| Forum | Topic | Date | Replies |
| Weight Loss | What's your weight loss pet pieve? | Jul 05 2009 14:30 (UTC) |
64 |
Too many to list them all, but after losing 85#, I absolutely hate the loose skin that is left. Can not wear short sleeve shirts because the arm skin flaps around. Wrinkled looking stomach skin. So all right I know surgery is available but I have no money for that. Is there anything else to do about loose skin that actually works. Anybody out there have a solution????????????? |
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| Motivation | Soon to drop below 200lb! | Jun 01 2009 05:56 (UTC) |
2 |
Well it's been awhile but i'm still under 200. But only 190#. SOMEDAY I WILL BE AT MY GOAL. |
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| Motivation | Soon to drop below 200lb! | May 22 2008 14:53 (UTC) |
6 |
Original Post by horsieleanna: the scale finally moved this last week. This morning 190#. Pretty soon all be a 180 girl. |
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| Weight Loss | What's your weight loss pet pieve? | Apr 18 2008 21:01 (UTC) |
91 |
biggest= When People Say Boy you've lost a lot of Weight! But do you feel good. I Mean do you really Feel better.
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| Motivation | SPRING into action (again) with a Motivational MARCH!!! | Mar 05 2008 16:27 (UTC) |
7 |
I really need a MARCH MOTIVATIONAL MY MARCH MOTIVATIONAL GOALS
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| Games & Challenges | GAME: A-Z Cities! | Feb 24 2008 13:07 (UTC) |
30 |
Zigzag, Oregon Zigzag is an unincorporated community in Clackamas County, Oregon, United States. It is located within the Mount Hood Corridor, between Rhododendron and Welches on U.S. Route 26. The community is part of the Villages at Mount Hood, which stretches from the border of Sandy to Government Camp. The town is named after the nearby Zigzag River, a tributary of the Sandy River, which is in turn a tributary of the Columbia River. One of the ranger stations for the Mount Hood National Forest is located there, in a cabin built in the early 1900s and now on the National Register of Historic Places. |
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| Motivation | Soon to drop below 200lb! | Feb 23 2008 16:46 (UTC) |
24 |
| After a 10 day stall at 201, I finally moved to 198. Hurray | |||
| Games & Challenges | GAME: A-Z Cities! | Feb 22 2008 17:12 (UTC) |
33 |
Wagontire, Oregon A Brief History Someone found a wagon tire in the desert and the area surrounding it became knows as “Wagontire”. Romantics speculate that the wheel came from a wagon train that was attacked by Indians, but no one really knows why the relic was left behind. Another mystery is the history of 49 three-inch cannon balls that were found between Wagontire and Riley in 1978. Before 1900, a German named Anton Egli settled on a ranch near Wagontire Mountain. The family moved to North Hollywood in the 1920’s. Joe Egli (Anton’s son) became the senior casting director for Paramount Studios during the heyday of large movie companies. Ed Egli (another son) drove the multi-horse teams in many early day cowboy westerns. As people settled the high desert area, they received their mail at the Egli ranch. Later, the ranch became an official post office called Egli. In 1919 the post office name was changed from Egli to Wagontire. The only good water for miles around was from springs on Wagontire Mountain, which led to waterhole feuds, gun battles and murder. The early pioneers were tough, uncompromising people, they did whatever they considered necessary to survive in a hard land. |
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| Games & Challenges | GAME: A-Z Cities! | Feb 21 2008 19:07 (UTC) |
35 |
Union, Oregon Union is a city in Union County, Oregon, United States. The population was 1,926 at the 2000 census At one point Union was the county seat, but when the railroad was built it was put through La Grande instead of Union. La Grande became the bigger town within the county and eventually became the county seat.[citation needed] During the 2006 November elections, Kyle Corbin, an 18-year-old college student, was elected mayor after a successful write-in campaign. He had promised to bring an end to the political chaos that had plagued the town for the last two years, which included three councilmen and mayor Deborah Clark being removed in recall elections. "I know the procedures and rules," he told an Oregonian reporter. "I've run a meeting with a bunch of high school kids."[3] Since then, one newspaper reports that "talk around town about whether the young mayor will succeed ranges from skepticism to sunny optimism."[4]
As far as the History,. I think it makes this game more interesting. But then only my opion. SO if you dont like it, just say so, and I will quit. |
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| Games & Challenges | GAME: A-Z Cities! | Feb 20 2008 14:29 (UTC) |
40 |
