• If you are having any problems posting threads plz message Kate. since latest update we have had 6 members with problems, sorted those but yet to find the problem.

What would you want to be written on your tombstone?

Actually, the walking dead punters have got the right idea, getting their rocks off and getting a bite to eat at the same time. I often feel a bit peckish after a good root. :vamp:
 
Actually, the walking dead punters have got the right idea, getting their rocks off and getting a bite to eat at the same time. I often feel a bit peckish after a good root. :vamp:
So if they are peckish after a root What are they like after they have eaten your leg, I know personally I get very hungry after a joint
 
images

images
 
"Here lies a Furry Ass. "

"Just another number to the Bureau of Statistics."

"Here Lies a Natural Gas Producer. Warning: Highly Flammable."
 
oh i got no tiffy iffy jiffy with HP. Besides we don't kiss and make up, we Rum it up. But if that's what you normally do. :eek:
 
poetree1.jpg


I want one of these^^^^^

Link is broken so has been taken down


Though Link is broken so has been taken down, thanks to the use of embalming chemicals, concrete vaults and non-biodegradable caskets, burials are getting greener each year with various Link is broken so has been taken down and link is broken so has been taken down

But what about keeping it simple, yet also tying death back into nature's cycle of renewal? That's what French designer Margaux Ruyant does with Poetree, a funeral urn that infuses a poetic spirit into the mourning process. Poetree is a funeral urn that evolves over time, allowing loved ones to plant a tree in the ashes, while also providing a simple but elegant monument.
poetree2.jpg


The Poetree is made out of a ceramic ring with the deceased's details, plus a cork container and stopper. Relatives can place the deceased's ashes in the urn and take it home, along with a boxwood tree sapling in a biodegradable pot. When they are ready, the cork stopper is removed, soil can be poured inside the urn, and the small tree may be planted in the ashes.

poetree3.jpg


After giving the boxwood tree some time to grow, the urn can then be planted outside, where the cork container can biodegrade, leaving only the ceramic ring as a marker and a living, growing tree to commemorate those who have passed on. It's a gorgeous idea that transforms the traditional 'static' view of death into something that is fluid and triumphantly hopeful.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
I want the tree planted in my urn to be a fruit tree
The fun would be working out where to plant me. May be in front of a vegans house
Have a vegan eating the last remains of my body,:playful: I would enjoy that
 
Tania THAT IS SO AWESOME...... ME TOO WANT ONE!

poetree1.jpg


I want one of these^^^^^

Link is broken so has been taken down

Though Link is broken so has been taken down, thanks to the use of embalming chemicals, concrete vaults and non-biodegradable caskets, burials are getting greener each year with various Link is broken so has been taken down and Link is broken so has been taken down

But what about keeping it simple, yet also tying death back into nature's cycle of renewal? That's what French designer Margaux Ruyant does with Poetree, a funeral urn that infuses a poetic spirit into the mourning process. Poetree is a funeral urn that evolves over time, allowing loved ones to plant a tree in the ashes, while also providing a simple but elegant monument.
poetree2.jpg


The Poetree is made out of a ceramic ring with the deceased's details, plus a cork container and stopper. Relatives can place the deceased's ashes in the urn and take it home, along with a boxwood tree sapling in a biodegradable pot. When they are ready, the cork stopper is removed, soil can be poured inside the urn, and the small tree may be planted in the ashes.

poetree3.jpg


After giving the boxwood tree some time to grow, the urn can then be planted outside, where the cork container can biodegrade, leaving only the ceramic ring as a marker and a living, growing tree to commemorate those who have passed on. It's a gorgeous idea that transforms the traditional 'static' view of death into something that is fluid and triumphantly hopeful.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
I want the tree planted in my urn to be a fruit tree
The fun would be working out where to plant me. May be in front of a vegans house
Have a vegan eating the last remains of my body,:playful: I would enjoy that
what tree??????? a lemon tree?????????
 
Good idea. I am so sweet the fruit would be like eating sweet oranges
I don't like sweets..........I like sour lemons.........guess you have to find another vegan to eat the remains of your body hanging on a sweet lemon tree............sigh sigh sigh
 
I don't like sweets..........I like sour lemons.........guess you have to find another vegan to eat the remains of your body hanging on a sweet lemon tree............sigh sigh sigh
So your the only vegan who eats butter pastry based sweets And don't let's get started on your eating fish
 
The weeping angels got to her at last, haha.
Or
She came, she fucked shit up, now she's gone to fuck shit up somewhere we can't go.
 
Back
Top