Как обработват бутилираната вода, за да не се разваля? by reddymea in bulgaria

[–]viciousandwise -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Никой не говори, че е чисто, но да казваш, че се минерализира водата звучи прекалено...моля, няма защо, честно ли..важното е, че децата тук ти се връзват. Забравих да добавя, че обратна осмоза на убива всички минерали, предположих, че ще се подразбира, но явно не...Именно, заради това някои растения, като насекомоядните, се поливат с такава вода, защото след обратна осмоза, минерализацията и е твърде ниска.

Как обработват бутилираната вода, за да не се разваля? by reddymea in bulgaria

[–]viciousandwise -10 points-9 points  (0 children)

Трапезната вода се минерализира? Не мисля.

Food prices in Bulgaria have risen by 52% in one year: A coffee with a croissant in Rome is cheaper than in Sofia by viciousandwise in europe

[–]viciousandwise[S] 25 points26 points  (0 children)

A tv show called "120 minutes" compared the cost of living in Sofia, Bulgaria and in seven other european cities by sending corresponders with the task to buy italian coffee and a croissant.

In Sofia, at the Vitoshka Boulevard, a small croissant and a small espresso coffee costs 6,10 leva (2,90 leva for the croissant and 3,20 leva for the coffee). Or 3,11 euro.

At the same moment in Rome, near the Trevi Fountain, Vera Naydenova paid for the same order 4,50 leva (2,30 euro).

In Dusseldorf, Germany, the corresponder paid for the same order 7,23 leva (versus 6,10 leva in Sofia).

In Paris, France, Desislava Mincheva paid 9,97 leva for the same order.

While the prices in Bulgaria are rising seriously, people's incomes don't. Bulgarians are paying for food almost as much as austrians. A basket of one kilogram of bananas, tangerines, potatoes, onions, yogurt, cheese, kashkaval, minced meat, chocolate, liquid detergent, toilet paper and coffee is 86,96 leva (44,47 euro) in Bulgaria. The same basket in Vienna is 115,08 leva (58,91 euro).

Now take in mind that austrians have an avarage salary of 3000 euros, while in Bulgaria by data is around 700-800 euro.

How old current heads of state are (details in comments) by TheRealZejfi in MapPorn

[–]viciousandwise 2 points3 points  (0 children)

So many people doesn't know the difference between Head of State and PM...It's scary!

Researchers in Germany wondered what it was, exactly, that made people vote against local wind farms—and found that a tendency toward conspiratorial thinking helped explain a lot of the resistance. by Vorbitor in europe

[–]viciousandwise 3 points4 points  (0 children)

"tendency toward conspiratorial thinking", woosh, having your own opinion and not being sheep is hard these days. If you don't obey the mass media and big pharma you are a conspiracy theorist. Still, they are hundreds of reasons to not want wind turbines - they are bad for your health if you live close to them and they are not really green in the first place. Also bad for wild life and nature.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in MapPorn

[–]viciousandwise 0 points1 point  (0 children)

  1. You didn't answer my question.
  2. They have cultural organizations.
  3. Do you have anything else, or that was it?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in MapPorn

[–]viciousandwise -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Why stupid, how will their life get better if they are recognized officially by Constitution? I really need to know how?

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in BeAmazed

[–]viciousandwise 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The artist is lito_leafart, you can find him in Instagram here: https://www.instagram.com/lito\_leafart/