Cptn_Slow

joined 4 months ago
[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 week ago

We use reolink E1 cameras, and they work pretty well, not perfect. No sound alarm, and depending on the E1 vs. E1 Zoom vs. E1 Pro have different connectivity. But they are fine.

[–] [email protected] 7 points 1 month ago (4 children)

I try to get local, but I caved once and got some Onyx Coffee Lab and let me tell you, that was some of the most underwhelming coffee I've had. They must have the good reddit bots because it seemed well recommended there and there wasn't a single blend of the five I tried that was better than what I can get locally (SE Michigan).

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 month ago

The one that is similar to the old Dunkin bags?

 

About 5 years ago, when I started getting more serious about lawn care I paid ~$75 for a jar of tenacity. My yard is smaller so I've made it about halfway through the jar, and in hind sight the signs were there, it's dead Jim...

First year, one application at 4 oz./acre took care of my weeds. By about the third year, the first application just didn't quite kill off the weeds but the second application would finish them off.

Finally this spring, I notice I've got a large portion of my yard taken over by creeping bentgrass. So I hit it with a 4 oz./acre and planned on doing 2 oz/acre every two weeks after to stall the bentgrass. But after the first application, the weeds didn't even bleach, and they were still fine after the 2nd application.

I decided to replace my tenacity and not only has the price almost halved, but one application at 2 oz./acre and the entire yard has frosted tips, the bentgrass is stalled and the other weeds have vanished.

TL;DR: Tenacity will start losing its potency around 3 years, if yours doesn't seem to be working, consider replacing it.

Now if anybody knows what happens if you get close to max amount per year, please let me know. I'm curious, because now I have no idea how much active ingredient actually made it onto the ground.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 2 months ago

Well it's simple really... They want American dollars, without American participation.

[–] [email protected] 11 points 2 months ago

Just a reminder, that every time they sell out an event, it tells them they didn't charge enough. Going to a race is fun, but $1200 USD to watch cars go by is a joke.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 2 months ago (1 children)

I haven't seen the video, but from your post it all sounds reasonable. Even at idle the safety zone in front of a turbine engine is probably 7+ feet.

Especially while turning you have to push the thrust up, so that distance can go up to like 10-15 feet, maybe even more depending on the engine.

Also, even if they saw him, which in the dark at an airport would be pretty hard to do, shutting the engine down takes time. And I don't mean you can't shut it off, I mean after you turn the switch off (Airbus at least) it takes at least 60 seconds for the engine to slow down to a speed that would only maim you, instead of kill you.

 

First pour tonight, and I gotta say it's pretty good. I'm no professional, but if you like Lagavulin's other offerings you will probably like this.

It's sweet, like really sweet, but I think the peat and smoke counteract it well.

On the nose, the rum barrel didn't really stand out to me, it smells like Lagavulin, but just a little different.

The taste is immediately sweeter than standard 16, but still tastes familiar. Milder on peat, and big on vanilla.

And the finish I found good, the rum fades away, and the peat lingers.

I paid $89 for it and I'd say it was a good buy, I wouldn't pay more though.

[–] [email protected] 14 points 3 months ago

No, but I'm bout to now!