I still carry them in my cars. They have gotten me out of too many traffic situations where the GPS was clueless.Lovely story.
And don’t you miss real maps?
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I still carry them in my cars. They have gotten me out of too many traffic situations where the GPS was clueless.Lovely story.
And don’t you miss real maps?
Cool! I will do them both.It was quite a few pieces too. From now on, I'll share an easy and a hard puzzle of the same picture.
The older hens go to roost around 8:30 pm or so in the summer. The pullets are another matter! I would usually try to get them to go in at 10:30 pm, so I could go to bed too, but it involved bribes, and could be chaotic. There were always one or two stragglers and sometimes one would grab the treat and then run back out the door which was open so the latecomers could come in and that triggered lots of excited running around on the pullets' part and some frustration on my part! But that's one of the things I love about chickens: their exuberance and single-mindedness!!I never thought about the fact that then light never goes dark enough for them to close. Do the chickens still roost? How do they know to go to sleep? Conversely, what do the chickens do when most of the day is dark?
Thanks so much for replying. I find this fascinating and something I never considered before.The older hens go to roost around 8:30 pm or so in the summer. The pullets are another matter! I would usually try to get them to go in at 10:30 pm, so I could go to bed too, but it involved bribes, and could be chaotic. There were always one or two stragglers and sometimes one would grab the treat and then run back out the door which was open so the latecomers could come in and that triggered lots of excited running around on the pullets' part and some frustration on my part! But that's one of the things I love about chickens: their exuberance and single-mindedness!!
We turn on lights in the coop when we take out their breakfast at this time of year and turn them off once it's daylight. It isn't enough to trigger laying as I do like the older hens to take a break which they are currently doing.
Well, I tried steeping the new leaves a second time and it had more flavour than the first time, but it still wasn't a satisfying brew, so I tossed those leaves out.I used to drink tuocha tea, Chinese pu'er tea sold in nest shape, and they also expressly stated it could be rebrewed several times. It's a very specific type of tea though.
Following from tossing the leaves out, I will persist because wasting tea is sacrilegiousIf you didn't like it at the first brew my guess is it will not improve after severals.
I don't use gps, but I heard it would send large trucks on short journeys with impassable corners so a truck would never arrive having become jammed on a narrow bridge or some such. Human drivers reading maps would take longer but navigable journeys and reach their destinations. I assume trip planning errors like that are removed from the gps systems these days.I still carry them in my cars. They have gotten me out of too many traffic situations where the GPS was clueless.
It sounds quite tricky with the pullets wanting to stay out late. It would descend into mayhem quite easily with the bunch at my houseThanks so much for replying. I find this fascinating and something I never considered before.
No. I have no sense of direction. Without GPS I'd never arrive anywhere.And don’t you miss real maps?