Anonymous ID: 462057 May 21, 2019, 1:59 a.m. No.6549350   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9370 >>9589 >>9634 >>9662

>>6548999

interdasting. On it's last voyage did that boat make a stop at the Obstn Fish Haven? Or whatever the hell that underwarter structure is?

 

>>6548775 pb

>>6548690 pb

Nice work anon. Notifying the LBP diggers of one more 1st and 10 on the 40 possibilities just out of the photo frame. Los Alamitos Army Airfield. Runways 4L and 4R facing 40 degrees. There's a group of numbered streets across interstate 405 but missing 10th street oddly.

Anonymous ID: 462057 May 21, 2019, 2:13 a.m. No.6549369   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9379

>>6549187

pedo hanks jr. He who makes kerchiefs.

 

>>6512142 (PB)

 

sounds about right

 

<"My grandpa always carried (a handkerchief) with him to blow his…

 

<whenever I went to an army in the navy by the village people surplus store I would always buy one

 

<my dad always had a stack of them whenever we would go on family vacations and would wear them around his…

 

The handkerchief code (also known as the hanky code, the bandana code, and flagging[1]) is a color-coded system, employed usually among the gay male casual-sex seekers or BDSM practitioners in the United States, Canada, Australia and Europe, to indicate preferred sexual fetishes, what kind of sex they are seeking, and whether they are a top/dominant or bottom/submissive.

 

Wearing a handkerchief on the left side of the body typically indicates one is a "top" (one considered active in the practice of the act/fetish indicated by the color of the handkerchief), while wearing it on the right side of the body would indicate one is a "bottom" (one considered passive in the practice of the act/fetish indicated by the color of the handkerchief). The hanky code was widely used in the 1970s by gay and bisexual men.