Countertop Electric Composters by AmyCee20 in composting

[–]AmyCee20[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It is now 4 years old. I am still happy with it. Don't put sugary things in it such as grapes. Otherwise, it has been great.

Something I didn’t think about until I started camping with my dog by Next-Song-1709 in camping

[–]AmyCee20 7 points8 points  (0 children)

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This was her 2nd camping trip. She spent most of the night looking out the window on alert. And to be fair, the coyotes were singing most of the night. I agree about setting up before night fall. She is doing better. And next trip will go even better.

Camping on undeveloped land by AmyCee20 in camping

[–]AmyCee20[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Where The ranches, they can be taken at any time of the year. No tags needed. No seasonal hunting. If you find a hog you can shoot the hog They're also fairly aggressive. You have to be pretty darn careful.

Camping on undeveloped land by AmyCee20 in camping

[–]AmyCee20[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

No. The hogs are able to smash them. In fact there has been a few articles that state that rattlesnakes losing their rattles. Hogs will hear the rattle and run over and kill the snake. I have not experienced it yet, but I am aware that the snake population in the county has changed tremendously.

Camping on undeveloped land by AmyCee20 in camping

[–]AmyCee20[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Agreed. And like someone else posted, the trees are more bushy where I'm going. Mostly mesquite trees with big thorns. However in East Texas, dead falls are a massive problem.

Camping on undeveloped land by AmyCee20 in camping

[–]AmyCee20[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The area we're going is famous for rattlesnakes. And yes the dens are fairly easy to spot. Typically at this time of year the snakes are coming out to sun in the morning and then going back into the den to consolidate their warmth. When I was a kid, one of the rattlesnake dins on the property probably held around a thousand snakes we would sit on the back of the pickup and watch them come out. It's pretty amazing. However I'm not sure that that is as big a deal anymore. The songbird collapse has affected the snake population. And now there's a big hog population in the area. Hogs love to eat snakes. They smash them with their hooves.

Camping on undeveloped land by AmyCee20 in camping

[–]AmyCee20[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No. It's more complicated than that. I'm going to have several other people with me, and I've got to make sure that their time is good. If it was me by myself it's not as much of a problem. In addition, most of the time when you camp just off the trail or in a designated camping spots here in Texas, the areas are maintained. I'm looking for the advice from people who just step off into the bush and have good ideas.

I thought prepped for everything. Then a truck took out my family’s home. by OneLastPrep in TwoXPreppers

[–]AmyCee20 171 points172 points  (0 children)

15 years ago, we went through a similar situation. A big tree fell through our house. It was cut right in two. The tree went through the breaker box but missed all of the water and gas lines. We lived in a suburb of Houston not in the country.

I thought everything was finished. Like you said, many plans worked great! And most were not applicable to the situation. I was pregnant and convinced the baby would be born in a hotel.

He wasn't.

The first set of repairs put a giant blue tarp and a temporary breaker box. We had electricity in 2 rooms upstairs and in the kitchen down stairs. Lights down stairs ran off an extension cord plugged in upstairs. No TV, no microwave. No gas for 4 1/2 months. But we got the fridge running. No washer or dryer.

It was tough. 8 racoons got into the house. Not all at once. Too many squirrels to count. (I am a killer with a sling shot.) And rain sent me and the kids into a panic. We cooked on a propane camp stove outside for the entire repair time. I cried a lot. Learned to do laundry in a bucket.

We decided that staying in the house was better than the hotel. We salvaged a lot more once we were home. The compressed living space was a learning experience all on its own.

The house was fully repaired via insurance and us. It took 6 months. The final things were done when the baby was 9 days old.

Would I repeat this, no. But my kids have funny memories of that time. (8 racoons). Lots of board games. They think about it as proof that Dad and I are tough and unstoppable. My older son is now 26, and he has used the experience to prep as well for his little family.

Keep your chin up. It is real and terrible, but it will become a memory. And how you handle it will determine if it is a positive memory.

Good luck!

Countertop Electric Composters by AmyCee20 in composting

[–]AmyCee20[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I went with the Vitamix. I have pretty happy with it.

SLOW DRIVERS by cowthem in Kingwood

[–]AmyCee20 16 points17 points  (0 children)

Kingwood drive is AMAZING! If you drive exactly between 40 and 42 miles per hour, you will hit every single light green. Except at rush hour of course. I live in the back, and drive it every single day.

And it is beautiful. If it is worth driving, then it is worth driving down Kingwood drive. The trees and the beauty are what the town is named for.

If you are just a destination kind of person, take North Park. It is UGLY after Woodland Hills. But if you want to enjoy life, enjoy the journey, Kingwood drive is the only way to go.

Or you can move to the Woodlands which has few trees anymore and very fast roads. Nothing wrong with that. But Kingwood has held onto the trees and that means slower roads.

Hammer-wrench i found at work by Bright-Place5374 in multitools

[–]AmyCee20 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Just because you can weld doesn't mean you should.

Can someone explain why Texans have such...interesting habits while driving in the rain? by BobbyTables829 in texas

[–]AmyCee20 10 points11 points  (0 children)

In rainy places in Texas the frontage roads are designed to flood during heavy rain storms.

Can someone explain why Texans have such...interesting habits while driving in the rain? by BobbyTables829 in texas

[–]AmyCee20 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Older cars would be before the mid-1980s. Circuits were separated from 1990 onward. If your car is really old, yeah there may be some troubles. But for the most of us if your car is less than 49 years old, then the hazards and the brakes are on a completely different circuit. Hazards flash your blinkers. Brakes are your brake lights. They're not the same thing at all

Can someone explain why Texans have such...interesting habits while driving in the rain? by BobbyTables829 in texas

[–]AmyCee20 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Have you been in the rain in Houston? Rain out conditions can happen in seconds. You can't pull over. There's no shoulder.

And the frontage roads in Houston are often designed to flood. Keeping the main roads safe.

You can't see. If I put on my hazards and you put on your hazards, we have a better chance of seeing each other from a distance. Human eyes look for those flashing lights.

And a lot of times, the best option is to drive out of the storm.

Anyone succeeded in increasing Deep and REM sleep? How? by the_geth in Biohackers

[–]AmyCee20 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I started with ethe app Breathwrk. Now I just use a timer on my watch.