lowenz on 3/11/2024 at 09:04
Taste is slowly returing, smell will need weeks......
Subjective Effect on 3/11/2024 at 17:41
In Italy too!
Sad. Very sad. So sad!
lowenz on 5/11/2024 at 12:56
LOL
My (personal) ragù (with the "
ù", it's where you put the accent) tastes different but thanks to the Builder I can already savor my beloved zibibbo ( (
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muscat_of_Alexandria) )
Still the big problem is the smell (and not only about the cuisine).....I think the taste damage is more about something running interference and not direct nervous damage.
DuatDweller on 5/11/2024 at 20:30
I'm more or a lover of an Amaretto DiSaronno or Zabov, or Cinzano or a Martini.
But to each his own, I hate wine, because when I was a small boy in parties I nonni gave us water and wine, from then I hate wine.
For all other occasions caffe espresso (sorry about the lack of accent is messy finding in a keyboard with two different languages, keyboard is Spanish and the OS is in US English), or sparkling water.
Nicker on 5/11/2024 at 20:37
Is Topic Deviation a symptom of COVID?
DuatDweller on 6/11/2024 at 00:38
I'm sorry Nick, maybe I distracted you from your ice hole fishing hobby, or your polar bear petting......
:p
Nicker on 13/11/2024 at 23:09
Canada has its (
https://www.cbc.ca/lite/story/1.7382156) first documented case of avian flu (H5N1) in humans. Apparently there are a dozen or so cases in the USA. Human to human spread is presently rare and unstained, with most cases arising in poultry workers.
However...
Quote:
But the more people become infected by animals, the more opportunities the virus has to mutate and spread between humans, said Angela Rasmussen, a virologist at the University of Saskatchewan's Vaccine and Infectious Disease Organization (VIDO).
"The longer a virus is able to get evolutionary experience with a particular host species, it's going to continue to adapt to being in that host," Rasmussen said.
"One of those adaptations would potentially be increased transmission and increased transmission efficiency."
Good thing, at this critical juncture, that the CDC is to be led by a competent expert with only one brain-worm. It will probably disappear by Christmas.
Starker on 14/11/2024 at 02:20
I don't think they can get rid of the CDC by Christmas.