- OT Major Tstorms in Da Lou now! - 2 Updates
- A new toy - 9 Updates
- OT I bought a 18" Lasko Pedestal Fan to take my Nordictracking to the next level! - 2 Updates
- OT 30 days has September, April June and November.... - 6 Updates
- Big Olaf Ice Cream - 1 Update
- Steaks on the Sizzle Zone - 2 Updates
- statins bad? - 3 Updates
| John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Jun 02 06:38PM -0700 On Saturday, June 1, 2019 at 10:06:32 PM UTC-5, Bruce wrote: > It works in the URL box of the browser, but it might get broken on > Usenet. What's stupid about that? Just put it between <>, like Gluten > Man says. Nope, if copy/paste fails, it's because TECH fails! Not me! I KNOW how it's supposed to work! And how much did YOU spend on gasoline last month? Me, ZERO! John Kuthe, Climate Anarchist and Knows More Than You Do! |
| Bruce <bruce@invalid.invalid>: Jun 03 12:35PM +1000 On Sun, 2 Jun 2019 18:38:07 -0700 (PDT), John Kuthe >> Usenet. What's stupid about that? Just put it between <>, like Gluten >> Man says. >Nope, if copy/paste fails, it's because TECH fails! Not me! I KNOW how it's supposed to work! You don't understand the difference between the address bar of your browser and Usenet. There is failure involved here, but it's not TECH that's failing. >And how much did YOU spend on gasoline last month? Me, ZERO! We drove around 200 miles worth. How much coal based electricity did you use for driving? |
| JBurns <jpburns@westnet.com.au>: Jun 03 08:08AM +0800 On Sat, 1 Jun 2019 16:45:18 -0500, Terry Coombs <snag_one@msn.com> wrote: > She wanted an Instant Pot , so today we bought one . Will be cooking >a 2 lb sirloin tip roast in it for dinner tonight . I wanted a rear tine >tiller ... I got a new toy today, or at least I ordered it. We have finished renovating the new-to-us house, except for the kitchen. It is a large kitchen 8 metres wide and 5 metres deep but at present is dated and poorly designed. It is built around 3 sides, no island, no peninsula. We are ripping the whole lot out. Most appliances will be located pretty much where they are now but we are adding a large peninsula with a built in wine fridge. There is a 60cm wall oven built into a cabinet and then a 75cm gas cooktop, so plenty of room to install this https://www.ilve.com.au/freestanding_cooker/pw150fmp-4/ Tadaaa! I have always wanted something like this but didn't have quite such grand plans. We got a good price on it though and also gained quite a bit of cash on the changeover from large city to very small city. If we decide to relocate in the future it will go with us. We did all the other renovations ourselves but the kitchen is being built by professionals. JB |
| "itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net" <itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net>: Jun 02 05:17PM -0700 On Sunday, June 2, 2019 at 7:08:23 PM UTC-5, Golden One wrote: > We did all the other renovations ourselves but the kitchen is being > built by professionals. > JB Remodels are great...once they're done, hahahaha. Be sure and post pictures, if you have the time, as the remodel progresses and especially once it's complete. Congratulations on your new kitchen!! |
| Hank Rogers <nospam@invalid.org>: Jun 02 07:22PM -0500 JBurns wrote: > We did all the other renovations ourselves but the kitchen is being > built by professionals. > JB Do yoose have a basement, or is yoose new house just a goat barn on a slab? |
| Ed Pawlowski <esp@snet.xxx>: Jun 02 08:35PM -0400 On 6/2/2019 8:08 PM, JBurns wrote: > of room to install this > https://www.ilve.com.au/freestanding_cooker/pw150fmp-4/ > Tadaaa! Ohhhhhhhhhh, that is lovely. We don't cook the type of meals that would really utilize it these days, but it sure it nice. Having a flat top will be nice too. |
| JBurns <jpburns@westnet.com.au>: Jun 03 09:25AM +0800 On Sun, 2 Jun 2019 19:22:22 -0500, Hank Rogers <nospam@invalid.org> wrote: >> JB >Do yoose have a basement, or is yoose new house just a goat barn on >a slab? Goat barn on a concrete slab. Last week I planted my citrus trees. There was an existing grafted Lisbon lemon and an unknown (grafted) mandarin, both suffering badly from lack of water. I have managed to save both and both have now flowered and have small fruit. I have added a Eureka lemon, Imperial mandarin, Washington navel orange and a Tahitian Lime. Sometime this month I should be able to locally source some apples and stone fruit suitable for warmer climates. Blueberries grow great here and fruit for most of the year so I put in two advanced plants. Husband has been fishing a few times with one of our neighbours and we have stashed some fish in the freezer. Some of this https://www.fish.wa.gov.au/Species/WA-Dhufish/Pages/default.aspx this https://www.fish.wa.gov.au/Species/Pink-Snapper/Pages/default.aspx and a couple of these https://fish-on.com.au/what-the-fish/a-g/coral-trout/ The same neighbour has cray pots and has gifted us with some of these https://www.fish.wa.gov.au/Species/Rock-Lobster/Pages/default.aspx They (the neighbours) don't have much of a garden so I will reciprocate with fresh fruit and veg as it becomes available. JB |
