>watching Jerry Springer
>woman divorced husband and went for his dad
>marry's dad
>is now pregnant with dad's kid
>now she wants to get back with the son
wat
They didn't have a southern accent, so they could be trailer trash from anywhere.
I want a half-brother-step-uncle-dad! (actually it wouldn't include uncle, but I thought that sounded better) I almost brain asplode trying to figure that out when its really quite simple.
Wait Debbie, are you dealing with little childrens or something?
I'm playing Halo 4 with some user named 'WOODYHARRELSON'
Could it be?
(09-12-2013, 09:12 PM)snipelfritz Wrote: [ -> ]I want a half-brother-step-uncle-dad! (actually it wouldn't include uncle, but I thought that sounded better) I almost brain asplode trying to figure that out when its really quite simple.
Wait Debbie, are you dealing with little childrens or something?
Sometimes they act like little kids, but no. I'm a lecturer at an agricultural college. In a nutshell - I teach farmers to farm with fruit.
@Sam Crazy thing is the Western Cape is not subtropical area like Hawaii, it's actually Mediterranean, that is why those orchards are so amazing.
Ag Studies majors, lol. I went to the University of Minnesota for 3 years which has 3 campuses: The main campus/east bank of Minneapolis, where most of everything and like 6 dorms are (I lived there/near there my 3 years). The West Bank where the artsy theater and dance stuff was and one dorm was (I hung out there quite a bit freshman year). And there was the St. Paul campus, like 7 mile shuttle-bus ride from the east bank campus with one dorm. That St. Paul campus is where all the Agg. Studies kids lived. It's was literally adjacent to the Minnesota State fairgrounds.
I worked as a student custodian at that St Paul dorm during one school year and two summers. During the school year was awesome. I'd get there after class around 4PM. I'd typically get stoned as hell on my way, then I'd just walk the halls with an industrial-style vacuum. I'd check out/hit on freshman girls (one time I asked a girl out and then she forgot about it, but she was seriously beautiful) and then sit in the custodial area and watch South Park on my laptop.
FUUUUUUUUUUUUCCKKKK There was a point to this story, and I lost it. Sorry guiz.
One time, over a summer we had a HS girls soccer camp stay there over a weekend. Cleaning a room after, I found some Hello Kitty panties with racing stripes (like poop marks). Also, during the school year, I found weed on the hallway floor, and I smoked it, and it wasn't bad.
Sorry guys I'm inebriated and I'm not supposed to be.
DEBBIE: Do you grow shit? If I were to have nothing but a small balcony (I can get plant pots) and it's September/October what can I grow that I can eat? Some kind of moss? (that's kind of a joke) Also, I should not I'm in a temperate climate, so our winters are colder than you "Mediterranean." I love to cook, I just rarely have fresh vegetable ingredients to cook with.
EVERYBODY: Does my messed up stream-of-conscious writing style make any sense whatsoever?
What you can grow depends on your how much direct sunlight the balcony receives (hours). It's better to have morning sun than late afternoon sun. The afternoon sun can burn your plants more easily. Since you are in the Northern Hemisphere your south side would be the warmest facing side. If the crop you intend to plant has a tendency for sunburn, avoid the south facing side, if it prefers the heat, you will do well in the south faciong side. Catch my drift?
Sept/Okt? I take it that means you are currently in Autumn on your way to Winter? You can plant chard (or spinach, which ever term you prefer) or peas also do well in the winter. Most herbs do really well in most environments. Just research what type of vegetables/herbs do well in potplants and how deep the pot should be. Also, if you consider planting things together in a very large container, make sure you plant companion plants together. Some vegetables don't like to planted to close to each other and can affect the growth and production of each other. Other plants grow better when planted together. It's called comoantion planting.
I don't know much about vegetables and herbs, since I mostly work with fruit trees and very specific type of cutflowers, proteas.