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Potato Head threatening Woody. One evening, after Woody accidentally knocks Buzz out the window, Mr. Potato Head is quick to accuse Woody of being a jealous 'toy killer', and interrogates him if he will do the same to Mr. Potato Head if Andy started playing with him more, and leads a mutiny with the other toys to attack Woody by stringing him by his pull-string.
Age Of War 2 Gaming Potatoes Youtube
Стабильность России/СССР
Potato posted a topic in Help
во всех сценариях стабильность 0%, что можно с этим сделать?- PANTIC reacted to a post in a topic: Belarusian Language
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моды Моды на русском
Potato replied to Noron's topic in Русский
моды Моды на русском
Potato replied to Noron's topic in Русский
моды Моды на русском
Potato replied to Noron's topic in Русский
попробовал мод. Мне кажется бафы и дебафы слишком высокие, в сравнение с оригинальными. так же как мне кажется существуют лишние идеологии(хунта, иудо-семетизм), в то время как нет важных(либерализм). из багов, у меня почему-то два авторитаризма.- Potato changed their profile photo
- maybe it is worth depending on the date to change debuffs from alliances? because in the modern world there are major alliances, while in the game it is impossible to do this
- Potato reacted to a post in a topic: Моды на русском
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БЕЛАРУСЫ ЁСЦЬ?
Potato replied to Makeevsky's topic in Русский
моды Моды на русском
Potato replied to Noron's topic in Русский
- always, when you open a point more on the provinces, the game crashes. Android and PC

“TATER” PICKERS – 1942/43

The early part of October was “Tater” picking time during the last war.
We children looked forward to at least a week off school in order that the potatoes could be harvested in good time before the first frosts arrived. I was nine years old in 1942 and like everyone else not in the armed forces, we were expected to “do our bit” for the war effort, and effort it was at times. Food was scarce and every crop was precious.
Even basic commodities were hard to come by. Farmers produced as much food as possible to keep the nation fed, as little food from abroad got through due to German submarines sinking the supply convoys.
That’s were we came into the picture. Most men, except for the elderly or disabled were away in the fighting forces and farmhands were short, although exempted from the forces, as farming was work of national importance and a reserved occupation, many felt it their duty to “join up”.
Come harvest time women and children were encouraged to get the crops in.
It was my first paid job and the hard-earned money in our pockets made us feel very important.
We were friends with a farmer and his wife named Archer (yes, truly they were the Archers) who owned a farm at Lammas Hill, Wolston, a village in Warwickshire, and so it was to their farm together with many other children, both boys and girls that we made our way. We arrived at the farm for 8.30am and waited for the tractor and trailer to transport us up to the potato field.
Often the mornings were misty and chilly gradually warming up as the day progressed.
Everyone took his or her own bucket along. We had no special clothing but everyone wore wellies with knee high woollen socks – mostly of a dismal dark grey colour I remember. Ordinary coats or macs were worn on chilly days and the girls wore pixie hoods (a woollen hat which tied under the chin) and usually hand knitted. Boys wore school caps but these often ended up in their pockets or were deposited on the muddy ground.
Our job was to pick up the potatoes turned up by the tractor. Each child had a length of field to work in. It was hard work too, bending down and placing the earthy potatoes into our buckets until it was full and then we emptied these full buckets into a nearby trailer and began picking all over again. Fine days when the soil was dry, were not too bad, but sometimes the fields were muddy with overnight rain, potatoes were wet and covered in thick earth, our hands became filthy and our wellies clogged and weighted down with mud. On rainy days of course no work could be done at all. We worked until a field was cleared. The farmer then put the potatoes into “clamps”, which were long mounds of potatoes which were covered in straw and then earth was piled on the top to form a frost free storage. They resembled long barrows when completed.
During the following months, potatoes were put into one hundred weight sacks (112lbs) for sale to the shops during the winter months.
Women from the village also joined us in the fields but of course their pay was higher and a useful addition to their household budget.
We had a break for lunch and then resumed work in the afternoon. I seem to remember we worked until about 4.30pm. Some children worked harder than others and the boys often had “spud” fights throwing potatoes at each other until reprimanded by the farmer.
At the end of the day we climbed onto the trailer and had a ride back to the farm. This was the best part of the day and if possible I liked to ride on the back of the tractor which was very bumpy on the uneven ground. Health and Safety regulations today would not allow it to happen, but I loved it in spite of getting a bruised lip once when my bucket jolted up into my face.
At the end of the week we were paid our hard won wages. I can’t remember the exact amount but it was about two shillings a day (10p decimal currency). Ten shillings (50p) for five days work seemed a fortune to me. It was my very first pay packet. What a thrill, I was so proud. I saved a large part of it for buying Christmas presents. It’s not long from October to December! Also, we were allowed to take as many potatoes home as we could carry in our buckets but as I had to walk a considerable way, my home was about a mile distant, half a bucket was just about as much as I could carry. Although potatoes and bread were not rationed until after the war in 1947, when food was even more scarce, due to the rest of starving Europe having to be fed, our mothers were glad of these extra potatoes. They tasted twice as good to me for I had harvested them myself.
Monica Evans (nee Timmins)
May 2005
Age Of War 2 Gaming Potatoes Pc

Age Of War 2 Gaming Potatoes Download
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Age Of War 2 Gaming Potatoes Free
- Cover a playing field with potatoes. At the signal, the potatoes must be collected and put into a pail or bowl using only a spoon. The winner is the person who collects the most potatoes. Who can make the longest potato peel? Bobbing for Potatoes. Fill a tub filled with water and a sack of washed potatoes.
- Today the potato is the fifth most important crop worldwide, after wheat, corn, rice and sugar cane. But in the 18th century the tuber was a startling novelty, frightening to some, bewildering to.
- Take control of 16 different units and 15 different turrets to defend your base and destroy your enemy. In this game, you start at the cavern men's age, then evolve! There is a total of 5 ages, each with its units and turrets. I hope you have fun with this game!
- Potatoes in the United States Potato Facts - Learn About Potatoes. Potatoes arrived in the Colonies in 1621 when the Governor of Bermuda, Nathaniel Butler, sent two large cedar chests containing potatoes and other vegetables to Governor Francis Wyatt of Virginia at Jamestown.
