rswyan
Super Star Member
- Joined
- May 12, 2004
- Messages
- 13,241
- Location
- Northeast Ohio
- Tractor
- Kubota B2910, Cub Cadet Pro Z 154S, Simplicity 18 CFC, Cub Cadet 782
Condolences Billy.
Oh my Billy. I'm so sorry, I know your heart is hurting. Condolences. I know you and your family gave her the best life. Long, drawn out diseases are hard for everybody involved. I'm praying for your hurt, in time, to turn to remembrances of her zest for life. A good dog is hard to replace. There's a reason they call them "Man's best friend". Also praying for your healing.
Don, It seems at one time many years ago, that I was reading to keep burned/charred wood out of a compost pile, because they took too much energy to finish composting??? Kind of like Post Oak leaves??? So I'm interested to see how it turns out. There is a local company that was making lump charcoal, maybe B&B? Maybe the smaller the crumbles, the easier it is to contribute. I believe I told this before, but my buddy does oil patch work, and at really old units, there would be what I considered a small environmental disaster of spilled oils and such....He said, "In 5-10 years, this will be the greenest place in the pasture". He showed me where another unit had been, and sure enough, he was right.Good morning! 77˚F muggy, partly cloudy humidity 83%. Heading to the mid 90s today.
Kyle I had a friend in Houston whose son was applying for a job as a valet at our condo. He said his son could not drive a standard, I told him sorry I could not be a reference for his son. The incline into the parking garage was quite steep. When your daughter feels comfortable with the stick shift get her to practice stopping on an incline and the going up it without rolling backwards or dying out. This will simulate parking garages and railroad tracks. Remember the RR tracks besides South Main Street in Houston at Hillcroft, Fondren and Chimney Rock. Our first 4 vehicles were manual, never wanted to spend the extra money on an automatic. I have paddle shift in the Stinger now, one day I'm going to learn how to do it.
Different websites discussed wether BBQ charcoal could be substituted for expensive biochar. One web site seemed to make the most sense. It stated that using all natural charcoal that was not in briquettes form but in lumps was ok. I found some at HD and will crush it and add it to my compost. I do miss a good burn pile, it would be interesting to make my own good expensive biochar.
It was too hot to mow yesterday, at least all the grass is growing at the same speed and the yard looks even.
Hand and foot tournament tonight - going for the price money. Tournament is limited to the first 40 people.
Wngsprd hope you continue to recover quickly.
RIP Coconino Moon
2/24/14 - 6/25/2021
Ok Eric, here's my idea, I want only 10% royalties. This idea can fix at least 2 problems (maybe more) at once. You know how those UPS (uninterruptable power supplies) are always going bad because of the batteries??? Well, lets' make one, that can not only charge multiple Makita/Milwaukee batteries at once (they already have that) but can work as a UPS too, using whatever brand of batteries are attached to it (charging under normal circumstances, but used for backup power if needed). I just need you to design the boards and schematics. PS, I have maybe 3 or 4 old, non-working UPS's at work (in my area alone), that need new batteries. I'd throw them out for a nice charger/UPS system. I've seen our IT dept throw many old UPS away. The batteries they use are so/so. I figure a properly charged 18v battery or a host of them charging, could really supply ample time to shut down a server or computer or maybe power other things like a fish tank's pump etc....Had a pleasant stroll around town with my wife this morning. It was good to see the place so busy again, even if we all still have to put on masks before entering shops.
Fuddy, are you tempted to buy the island home ?
Wng, good to hear you recovered enough to be roasting not just one but 3 batches of coffee.
Kyle, I have a Metabo detail sander, similar to the one you showed except with a generous length of power cord. I hate tools that skimp with short cords, though I guess it will not be long before most tools without batteries are museum pieces. It works well in the hard to reach places where I can't get in with an orbital sander. With 33 different flat faces per window, I am really glad there are only a couple of places I have to sand by hand.
Bird, sounds like your auto driving daughter grew up with a great can-do attitude
PJ, saw a sign on a chalkboard this morning that you may need to take heed of if you keep missing out on those portions of food
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