Covid-19

curious2garden

Well-Known Mod
Staff member
"Foxhole" is a euphemism for taking this seriously and taking preparedness seriously. I don't ever recall a drill sergeant using his 'inside' voice to instill in us the urgency of his message. Shouting works.... like "Loud pipes saves lives"..we are both trying to help people only in different ways. Take care, this is gonna be a rough one
You don't need a Bobcat for a euphemism
I'm 1/2 owner of a bobcat.....I can dig a foxhole anywhere in 5min.
We have an RV under a carport to live in.
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There is a fighting hole hidden in the brush in this picture, if you cannot see it I have done my job..
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MICHI-CAN

Well-Known Member
That's good. Most can be eaten as just the plants. I have toy fridge stocked with them. I donate starter plants to a church and a community garden. As well as friends. Gonna lose some bud real estate this year. Sucks. Wanted to go legally crazy this year.
 

Kushash

Well-Known Member
Crime will go up as some desperate people will do stupid things.
Amateurs are more likely to be deterred with some basic safety measures.
Might be a good time to improve outdoor lighting and finally install some security cameras.

Not sure if I should get LED lighting or the less efficient but better deterrent HPS lighting.
Better go with the HPS.

I got a fever and the only prescription is more cowbell.

 

MICHI-CAN

Well-Known Member
Crime will go up as some desperate people will do stupid things.
Amateurs are more likely to be deterred with some basic safety measures.
Might be a good time to improve outdoor lighting and finally install some security cameras.

Not sure if I should get LED lighting or the less efficient but better deterrent HPS lighting.
Better go with the HPS.

I got a fever and the only prescription is more cowbell.

Security cameras are like locks. They only keep honest people out. Full coverage here for years. No deterrent.
 

Kushash

Well-Known Member
Security cameras are like locks. They only keep honest people out. Full coverage here for years. No deterrent.
Well they can at least give a sense of security when you check out what's going on around the outside of a property which could lower anxiety for some people and they are helping to catch career criminals these days when severe cases are caught on a variety of cameras and shared with detectives. Not useful in court but it does give leads to who they are looking for.
IDK just my novice opinion.
 

DarkWeb

Well-Known Member
That's good. Most can be eaten as just the plants. I have toy fridge stocked with them. I donate starter plants to a church and a community garden. As well as friends. Gonna lose some bud real estate this year. Sucks. Wanted to go legally crazy this year.
Took down a auto flower 2 days ago and have other things going in. Less pot more veggie starts. Maybe I'll resurrect my 12'x24' greenhouse probably a little smaller this time (snow collapsed it).....a friend has a c.s.a. farm we've been involved in for the last 5 years.....I'm not worried about food. We'll see what happens, might be all good after a few months of tough times. But you can tell a lot about a person on the checkout lines..........some people are hording frozen pizzas and crap! Now is a good time to learn how to cook real food if you don't know how.........</rant>
 

Bareback

Well-Known Member
I Don’t Cotton To

A listener from Dallas wonders about the origin of “I don’t cotton to,” meaning “I’m not in favor of” or “I don’t get along with.” Though it sounds like a classic Southern phrase, Martha traces it all the way back to England, where the verb to cotton had to do with textile work. Saying “I’m not cotton with” or “I don’t cotton to” means that you don’t get along with something.


^^^
As a kid "I don't cotton to that." was what I heard when the grownups were displeased.

I still say that.....when it’s not good to say fuck it or fuck that shit or a number of other phases like that.
 

Kushash

Well-Known Member
you could (falsely) label your places as being infested by SARS-2 guess that may thwart those with reading abilities off XD
That's a plus.
I left a Halloween decoration up on my front door after halloween a few years ago.
8 small skeletons hung across the top of the door hanging by their necks.
I watched what looked like two young guys well dressed that where likely Jehovah Witnesses or Mormons on a mission.
They walked up to the door and turned around without knocking or ringing the bell.
Those skeletons get to stay there year round now.
 

greg nr

Well-Known Member
someone always profits.

Are there better companies that can do the job? if so I imagine they are already trying.

I do not see how pushing a political agenda is going to cure any of this.
Short answer: Yes, absolutely, and in massive quantities.

For example, the who test is highly effective, cheap, and available from multiple sources. But the cdc/fda wouldn't approve it for political reasons. Same with independent labs developing the ability to test. The dod independently just bought 500,000 of these tests to use on military personnel because they couldn't wait for domestic supplies of the cdc test to become available.

In short, the supply of test kits was intentionally restricted.

A political agenda caused this.
 

BarnBuster

Virtually Unknown Member
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