I'm usually attempting to entertain you but I'm in the middle of pussy sandwich buffet at the moment.
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hey Dill have you heard of a book called "propaganda wars how the global elite control what you see"?
Been hacking away at the invasive shrubs which have plagued the area, and our property :sweat:, for too long. Also been pruning and chopping some unwanted trees; hopefully going to be finished with the initial work of chopping stuff down within the next couple weeks to a month. Going to try and see if I can cover them to cut off sunlight and see if I can kill them without chemicals or needing to dig them out. After that will be killing or uprooting. Need to prune the skirt of some trees I don't want dead as well. Not the fastest process when doing it all manually but at least I've finally gotten Gyp out there to help :wacko:.
Nintendo Switch games keep leaking out early. I wonder how underground emulation of the Switch 2 will be whenever it comes, if it does.
If there are areas with invasive plants buy bags of rock salt used for snow and go high salinity wasteland they die in on them. Disperse in the area of undesired plants, then you'll need to water the soil for it to seep in and natural precipitation does the rest. It's non-toxic and reverts back to normal over time, the key is kill the roots and seeds of plants you don't want to grow there breaking their life cycle. Desired natives take their place eventually.
Any idea how long until recovery and coverage area for a 50lb bag? It's across multiple acres of land so it's going to add up no matter what if I'm buying stuff.
It varies by soil type and precipitation as well as amount of rock salt used. Sandy soil leaches out more salt with precipitation and depending on amount of water that passes through it can last 3-5 months. More organic soil can retain high salination for 2 years if you don't introduce organic matter to make it recover quickly. Rule of thumb is to cover an area with enough salt so that it's a thin layer above topsoil, come back four months later to water down sandy soil to make it recover and add compost to organic soil to make it recover.
so I started doing some plays on colecovision some of the games haven't been bad but my controller is wearing out. I don't know if the brand is getting worse for quality or if I just got a bad one I really haven't used it that much since I got it a couple months ago but the buttons and d-pad are getting soft and sticky and many times the buttons don't register as being pressed like the pad isn't making proper contact with the board. I ordered a new controller today from a different brand hopefully it turns out well.
as far as the games go it looks like anything that got released on the 2600 and ported to coleco is better by a long shot on the coleco, it's not even like the 2600 to 7800 difference it's like 2600 to nes difference
you ever get the urge to go out into the street in the middle of the night and just yell FUCK over and over again or maybe something else :wacko:
I got burned out on oblivion so I started up solus project it's a survival adventure puzzle game by the people that made the ball. I though it was a sequel to the ball but it's not. I'm not too far into it yet so I can't really say I like it or not.
Bloop!