Plush, Oregon Plush is an unincorporated rural community in Lake County, Oregon, United States. The one notable attraction in the area is the Antelope Hot Springs located on the Hart Mountain National Antelope Refuge. Hart Mountain hosts many protected big game animals including the pronghorn antelope and big horn sheep. |
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| Games & Challenges | GAME: A-Z Cities! | Feb 19 2008 17:19 (UTC) |
43 |
Mist, Oregon Mist is an unincorporated community in Columbia County, Oregon, United States. It was named for the atmospheric conditions of the Nehalem Valley.[1] On July 6, 2001, the Mist store, which was built in 1874, caught fire and was destroyed. Until then, it was the oldest continuously operating business in Oregon,[2] offering food and hardware and displaying historic newspapers clippings and antique logging equipment on the walls. Mist is a crossroads community where Oregon Route 47 turns north to Clatskanie, Oregon, and a pioneer trail (Burn Road) crossed the Nehalem River and went south to Vernonia. It is the easterily terminus of Oregon Route 202. The Nehalem River valley widens between Mist and Jewell and was favored by the Native American tribes of the area for hunting, and later favored by early European American settlers for agriculture. The area is now sparsely settled it is notable for having the largest operating sawmill in Columbia County and also geological conditions lending themselves to natural gas storage. Mist contains one of the very few, and therefore very valuable natural gas storage areas in the Pacific Northwest. It operates unobtrusively on a hill near Mist. It is controlled by Northwest Natural and is connected by several pipelines including a 16-inch (410 mm) and a 24-inch (610 mm) pipe line along the Nehalem Highway[3] Earlier in the 20th century, Mist was an important logging center, complete with a railroad. Though still important in terms of logging, the population today is sparse, and there is no longer a railroad. |
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| Games & Challenges | GAME: A-Z Cities! | Feb 17 2008 02:59 (UTC) |
54 |
Beatty, Oregon Beatty is an unincorporated community in Klamath County, Oregon, United States. Beatty is located on Oregon Route 140 at the confluence of the Sycan and Sprague Rivers and is 30 miles east of Klamath Falls. Beatty was named for J .L. Beatty, a missionary who lived nearby when the area was in the Klamath Indian Reservation. The post office in Beatty, ZIP Code 97621, was established in 1913. Toby "Winema" Riddle is buried near Beatty. The OC&E Woods Line State Trail passes through Beatty |
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| Games & Challenges | GAME: A-Z Cities! | Feb 16 2008 23:09 (UTC) |
58 |
Xenia, Kansas Xenia is a city located in Bourbon County, Kansas, United States. |
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| Weight Loss | Lost ALMOST 100 lbs... new pics! | Feb 16 2008 21:25 (UTC) |
25 |
| Great Job, Im behind you about 40# worth. Keep it up, You can do It | |||
| Games & Challenges | GAME: A-Z Cities! | Feb 16 2008 06:13 (UTC) |
64 |
Riley, Oregon Riley, Oregon is an unincorporated community located in Harney County, Oregon, United States. Riley is about 28 miles west of the county seat Burns, at the crossroads of U.S. Highway 395 and U.S. Highway 20. Its population is very small and comes almost entirely from the area ranches and farms. Farming in the area consists mainly of alfalfa, hay, and root crops. A post office named Riley was established in about 1885, and was named for stockman Amos Riley of the ranching partnership Riley and Hardin. Previously there was a Hardin post office located about 75 miles northwest of Riley, so the people who lived on Silver Creek suggested the new post office be called Riley. Riley post office was closed in 1919, but was reopened in 1949 after an office called "Suntex" was closed. |
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| Games & Challenges | GAME: A-Z Cities! | Feb 16 2008 03:41 (UTC) |
66 |
Paulina, Oregon Paulina is an unincorporated community in Crook County, Oregon, United States, named after Paiute Chief Paulina. Paulina post office was established in 1882.[1] Paulina has one K-8 grade school.[2] The community is the home of the Paulina Rodeo, which was the subject of a Kim Stafford poem,[3] and the Paulina Ranger District of the Ochoco National Forest |
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| Weight Loss | 35 and counting! | Feb 16 2008 02:52 (UTC) |
1 |
| Congratulations Keep up the Good Work!!!! | |||
| Games & Challenges | Change 1 letter Only Game | Feb 15 2008 16:46 (UTC) |
1,819 |
| grip | |||
| Fitness | How long to build muscle | Feb 14 2008 22:58 (UTC) |
3 |
| me too, thanks for answering my question. | |||
| Games & Challenges | GAME: A-Z Cities! | Feb 14 2008 02:15 (UTC) |
72 |
Joseph, Oregon Joseph is a city in Wallowa County, Oregon, United States. Originally named Silver Lake and Lake City, in 1880 the city formally named itself for Nez Perce Chief Joseph. The population was 1,054 at the 2000 census.
