Richy_T
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1RichyTrEwPYjZSeAYxeiFBNnKC9UjC5k
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August 12, 2021, 12:53:51 AM |
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Building the bluestone pad was about 800 and 100 for the poison ivy treatments. I was more sore from the poison Ivy then I was from moving 4.5 tons of gravel into place.
I was thinking of just going with concrete pylons and wooden posts. Would you advise against? I have heard with the poison ivy, the best bet is to wash thoroughly with detergent after contact. You need to catch it early though so if you were not aware it may not have helped.
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ChartBuddy
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1CBuddyxy4FerT3hzMmi1Jz48ESzRw1ZzZ
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August 12, 2021, 01:01:27 AM |
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savetherainforest
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August 12, 2021, 01:04:09 AM |
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Building the bluestone pad was about 800 and 100 for the poison ivy treatments. I was more sore from the poison Ivy then I was from moving 4.5 tons of gravel into place.
I was thinking of just going with concrete pylons and wooden posts. Would you advise against? I have heard with the poison ivy, the best bet is to wash thoroughly with detergent after contact. You need to catch it early though so if you were not aware it may not have helped. Any acidic corrosive substance that can disinfect works, but it also will create severe burns on the applied surface. Concrete works only in humid areas. And you just have to whitewash once every few years to maintain the humidity in the concrete.
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Copetech
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August 12, 2021, 01:22:37 AM Merited by JayJuanGee (1) |
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Building the bluestone pad was about 800 and 100 for the poison ivy treatments. I was more sore from the poison Ivy then I was from moving 4.5 tons of gravel into place.
I was thinking of just going with concrete pylons and wooden posts. Would you advise against? I have heard with the poison ivy, the best bet is to wash thoroughly with detergent after contact. You need to catch it early though so if you were not aware it may not have helped. I have always knocked out Poison Ivy breakouts quickly with a hot shower, scotch-brite pad and Chlorox Bleach. Itbdries out and heals within 48 hours. Of course if you know you've been into it, you can do the bleach treatment before the breakout begins. Also NEVER put poison ivy in a brush pile to be burned!!! The oils leach to the smoke and go airborne. Easy way to end up in the hospital with poison ivy in your eyes & lungs!
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suchmoon
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August 12, 2021, 01:34:35 AM |
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I was thinking of just going with concrete pylons and wooden posts. Would you advise against?
Have you checked your local code? You might not have a choice for the size of shed you're planning if you're in a cold climate.
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Luke Briggs
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August 12, 2021, 01:52:35 AM |
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Bitcoin payment future
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Kiley33
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August 12, 2021, 02:01:02 AM |
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Bitcoin payment future I thought of this picture.
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ChartBuddy
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August 12, 2021, 02:01:26 AM |
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marcus_of_augustus
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Eadem mutata resurgo
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August 12, 2021, 02:08:49 AM |
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https://www.zerohedge.com/covid-19/study-finds-most-highly-educated-americans-are-also-most-vaccine-hesitant “It finds that the association between hesitancy and education level follows a U-shaped curve with the highest hesitancy among those least and most educated. People with a master’s degree had the least hesitancy, and the highest hesitancy was among those holding a PhD.
In addition, while the lowest educated saw the largest drop in vaccine hesitancy for the first five months of 2021, those with PhD’s were the most likely to not change their minds."
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Biodom
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August 12, 2021, 02:18:23 AM |
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How about...PhD's just don't want to tell random 'survey bozos' what they really think. I usually hang up on 90-95% of surveys, coming to 99-100% if a survey is taking longer than 2 min. Sorry, no time to listen to a barrage of "guiding" questions.
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philipma1957
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'The right to privacy matters'
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August 12, 2021, 02:24:09 AM Last edit: August 12, 2021, 07:23:39 PM by philipma1957 Merited by JayJuanGee (1) |
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Building the bluestone pad was about 800 and 100 for the poison ivy treatments. I was more sore from the poison Ivy then I was from moving 4.5 tons of gravel into place.
