INCUBATING w/FRIENDS! w/Sally Sunshine Shipped Eggs No problem!

Status
Not open for further replies.
Not the last time I checked! They like dirt and fertilizer! The inside of the boots were clean, and the outsides had dirt and fertilizer. Had I made them planters, I would not have had to wash them.
lau.gif
Yea but you would have had to turn them inside out if the dirt and fertilizer was on the outside.
 
Not the last time I checked! They like dirt and fertilizer! The inside of the boots were clean, and the outsides had dirt and fertilizer. Had I made them planters, I would not have had to wash them.
lau.gif
You could have turned them inside out & saved yourself the trouble of washing them



DRAT! Chaos upstaged me again
barnie.gif
 
Last edited:
If poop is floating in a bucket of bleach, is the bucket clean?
if you accidentally bleached a pair of rubber boots, and dulled the color, would you feel bad handing them down to your next child?


My boy is still wearing the boots handed down from his sister. They had holes when he got them. Now they have BIG holes. But those boots have been around a good 5-6 years.


So far. The worst of it all has been north of us, but all that water flows south. The river is supposed to come up another 8 ft. We might get some water in the yurts, but everything in main camp should be fine.
:lau :lau :lau

What be a "YURT"?
Please 'splain me


You already got some answers, but I'll show you ours. Not nearly as nice. :lol:

400


If you follow the road down the right, you can just make out the water. Usually you have to hike about a mile and jump down a bluff to get to the river. A couple of years ago we lost part of our bluff when it collapsed from flooding. The river is sandy bottomed, and all our ground is sand. Everything gets pretty shifty.

400


This is the trail to the river.

DH said the water is down from the flag he marked yesterday, but the national weather service is predicting the bridge on the highway will be underwater, which would be another 10-15+ feet.
 
My boy is still wearing the boots handed down from his sister. They had holes when he got them. Now they have BIG holes. But those boots have been around a good 5-6 years.
You already got some answers, but I'll show you ours. Not nearly as nice.
lol.png




If you follow the road down the right, you can just make out the water. Usually you have to hike about a mile and jump down a bluff to get to the river. A couple of years ago we lost part of our bluff when it collapsed from flooding. The river is sandy bottomed, and all our ground is sand. Everything gets pretty shifty.



This is the trail to the river.

DH said the water is down from the flag he marked yesterday, but the national weather service is predicting the bridge on the highway will be underwater, which would be another 10-15+ feet.
Does the water ever bring any extra critters up with it when it gets that high?
 
My boy is still wearing the boots handed down from his sister. They had holes when he got them. Now they have BIG holes. But those boots have been around a good 5-6 years.
You already got some answers, but I'll show you ours. Not nearly as nice.
lol.png




If you follow the road down the right, you can just make out the water. Usually you have to hike about a mile and jump down a bluff to get to the river. A couple of years ago we lost part of our bluff when it collapsed from flooding. The river is sandy bottomed, and all our ground is sand. Everything gets pretty shifty.



This is the trail to the river.

DH said the water is down from the flag he marked yesterday, but the national weather service is predicting the bridge on the highway will be underwater, which would be another 10-15+ feet.
We've had the same situation here more than once. PITA when there's only 2 ways in & out & both are under a foot of water.
 
My boy is still wearing the boots handed down from his sister. They had holes when he got them. Now they have BIG holes. But those boots have been around a good 5-6 years. You already got some answers, but I'll show you ours. Not nearly as nice. :lol: If you follow the road down the right, you can just make out the water. Usually you have to hike about a mile and jump down a bluff to get to the river. A couple of years ago we lost part of our bluff when it collapsed from flooding. The river is sandy bottomed, and all our ground is sand. Everything gets pretty shifty. This is the trail to the river. DH said the water is down from the flag he marked yesterday, but the national weather service is predicting the bridge on the highway will be underwater, which would be another 10-15+ feet.
Does the water ever bring any extra critters up with it when it gets that high?
Yep. The last time it was this high (when we were working as summer staff 12 years ago) there was a small gator in the little decorative pond close to the dining hall. We tried to catch it a few different times. It eventually moved on. The river goes out of banks a few times a year, and gets pretty close to the yurts once a year or two. When DS was weeks old we had to park at our neighbor's cabin and wait for our houseguest (who had waded/swam home) to bring the camp truck and pick us up. That's been about 4 years. But all the flooding in North La is making this time a little different.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom