๐ Hate unfair concentrated unnecessary aircraft noise so moan a lot about it. Some Spurs chat too. Season ticket holder for my sins. #PocketSunflowers ๐บ๐ฆ
@AgutterChris@suttonunited Looking like proper planning and analysis this season rather than asking the Magic 8 ball for help. Performed a miracle staying up last season too. You and your team doing a superb job, @AgutterChris
@TheSpursExpress Having been a fan as a kid since the 80s Iโve seen us win trophies and had great times, but nothing will give me what I was lucky enough to experience alongside my teenage lad in Bilbao. I will treasure that moment for the rest of my days.
BLOCK NAVY & WHITE FLAGS
A few occasions this season weโve brought out our block navy and white flags for fans to wave. Weโve made posts that these are our flags funded by fans have still had people take them.
Weโre aware people likely think these are from the club and freebies but would love for fans to drop them back to the club at their convenience or bring them back at the start of next season.
If you know anyone that has one please just let them know. Itโs no big deal we would just love them back!
Weโve also had some people reach out to us as they werenโt aware and really appreciate the honesty.
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@lazqetjohnson@D_Wizard05 Sakaโs pushed the ball away twice in that one moment, right then left hand and hand moved deliberately for both so I just donโt see how at least one of those wasnโt given . However, I did think had a very good game apart from that. Correctly waving away Maduekeโs pen appeal too
The reason we think dandelions are weeds is because of a 1950s marketing campaign.
Dandelions, native to Europe and Asia, were brought to North America in the 1600s by European colonists who grew them deliberately.
Every part is edible. The leaves are a salad green, the flowers were made into wine, and the roots were roasted as a coffee substitute and used medicinally for liver and kidney conditions for thousands of years. They were a kitchen-garden staple well into the 1800s.
The shift happened after World War II, when 2,4-D (originally developed for chemical warfare research) was approved as a residential herbicide. Companies like Scotts built the modern lawn-care industry around the idea that a perfect green lawn meant zero broadleaf plants.
Dandelions, being bright yellow and resistant to mowing, became a visible enemy, and the campaign worked. By the 1970s, "dandelion-free" was synonymous with "well-kept."
They aren't native, but they aren't doing significant ecological harm either. The herbicides used to kill them, on the other hand, kill bees, contaminate groundwater, and have been linked to non-Hodgkin lymphoma in humans.
If you hate dandelions, it's most likely due to a marketing campaign that ran before you were born.
@kennethdalglish Things like this transcend club tribalism. Really sorry to hear this news. Great to see you still have that brilliant sense of humour though, itโll stand you in good stead. Wishing you all the best and for a speedy recovery, and sending strength to your family and friends.