Blue Ice Bike
1 mW
- Joined
- Jan 27, 2017
- Messages
- 14
subscribed.
Want to build a battery pack for my solar panel charging system.
Want to build a battery pack for my solar panel charging system.
Staphylococcus aureus is known as a food-poisoning agent and a common cause of infections including serious antibiotic-resistant hospital infections6,7. In addition it has been implicated in SIDS (Sudden Infant Death Syndrome)
Furthermore, for differentiation on the species level, catalase (positive for all Staphylococcus species), coagulase (fibrin clot formation, positive for S. aureus), DNAse (zone of clearance on DNase agar), lipase (a yellow color and rancid odor smell), and phosphatase (a pink color) tests are all done.
WHAT is your product??????swbluto said:x
Looks like I'm in talks with a producer of the Today Show. Getting my product featured on the show, woohoo, lol.
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Are ya bathing? Water! wash! soap! Might want to wash up before you go on TVswbluto said:Hmmm... I'm noticing something peculiar. I haven't washed my feet in a month
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swbluto said:Hehe, you know that girl that keeps trying to harm me but I knew how to silence her? Well, once again, she tries to harm me but little does she know, it's absolutelyof NO effect.
Dauntless said:swbluto said:Hehe, you know that girl that keeps trying to harm me but I knew how to silence her? Well, once again, she tries to harm me but little does she know, it's absolutelyof NO effect.
Not psychopath, SJW. It's a noble cause trying to destroy you, of course.
The "Girl" that comes after me from time to time I tried to date in college, but of course she was too good for me. I was warned by her high school classmates, but I didn't listen, of course. So I reconstruct from what I'm told that she had an affair with a guy at work, old enough to be her father, lost her job because his wife was HER BOSS, wound up letting the guy leave his wife for her, but was someone affronted by the fact that HE wasn't good enough for her either. So she took to vandalizing my house, I guess because I was closeby, eventually she starts trying to run me over when she catches me on foot. How much more their really is I'm not sure, it's not like I'm discussing any of this with her. Once she was out of that one job I no longer had friends among her coworkers to update me on matters. Somehow, I can't help but think she considers her some sort of SJW for doing this.
So someday when your girl there drives up the sidewalk at you we can compare notes. Until then, you're a piker.
Dauntless said:So is this girl of yours from Southern California or what?
bigmoose said:The medical stuff you wrote above happens to real old folks... I thought you were a lot younger. Am I off in guessing your age?
swbluto said:I'm like any normal 29 year old male
swbluto said:Anyway, I'm OK with the idea of filling in the gulley because I've seen the water around here. It doesn't flow anywhere. It just sits in the trenches. So, I don't think "flow" is going to take out a driveway on my particular property like might be true in a conventional culvert situation. So, I think filling it in is perfectably doable. It's really just a good idea to build it high, to make sure it is well above the current water levels, and to make sure there's some good trenching around it. The water levels get pretty high.
I sure hope you get this paradise done, before you have your strokeswbluto said:Well, I guess I /should/ put one under but I'm the type that doesn't feel like doing something unless I know it needs it, and I want to give a chance to let me know if it needs it first (By taking out the driveway during a downpour, lol.). It seems like it should be a relatively simple manner to install one later if necessary.
Anyway, seems like the multimillionaire buying up all the properties and going around con sus dos amigos mexicano with his go-cart and front-loader in tow, is doing something. I suspect he's gone past the "putting up signs" stage and he's now moving into the "Clearing the property of trees" stage. But, I'll check it out later, assuming I'm still around, lol. (I was a bit wiser with moving the RV last time, by putting all the loose items in a box. My cocoa and my salt didn't spill this time, yay!)
I put my RV on the side in the intersection so I'm not technically blocking the street. Not that I suspect there's going to be cops (Because it seems like the last two were called in by the neighbor I talked to two days ago), but it seems like i've been pretty lucky recently, lol, Anyhow, I'm pretty sure "not blocking the street" is not going to stop them from harassing me, but I'm hoping that whatever they might threaten me with, it's not a Class B demeanor kind of threat (6 months jailtime), lol. The next cop visit, I'll just go back to the national forest and hope that the couple days I was away counts, lol. It doesn't exactly seem like the NF here is keep strict tract of the residents here. They must be "relaxed" like much of Houston. [As opposed to the military, kind of the opposite of relaxed.]
