodchuck burrow, which consists of three rooms and a tunnel leading to it that is 6 inches wide and extends 25 to 30 feet. He determined that 35 square feet of soil needed to be excavated to create such a burrow. Knowing that a cubic foot of soil weighs 20 pounds, that would come out to be 700 pounds of dirt that a woodchuck can chuck, and leading, by extension, to an answer to what was then an 85-year-old question, that should a woodchuck be so inclined, he could chuck about that many pounds of wood as well
Unanswered questions don't always sit right with people. In 1988, state wildlife conservation officer Richard Thomas of New York attempted to figure out just how much a wood a woodchuck could chuck, had one had the opportunity to do so. Woodchucks don't actually chuck (throw) wood, of course, but, being a burrowing rodent, they do know well how to toss around some dirt. So Thomas took to calculating a typical size of a woodchuck burrow, which consists of three rooms and a tunnel leading to it that is 6 inches wide and extends 25 to 30 feet. He determined that 35 square feet of soil needed to be excavated to create such a burrow. Knowing that a cubic foot of soil weighs 20 pounds, that would come out to be 700 pounds of dirt that a woodchuck can chuck, and leading, by extension, to an answer to what was then an 85-year-old question, that should a woodchuck be so inclined, he could chuck about that many pounds of wood as well.

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