Me too! No frost forecast here for a while but i really want to finish to show up that slacker contractor that is supposed to be building my goat shed. He was off more than he worked this week. I bet he has another job.I hope you finish it!
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Me too! No frost forecast here for a while but i really want to finish to show up that slacker contractor that is supposed to be building my goat shed. He was off more than he worked this week. I bet he has another job.I hope you finish it!
Somebody said something about food not liked as kids, but liked now here ?graaaaaaaavy!![]()
@Peep_Show Does the greenhouse not have crazy temp swings between night and day? Those usually have so little to no insulation.
Somebody said something about food not liked as kids, but liked now here ?
Gravy was one for me. You ate what was on your plate when I was a kid or you stayed at the table till done. If they put gravy of any sort on my food, taters only butter would be OK, gravy on taters, I'd be at the table till bed time, couldn't force it on me, I'd rather eat someone else's snot back then
I love gravy now. Gravy on everything, meat, noodles,rice, taters, bread, toast, everything
The greenhouse is not transparent on all sides. It has the east wall all double-pane glass (4 panels) mounted into a thick wood and stucco wall. The northside is a sliding glass door. The south side has two double-hung windows mounted into a thick wood and glass wall. The westside is the the other side of the garage wall. The wall surface is tongue-and-groove thick pine against whatever the garage wall is. It has a skylight and brick floor. We recently had the house re-roofed and they at that time roofed the studio! Not flimsy tar paper, but membrane and insulation.
So -- short answer -- the temp swings are not too vast. This morning I went out there at dawn (we were down to near freezing last night) and it was an okay 60 in the building and, of course, warmer inside the brooder. The brooder is going to kick on and maintain a certain temperature whatever the ambiance is inside or out, but it's nice that it's not working so hard during the day because the warmth allows it to stay off longer. Plus it's naturally light in there vs. our rather dark garage. (We will not be putting the brooder inside the house this time... Too much chick dander everywhere.)
This house was designed by a chef, so he'd bring his herbs into the greenhouse space to overwinter. There used to be a heater on the wall, but with the new roof (and the fact that I'll be running kilns in there eventually) the need for an industrial heater seemed moot and so it was removed.
That is so true!I think if they thought it was a important addition to the site, they would resubmit or redo their articles themselves if they don't see them here. Be nice if all gets transferred smoothly but IMHO it isn't going to take long before there is more articles than any one person could ever read.
You do ceramics?The greenhouse is not transparent on all sides. It has the east wall all double-pane glass (4 panels) mounted into a thick wood and stucco wall. The northside is a sliding glass door. The south side has two double-hung windows mounted into a thick wood and glass wall. The westside is the the other side of the garage wall. The wall surface is tongue-and-groove thick pine against whatever the garage wall is. It has a skylight and brick floor. We recently had the house re-roofed and they at that time roofed the studio! Not flimsy tar paper, but membrane and insulation.
So -- short answer -- the temp swings are not too vast. This morning I went out there at dawn (we were down to near freezing last night) and it was an okay 60 in the building and, of course, warmer inside the brooder. The brooder is going to kick on and maintain a certain temperature whatever the ambiance is inside or out, but it's nice that it's not working so hard during the day because the warmth allows it to stay off longer. Plus it's naturally light in there vs. our rather dark garage. (We will not be putting the brooder inside the house this time... Too much chick dander everywhere.)
This house was designed by a chef, so he'd bring his herbs into the greenhouse space to overwinter. There used to be a heater on the wall, but with the new roof (and the fact that I'll be running kilns in there eventually) the need for an industrial heater seemed moot and so it was removed.
The greenhouse is not transparent on all sides. It has the east wall all double-pane glass (4 panels) mounted into a thick wood and stucco wall. The northside is a sliding glass door. The south side has two double-hung windows mounted into a thick wood and glass wall. The westside is the the other side of the garage wall. The wall surface is tongue-and-groove thick pine against whatever the garage wall is. It has a skylight and brick floor. We recently had the house re-roofed and they at that time roofed the studio! Not flimsy tar paper, but membrane and insulation.
So -- short answer -- the temp swings are not too vast. This morning I went out there at dawn (we were down to near freezing last night) and it was an okay 60 in the building and, of course, warmer inside the brooder. The brooder is going to kick on and maintain a certain temperature whatever the ambiance is inside or out, but it's nice that it's not working so hard during the day because the warmth allows it to stay off longer. Plus it's naturally light in there vs. our rather dark garage. (We will not be putting the brooder inside the house this time... Too much chick dander everywhere.)
This house was designed by a chef, so he'd bring his herbs into the greenhouse space to overwinter. There used to be a heater on the wall, but with the new roof (and the fact that I'll be running kilns in there eventually) the need for an industrial heater seemed moot and so it was removed.
I know my Dad used to make us kids eat stuff until one day he made me eat beans and i barfed on my plate. After that, not so much.that sounds wonderful!
@Beer cangreat song!
and yep, growing up, and raising my kids, you eat what is in front of you...or just go hungry.
One stubborn child hated spinach, told him if he happily ate one large bite, I wouldn't put more on his plate.
The next morning at breakfast...that kid was eating his cereal in an odd way..asked him what was up...
the spinach was still all balled up in his mouth...good boy hadn't spit it out...but he had slept with it in his mouth and had never swallowed.
That same kid on a different occasion, we had Brussels sprouts. I told he had to happily eat half a sprout (grumpiness or whining or complaining means that they have to eat more..until they can do it politely).
He said he really couldn't. I told him he had to. He ate a bite and spewed all over the bench he was sitting on and the floor.![]()