Jim Beankie
In the Starting Line-Up
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How many tentacles does that thing have?
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CLICK HERE to Register for a free account and login for a smoother ad-free experience. It's easy, and only takes a few moments.How many tentacles does that thing have?
How much do you burn?More rain. Great. I usually buy my firewood a year ahead. I still have gotten this year's (for next year). Nobody can get into the woods: early spring all summer long out there..
Looks like its bringing Covid with it.
One is direct hit on the new lighthouse.How many tentacles does that thing have?
I think everybody's got a computer model. One is from Incarcerated Bob.How many tentacles does that thing have?
Go talk with your blowbuddy Ivan.Blame Bill the GM.
Only about 4 cords. I used to heat only with wood, used about 7 cords and got maybe half out of my own woods, but I'm getting a little old for that stuff. Nowadays I buy either logs or round wood. I suppose eventually it'll just be me and thermostat and a bunch of oil, unless they mandate electric-only at some point.How much do you burn?
Only about 4 cords. I used to heat only with wood, used about 7 cords and got maybe half out of my own woods, but I'm getting a little old for that stuff. Nowadays I buy either logs or round wood. I suppose eventually it'll just be me and thermostat and a bunch of oil, unless they mandate electric-only at some point.
We’ll get some rain and wind on Saturday, right now Sunday looks nice.It looks like Lee will go east of Foxborough, but a couple of the outlier spaghetti models have it hitting New England. It could make Sunday night pretty interesting, weather wise
edited to add: a very small but non-zero chance we could be playing Monday night football this week
Hurricane Lee tracker: Follow path of 'dangerous' storm as it heads for New England
Follow Hurricane Lee's projected path with this live tracker as the Category 2 storm moves toward New England and Canada in the Atlantic Ocean.www.usatoday.com
And they did so well in the weather last week, especially in Q1. Did weather improve after first quarter?i'd actually take some nasty weather......this team is built to win on running game & strength of defense, the opponent is not
I smoke two joints in the morningHow much do you burn?
I dont think Hurricane Abdul-Jabbar can stop Hurricane Lee.It looks like Lee will go east of Foxborough, but a couple of the outlier spaghetti models have it hitting New England. It could make Sunday night pretty interesting, weather wise
edited to add: a very small but non-zero chance we could be playing Monday night football this week
Hurricane Lee tracker: Follow path of 'dangerous' storm as it heads for New England
Follow Hurricane Lee's projected path with this live tracker as the Category 2 storm moves toward New England and Canada in the Atlantic Ocean.www.usatoday.com
The game starts at 420.I smoke two joints in the morning
I smoke two joints at night
I smoke two joints in the afternoon
It makes me feel all right
I smoke two joints in time of peace
And two in time of war
I smoke two joints before I smoke two joints
And then I smoke two more
And they did so well in the weather last week, especially in Q1. Did weather improve after first quarter?
I live in northern New England. I lived off grid for ten years, had a sheep farm. We were on a hilltop where the wind just whistled through, and most years the sheep fencing, which was maybe 4'8" high, got buried completely under the snow. We used to say spring was on its way when the top of the picnic table reappeared in late winter.The house, a log cabin was built by hippies, badly built and caulked, plastic sheeting over two window openings when I bought it, doors so ill-fitted that a little snowdrift built up inside the front door some nights. It took 9 or 10 cords to heat it the first winter. I was younger and stronger then, so it was kind of a big adventure. Eventually my wife put her foot down and we moved into town, to a house with a few acres of pasture, so that we could bring most of the animals with us. Now we are in a legit house (I gave up working in the woods and got work in education) with a couple of sheep, 25 chickens, six dogs, and three cats; and it only takes 3-4 cords plus oil to heat the house. So when I think back to the firewood I used to have to work up (plus stowing away hundreds of bales of hay), 3 or 4 cords, which I only have to split and stack in the woodshed, doesn't seem that bad. Once a year, the hay guy delivers 60 bales of second cut. He even helps we old fogies to stack it in the hay building (for- ouch- seven or eight bucks a bale). For firewood, we get mostly maple (hard and soft), ash, red oak, birches (yellow has the most heat), and beech.Thats still a lot of wood.
I burn wood too. Probably 2 cords. Where I live they have Osage Orange or Hedge trees. Its like burning coal and if you put too much in you can damage the stove and catch the house on fire. Hackberry and Black Locust too are good at generating heat.
There will be a civil war or some states will succeed from the Republic before we get to electric only.
They already average like 20' tides. I can only imagine. I own land up there in Lubec.Bay of Fundy could experience an epic surge.
I live in northern New England. I lived off grid for ten years, had a sheep farm. We were on a hilltop where the wind just whistled through, and most years the sheep fencing, which was maybe 4'8" high, got buried completely under the snow. We used to say spring was on its way when the top of the picnic table reappeared in late winter.The house, a log cabin was built by hippies, badly built and caulked, plastic sheeting over two window openings when I bought it, doors so ill-fitted that a little snowdrift built up inside the front door some nights. It took 9 or 10 cords to heat it the first winter. I was younger and stronger then, so it was kind of a big adventure. Eventually my wife put her foot down and we moved into town, to a house with a few acres of pasture, so that we could bring most of the animals with us. Now we are in a legit house (I gave up working in the woods and got work in education) with a couple of sheep, 25 chickens, six dogs, and three cats; and it only takes 3-4 cords plus oil to heat the house. So when I think back to the firewood I used to have to work up (plus stowing away hundreds of bales of hay), 3 or 4 cords, which I only have to split and stack in the woodshed, doesn't seem that bad. Once a year, the hay guy delivers 60 bales of second cut. He even helps we old fogies to stack it in the hay building (for- ouch- seven or eight bucks a bale). For firewood, we get mostly maple (hard and soft), ash, red oak, birches (yellow has the most heat), and beech.