| U.S. Janet B. <JB@nospam.com>: Jun 02 07:48PM -0600 On Sun, 2 Jun 2019 16:59:15 -0500, Terry Coombs <snag_one@msn.com> wrote: snip And that just got a whole bunch easier >with this new tiller . Rear tines , power driven wheels , and it does in >one pass what the (now) old one took 3 to accomplish . While being >guided by one hand if i want , and it doesn't shake me to pieces . exactly Janet US |
| JBurns <jpburns@westnet.com.au>: Jun 03 09:53AM +0800 >Ohhhhhhhhhh, that is lovely. We don't cook the type of meals that would >really utilize it these days, but it sure it nice. Having a flat top >will be nice too. I am still cooking for myself and three men on a daily basis, and also have family gatherings. Some of our family have moved to this town also. I bake a lot and have been baking for a couple of local charities. They provide me with flour, sugar and eggs and I buy the more costly ingredients. They distribute the results to needy families and also sell some at bake sales. Really, I have been managing perfectly well with a small oven and a large cooktop, but I have wanted something like this for so long. It is very nice to be able to indulge myself. I wish my Mother was still with us, she would have had a field day with this. Her baking was incomparable. I didn't really understand why she would spend the considerable amount of time required to turn out very complicated cakes etc. but it was her main hobby and lots of people benefited from her delicious creations. She was approached by several people to provide cakes for restaurants but never did, she liked to give them away. I miss her terribly. JB |
| Ed Pawlowski <esp@snet.xxx>: Jun 02 10:05PM -0400 On 6/2/2019 9:53 PM, JBurns wrote: > several people to provide cakes for restaurants but never did, she > liked to give them away. I miss her terribly. > JB Nice story. I bet she got a lot of satisfaction giving them away. Making them for pay takes the fun out of it and makes the hobby a job. |
| Hank Rogers <nospam@invalid.org>: Jun 02 09:34PM -0500 JBurns wrote: > They (the neighbours) don't have much of a garden so I will > reciprocate with fresh fruit and veg as it becomes available. > JB I really love blueberries. I had some bushes years ago. They grew pretty large, and had wonderful tasting berries. But after a few years they up and died. Maybe it was one of those dry years, can't remember now it's been so many years ago. |
| John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Jun 02 06:14PM -0700 On Sunday, June 2, 2019 at 4:55:38 PM UTC-5, Sheldon wrote: > On Sun, 2 Jun 2019 12:43:26 -0400, Ed Pawlowski <esp@snet.xxx> wrote: ... > >In a real house with a basement. > Yup, REAL houses have basements. Even Amish houses have basements... > Anish barns have basements. Not in New Orleans! Water table is too high! Waterproofing them is a nightmare! They don't BURY THEIR DEAD EITHER!! And where is there a BARN with a basement, ShelDUM? Whose? John Kuthe... |
| Hank Rogers <nospam@invalid.org>: Jun 02 09:26PM -0500 John Kuthe wrote: > Not in New Orleans! Water table is too high! Waterproofing them is a nightmare! They don't BURY THEIR DEAD EITHER!! > And where is there a BARN with a basement, ShelDUM? Whose? > John Kuthe... He's probably broken into lots of barns to have sex with animals. Speaking of the dead ... Hide yoose corpses, else Popeye will hump them until their limbs fall off. |
| JBurns <jpburns@westnet.com.au>: Jun 03 08:27AM +0800 On Sat, 01 Jun 2019 06:37:54 +1000, Bruce <bruce@invalid.invalid> wrote: >>..but May's not on that list! >>So today is May 31! NOT the 1st of June! Oh well, I bought me and my housemates the First Donuts Of The Month Club a day EARLY!! Think I will HAVE ONE! >It's the 1st of June. Has been for 6 hours and 37 minutes. First day of winter and it was 28C here. Just georgeous. JB |