Anyway, I'm slowly adding to the driveway now. Got 6 wheelbarrow loads in, just 90-110 more, I think?
Anyhow, as to age. Yep, I guess I'm 'old'. It puzzles me (I don't know the underlying cause), but it seems that's been a common remark. As to strokes, they can strike at any age, though artery dissection and vessel disorders are a more common causes in younger folks. I'm guessing based on the location of the carotid pain, I might have a carotid dissection from the "Great Neck Sprain" that happened 6 months ago. Seems like it was happening a good 2-3 inches downstream from the carotid fork. Research is telling me that it normally heals up 80% in like 12 months, was it?
Though, it's a bit interesting I can elicit the right temple forehead pain by pressing on the right carotid fork, but not on the left one. Maybe it's just the scapula muscle, seems like it maps to the right forehead.
Sand-clay road construction was one of the common methods of providing a stable road surface in the early 20th century. The idea was that adding clay to sandy roads gave them stability; adding sand to clay surfaces prevented them from rutting and becoming sticky in wet weather. Historian Albert Rose explained the tricky part of construction was getting the proper proportions of sand and clay so that "the clay acted as a binder while the sand particles were permitted to bear upon each other and interlock so as to resist displacement by traffic."
With their economy depleted by the ravages of war, the South needed a road surface that could be built and maintained at a small cost from local materials in generous abundance. It was a logical development, therefore, that S. H. Owens, road supervisor of Richland County, South Carolina, because of his location and the thoroughness and efficiency of his work, should be acclaimed by his associates as "the father of the sand-clay road in America."
Mr. Owens wrote, "In January, 1889, I took charge of the roads in this county, which were then in deep sand in two-thirds of the county, the balance, being through sticky clay hills with the exception of about two miles of macadam road which had proven too expensive for our county to continue to build. I commenced covering the sand on the old Camden road with clay, to about 10 inches in depth. At first the people were displeased. It had rained a great deal and they were not accustomed to seeing muddy roads. I continued to throw sand on the clay until it quit bogging and sticking to the wheels, keeping it crowned with an ordinary road scraper. After I had built a few miles of the road and it became smooth and hard the people were delighted."
There are some plants however that don't seem to mind the clay that much. They are as follows: Persimon, ogechee lime, che grafted on osage orange, jujubee, mulberry, muscadine grapes, pear. I have over 100 fruit trees and wish I had better soil. I helped a friend plant a few trees about 4 years ago in good loamy soil. They grow twice as fast as the ones I have and are much healthier, but when given lemonds make lemonade.
I have had good growth with my Red Haven Peach tree in clay. I dug a big hole, and mixed in a bag of planting mix. Very good growth, but only 9 months old so far. I plan to dig in more mulch each year, and create "donut" shaped mounds around my trees. I have had good luck with peaches in many soils.
With all the caliche here in New Mexico I've discovered that I need to dig huge holes - ensuring I've got them very deep for drainage and then backfill the hole with caliche-free topsoil mixed with a really good compost, adding humus and Super-thrive as I water the new plant in.
Around town the best product I have found is with a good mix of lava sand, lava rock, blood meal, organic matter and other good stuff is ORGANO PATIO MIX FOR PALMS AND CACTUS, packaged locally by GroWell Industries
swbkuto said:Looks like my product is going to be aired on the today show.
Since the end of World War II, the US has gone from being a nation of canned beans and thousands of creamed vegetable recipes to being a country of fresh fruits and vegetables all year long.
These are nice things, and because of President Donald Trump, we may very well be about to have them taken away.
Because here's the thing about short sleepers: They're not people with insomnia, nor are they people with insane caffeine addictions that keep them from getting fully rested. Instead, short sleepers wake up after very little sleep well rested and ready for the day. They'll always wake up early — even on vacation, and they tend to have similar behavioral characteristics as well, like being physically active and optimistic