I'm still alive

Oct 14, 2006 23:50

I'm at my mother's house, as she has electricity (I do not).  I do, however, have heat.


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Comments 9

elfie_elfie October 15 2006, 18:05:46 UTC
That last picture looks like you got your face punched in. :D

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peanut October 15 2006, 23:05:25 UTC
Will you get your sleigh and dogs out and see if you can find my family? :(

PS- Glad you're alive!

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heebiejeebie October 16 2006, 22:48:40 UTC
snow's all gone - don't need the sled
it's actually kind of warm today
what you REALLY need is a chainsaw or ax to get around all the branches

it's crazy here, jaime... you don't even know...

did you find your family?

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dilated_skyy October 17 2006, 21:21:12 UTC
Glad you guys finally have power back. It's all rainy and gross out today. *huggles for miss Jess*

Hey..I touched you. :P Now you have Skyy cooties. Enjoy. :)

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vyl8 December 14 2006, 01:31:18 UTC
If you grow your own food I will have plenty of compost for you in the spring (provided my red wigglers survive the winter.) I've been composting my chinchillas' old bedding and some vegetable scraps. The way things look now, I will have more compost than I will need.

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heebiejeebie December 14 2006, 04:08:36 UTC
Oh ooh oh oh oh thanks
I'll pay you back in vegetables in the summer.
seriously I love compost
It's like, the coolest thing ever
I even have my friends bringing me food scraps.
Did you buy the red wigglers to help compost? How long have you been composting?
I dug up my garden beds a week ago, and was surprised how many worms were still in the soil. Most of them had gone WAY under the soil, at least a foot down where the soil was less cold.

We have a chinchilla too.
His name is Charlie.
How long have you had your chin? How old is he/she?

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vyl8 December 14 2006, 14:37:30 UTC
My grandma actually bought me the red wigglers for composting as an early christmas present. I started composting a few months ago because I didn't want to just throw out bags of pine bedding and biodegratable chinchilla waste. Since I clean their cages once a week it ends up being way more than I can fit in my compost bin. I have to wait until my worm compacity gets larger to handle it I guess. So I have started to use it as "mulch" for the trees in my backyard. I've always been into composting, even if it was just tossing corn husks in a pile outside ( ... )

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heebiejeebie December 15 2006, 01:39:53 UTC
Do you do "vermi" composting? Do you have a special worm composter like ( http://www.cleanairgardening.com/wormcomposter.html... )

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