Great thread, very entertaining. I didn't know babies were born without kneecaps. I hope to make a contribution soon.
I sleep whenever my body tells me to. (Thank Heaven for retirement.)
I remember getting a 10 meg hard drive in 1984 and wondering what all we would put on it.
I want to be like you and Addie when I retire. I hope it can be soon enough to really enjoy it! I know I could be good at it too!My thoughts exactly, Addie.
I take a 3 hour nap almost every day, whenever it happens. Usually from about 3pm to 6pm. Then I get up and start preparing supper.
I want to be like you and Addie when I retire. I hope it can be soon enough to really enjoy it! I know I could be good at it too!
The secret to retirement is not to put pressure on yourself. Just go with the flow and only do the things you want to do.
I want to be like you and Addie when I retire. I hope it can be soon enough to really enjoy it! I know I could be good at it too!
It wasn't an instant switch of lifestyle when I retired. At first, I'd wake with no alarm, already light outside and panic, thinking I was late for work.
I still find myself doing the money worrying once in awhile, but I'm slowly getting over that. It's hard to switch gears after working for almost 45 years.
More about Corn:
People throughout the world have tried to maximize the production of food from the very start of the explosion of humans on our beautiful planet. Methods to improve gardening are recorded in our history as far back as 7000 B.C. in what is now Mexico.
"Balsas” teosinte,(Z. mays parviglumis),of southern Mexico, was one of four perennial grasses of the family Poaceae, in pre-Columbian times, and this Teosinte, with clusters of tiny kernels, is the ancestor of modern day "Corn". Through trial and error mostly, ancient humans used the first systems of agriculture to propagate and improve the production of this plant until it became what we all enjoy today as "Corn on the cob".
Hydroponic Unlimited - History Of Hydroponics
(Posted with the permission of the site owner (Me)
One kernel can produce 800 kernels in about 30 days (you watch the same shows I do on PBS, Rock!).The average ear of corn has eight hundred kernels arranged in sixteen rows.
One kernel can produce 800 kernels in about 30 days (you watch the same shows I do on PBS, Rock!).