"I made a horrible mistake going to the service center at Ag-Pro. I needed maintenance on my chainsaw and they said they would take a look at it. They did not tell me that taking a look at it would cost $90.\n\nIt needed a simple fix, a new chain... The total would come out to $150. Even though this is clearly a rip off, I told them to go ahead since I already wasted $90.\n\nA week later the chainsaw was not ready yet, they said the chain was on backorder. I called Ace hardware and bought a chain myself in 3 minutes.\n\nI picked up the chainsaw and took the $90 loss just so I don't have to deal with their incompetence any longer. Of course there's was never an apology or recognition that they were doing a terrible job.\n\nAfter $90 they didn't even bother to wipe the saw down for me... I'm reporting to BBB."
Tractor Supply Co.
3.5
2
Delaware Ave & US Highway 36, Marysville
CLOSE · 08:00 - 21:00 · +1 937-642-7069
"Very good location near a lot of big stores and fast food chains makes it accessible and easy to get in and get out!"
Buckeye Power Sales
3.5
14
6850 Commerce Court Dr, Blacklick
CLOSE · 08:00 - 17:00 · +1 614-861-6000
"Don't know why they advertise a service department, requested service online, no reply, called service department, got voicemail, nobody ever called back. This was 2 months ago. Ever heard of Customer Service? Terrible!"
Drag usually involves cross-dressing. A drag queen is someone (usually male) who performs femininely and a drag king is someone (usually female) who performs masculinely.
Drag uses clothes and other aspects of performance to create heightened versions of masculinity, femininity and other forms of gender expression. It is rooted in acceptance and resilience and is an artform that represents freedom of expression and resistance to unjust forces.
drag (third-person singular simple present drags, present participle dragging, simple past and past participle dragged) (informal, intransitive) To perform as a drag queen or drag king.
Drag is a type of entertainment where people dress up and perform, often in highly stylized ways. The term originated as British theater slang in the 19th century and was used to describe women’s clothing worn by men.