| Bruce <bruce@invalid.invalid>: Jun 03 10:39AM +1000 On Mon, 03 Jun 2019 08:27:44 +0800, JBurns <jpburns@westnet.com.au> wrote: >>>So today is May 31! NOT the 1st of June! Oh well, I bought me and my housemates the First Donuts Of The Month Club a day EARLY!! Think I will HAVE ONE! >>It's the 1st of June. Has been for 6 hours and 37 minutes. >First day of winter and it was 28C here. Just georgeous. But we did have overnight frost. |
| graham <g.stereo@shaw.ca>: Jun 02 06:53PM -0600 On 2019-06-02 6:27 p.m., JBurns wrote: >> It's the 1st of June. Has been for 6 hours and 37 minutes. > First day of winter and it was 28C here. Just georgeous. > JB I would imagine that Geraldton in the summer, with a land breeze, isn't so pleasant. |
| John Kuthe <johnkuthern@gmail.com>: Jun 02 06:23PM -0700 On Saturday, June 1, 2019 at 1:23:44 AM UTC-5, Jeßus wrote: > >..but May's not on that list! > >So today is May 31! NOT the 1st of June! Oh well, I bought me and my housemates the First Donuts Of The Month Club a day EARLY!! Think I will HAVE ONE! > You posted this on June 1. BULLSHIT!! I looked at my Sangean Clock Radio. it was May 31! John Kuthe... |
| JBurns <jpburns@westnet.com.au>: Jun 03 09:57AM +0800 On Mon, 03 Jun 2019 10:39:43 +1000, Bruce <bruce@invalid.invalid> wrote: >>>It's the 1st of June. Has been for 6 hours and 37 minutes. >>First day of winter and it was 28C here. Just georgeous. >But we did have overnight frost. Not here. I doubt we will ever get a frost, too close to the sea. Nighttime temps have mostly been in the double digits. JB |
| JBurns <jpburns@westnet.com.au>: Jun 03 10:11AM +0800 >> JB >I would imagine that Geraldton in the summer, with a land breeze, isn't >so pleasant. There are very few days in summer when an easterly prevails. South westerly is the prevailing wind, thank goodness. There were two days in Autumn when the Easterly wind blew, yes it was horrible. We have good aircon. Refrigerated for very hot days and EVAP for the rest of the hot days. Despite being by the sea, the humidity is very low. We did venture further inland to have a look around, during April. That was awful. Hot and dry with a desert wind and plenty of flies. JB |
| "Julie Bove" <juliebove@frontier.com>: Jun 02 07:00PM -0700 "Ed Pawlowski" <esp@snet.xxx> wrote in message news:3nTIE.12600$w55.10930@fx44.iad... > Pinecraft. Every tub of Big Olaf Ice Cream is hand mixed with the finest > ingredients and is then churned in batch freezers by local Amish > Craftsmen. When I used to make ice cream, banana was the only flavor people liked. They actually loved it. |
| penmart01@aol.com: Jun 02 08:36PM -0400 >with little mess and also as an oven. I don't buy ribeye steaks but >love the standing rib roast. Mostly don't care for the texture of the >ribeye steak or the filet mignon. Chuck steak is tender when not over cooked... and have proper steak knives, not that stupid serrated crap that tears and mangles any steak. Serve steak on a wooden tranchard with a sharp knife, A good steak should never be served on a ceramic plate. |
| Hank Rogers <nospam@invalid.org>: Jun 02 07:57PM -0500 > knives, not that stupid serrated crap that tears and mangles any > steak. Serve steak on a wooden tranchard with a sharp knife, A good > steak should never be served on a ceramic plate. Popeye, can't you leave the man alone? Why don't yoose go and hump that old mexican wife our yours (or her mother or grandmother, if she won't put put for yoose). They ain't been screwed since pancho villa was a boy and did all three of them. Or get another old wetback woman to pester. Yoose are really more insane than john kunte or julie bovine. |
| "itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net" <itsjoannotjoann@webtv.net>: Jun 02 05:19PM -0700 On Sunday, June 2, 2019 at 6:30:18 PM UTC-5, Dave Smith wrote: > > is not a factor in heart attacks. Artery plaque is. He said chelation > > therapy along with vitamin D3 and K2 will reduce plaque by half. > Okay. I'll bite. Why can't your take vitamin D3 and K2? S U C K E R! |
| Hank Rogers <nospam@invalid.org>: Jun 02 07:37PM -0500 >>> therapy along with vitamin D3 and K2 will reduce plaque by half. >> Okay. I'll bite. Why can't your take vitamin D3 and K2? > S U C K E R! Don't you have to have your hair tested before taking d and k? |
| graham <g.stereo@shaw.ca>: Jun 02 06:52PM -0600 On 2019-06-02 5:32 p.m., Dave Smith wrote: >> is not a factor in heart attacks. Artery plaque is. He said chelation >> therapy along with vitamin D3 and K2 will reduce plaque by half. > Okay. I'll bite. Why can't your take vitamin D3 and K2? I'll go one step further. Chelation? Dr of what? Quackery? |
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