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| The Lounge | Evil-bay | Feb 13 2008 16:19 (UTC) |
6 |
pgeorgian It was about 300 miles away so I went and looked at it first. No Im a Reiner, and love it. |
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| Motivation | I lost 15# | Feb 13 2008 15:52 (UTC) |
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| When I started CC said 1450 Calories. I very seldom made it that goal, but close. Then I found out I was a inch shorter than I thought I was, So CC said 1350 Calories. I actually did much better at meeting that goal. Then I lost 15# and now CC says 1200 calories a day. I have no problem meeting that goal at all. Some days when I have to much burn meter deficit I add 100 to 200 calories or so. I'm on a little plateau right now, but not for long. |
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| Games & Challenges | GAME: A-Z Cities! | Feb 13 2008 04:38 (UTC) |
75 |
Granite, Oregon . Granite is a city located in Grant County, Oregon, United States. First established by miners after the discovery of gold July 4, 1862, the community was originally called Independence and was situated about a mile-and-half west-north-west of the present location. According to Oregon Geographic Names, the name Granite was chosen when its post office was established in 1878, the name “Independence” already being used in Polk County, Oregon. A. G. Tabor, who had staked the first mining claim on Granite Creek (the Independence) and was the only merchant in town at the time, served as the first postmaster. The city of Granite was incorporated in April 1900 with Grant Thornburg as mayor. With more than eighty percent of the men in the area directly employed in the mining industry, the viability of the area's economy practically collapsed when gold mining was made illegal in 1942 by Federal Public Law L-208, under the authority of the War Labor Act. The city had a population of 45 in 1930, 86 in 1940, 40 in 1950, and two in 1960. Although electrical service, provided by a local power plant on Clear Creek, and telegraph and later telephone lines were operational in the early days, they fell out of use and were abandoned after World War II. Modern telephone service was extended to Granite in the year 2000. As of the 2000 census, the city had a total population of 24, up from its population of 10 in 1990. It is the second-smallest (according to population) incorporated city in Oregon, after nearby Greenhorn, which has a population of zero |
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| Games & Challenges | GAME: A-Z Cities! | Feb 12 2008 03:38 (UTC) |
79 |
Cayuse, Oregon Cayuse is a census-designated place (CDP) and unincorporated community in Umatilla County, Oregon, United States, located 11 miles east of Pendleton on the Umatilla Indian Reservation. The population was 59 at the 2000 census. According to Oregon Geographic Names, Cayuse, named for the Cayuse people, began as a railroad station and post office, which was established in 1867 |
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| Games & Challenges | Change 1 letter Only Game | Feb 11 2008 17:01 (UTC) |
1,846 |
| Keep | |||
| Games & Challenges | GAME: A-Z Cities! | Feb 11 2008 16:22 (UTC) |
82 |
Zena, Oregon Zena is a former community (considered a ghost town) approximately 10 miles northwest of Salem, Oregon, United States, in Polk County. The community was established in 1858 was originally called "Spring Valley". It was renamed "Zena" by D.J. Cooper and his brother, pioneers from Missouri. In 1866 they built a store and obtained the post office there, renaming the community in tribute to their wives, Arvazena and Melzena Cooper. [1] According to Arvazena Cooper:
Zena is home to the historic Spring Valley Presbyterian Church. The 1992 novel The Road to Zena by Joel Redon is set in Zena |
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| Games & Challenges | The person below me!!! | Feb 11 2008 16:15 (UTC) |
1,952 |
False
TPBM has lost 20# since they have been at CC |
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| The Lounge | Evil-bay | Feb 11 2008 15:59 (UTC) |
8 |
| I've sold a car, a saddle and other things on E-bay. But mostly I've bought. I bought a Kodiak Truck and Horse Trailer on E-Bay. I've got some awesome show clothes all way to small for me. LOL But I have had to lay low on e-bay for about 2 years now. It was getting out of hand, way to easy to enter your credit card number. (BTW-its paid off and cancelled now) But I still like to look there for bargains. Shame on me! | |||
| Health & Support | I Totally Binged =[ Just want to cry!!! | Feb 11 2008 15:29 (UTC) |
2 |
| *Binge Day?...Learn 2 Forgive. There's Always Tomorrow...* | |||
| Motivation | Creative things to do with your Way too Big Clothes | Feb 11 2008 01:00 (UTC) |
12 |
| Make Quilts for people who really need them. | |||
Why can athletes eat so much?
Athletes need adequate calories to offset those they burn in training and competition. They eat to either maintain their body mass or gain muscle... Read more

