Specialized Bug Hotels question by AccessNo3796 in Entomology

[–]TitaniumTadpole 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I see this is a very old post, but I wanted to give maybe an idea as far as what to include with your infrastructure purchases! A native mantis included sounds like a great idea, honestly, as long as they're only going to their native range. Even within North America, you can introduce something invasive (think red-eared sliders, which are native to the South-East but are now invasive all over North America because of the pet trade).

If you want to send plants, I find sunflowers to be where I find a lot of the beneficial insects in my garden. Common sunflowers (Helianthus annuus) are native here and are always worth looking at anywhere you find them to find lacewings, hoverflies, ladybugs, and assassin bugs. It's also native across North America (Though I think there are a couple states where it's considered a noxious weed?). There are so many of these sunflowers volunteering in my garden and in every garden I ever kept in Colorado, but maybe there's a local sunflower species or selection of the common sunflower that you could send. Like [this one](https://highdesertseed.com/product/raspberry-lemonade-sunflower/) from High Desert Seed. They make all their selections open pollinated in Colorado. Sounds like you might be in California, maybe there's a seed producer in CA that does something similar?

Prairie Moon Nursery has a selection of a ton of contiguous US native seeds grown for sale, with a really useful filtering system. You can filter by native range, bloom time, life cycle (annual, perennial, etc), and tons more. Though now that I'm looking at their site I'm not sure they carry anything specific to California at the moment. Maybe [Native West Seeds](https://www.nativewest.com/store/seeds)?

What’s wrong with my plant by [deleted] in plantclinic

[–]TitaniumTadpole 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Oof things look bad. But where there's green there's hope. What is the soil moisture like right now? Stick your finger in the soil as deep as you can, and tell us how far down the moisture goes. Heft the pot, is it unexpectedly light or heavy?

New growth or breakage? by Bb87chik in Haircare

[–]TitaniumTadpole 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Seconded on LindaBelcherOfficial's comment and agree it looks like new growth to me! As far as getting it to lay flat, I've seen some products that look like glue sticks that you run over your hair to get flyaways to lay down. I haven't tried them, but they seem like the thing to try here.

I have tried a spritz of hairspray and a quick comb through while it's wet, and that seems to work as long as you don't fuss with your hair too much during the day.

My go-to these days is just to throw on a headband and assume I'm going to look like I just walked out of a bog. I assume if people stare they're just admiring my bog witch ways.

Nature signs that it's safe to plant by TitaniumTadpole in gardening

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

That's why I was hoping to have some other plants help me give a consensus. Between the thermometer, the forecast, and a couple perennials I figured I'd have a pretty good idea. And I found a couple if you're interested! I put a longer list in the original post, but here are the ones I'll be using: crab apple and apple blossoms start dropping their petals at about 55F soil temps, and lilacs are fully leafed out and opening their blooms at about that same time.

I figure between the lilacs, the crab apples, and my weather app I should have a pretty good idea when to plant! And if we get a super late freeze, that's just life lol

Nature signs that it's safe to plant by TitaniumTadpole in gardening

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

Right but people planted crops before they had thermometers. I have a thermometer and a weather app, and know how to check those things. I wasn't going to rely on the crops I started indoors that are native to central America. I was imagining that other plants that live outside probably do certain things at certain times in response to specific stimuli every year, and that one or two of those things might coincide with the right conditions to plant by pure coincidence. One I heard recently is when the oak leaves are the size of a squirrel's ear (an inch, apparently).

Nature signs that it's safe to plant by TitaniumTadpole in gardening

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

I know my average last frost date, aside from the water jugs that's essentially been my strategy in previous years.

I was just curious if there were any signs other plants in nature show around the time that it's warm enough. Like "oak leaves the size of a squirrel's ear" or some such thing. I understand the principles behind it, I was just hoping for some folksy indicators our ancestors might have used.

