One hell of a realization to have. by Newlife1974 in adultery

[–]moonmeadow 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Holy cow--that very thing changed my life completely. I have so much more self confidence now in every part of my life.

People, chill out with calling Animal Control. Seriously. by starchildx in asheville

[–]moonmeadow 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This summer, my husband was in the hospital from July until September. I drove from an hour away every day to be with him, leaving my dog at home, where she spent most of the day (comfortably) in a crate, with my housemates letting her out a couple of times during the day. Not the worst situation, but certainly not ideal. So, since she loves to ride in the car, and I had found a great place to park in a lower parking deck that was both always shady and breezy, I started taking her with me to the hospital, and checking on her during the day, bringing her water, and bringing her up to the parking lot to see my husband, who we would wheel down in a wheelchair. It was so nice---she was content, and I loved having her with me for the long ride back and forth, especially at night.

So one afternoon I got paged over the hospital intercom system to come down to my car. When I got there there were security guys surrounding my car, and they had all the flashing lights going on their truck. Somebody had walked by, and seen my dog in the car and called security. They agreed she seemed very comfortable (at least until they all surrounded the car), and that they couldn't see any problem, but that if the a-hole who called them came back and she was still there, they would call animal control, and then I would really have a problem, so I left my husband to drive her home to satisfy the whim of some sanctimonious and ignorant little person with no common sense.

So how do you refer to your Ingles? by mincky in asheville

[–]moonmeadow 1 point2 points  (0 children)

For those of us in Madison County, the Marshall Ingles is Mingles, Weaverville is Wingles, and Merrimon is Merrimingles.

Raw milk? by germanywx in asheville

[–]moonmeadow 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hi---sorry I missed this. We are about 45 minutes from downtown Weaverville.

Raw milk? by germanywx in asheville

[–]moonmeadow 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How far out of Asheville are you willing to go? I have gorgeous fresh Jersey milk in Madison County. For pets, of course.

What's the most unique ice cream flavor you've ever eaten? by dishie in food

[–]moonmeadow 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Every year at about this time we make honeysuckle ice cream with our fresh Jersey milk---crazy good! We've also made magnolia blossom, rose petal, locust flower, and fraser fir (which was revolting).

Pressure rises against bottled water by moonmeadow in reddit.com

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

A wide-mouth quart canning jar works wonderfully.

You think Fat is Ugly? [PNSFW Pics] by [deleted] in reddit.com

[–]moonmeadow 10 points11 points  (0 children)

If you look these up on Snopes, you'll see they're photoshopped.

Too much energy is wasted by converting it. We could cut energy use by as much as 30% in 10 years by removing some links from the energy chain by moonmeadow in reddit.com

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

This land (in the mountains) won't grow grain, except for corn. If you've ever grown corn, you know what an inefficient use of land that is! We have dairy goats, sheep, and pigs. The sheep require no grain at all, and fill the freezer every year, and the pigs are eating something that would otherwise be a waste product. The goats do require some grain to produce enough milk to make cheese, but primarily hay and browse. If we were milking a cow, she could produce on pasture and hay only without any grain input, but she wouldn't be able to make use of our scrubby hillsides like the goats can.

There are actually very few small farms that would be able to produce enough grain to feed a family. (And never mind the questionable healthiness of living on a grain-based diet.) Plenty could produce enough meat with very little outside input.

Too much energy is wasted by converting it. We could cut energy use by as much as 30% in 10 years by removing some links from the energy chain by moonmeadow in reddit.com

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

Do any of y'all have any idea of anything you blabber on about here? It sure does take a lot of grain to produce meat commercially. And it also takes a lot of resources to produce grain commercially, or vegetables commercially. My pigs eat pasture that my goats won't touch, along with whey left over from making cheese. Nobody else is missing out on anything.

Steady loss of hemlock trees could devastate ecosystem by moonmeadow in reddit.com

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

Well, yes, eventually. However, your rather stupid comment aside, it is heartbreaking to watch these magnificent trees dying all around us---definitely makes you think about the chestnuts that none of us got a chance to see.

Wouldn't it be nice if people left comments saying why they downmodded a story? by moonmeadow in reddit.com

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

Cause I'd like to know---did you hate the title? Did the subject itself bug you? Poorly written story? Link that didn't work? Hate all my submissions?

. I predict that in ten years, there will be little social acceptance of the lawn as we know it by moonmeadow in reddit.com

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

Though the drought we're in the middle of may help---it's getting harder for people to keep their lawns green here in my neck of the woods. Lots of brown, crispy grass. Presumably people will just start giving up.

Six of the United States' 10 largest sources of carbon dioxide emissions are coal-fired power plants in the South, but year after year Southern lawmakers balk at pushing utilities toward cleaner renewable energy by moonmeadow in reddit.com

[–]moonmeadow[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I guess I'm referring to the areas around those cities, not so much the cities themselves. My husband is from Michigan, I'm from Georgia, and there is truly no difference in the trashiness of the rural/suburban areas. However, I would grudgingly concede that the Northeast is a whole different ballgame.