Thank god my closet locks from the outsideWhatever... good thing you have more energy than me. ππ It's bad enough doing a puppy in the terrible two's. I can't imagine trying to keep up with a little leaguer π
Thank god my closet locks from the outsideWhatever... good thing you have more energy than me. ππ It's bad enough doing a puppy in the terrible two's. I can't imagine trying to keep up with a little leaguer π
Are you talking about that little cutie I've seen in pictures? I can't believe he got older and that good at it πππ yes I can ππThank god my closet locks from the outside
Oh thats the one! Hes like drinking beers all night and enjoying urself β¦ then u wake up in the morning ! Thats also him hahahAre you talking about that little cutie I've seen in pictures? I can't believe he got older and that good at it πππ yes I can ππ
When I am up in Ludington Michigan. I will check that out. There is a ice cream shop but they also make their own ice cream. They supply stores with ice cream in nearby cities. The name of the place is House of Flavors.I live near a shop that hand-makes its own ice cream and candies. While they aren't nice big barrels like those blue ones, they do have a lot of 5-gallon and 3-gallon food grade buckets that they put out free-for-the-taking, about every two or three months. Most of the time they have lids with them, too.
They're great to store bulk flour, beans, rice, or whatever in, plus they do all the stuff the ones Home Depot charges $4-5 each for that aren't "food safe". I use them to hold fish while I do aquarium changes, as plant stands to get the plants up higher in the window (I'm not fashion conscious, could you tell?), and all sorts of cleaning (though I don't use those buckets for live critters once they've had soap in them). They're great to drop a block of coco coir into water in and let it fluff up, My daughter-in-law likes to "brine" her turkeys at Thanksgiving, and these are perfect for that. I've even used them for "container gardening", they're big enough to keep tomato plants happy.
Just mentioning because if you need a higher quality bucket, see if you can find a place that makes their own Ice cream (they get frozen strawberries, and all sorts of other ingredients in these buckets) and check with them for ones they are done with Some restaurants get bulk food-things, too - but with them you have to be careful it didn't get something greasy put into it, or that they didn't use it with industrial strength cleaners to wash their floors, etc....
Have they said how the white one got cut?Dear Ray,
I'm just letting you know that the runaway military horses, Vida and Trojan, are continuing to improve.
Natrah
Yes Vida hit a bollard and one of them must have hit a bus as there were pictures of a bus with a smashed windscreen.Have they said how the white one got cut?
Yeah π€Dear Ray,
I'm just letting you know that the runaway military horses, Vida and Trojan, are continuing to improve.
Natrah
I'm no expert on this but something I've done is: dig just below the sod level . Then we put sand down and planted the slabs on top. Then filled in with the sod and dirt. If that's something you are trying to do.π€ like a little area or stone walkway in your garden.Good afternoon/evening all.
Here we are on the last day of April already - where has that first third of the year gone?
It has been a very cold miserable day again, and poured down since about 4 pm with more to come for the rest of the week.
The windmill obsession seems to have calmed down, 3 of them have fallen again so hopefully they'll stay down, depends if they are ready to admit defeat. π³οΈ
The birds have continued to ignore them.
My hedgehog pops in every night to enjoy the food I leave out regardless of the weather. It will give him a good start after a long winter hibernation. He seems to spend most of the night here looking for bugs and snails etc too so I'm wondering if he is nesting in my garden. Pity I can't track him.
Wildlife apart, I need some advice from you handymen - can you recommend the best way to lay paving slabs without actually concreting them in?
Thanks Cathy, the lane that runs at the end of my garden was tarmacked many years ago and it has been breaking up especially in the area where the neighbours keep flooding it. I've been given the paving slabs to reuse, so I thought I would take it all up and put the slabs down instead. It doesn't have heavy use so I'm hoping to do it as cheaply as possible. Sand would be a good option - or maybe gravel?I'm no expert on this but something I've done is: dig just below the sod level . Then we put sand down and planted the slabs on top. Then filled in with the sod and dirt. If that's something you are trying to do.π€ like a little area or stone walkway in your garden.
We used play sand and it worked just fine. I think gravel is so chunky unless it's peasize that it may be too sharp and chunky. But if someone has better knowledge do that. What we did was a landing at the end of a ramp for a wheelchair. After time went by it settled right in. The sod and dirt became an essential part of the little landing.The slabs were probably 18"x 18"and not thick.π.Thanks Cathy, the lane that runs at the end of my garden was tarmacked many years ago and it has been breaking up especially in the area where the neighbours keep flooding it. I've been given the paving slabs to reuse, so I thought I would take it all up and put the slabs down instead. It doesn't have heavy use so I'm hoping to do it as cheaply as possible. Sand would be a good option - or maybe gravel?
That is great to hear. Thanks for the update.Dear Ray,
I'm just letting you know that the runaway military horses, Vida and Trojan, are continuing to improve.
Natrah
They make a paver sand made for the base and then the joints between the pavers. To lock everything together. It's more expensive than regular sand.Good afternoon/evening all.
Here we are on the last day of April already - where has that first third of the year gone?
It has been a very cold miserable day again, and poured down since about 4 pm with more to come for the rest of the week.
The windmill obsession seems to have calmed down, 3 of them have fallen again so hopefully they'll stay down, depends if they are ready to admit defeat. π³οΈ
The birds have continued to ignore them.
My hedgehog pops in every night to enjoy the food I leave out regardless of the weather. It will give him a good start after a long winter hibernation. He seems to spend most of the night here looking for bugs and snails etc too so I'm wondering if he is nesting in my garden. Pity I can't track him.
Wildlife apart, I need some advice from you handymen - can you recommend the best way to lay paving slabs without actually concreting them in?
Thanks Ray I'll look it up.They make a paver sand made for the base and then the joints between the pavers. To lock everything together. It's more expensive than regular sand.
It hardens up but not like concrete.