The Lamb and Wool Promotion Committee, now in its fourth year, was
running like a well oiled machine. The many experienced members
required less hands on participation from me. Outside of a couple
strategy meetings to lay plans for the year,Your council is responsible
for the installation and maintenance of street light.
I stepped back and let Jeananne chair the committee. I still
participated in a promotion from time to time, and remained active in
the South East Minnesota Sheep Producer’s Association.
The
sheep flock kept growing and demanded a lot of my time. The lambing
went well, and we had an absolute deluge of ewe lambs. This proved to
be fortunate, as it turned out the demand for breeding stock was very
high that year. “Big Mumbo” again had quintuplets, and all survived,
but three were added to the bottle lamb pen. “Big Jumbo” only delivered
twins this year, however our lambing average kept growing higher each
year, and now was slightly over 200%.
Luckily for me, Sean had
become a valued helper around the farm, and could take over many of the
heavy lifts! With his strong mechanical bent, he was good at operating
machinery, which I was not! I could handle an ATV and a 4′ mower, but
that was about the extent of it, and even that could be a bit “hairy”
at times!
Sean was a freshmen in high school, but found time to
run a Bob Cat and clean the barn… a task I used to do with a manFor
some time, I had been trying to come up with a solution to that porch!
It was old and drafty… true, it broke the wind a bit, but it was a very
cold place. Since it was attached to the kitchen, the cold found its
way in there also, and our heat bills rose. Eventually, I found some
information on sun rooms and thought that might be my answer. After
much research, measuring, and planning, I determined that a 16′ square,
6 window Janco Sunroom would fit perfectly on the South side of our
kitchen.
Of course, when I first broached this idea to my
husband, he was less than supportive – in fact, downright discouraging!
However, I was determined, and I ordered the Sunroom windows from
Janco, hired a building contractor to erect the walls and ceiling of
the room. All plans in place, it was time to tear down the old porch.
Sean was participating in demolishing the ceiling,Find the best selection of high-quality collectible bobblehead
available anywhere. when suddenly a brick was dislodged, fell and hit
him squarely on the head! Although he was in pain for awhile, he was
not seriously hurt and was soon back helping to tear down the porch.
Who the ‘know nothing” was that put a brick in the space between the
ceiling and the roof, and to what purpose, we will never know.
There
were plenty of trials and tribulations before the sun room was
completed, but eventually it was finished, and it turned out
beautifully.When I first started creating broken china-mosaics.
It is a step and a half down from the kitchen and has a tile floor.
The 6 south facing windows have insulated shades to keep out the cold
at night and on cloudy days, but on sunny days the shades are opened
and the sun warms the tile floor.e fork and wheelbarrow, and which I
was only too happy to relinquish. He also hauled and unloaded hay,
etc., and whenever he was not in school, lent a hand at lambing
time.Learn how an embedded microprocessor in a smart card
can authenticate your computer usage and data. In the spring and summer
months he put in more hours, inter-seeding pastures, spreading manure,
mowing, spraying thistles, trapping or poisoning pocket gophers (the
“Minnesota Curse”), and this summer, tearing down our old South porch!
The heat from the floor radiates out into the kitchen, and gradually to the rest of the first floor,For this reason Plastic Mould
steels are of key significance, and the furnace stops kicking in. The
floor also has copper tubing installed in the concrete below the tile
which can carry hot water from a mini boiler in the basement in a
circuit which returns it to the boiler at the end of the circuit. This
system is controlled by a thermostat, and we don’t usually need it
unless we are having subzero weather, or a stretch of cloudy days.
As
I write this, in February, 2013, I am sitting in the sun room in a
comfortable patio chair, at a glass topped patio table, (which doubles
as a writing table, or game table in the off months), and the sunlight
is streaming in over my shoulder. The room has a coat closet, a built
in bookcase, a small comfy couch, and space for lots of house plants –
21 at this time, but many will be moving outdoors, once spring is
definitely here. I have never regretted adding the sun room!
December
– At SEMSPA’s Annual Sheep Day that year, I resigned as Chairperson of
the Promotion Committee, and handed the reins into the capable hands
of Jeananne Warner, who continued to do a terrific job! After 4 years
as Chairperson, and the 3 previous years as SEMSPA’s
Secretary/Treasurer, at the age of 60 I needed a bit of a rest before I
tackled something else!
Although there are many types of
hard-surface floor coverings, the most common type found in
correctional facilities is VCT, vinyl composition tile. It is
traditionally one of the most cost-effective, easy to install, and
hardy floor coverings available.
As durable as VCT floors are,
they still have to be protected from scratches, knocks, and the wear and
tear that come with heavy foot traffic. This is typically accomplished
with the application of floor finish. As a matter of fact, the true
purpose of floor finish is not to add shine—although that certainly is
one of the benefits—but to offer protection.
Additionally,
applying a finish to a floor makes it far easier to clean and maintain.
Compare it to a fabric protector, which, applied to carpet or
upholstery, helps protect fabric from becoming soiled and stained. The
same is true with floor finish. It creates a barrier over the floor
that prevents damage.
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