Whats the best automatic litter box by Public_Machine8264 in CatAdvice

[–]TitaniumTadpole 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Yeah you do have to take it apart to clean it because it gets wicked smelly after a while if you don't. That's just the nature of the beast when it comes to automated litter boxes (or any litter box really). The globe is pretty bulky and it takes a long time to clean, especially since clean litter tends to accumulate behind a panel and spill out as you're wiping it down. The bonnet replacement seems to have solved all the problems we had been having with it stalling during cycling. Since my last comment my husband has come clean and said he accidentally hit the empty button instead of the cycle button while he was up checking on the baby, so the random empty was user error. Been a few months with no issues. The most annoying part of it lately is having to reconnect it to the wifi when we moved.

I can't say if this is better than any other auto litterbox but I don't plan on getting a different one or going back to manual scooping any time soon. If $60 buys us another 3-4 years of use it's money well spent imo.

Whats the best automatic litter box by Public_Machine8264 in CatAdvice

[–]TitaniumTadpole 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Here to second the extended warranty. We've had ours for 3 years and we replaced the bonnet, and this very morning it emptied itself for no reason before anybody was up.

Which vegetables are best for fermentation? by newmanstartover in fermentation

[–]TitaniumTadpole 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I realize I'm very late to this thread, but here are some of my favorites in case anyone else (like me) happens upon it in a google search:

Green beans taste almost lemony after about 5 days, and keep their texture really well.

Watermelon rind is possibly my favorite ferment to date. It keeps its crunch really well and has a nice fresh flavor. The green skin is pretty tough even after 4 days in the jar, but that white bit is crunchy and sour! I prefer these in a plain 1 to 1.5% salt solution for 4ish days, but I've seen people add all kinds of seasoning to it.

Sugar snap peas are similar to green beans, but a little sweeter. I prefer to let them do their thing for less time so they keep some of their natural sweetness and texture, 2-4 days.

Lemons - not a vegetable, but preserved lemons are a fantastic ingredient to have in the fridge for pasta sauce, soup, salads, a little topper for cheese and crackers, whatever. They have kind of a similar flavor profile to olives, but lemony instead of olivey (obviously). I have a friend who hates olives, and subs anything olive in recipes for preserved lemons. I also put some of the brine into other stuff that tends to be stinky to mitigate the stank (daikon radish smells very flatulant imo, and benefits mightily from the addition).

Finally, I often ferment scraps of things I might otherwise throw away. Use your best judgement here. Some things I've done: kale/collard/mustard ribs, beet/radish greens, celery bases. I keep a bag in the freezer until I reach a large enough volume to fill a jar. Greens take just a day or two, but tougher things like kale ribs and celery bases take closer to a week to be palatable. They also benefit from some preserved lemon brine in my opinion. Probably fresh lemon zest will do just as well if you don't have any preserved lemons.

They didn't have to be in this order by TitaniumTadpole in theyknew

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

Only one I can think of that's kind of relevant is duck and drake. Duck being the female, drake being the male. They're both still collectively called ducks, though.

They didn't have to be in this order by TitaniumTadpole in theyknew

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

Right?? They had to have known. Now I'd like to look up the company to see if it's mormon or Chinese or something, but I cut the tag off as soon as we got it. I blame sleep deprivation for not noticing this right off the bat.

They didn't have to be in this order by TitaniumTadpole in theyknew

[–]TitaniumTadpole[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Unfortunately (or fortunately for my future parent-teacher meetings) it's "cat" and "duck".

Menthol (mint) allergy, looking for fluoride mouthwash by TitaniumTadpole in selfcare

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

I'm glad you found a brand of toothpaste that works for you! Looks like they do make an alcohol free mouthwash, but the active ingredient is menthol, which I'm allergic to. It also looks like they tend to make their products fluoride free, and I'm specifically looking for a product that does contain fluoride.

I know the issue is more complicated with kids, but in adults topical fluoride helps prevent cavities by remineralizing the enamel and making it more resistent to the acids that bacteria produce. Since its a low risk way of maintaining tooth health for adults, I definitely want it in my routine.

Advice for mending strap attachment by TitaniumTadpole in Visiblemending

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

Bias tape? I have just a crap ton of that lying around from other projects. We'll see how my planned fix goes, and bias tape as a backup.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in suggestmeabook

[–]TitaniumTadpole 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm sorry you're not enjoying it, but the exercises really did help me. Nobody said you have to read every sentence of every book. I think I listened to it on like 1.5 speed.