Welcome to my pond - Swim, wade, or sit on the bank

Would that considered a crappie meal? :oops::lau:gig
Oh Debs... Do NOT make me start singing to you ... I swear I will & then you'll REALLY be miserable. :hugs:hugs:hugs

byc cant hear.gif


I'll sing too if ya want some help... Between us both she'll snap out of it just to make us stop! :D

byc cant hear.gif


Yeah, it's been pouring all day! :hit
I hope K and Rav are ok! :fl:fl
:hugs:hugs

K is all good, but dunno if he's prepared for all the rain.

HEY @Debs Flock get your hind end back here so I can :smackya and :hugs:hugsya and kiss ya and squeeze ya and tell ya it will be ok!
:oldno train smashings please!

:love

Ok. .I'll start. Ehem.
Me me me me me. . cough cough, echm. . . .

I'm Henry the eighth I am Henry the eighth I am I am. . .
I got married to the widow next door ..
She's been married seven times before. . and all their names were Henry. . HENRY! . . . .

byc cant hear.gif


Ohhhhh...I am Henry the eighth I am, Henry the eighth I am I am...
:lau:clap

How bout..You are my sunshine, my only sunshine, you make me happy, when skies are grey, you'll never know dear, how much I love you. Please don't take my sunshine away! :D

:love The only song I ever sang to my boy.
 
Wow...a triple play! :lau
Don't ya hate when a song you know so we'll escapes your memory?:th:lau
Bye bye love
Bye bye happiness
Hello loneliness, I think I'm going to die.
There goes my baby with someone new
She sure looks happy, I sure am blue
She was my baby, 'til he stepped in
Goodbye to a romance that might have been
 
@Alaskan -thought you might find this "interesting"


EPA wants people to stop burning wood in Alaska
Posted on February 28, 2018 by Daniel
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The EPA may tell people in parts of Alaska to stop heating their homes with wood burning stoves because they are causing the region to violate the Clean Air Act.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), tasked with enforcing the federal Clean Air Act, may declare Fairbanks and North Pole, Alaska, towns with a combined population of about 100,000, in “serious” noncompliance with the law early in 2017.

Wood-burning stoves emit small-particle matter (PM 2.5), which can settle in low-lying areas and can contribute to respiratory problems, according to EPA. EPA monitors show from 2013 through 2015, North Pole, Alaska, a town south of Fairbanks, had the highest average level for PM 2.5 in the nation. Absent quick action to reduce these emissions, Tim Hamlin, the director of the office of air and waste at EPA’s Region 10, says the agency could issue a noncompliance designation in early 2017, according to a report by The New York Times. A non-compliance designation could result in a loss of federal transportation funding for the state.

Hamlin notes the 1970 Clean Air Act sets a nationwide standard for air quality, which EPA was charged with enforcing.

“We don’t want to be telling people what to do, but the standard is what it is, and we want to work with you to be able to get there,” Hamlin told the Times.
http://www.alittlemorefreedom.com/epa-people-stop-burning-wood-alaska/
 
@Alaskan -thought you might find this "interesting"


EPA wants people to stop burning wood in Alaska
Posted on February 28, 2018 by Daniel
FacebookPinterestTwitterGoogle+RedditFlipboardLinkedInShare

The EPA may tell people in parts of Alaska to stop heating their homes with wood burning stoves because they are causing the region to violate the Clean Air Act.

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), tasked with enforcing the federal Clean Air Act, may declare Fairbanks and North Pole, Alaska, towns with a combined population of about 100,000, in “serious” noncompliance with the law early in 2017.

Wood-burning stoves emit small-particle matter (PM 2.5), which can settle in low-lying areas and can contribute to respiratory problems, according to EPA. EPA monitors show from 2013 through 2015, North Pole, Alaska, a town south of Fairbanks, had the highest average level for PM 2.5 in the nation. Absent quick action to reduce these emissions, Tim Hamlin, the director of the office of air and waste at EPA’s Region 10, says the agency could issue a noncompliance designation in early 2017, according to a report by The New York Times. A non-compliance designation could result in a loss of federal transportation funding for the state.

Hamlin notes the 1970 Clean Air Act sets a nationwide standard for air quality, which EPA was charged with enforcing.

“We don’t want to be telling people what to do, but the standard is what it is, and we want to work with you to be able to get there,” Hamlin told the Times.
http://www.alittlemorefreedom.com/epa-people-stop-burning-wood-alaska/
Since that was written pre-2017, I guess it didn't fly
 

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