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Can't comment on the others, but the BBX is great fun. I believe the Kyosho Dirtmaster is also retro-styled buggy, but made with modern plastics and will hold up well to bashing/messing around (not stupid jumps off concrete skate ramps). The other classic Kyoshos are apparently lovely buggies to build and drive, but maybe a bit more expensive for just messing around?
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Maybe get a trail camera? You can set them up so that they take photos/video when there is motion. They therefore don't use much battery. Mine is quite an old model, but lasts weeks on a charge (it has 8 AA batteries for long life). Then again, from 2 metres away, they'd be fairly distant.
How far away is the garden? You might need quite a long lens, which can be quite expensive. most DSLRs have a compatible 70-300mm which are affordable.
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Now, the disappearing sock thing has always been around, so you can only ever find one of a pair, but since my 4 yr old started school in September its increased exponentially.
Bought a pack of 7 black socks, within 2 weeks, we were down to 3 pairs. Bought another 7 pack and now we a left now with 4 pairs out of 14. They definitely come home each day, but somehow get lost in laundry.
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We're currently down to 1 elderly cat (from a peak of 4). The wife is a vet and they were all brought home/rescued from when she was newly qualified and still enthused.
Yeah, we've never had any special car furniture or beds.
We use the World's best stuff also. It's great, but sodding expensive and seems to have gone up 25% in the last couple of months, bought a 12kg bag last week and it was £45!
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Chassis has been built for a few weeks, but only gotten round to finishing the body due to the weather. Tyre lettering is already wearing off, as is the paint on the driver!
Took for a spin this morning, I'm using a sensored brushless motor (a Tamiya 13.5t TBLE02s) for the first time, twinned with a Tamiya TBLE04RS esc. It's so smooth compared to my 2 other buggies which have Superstock BZ motors.
The way my wife puts lids on things or rather doesn't.
She'll rest them on the top of the bottle / container and put them back in the cupboard/fridge or leave on the kitchen top. I then pick up the item, often by the top, and the lids comes off.
Clearly my fault for not adapting and only picking up from the main container.