Washingtonians Come Together! Washington Peeps

I'm not sure how your door locks but could the wind have blown it open? I sure hope you find her.

That's what I was thinking- the wind has been blowing crazy today- from directions we normally don't get wind. The temporary roofing we put over the 2nd pen was blowing all over- poor hens were looking a little nervous!
 
wow, I have those 2 exact bird feeders in my yard. What a coincidence.

(for the record, I think wi-fi and cell towers emitting RF are wreaking havoc- and there's countless European studies substantiating that. )
 
Back some time ago we where talking about sheet composting garden plots. I saw this on Craigslist and wondered what you think of using this as a sheet compost. It also fits into the do no harm idea of not using nonrenewable resources. Apparently it is a mattress recyclers. All that cotton batting inside the mattresses is being offered free. Lots of it.

http://seattle.craigslist.org/skc/zip/3598243346.html


We generate about 12 square yards a week. Excellent for using in your compost, help new seedlings or for insulation. Come see it at A Plus Removal & Recycling, 116 Clay St NW, Auburn. 253-737-4441 Monday through Friday 7 am to 3:30 pm.
  • Location: Auburn

sadly, the cotton batting is almost positively poisonous, full of tons of pesticides (It takes 10 lbs of pesticide to make 1 lb of cotton!),
ep.gif
and of course, US beds are all treated with flame retardants- and much more. (While they are supposedly being reduced and phased out, we're very far from them being gone.) Adding water to the cotton would leach out all of the toxins, I am afraid.


".... Since the mid- to late '60s, most mattresses have been made of polyurethane foam, a petroleum-based material that emits volatile organic compounds that can cause respiratory problems and skin irritation. Formaldehyde, which is used to make one of the adhesives that hold mattresses together, has been linked to asthma, allergies, and lung, nose, and throat cancers. And then there are cotton pesticides and flame-retardant chemicals, which can cause cancer and nervous-system disorders. In 2005, Walter Bader, owner of the "green mattress" company Lifekind and author of the book Toxic Bedrooms, sent several mattresses to an Atlanta-based lab. A memory-foam model was found to emit 61 chemicals, including the carcinogens benzene and naphthalene....."

I don't know about you, but I would not want that in my garden beds.
sickbyc.gif
 
Renton residents trying to solve mystery of disappearing birds

I live literally just a few blocks from Rolling Hills, and have had the smart meters for about 10 years. Been so long I can't remember how long they've been in, just a few years less than the 15 I've lived here. There is no decrease in the number of birds and I'm seeing several new species have shown up, that I didn't see the first few years I lived here.
I would suspect that the influx of Starlings, Pigeons, Doves, and more Crows is more likely the culprit of moving the little songbirds along. I have 6 bird feeders of different kinds in the yard, and when they are full, my yard is flush with the little birds- Wrens, Bush Tits, Robins, and most numerous are the Chickadees. As well as dozens of other species, and year round Hummingbirds.
Russ
 
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Evening Peeps! Long time no see. Busy Busy here at the farm, as always. The girls are starting back in to their laying cycles now that the daylight is returning (thank goodness). Hope to be around more, sorry I have been away so long.
 
sadly, the cotton batting is almost positively poisonous, full of tons of pesticides (It takes 10 lbs of pesticide to make 1 lb of cotton!),
ep.gif
and of course, US beds are all treated with flame retardants- and much more. (While they are supposedly being reduced and phased out, we're very far from them being gone.) Adding water to the cotton would leach out all of the toxins, I am afraid.


".... Since the mid- to late '60s, most mattresses have been made of polyurethane foam, a petroleum-based material that emits volatile organic compounds that can cause respiratory problems and skin irritation. Formaldehyde, which is used to make one of the adhesives that hold mattresses together, has been linked to asthma, allergies, and lung, nose, and throat cancers. And then there are cotton pesticides and flame-retardant chemicals, which can cause cancer and nervous-system disorders. In 2005, Walter Bader, owner of the "green mattress" company Lifekind and author of the book Toxic Bedrooms, sent several mattresses to an Atlanta-based lab. A memory-foam model was found to emit 61 chemicals, including the carcinogens benzene and naphthalene....."

I don't know about you, but I would not want that in my garden beds.
sickbyc.gif

Wow, either would I. Scratch that idea. I am super sensitive to chemicals. I get asthma from almost anything that they have put smell into. We are getting a new bed Tuesday. I hope it doesn't cause me problems! I didn't get an all foam one for that reason.
 

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