Washingtonians

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Cute! At this point, all lavender Orps need improvement because they are still a project. Their type and feather quality are what need the most work. The lavender gene messes with the feather quality so that they look ruffled. They don't lie flat and nice as a true Orp should. The type will also need work, because to get the lavender color into the Orps, black Orps were crossed with another breed that had the lavender gene. So, you just need to continue to cross the lavenders to high quality black Orps which will result in split black Orps (carrying the lavender gene). Then you cross the split together and cull all blacks and save only the lavenders. Crossing the split blacks will result in 25% lavender chicks, 50% split black chicks and 25% pure black chicks, and there is no way to tell which are split and which are pure in the black chicks, so you remove them from your program and only work with the lavenders. You then breed them again to high quality pure Black Orps (not splits), the resulting offspring will be 100% split black. Breed the splits together and keep the lavs. Do it again and again. Ideally also, you aren't breeding brothers/sisters together. So it's best to have at least two pens going, I have one pen with a pure black English Orp roo over lavender hens, and another pen with my Lavender Roo over pure black English Orp hens. When you grow out their offspring, tag them somehow so you know which ones hatched from the black roo's pen vs which one's hatched from the lav roo's pen. Then pick your best split combo's and pen them together similarly to breed. When their offspring hatch, tag the lavender chicks in a similar fashion, cull any black chicks, and repeat over and over. Eventually most of the bad type/bad feather quality will be bred out, but it could take lots and lots of repeating this process. CGG and I were chatting about this the other day because we both got our lav's from the same lady who got hers from Hinkjc who is really the beginner of this project at least here on BYC. I wanna say that Hinkjc is like up to generation 8 or something? Not 100% sure. I plan to breed my split's in late winter, and consider them my F1's, so their offspring will be my F2's. But before I got my lav's, they were probably already improved 4-5 times over so are actually just behind Hinkjc's a generation or two, maybe three. Anyway, hope that helps! Until the type and feather quality are excellent, don't worry about other little things. They come first and foremost and need the most work.
 
This came with the link above about barn moving.

News report from Bruno , NE In 1981, Herman Ostry and
his wife, Donna, bought a farm a half mile outside of
Bruno , Nebraska , a small community sixty
miles west of Omaha . The property had a creek and
came with a barn built in the 1920's. The barn
floor was always wet and muddy. When the creek
flooded in 1988, the barn ended up with 29 inches
of water covering the floor. That was the last
straw. Ostry needed to move it to higher ground.He contacted a building moving company and was
discouraged by the bid. One night around the
table, Ostry commented that if they had enough
people they could pick the barn up and move it to
higher ground.. Everyone laughed.A few days later, Ostry’s son Mike showed his father some
calculations. He had counted the individual boards
and timbers in the barn and estimated that the barn
weighed approximately 16,640 pounds. He also estimated
that a steel grid needed to move the barn would
add another 3,150 pounds, bringing the total
weight to just under 10 tons. He figured it would
take around 350 people with each person lifting 56
lbs. to move the barn.The town of Bruno , Nebraska was planning its centennial celebration
in late July of 1988. Herman and Mike presented
their barn moving idea to the committee. The
committee decided to make it part of their celebration.

So, on July 30, 1988, shortly
before 11 a.m., a quick test lift was successfully
made. Then, as local television cameras and 4,000
people from eleven states watched, 350 people
moved the barn 115 feet south and 6 feet higher up
a gentle slope and set it on its ne w foundation.

The reason most people think that something cannot be
done is because they know that they can’t do it by
themselves. But impossible things can be done if
we join together in the task. Working together,
we can not only move barns, but change the world.
 
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going through the same thing with 18 yo DS. Don't have any good advice. We pretty much told him the same thing you told her. It is really hard...but I am told they will grow out of this and come through on the other side doing well. I just pray for him nightly.

3 of the 4 I have raised have. It was actually the 1 boy that was the worst and still has no clue.
 
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How funny do we live in the same house just different neighbourhoods. Havin left over goolash watchin SURVIVOR and finishing destroying my honey comb. THe spinner did me no favours and I am not a happy camper about it.
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No fire place = no fire, homemade meat ball sub and SURVIVOR.
 
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THis is very interesting. It is also cool to me because I tell people nothing is impossible. Just that some things are a lot more difficult to do. While I was helping the neighbour with his house he had no clue how we were going to lift 2-6 inches and push the walls in 4-5. I can move the world if ya just give me a little time. It's just like eatin an elephant just one bite at a time.
 
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So darn cute. I especially enjoy the difference in size and stance between Bumble and the Big Guys, ( which is what I think I'll name my next rock band).
 
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I agree CL. When I made her buy chains last year for her first winter in Pullman, the guys showed her how to put them on. But she never had to use them and that was a year ago. I would love for DH to show her how to put them on, but in all these years I don't remember having to use them in the city, so DH would probably have to learn how to use them first. I'm going to pass along your other suggestions as well before she packs to leave.

She will do fine;). I can't tell you how many times I drove back and forth to visit my parents as a young'un in EW all winter long. Also -- Sadie -- make sure she has good all weather tires maybe even with studs on? Front wheel drive does ok in yucky weather. And a momma's love gets a kid home too
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xo

Eta -- cuz I'm on my dumb phone and typos are a given lol!

Thanks for trying to soothe my nerves jbear. I will suggest she have the tire place in town check her tires before she leaves town. She said the guys were pretty nice at the place where she bought her chains last year.
 
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I been there done this with my daughter. It is very painful to watch them derail their lives. I don't really understand why my DD had to go through the phase she did. I just know that it did pass. Just remember that you have done your job, and that she has the right to be miserable. Just do your best to support her without contributing to the insanity. We remove all financial assistance when our DD hooked up to a guy twice her age that couldn't read or write. She met him at the Community College's tutoring program. It was so hard to watch a girl that had graduated from the CC at the age of 18 with an AA degree, give up all the advantages of graduating early. She didn't get her BS from the UofW until she was 26. She did grow out of it, and is living the life that she should. So you have much support in a difficult time.
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It is so much better that the cancer has been located as early as it has. It is highly unlikely that you die from this. The worst part will be the treatments to take care of the known risk. You have a lot of people that love you and are pulling for you.
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She left tonight knowing that we love her and are here if she gets into a dangerous spot. It's NOT a revolving door but definitely a safe haven in a time of trouble.
Thanks for the well wishes. Y'all are the best!
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That's all you can do at this age. I can remember the night our DD called stranded on the side of the freeway. The old boyfriend stop the car and let her out, and the left her there. We called the State Patrol on that episode. DH and DS went and picked her up. It was a good thing the BF wasn't anywhere near. DS would still like to have a go at the guy. I left the door open to communication, and for a long time we talk about neutral subjects. We still have to sometimes do that even now.
 
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