OT bacteria in snow | Arthritis Information

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Check this out:

 
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20080228/ap_on_sc/snow_bugs
 
Just so you know, after we win the Nobel for fizzing, I'm going to recommend we apply for a grant to test everybody for snow bacteria.....
Wow -
 
Loved the idea of planting in drought areas...the possibilities.
 
I'm for the Snow bacteria study after the Fizziology is much more accepted as a mainstream treatment! 
 
And this does explain the MI AI Vortex!  They get a LOT of snow!
 
LOL
 
Pip
[QUOTE=Pip!]Wow -
 
 
And this does explain the MI AI Vortex!  They get a LOT of snow!
 
LOL
 
Pip
[/QUOTE]
 
That was the FIRST thing I thought of LOL.  Maybe we should start our study there.  The AIMS Study - Autoimmune from Michigan Snow.
Mmmmmmmmm

and think of all the snow you ate as a kid...........I know we did!!!!! >.<
We need to get an application for Nobel Prize in medicine and find out when it is announced, hopefully a snow month for Oslo.  We could win the prize and do a snow test while visiting :)  We could have fizzle parties.  My fizzle has fizzled out. My last fizzle bath produced very mediocre results. We need new case subjects. Damn - need to get that tub cleaned!
 
Pip - who admits to eating snow as a kid!
LMAO At least you didn't eat yellow snow..................right?!??!?!?! Eeeewuuuuuuw!  Definitely not!We've had one really good snow in my daughter's lifetime (pre JRA, too).  She loved sledding, and after the snow melted she couldn't understand why we couldn't still sled.  Every time we went in the garage, she would point to the sled and cry when I didn't get it down.
 
One day we weren't going anywhere when she did it, so I got it down.  She was so happy!  She sat on it in the garage, smiling so big, but then got disappointed because it didn't move.  I guess she figured out I hadn't been lying about the need for snow, because she never cried for it again.     
Oh, that's soooo sweet!I will admit to eating alot of snow, plus enjoying fantastic ice sticks a yard long and maybe an inch across.  However, it was Alaska and probably -30.  I had explained away all my finger, toes, and nose problems to frostbite, it was RA.  Geez.  Gimpy-you are hilarious.  And that is a wonderful story about sledding.  Take care ~~ Cathy
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