I was thinking of just going with concrete pylons and wooden posts. Would you advise against? I have heard with the poison ivy, the best bet is to wash thoroughly with detergent after contact. You need to catch it early though so if you were not aware it may not have helped. Yes since it was dirt and roots. I did not think they were roots from the Poison Ivy as 18 months ago I killed off the Poison Ivy with roundup . Also there was a small tree stump I dug out while laying on the ground sweating like a mofo.. If you get exposed to the oils and are sweating you simply absorb the oil and washing is less helpful. I have been good with Poison Ivy after getting it really bad back in 1968.. 2 or 3 showers after any known exposure kept it very small. This time I worked in the dirt sweating for 2 hours so the showers were most likely too late. Well the next shed this fall I will let a young guy do the work fuck saving the $600. BTC is on the rise. As for concrete and pylons depends on code. I can do this with a gravel pad and not be called permanent structure so no tax on it and no permit. If I do concrete I need a permit.
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dragonvslinux
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August 12, 2021, 02:29:49 AM |
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I was wondering if there's a category of people who support the vaccine, as naturally intrigued by research projects and public experiments, but chose to abstain as not getting paid to test new medical research? I've otherwise stayed out of the debate for a while, just listening to friends who say they will never get it and we need to fight, as well as others who claim I am dumb for not having it already. Truth be told, my main argument for not getting the vaccine is my sock draw is always a complete mess. I have to keep rearranging it with thinner socks at the front for the warmer weather, but with access to thicker socks for work and gardening. It's a real nightmare to be honest and is a lot of maintenance for me, it's meant I simply haven't had the time to join this research project. That and the day I genuinely considered having the vaccine - "the day" as others put it - a beautiful butterfly landed on my knee (that was dirty from soil work) and with persistence decided to clean me while gaining sufficient nutrients, or so I assume. I tried to deter this creature but they were so persistent and determined so I gave up. It completely distracted me from thinking about taking the vaccine, and personally haven't thought about it since. I otherwise support everyone who has become part of this experiment, I genuinely salute you all! Medical advancements are needed, and this is a very well controlled study with an amazing sample size. I look forward to the continued results of this experiment in the coming years. Naturally I'm skeptical with any untested medicines/vaccines that haven't gone through the test of time, at least 2-3 years but realistically 10 years for the full research to be discovered. If you're part of the older generation then for sure you have nothing to lose, but personally, I feel I've still got a lot to live for. None the less, I appreciate all of you who are vaccinated for being part of this study so I don't have to
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Biodom
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August 12, 2021, 02:38:14 AM |
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I was wondering if there's a category of people who support the vaccine, as naturally intrigued by medical research and public experiments, but chose to abstain as not getting paid to test new medical research? I've otherwise stayed out of the debate for a while, just listening to friends who say they will never get it and we need to fight, as well as others who claim I am dumb for not having it already. Truth be told, my main argument for not getting the vaccine is my sock draw is always a complete mess. I have to keep rearranging it with thinner socks at the front for the warmer weather, but with access to thicker socks for work and gardening. It's a real nightmare to be honest and is a lot of maintenance for me, it's meant I simply haven't had the time to join this research project. That and the day I genuinely considered having the vaccine - "the day" as others put it - a beautiful butterfly landed on my knee (that was dirty from soil work) and with persistence decided to clean me while gaining sufficient nutrients, or so I assume. I tried to deter this creature but they were persistent so I gave up. It completely distracted me from thinking about taking the vaccine, and personally haven't thought about it since. I otherwise support everyone who has become part of this experiment, I genuinely salute you all! Medical advancements are needed, and this is a very well controlled study with an amazing sample size. I look forward to the continued results of this experiment in the coming years. Naturally I'm skeptical with any untested medicines/vaccines that haven't gone through the test of time, at least 2-3 years but realistically 10 years for the full research to be discovered. If you're part of the older generation then for sure you have nothing to lose, but personally, I feel I've still got a lot to live for. None the less, I appreciate all of you who are vaccinated for being part of this study so I don't have to hey, by the same thinking...bitcoin is untested too, just a beta software, no wonder the latest version is 0.21.1 10 year wait for results is not productive as some might be immunized by 5-10 different vaccines in the interim.
