One is that Uncle Lou will finally get the hint by Friday afternoon that he's overstayed his welcome and will leave without swiping most of the leftovers. The other is that there's a natural chemical in turkey called tryptophan that makes you sleepy after the Thanksgiving meal. While the ...
What makes you sleepy after you eat turkey? The amino acid tryptophan is found in turkey. Tryptophan is a precursor to serotonin, which is a neurotransmitter that plays a role in sleep. However, eating turkey is unlikely to make you feel sleepy. ...
The turkey ended up turning out okey but I was so tired and sleepy by the time I served dinner.The next year I got a method of cooking turkey from local radio in early November. I was ___ to give it a try. Making that turkey was like taking care of a baby for nearly two days...
“Back in the day, Dalyan was a quaint and sleepy village on the banks of the Dalyan River. The town first hit the headlines in the mid-eighties when an international campaign successfully defeated a plan to develop the nearby Iztuzu Beach where endangered loggerhead turtles famously lay thei...
Everyone else who came in there around the same time as me had dropped out. His job was just to cover the section up to Green Cove and back to account for all of the runners on this stretch of the course. As we kept going up the trail, I didn’t feel sleepy but I definitely ...
A rather sleepy farming village overlooking scenic Pancarl?k Valley, Ortahisar was traditionally famous for its underground caves where fruit was stored. Although it has recently... Silifke Lively, non-touristy Silifke is a small agricultural town beside the Göksu River that’s dominated by the...
Me feeling very safe in the ruins of Ephesus. A sleepy Kaleköy – not scary at all. The biggest threats to safety you need to worry about as a tourist in Turkey are things like pickpockets and scams – annoying, but ultimately not dangerous. ...
it was a struggle for our group to stay together. It wasn’t the sleepy little town that I remembered, and I wondered for a moment how the locals had reacted when nearly 30,000 Australian and New Zealand soldiers had flooded their town a century ago. Before long we retreated to the co...
March 31st at the Portage still sleepy. In the yard, I am happy to still have two Pine Siskins hanging out. I hope this means they have become regular visitors. The Goldfinches are looking a little in-betweenish these days. Not too clear pictures through the porch windows and screens but...