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BattleVersion wrote:For my Family?...
Burn down the world, sure... But, I'm also willing to carry it on my shoulders.

Smü wrote:A farmer's saying that has been proven itself this year goes like this in german:
"Blüht die Eiche vor der Esche bringt der Sommer große Wäsche"
which would translate into:
"If oak thrives before ash, summer will be quite a wash" (sucky rhiming translation), with "Wäsche / wash" meaning "rainy".
Yet I don't know if that applies to mideurope only or would be helpful in other countries of the northern hemisphere.
Cymro wrote:Seriously, I'm not sure I'd fuck with Ad'lan if he had his bow with him. I just don't see that ending well.

ODA 226 wrote:ZombieGranny wrote:Does it need to be relatively fresh tobacco, or would a nice stale cigarette work?
Nobody around here smokes, so a pack would most likely be several years old.
Since I don't smoke, I've only used Skoal, Copenhagen and Red Man to neutralize bee/wasp/spider venom. All of these work very,very well.


Ad'lan wrote:The Norfolk varient is "Ash before Oak, and you're in for a Soak, Oak before Ash and you're in for a Splash."
So it's true for East Anglia as well.


Smü wrote:Ad'lan wrote:The Norfolk varient is "Ash before Oak, and you're in for a Soak, Oak before Ash and you're in for a Splash."
So it's true for East Anglia as well.
So either way, you're getting wet.
Cymro wrote:Seriously, I'm not sure I'd fuck with Ad'lan if he had his bow with him. I just don't see that ending well.

Mr. E. Monkey wrote:Wee drop is NOT a dinosaur with a mind-control hat. Wee drop is NOT a dinosaur with a mind-control hat...
goofygurl wrote:Wee is a fire breathing dragon???


squinty wrote:Safety isn't a lever on a gun, a guard on a knife or any other mechanical device. Safety is a behavior.
vyadmirer wrote:Call me the paranoid type, but remember I'm on a post apocalyptic website prepared for zombies.

ZombieGranny wrote:Frankly, TravisM.1, I don't see how that post is helpful.
DarkAxel wrote:If the turtles are headed away from water, there's going to be a flood. If they are heading to water, the river's crested and going back down.




scurvy wrote:I've never heard of this before, but thought it belonged here:
"Crickets like it warm. And the warmer it gets, the faster they chirp. A gentleman by the name of Amos Dolbear noticed this fact back in 1898. He came up with a cricket chirping temperature formula, which is know as Dolbears Law. The equation is as follows: T = 50 + (N - 40) / 4, where T = temperature in degrees Fahrenheit and N = number of chirps per minute.
If that seems like too much work to figure out, there’s an simplified version that goes like this: temperature = number of chirps in 13 seconds + 40. "
if your packing a stopwatch and your math skills instead of a thermometer, and are just that damn curious about the actual temp. . .
Krustofski wrote:Dude, you're an open system which has energy pumped into it at least once a day. Entropy doesn't stand a chance. Plus, all living things are thermodynamically unstable anyway, we're held together by pure kinetics. You're not special. Um... what I'm trying to say is: Happy Birthday.

duodecima wrote:scurvy wrote:I've never heard of this before, but thought it belonged here:
"Crickets like it warm. And the warmer it gets, the faster they chirp. A gentleman by the name of Amos Dolbear noticed this fact back in 1898. He came up with a cricket chirping temperature formula, which is know as Dolbears Law. The equation is as follows: T = 50 + (N - 40) / 4, where T = temperature in degrees Fahrenheit and N = number of chirps per minute.
If that seems like too much work to figure out, there’s an simplified version that goes like this: temperature = number of chirps in 13 seconds + 40. "
if your packing a stopwatch and your math skills instead of a thermometer, and are just that damn curious about the actual temp. . .
I am totally checking this out tonite!!! (Since I don't pack a thermometer, watches have second hands, and I am a math geek)
Edit : This is
a) calibrated to a different species of cricket, or
b) we have sick/stupid/temperature insensitive crickets at my place, or
c) is only accurate within a certain temperature range higher than 66 degrees, or
d) yet another thing that just doesn't quite work...
Off (low) by about 18 degrees by either formula. Altho the crickets are chirping at roughly the same rate, which I'd never really paid attention to before.
silentpoet wrote:My first two warning shots are aimed center of mass. If that don't warn them I fire warning shots at their head until they are warned enough that I am no longer in fear for my life.

KnightoftheRoc wrote:duodecima wrote:Edit : This is
a) calibrated to a different species of cricket, or
b) we have sick/stupid/temperature insensitive crickets at my place, or
c) is only accurate within a certain temperature range higher than 66 degrees, or
d) yet another thing that just doesn't quite work...
Off (low) by about 18 degrees by either formula. Altho the crickets are chirping at roughly the same rate, which I'd never really paid attention to before.
Keep in mind, there's a temp difference between where you are probably holding your thermometer (shoulder height or so) and the ground, where it's cooler by quite a bit. Maybe not an 18 degree difference, but it certainly COULD be, depending on your location.
Related, and back OT: The air always changes temperature fastest, the ground next, and water slowest. This applies to rise or fall in temp.
Krustofski wrote:Dude, you're an open system which has energy pumped into it at least once a day. Entropy doesn't stand a chance. Plus, all living things are thermodynamically unstable anyway, we're held together by pure kinetics. You're not special. Um... what I'm trying to say is: Happy Birthday.

duodecima wrote:KnightoftheRoc wrote:duodecima wrote:Edit : This is
a) calibrated to a different species of cricket, or
b) we have sick/stupid/temperature insensitive crickets at my place, or
c) is only accurate within a certain temperature range higher than 66 degrees, or
d) yet another thing that just doesn't quite work...
Off (low) by about 18 degrees by either formula. Altho the crickets are chirping at roughly the same rate, which I'd never really paid attention to before.
Keep in mind, there's a temp difference between where you are probably holding your thermometer (shoulder height or so) and the ground, where it's cooler by quite a bit. Maybe not an 18 degree difference, but it certainly COULD be, depending on your location.
Related, and back OT: The air always changes temperature fastest, the ground next, and water slowest. This applies to rise or fall in temp.
QFT on thermal mass!
Excellent thought - but I was going by the Wunderground website temp, and I was sitting outside on the ground in short sleeves counting. No way was it 48 degrees. 66 (per website) seemed about right. And one of the crickets was in a ground level bush, but the other one was up a tree a ways, no difference.
Cymro wrote:Seriously, I'm not sure I'd fuck with Ad'lan if he had his bow with him. I just don't see that ending well.

Ad'lan wrote:Smü wrote:Ad'lan wrote:The Norfolk varient is "Ash before Oak, and you're in for a Soak, Oak before Ash and you're in for a Splash."
So it's true for East Anglia as well.
So either way, you're getting wet.
Welcome to sunny Norfolk.


silentpoet wrote:My first two warning shots are aimed center of mass. If that don't warn them I fire warning shots at their head until they are warned enough that I am no longer in fear for my life.



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