> In article <MPG.256f97e95...@news.octanews.com>,
> netcat <net...@devnull.eridani.eol.ee> wrote:
> >In article <slrnhgan0...@gatekeeper.vic.com>,
> >d...@gatekeeper.vic.com says...
> >> =?UTF-8?B?TWljaGHFgiBEd3XFvG5paw==?= <@think.a.bit.before.replying> wrote:
> >> >netcat wrote:
> >> >> @a21g2000yqc.googlegroups.com>, id...@hotmail.com says...
> >> >>> Mango is OK, but not special. Always tasted like a cross
> >> >>> of peach and pine to me.
> >> >>
> >> >> If it tasted this way, it was still too raw to be eaten.
> >> >> Ripe mangoes don't taste like pine at all.
> >> >>
> >> >Any way of getting _ripe_ and not yet _rotting_ on the other side mangos
> >> >in Estonia? In Poland that's next to impossible...
> >>
> >> Greenhouses?
> >
> >They certainly don't grow them here. I think that's also the case with
> >Poland.
> >
> >
> >rgds,
> >netcat
>
> If you have a local Indian community, check their markets. One of my friends
> and co-workers was from India and he was adamant that the ones sold there
> were much better than anything from a general grocery store.
>
>
> Ted
Or from a chinese stand.
--
A computer without Microsoft is like a chocolate cake without mustard.
Have you seen some place in Central Europe particuralry abundant in
_Chinese_ stands?
Michał