I FAKED YOU'RE MATHERS LOST NIGH
>>4618935
i too have invented an illusory apparition of my mather's final immanence
>>4618935
wow rude
those dubs oughta kick you out
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>>4618938
Go on
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quality thread
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i love you anon
will you marry me?
>>4618993
What did he mean by this?
>>4619003
lol i dunno lol kek ha lol lulz zozzle kek
Your fortune: Good news will come to you by mail
3737737474888476366267859998777266366374
This is my favorite number.
It's the number of times I faked you're mathers lost nigh
>>4619000
>000
Nice triples, anon. Checked. Aussie emergency services are on their way to congratulate you.
Your fortune: Outlook good
>>4619064
oh yeah
emergency
well you're gonna need emergency for the number of times i faked you're mathers lost nigh
>>4618935
A bit converter, also known as a pelham rounding, is used on pelham bits to change them from two-rein bits to one-rein bits. It is a leather strap that attaches from the snaffle ring to the curb ring, onto which the rein is then attached to the loop made between the two rings. A bit converter is very helpful when riding the cross-country phase of eventing, so that a rider using a pelham does not have to keep track of two reins— especially helpful when riding drop fences, which require the rider to slip the reins and then gather them back up on landing. It is also commonly used by children, who may have not yet become skilled enough to handle two reins with ease. However, the bit converter diminishes the rider's ability to apply the curb and snaffle functions of the pelham independently and discriminately, and thus is usually considered unsuitable for other types of riding; it is illegal in hunt seat equitation, for example.
A bit converter is also known in some places as 'roundings' or 'pelham roundings'.