With kids, you have to check the yard very carefully for toys, rocks, etc. before mowing. Now I only have to make a quick check in the back yard for anything that got thrown over the fence from the neighbor’s kids.
Looks like Dad didn’t see the ‘victim’.. hit and run!!. Barbie didn’t last long in my ring of friends when I was a kid, either, but we were more direct about it. First, she lost her hair. Then, after several attempts to jamb her onto a Breyer mold horse and giving new meaning to the phrase ‘hip dysplasia’, she eventually just lost her head altogether. By that time, we had all moved on to wheeled and/or mechanical things anyway.
When I went to the emergency room recently one of the nice doctors pointed out he was now guilty of billions of murders, for using antibiotics to kill so many “germs”.
For ages I have tried (in working in my shop, for example) to live by the slogan “If you could not fix it, don’t break it.” I carry that far enough that I try to avoid stepping on ants, for example. But a friend carried that a step further, asking whether I would have to be able to repair an ant’s leg if I broke it, and also asking where I studied orthopedic surgery for insects.
In the criminal justice system, sibling rivalry is a common source of backyard crimes. Investigations are carried out by two separate yet equally important factors of the family: the caregivers who know their way around their house and their kids, and the disciplinarians who dole out punishments. These are their stories.
[Sound of a gavel echoing through a grand courtroom]
Brother and I used to walk the railroad tracks by grandma’s house. One of the railroad spikes we found got left in the yard. Fortunately, (?) it was an older heavy-duty Briggs & Stratton, so it only left a big dent in the mower deck and bent the shaft. Dad always complained it never ran right after that.
Ratkin Premium Member 2 months ago
She’s a mulch-loved toy.
ᴮᴼᴿᴱᴰ2ᴰᴱᴬᵀᴴ 2 months ago
backyard Barbie chewed
LookingGlass Premium Member 2 months ago
Lt. Columbo will be …. shortly on the “job!!!”
;-)
Yakety Sax 2 months ago
If it is dropped outside then it is fair game.
David Huie Green LoveJoyAndPeace 2 months ago
Livin’ in a Barbie world has dangers not always noted.
sirbadger 2 months ago
If Zoe had let Hammie catapult Barbie, Barbie would still be alive today.
danketaz Premium Member 2 months ago
Who killed the lawn mower? Was it …Ken?
vacman 2 months ago
Cover the kids’ eyes, she shouldn’t be exposed to such carnage at such a tender age.
iggyman 2 months ago
Best to check out the yard before mowing!
Superhawk 2 months ago
This is exactly how a scary movie begins. At first, it seems like an ‘accident’.
Dkram 2 months ago
QUICK! Somebody, call the local CSI!
\\//_
Ignatz Premium Member 2 months ago
What if your name is actually "Barbie"®? Can you introduce yourself without a registered trademark?
SquidGamerGal 2 months ago
Hammie… Care to explain?
Huckleberry Hiroshima 2 months ago
I see CourtTV cameras, microphones, and real pretty reporters on the horizon.
GerryRoss 2 months ago
And just like that, Lennie Briscoe and Mike Logan show up at the MacPherson’s!
ctolson 2 months ago
With kids, you have to check the yard very carefully for toys, rocks, etc. before mowing. Now I only have to make a quick check in the back yard for anything that got thrown over the fence from the neighbor’s kids.
cracker65 2 months ago
Bad move Darryl. You’re supposed to put it in the garbage.
Norris66 2 months ago
Don’t worry Hammie will get his hat and magnifying glass. He’ll track the whole thing down.
thatbackgroundcharacter 2 months ago
My older brother managed to separate the head from the body of every Barbie I owned at one point or another.
ᴮᴼᴿᴱᴰ2ᴰᴱᴬᵀᴴ 2 months ago
gocomics.Com/babyblues/2021/08/06
Jane Foster and Stormbreaker
Strawberry King 2 months ago
CSI: Backyards
Cozmik Cowboy 2 months ago
Daryl, Daryl, Daryl – you gots kids, man – you always walk the lawn before you mow!
pheets 2 months ago
Looks like Dad didn’t see the ‘victim’.. hit and run!!. Barbie didn’t last long in my ring of friends when I was a kid, either, but we were more direct about it. First, she lost her hair. Then, after several attempts to jamb her onto a Breyer mold horse and giving new meaning to the phrase ‘hip dysplasia’, she eventually just lost her head altogether. By that time, we had all moved on to wheeled and/or mechanical things anyway.
The Quiet One 2 months ago
Maybe you should have picked up everything before you started mowing. Just sayin.
J-Yoshi64 2 months ago
Maybe now Zoe will learn not to leave her toys in the yard.
kathleenhicks62 2 months ago
Grass must have been VERY tall!
daleandkristen 2 months ago
Wren’s eyes – 3rd panel. Lol.
BW42 2 months ago
When I went to the emergency room recently one of the nice doctors pointed out he was now guilty of billions of murders, for using antibiotics to kill so many “germs”.
For ages I have tried (in working in my shop, for example) to live by the slogan “If you could not fix it, don’t break it.” I carry that far enough that I try to avoid stepping on ants, for example. But a friend carried that a step further, asking whether I would have to be able to repair an ant’s leg if I broke it, and also asking where I studied orthopedic surgery for insects.
K.S. Kiri 2 months ago
WRENS FAAAACE
DevilDog2001 Premium Member 2 months ago
In the criminal justice system, sibling rivalry is a common source of backyard crimes. Investigations are carried out by two separate yet equally important factors of the family: the caregivers who know their way around their house and their kids, and the disciplinarians who dole out punishments. These are their stories.
[Sound of a gavel echoing through a grand courtroom]
[ Law & Order theme plays]
Daltongang Premium Member 2 months ago
Well that’s what happens when you don’t take care of your things.
Willameano Premium Member 2 months ago
Brother and I used to walk the railroad tracks by grandma’s house. One of the railroad spikes we found got left in the yard. Fortunately, (?) it was an older heavy-duty Briggs & Stratton, so it only left a big dent in the mower deck and bent the shaft. Dad always complained it never ran right after that.