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OgNasty
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I was watching Pomp's podcast today and even Peter Schiff thinks that Bitcoin is going to break over $100K this year. Everyone in finance seems to know what's coming, which on one hand is reassuring that so many people are aware of so much money headed towards the Bitcoin market, but on the other hand markets have a way of doing exactly the opposite of what everyone thinks will happen right at the time it costs people the most money. We'll see which scenario plays out, but I'm firmly on the side of us seeing a six figure Bitcoin price in the next 4 months.
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dragonvslinux
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August 12, 2021, 02:47:08 AM |
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I was wondering if there's a category of people who support the vaccine, as naturally intrigued by medical research and public experiments, but chose to abstain as not getting paid to test new medical research? I've otherwise stayed out of the debate for a while, just listening to friends who say they will never get it and we need to fight, as well as others who claim I am dumb for not having it already. Truth be told, my main argument for not getting the vaccine is my sock draw is always a complete mess. I have to keep rearranging it with thinner socks at the front for the warmer weather, but with access to thicker socks for work and gardening. It's a real nightmare to be honest and is a lot of maintenance for me, it's meant I simply haven't had the time to join this research project. That and the day I genuinely considered having the vaccine - "the day" as others put it - a beautiful butterfly landed on my knee (that was dirty from soil work) and with persistence decided to clean me while gaining sufficient nutrients, or so I assume. I tried to deter this creature but they were persistent so I gave up. It completely distracted me from thinking about taking the vaccine, and personally haven't thought about it since. I otherwise support everyone who has become part of this experiment, I genuinely salute you all! Medical advancements are needed, and this is a very well controlled study with an amazing sample size. I look forward to the continued results of this experiment in the coming years. Naturally I'm skeptical with any untested medicines/vaccines that haven't gone through the test of time, at least 2-3 years but realistically 10 years for the full research to be discovered. If you're part of the older generation then for sure you have nothing to lose, but personally, I feel I've still got a lot to live for. None the less, I appreciate all of you who are vaccinated for being part of this study so I don't have to hey, by the same thinking...bitcoin is untested too, just a beta software, no wonder the latest version is 0.21.1 10 year wait for results is not productive as some might be immunized by 5-10 different vaccines in the interim. I waited *almost* 10 years until I invested in Bitcoin, once the blockchain was tried and tested. I knew about it for years, but never trusted it, as I'm naturally a skeptic The software used to interact with the blockchain is completely irrelevant, it's an immutable blockchain, I don't see your point here But sure, the more diverse research the better! After Bitcoin there were more than 5-10 different currencies that came about as well. Nice try though
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ChartBuddy
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August 12, 2021, 03:01:38 AM |
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Toxic2040
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August 12, 2021, 03:07:50 AM |
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Richy_T
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1RichyTrEwPYjZSeAYxeiFBNnKC9UjC5k
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August 12, 2021, 03:19:49 AM |
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Have you checked your local code? You might not have a choice for the size of shed you're planning if you're in a cold climate.
It's not cold. Though I wouldn't have thought that would have hit any kind of limit. It's also an area where codes are generally not so severe. Though I should definitely run a quick check. The main reason for going with the size of the neighbor's shed was it looked like a good size and is proportionate to the land area.
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Richy_T
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August 12, 2021, 03:36:24 AM |
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As for concrete and pylons depends on code.
I can do this with a gravel pad and not be called permanent structure so no tax on it and no permit.
If I do concrete I need a permit.
This is different from a concrete pad. It can be either a concrete block or you can cast concrete cylinders. I have been lucky so far with poison ivy with no incidents though my wife has had it a few times. I almost wonder if there's such a thing as immunity.
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