Anyone Giving Up Coloring to Go Gray?
amck2
15 years ago
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Comments (28)
gypsyrose
15 years agoRelated Discussions
I give up going for heavy chemicals
Comments (5)I am aware of how/why ammonia works(THANK YOU KEN), so of course I am only spraying on the ones I see, and I see PLENTY! My yard is shady, moist and cool enough this week they are out ALL DANG DAY, munching away. I have been bolstered by the fact I only see very small ones in my Hosta. I am hoping that means I am dealing with newly hatched and soon they will all be gone too. My vegi garden is another story. As I replanted I dug up many huge,(thumb nail size) adult slugs. Yes metaldehyde was the chemical I was trying to think of. I find Otho's Get-a bug to be the best. I like the pellets, apply every 6 weeks, but no one in my town sells it anymore. I have googled until my fingers are raw and cannot find a place to purchase and send me some that doesn't have prohibitively expensive price then I add plus shipping to that and I need a second mortgage on my home. I would be interested in guidance in on line buying and have asked here before, but have not been blessed with a response. I even asked a co-worker who does landscaping every summer if he knew of a wholesale source and that got me no where. I went to ammonia last year as my beds were under control slug wise, spraying after a rain early in the morning seemed to take care of the few that wandered into my gardens, but I have some newer beds that seem to be infested and ammonia alone is not doing the trick. If anyone has an affordable source I would REALLY appreciate directions to it....See MoreAnyone had to give up property rights for widening road?
Comments (30)Our property has gone through something similar twice. Once to redirect and pave the road so a subdivision could be built down the road and once for the walking/bike path to be installed. We weren't here for the road change, but the result was rather large easement in front of our property. Then three years ago a township rep came in to advise about a walking path they were going to install in front of 4 houses on our road. No one wanted the path for a variety of reasons, including privacy issues but the guy promised the end result would be a benefit to values and they'd work with each homeowner to ensure their privacy would be preserved and anything disrupted like sprinklers or plantings would be fixed to better than new. When I explained that we had plans to completely renovate the landscape and reconfigure our long driveway, he asked what we had in mind. As it turned out, one of the funding requirements was that the path maintain specific leveling so it would be handicap friendly and due to the slope in the property, any changes to the drive later on may be prohibited as a result. The drive as it was wasn't a safe exit so we chatted for a bit about what our vision was and the why's of it all. His response was, sign the quit claim and we will take care of it all for you. The only thing that he promised that we did not get was a row of trees for privacy but we essentially had a new 150 ft driveway, a parking path and new yard when it was done. In addition to the advise that Soundness is giving, which is pretty much how our transaction worked be very sure that ANY and ALL agreements made between you and the city/county are listed in the quit claim before you sign it. The trees were actually discussed in a subsequent conversation. Both my husband and I were present and clearly heard the man agree to installing trees for some privacy, his exact words were, "that can happen and will not be a problem" but since the tree install was excluded in the Quit Claim, he denied having said that and considering the cost of the drive even got upset at us for suggesting he'd agreed to that....See MoreAnyone want to give wall color advice for my bedroom?
Comments (96)I think it is based upon an object at Mount Vernon and not a room color. If you read the description of the fandeck, you can kind of tell which colors are room colors and which are "inspired by" colors. The room colors are mostly greens or blue-greens with white trim or white with green or blue-green trim, it seems. Actually I think you arrived at these three (or five, including the Burnt Umber and Inkwell) by a certain process of elimination of what was going on in other rooms and by wanting a saturated color. That leaves Blue, Red or Yellow as the primaries and you used a Dark Blue elsewhere, --or Green or a Neutral which is Brown or Black. I don't think you want a chrome yellow bedroom, or hazard orange bedroom so you are considering all the reasonable options available....See Morei give up googling. dose anyone here know!!!
Comments (4)Interesting study. The experiment did not measure precisely the time from mating to first cocoon, the objectives were more to quantify cocoon production and reproductive lifespans. The 4 day figure was an educated guess, and it is only expressed as "less than 4 days". IMO it's said that way because they think it is 2-4 days in this study since they had about 2 cups of moist manure with 10 worms inside which they disturbed on day 60, 70, 72, 74, 76, etc. Another criticism is that with that kind of disturbance the worms will be freaked and this can affect their reproductive cycle (which includes as they shed their cocoons). Unfortunately the authors do not report carefully observing the time of mating, and are vague about clitella development (sexual maturity marker) saying only it happened between day 60 to 80 for all ten worms in the experiment. They critiqued their own study about not providing any new food after the start of the experiment for 60 days. They seemed also to suggest diet played a role in cocoon output rate. Day 60 they swapped some new cow manure (food was strictly moistened ~20 day old cow manure) in after which worms started to gain weight healthily and many matured by day 70, and all by day 80. They did not check for cocoons until 70, but when they did, they found a few. They continued checking then every two days, day 72, day 74, day 76, ... It was an excellent study on the worm life cycle, but given they found rates better than 3 cocoons per week, if the question is how long after mating the first cocoon is, I think the jury is still out and 48 hours seems more reasonable to me in conducive conditions. It was interesting that approximately three weeks after estimated mating, cocoon production appeared to max out at a cocoon every day and a half. The related question is how long till the last cocoon still generated from the same sperm is shed and sperm no longer viable or all utilized, that could be months. On the other hand worms are extremely content to have multiple copulations and preserve their personal sperm bank, according to multiple sources in the literature, so in a dense worm bin you would expect to get results sooner due to the orgy environment. Best PC...See Moreamck2
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