Greetings and salutations! I am Aragorn135 and welcome to my user page. I joined Wikipedia on January 29th, 2010. You might learn a lot about what I like from just this page. Also, if you want to leave me a message, click . Please do not leave any inappropriate messages. Please sign my guestbook by clicking on the smiley face at the bottom right hand corner. Thank you! ~Aragorn135
For signing my guestbook - I, SchnitzelMannGreek, hearby present you with this unique barnstar. Thanks for reviewing my userpage and hoped you enjoyed it. Happy Editing:)--SchnitzelMannGreek. 20:33, 23 June 2009 (UTC)
For signing my guestbook - I, ~Aragorn135 hearby present you with this unique barnstar. Thanks for reviewing my userpage and hoped you enjoyed it! ~Aragorn135 04:33, 9 March 2010 (UTC)
The Jakkinx Guestbook Page Barnstar
This user has signed Jakkinx's Guestbook.
The oak eggar (Lasiocampa quercus) is a common moth in the family Lasiocampidae found in Europe and northern and western parts of Asia. The larvae feed on a wide variety of plant species, low down, including blackthorn, hawthorn, viburnum, dogwood, ivy and ling, but are not known to feed on oak. They can be infected by baculoviruses, which change their behaviour and cause them to climb out of the protection of low scrub and leave them open to predation, facilitating the spread of infection. Oak eggar larvae eventually pupate on the ground inside a silken cocoon, the exterior of which is hard and yellowish, and resembles an acorn, from which the common name "oak eggar" is derived. This oak eggar larva in the form of a fourth-instar caterpillar, with a body length of 53 millimetres (2.1 inches), was photographed on a branch in Keila, Estonia. The photograph was focus-stacked from 59 separate images.Photograph credit: Ivar Leidus
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For signing my guestbook - I, ~Aragorn135 hearby present you with this unique barnstar. Thanks for reviewing my userpage and hoped you enjoyed it! ~Aragorn135 04:33, 9 March 2010 (UTC)
Just type in {{User:Aragorn135/Guestbook Barnstar}} on your user page to get the barnstar.
Put the number 25 in a calculator. Multiply by 800. Multiply by 266. Subtract 1,992. Then look at the calculator upside-down... This user loves tricks like this.