6914.jpg
 
Thanks for the info. I will be investigating....and probably getting one. As a handicrafter, my hands take a workout.

In other news, started a fire in the stove this morning. Really should have last night, but too tired to do the set up and wait for it to catch well. This morning, we tested things out, and initially, it looked like we'd need to get a sweep out for the chimney. Then we realized we'd forgotten of open the air while the fire caught. All working great now.

Poor Nellie in the middle isn't moulting as hard as her first moult, but she's close.View attachment 3971122
Poor Nellie ~ w/o feather fluff chickens are really skinny underneath.

P.S. If you get a tilted ergonomic mouse it takes about a week or two to relearn using a different configuration mouse so don't be discouraged. When I broke the right arm I had to switch to a left-hand ergonomic mouse & everything was mirrored backwards to me but I adjusted.
 
Poor Nellie ~ w/o feather fluff chickens are really skinny underneath.

P.S. If you get a tilted ergonomic mouse it takes about a week or two to relearn using a different configuration mouse so don't be discouraged. When I broke the right arm I had to switch to a left-hand ergonomic mouse & everything was mirrored backwards to me but I adjusted.
Re-learning a mouse is hard. It took me a week to get used to the trackball.
 
Poor Nellie ~ w/o feather fluff chickens are really skinny underneath.

P.S. If you get a tilted ergonomic mouse it takes about a week or two to relearn using a different configuration mouse so don't be discouraged. When I broke the right arm I had to switch to a left-hand ergonomic mouse & everything was mirrored backwards to me but I adjusted.
How did you adjust to that? - ?that to adjust you did how
 

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