So are we Paul.Still waiting for the first snow here in Crackton
I should've been dreading COLD, not the snow.
Not a flake landed.
Barometer's almost on TILT: "very dry"
Barb
Moderators: Laaz, lucky1, Alchris, Kansas, Wes North Van
So are we Paul.Still waiting for the first snow here in Crackton
We're bare ground too.I'm surprised we haven't had any snow, yet. Not that I miss it!
Aaron, what a picture! Love it! Thanks for a gardening work you have been doing there! Beatiful!DesertZone wrote:A week or so ago. All melted.
It does in the winter and spring, hard too keep branches on the trees from all growing on one side. The wind has caused a death or here in the garden. Because of the protection in town, somethings grow there that I can't seem too grow out here. Like pumpas grass.TimMAz6 wrote:Hi Aaron.....your yard looks like it has a LOT OF WIND! Any plant which survives your yard is hardy in my opinion.
Yes...a labor of love. I wonder how the next owner will love it.lucky1 wrote:Aaron, wow, haven't seen a shot from that angle before.
You've done so much to define the outdoor spaces...very very nice.
Obviously a labour of love.
Yup, can imagine the wind howling there.
But the open skies are worth it.
Barb
Very nice of you, thanks!igor.glukhovtsev wrote:
Aaron, what a picture! Love it! Thanks for a gardening work you have been doing there! Beatiful!
Is your place for sale?wonder how the next owner will love it.
50 years or so.lucky1 wrote:Is your place for sale?wonder how the next owner will love it.
Or did you mean in 50 years or so?
Barb
Could it be you need 2 to get fruit?gojis have been in ground now three years,
Ugh! Good luck withthat! I am NOT looking forward to this winter...already way too cold for NovemberBeny wrote:HA...nice one.....we ve got our real first snowstorm here, the winter storm Boreas you ve got too Mike, but you have rain, and we ve got both here. Now we have about 6 inches of snow at the ground ....
Ben
Ugh, no thanks we do not want it!!!! Thanks for the holiday wisheslucky1 wrote:Good one, Mike!
We'll have some spare cold for you starting Monday when an Arctic outflow hits us.
This one'll be bad, from early reports.
Happy Thanksgiving to our U.S. friends!
As you sit down to that turkey dinner, remember "once on the lips, forever on the hips".
Barb
OK, I'll have your turkey.no thanks we do not want it
I'm still fulllucky1 wrote:OK, I'll have your turkey.no thanks we do not want it
Barb
Turkey? Whiskey?sidpook wrote:I'm still full
Hey Igor,igor.glukhovtsev wrote:Turkey? Whiskey?sidpook wrote:I'm still full
Hey?
Never had a luck cooking this bird. Definitely it's not a Central Asia nomads food choice. Horse meat is more delicious!
igor.glukhovtsev wrote:Mike, the nomad people in Kazakhstan prefer the horse, ship and cattle meat. Usually December is a month when Kazakh families slaught either one specially feed horse or cow which are a winter season food. In kazakh language it's called "sogim" - winter meat. Since I am not Kazakh but so called "Russian" - blue eyes, shaten hairs, our family is not a part of the nomad custom but I like buying and cooking the horse meat. Actually it is not a horse meat I had been buying in Italian traditional food stores in Toronto many years ago but something very special. As for hunting I'm not a fun neither of the hunting nor fishing. We have no rabbits in Kazakhstan but the bores, deers, wild goats and wild sheeps are the subjects of hunting in Kazakhstan.
By the way I am at 43.189574,76.915704 ... 1027.648 m / 3371.548 feet
...and we wonder how kids learn to ski "out of bounds" their parents take 'em there.out-of-bounds.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests