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Okra is about the easiest veggie to grow there is. First, look at the seed pack to determine when you should plant. Do not plant early.
Work soil up into a row. Provide good drainage.
Plant 2-3 seeds per hill about 10 inches apart. When the plants have came up and are about 1.5 inches tall thin to one plant per hill.
The plants will produce until the first frost. Harvest from the bottom of the plant and the plant will just grow and grow. I have seen people picking okra while standing on step ladders in LA.
Two 12' rows will provide more okra pods than the average family will use.
I mulch my soil before I cultivate and side dress with fertilizer as the year goes on.
Catfish?
First, catch the catfish....
Then kill the fish by driving a nail through its head into the board beneath.
Flip the fish over and gut the fish. Neighborhood cats will appreciate it if you leave the guts out and available for their midnight snack.
With the head immobilized by the nail, using a sharp knife cut around the body just behind the head. Then cut vertical cuts just through the skin around the fish.
Using a pair of pliers grasp the skin behind the head and pull towards the tail, removing the skin.
If the fish is large enough to fillet... using a very sharp knife slice down the back on both sides of the spine. You should get two fillets per fish.
Never cook Mud Cats and never cook one more than 18" in length.
My realty show starts next month.
;-) Parent
Use okra less than 2.5 inches in length.
Wash okra in cool water.
Chop into bite size pieces.
Have eggs/milk ready. Add salt and pepper as desired.
Slosh in batter. Roll in self rising meal (because it has just the right amount of flour)
Place on cookie pans and freeze.
After freezing store in zip lock bags. Quantity = amount desired for one meal.
Store in freezer.
To eat, bring cooking oil to boil, carefully placing the okra into the oil and cook until it is done. Parent
I might have to finally learn how to cook regular rice properly...I just can't ever seem to do it without a clumpy mess, so I buy the boil in bag. Economics might drive me to finally figure it out:) Parent
excellent!
Oh, you DO need water in the pot... Parent
Gracias hombre! Parent
still eating corn I canned 8 years ago, and spaghetti sauce from the same year. It was a big garden that year.
Check your salvation army type places first, canners can be expensive. The one I have is gasketless, and seals like a decompression tank--big bakelite screws to keep the top on. Parent
Now watching out for the grocer putting his thumb on the scale...thats a local skill set:) Parent
went to the nursery today with mom as inspiration for this years gardens. It worked (along with sunny 60+ weather!) and I'll be starting my seeds and working in the garden to try and figure out where/what I want to plant when it's time. I can put the potatoes out now if I want according to the person I spoke with, but I think I'll also check with my books and my farmin' LL :) I can plant sooner and longer into the year than my mom with some things, and she gets the heat and has massive garden space that I don't have, so we're planning to coordinate the 2. Parent
Broccoli, cauliflower, collards, any other cole crops in your garden, they don't take the heat that well.
I always plant a row of radishes, because they come up so fast, also. Sauteed radishes in an omelet will surpise you. Parent
I'm coming up on my first year here in this new climate, so last year's experiments have me excited for this year doing a true year round garden starting this season. I planted my potatoes late last year. Many were early varieties, so I'm going to stagger those plantings, and the late varieties should produce even better :) Oh, and since I planted late, the short downtime between plantings means I can try and use some of my own as seed :) Shallots will be going in (ones I grew and ones I got from my LL, who gave me the first starts last year) along with some good onion starts I started.
Talked to mom, she's going to walk her 'yard' tomorrow and do some planning. She wants to do a lot of herb planting in her current landscape instead of ground cover type of plants, as she's noticing they hang well through the winter. We have different micro-climates, her winter freezes more than mine, and her summer gets hotter. And she's about 30mins away drive time :) She also has a lot of unused space where she used to do full blown veggie gardens years ago, so we are looking at that space for the typical planting season. She used to do some crops there that I don't have the space for to get storage production. So if she's up for it, I'll be more than a happy camper. Parent
I really like the climate here!!! Parent
It doesn't get quite as hot here as southern Alabama, so tomatoes grow through the summer... but I miss my february loose leaf salads...
Enjoy! you're blessed! Parent
Rinse rice, rinse it a lot. Put rice in a sauce pan. Seriously, my friend, get a medium sized saucepan with a properly fitting lid. Add water to saucepan and rice. For brown rice the ration is 2:1, that is for every cup of rice add two cups of cold water. If you want it, add a little butter or olive oil and salt and pepper at this point.
Now, bring the uncovered pot to a boil. Let boil for 5 minutes. Turn the heat down to a simmer, put the lid on the pot, and cook for 30-35 minutes. Do not keep lifting the lid to check on the rice. I usually set the timer for 30 minutes, take a quick peek, and if the rice is still a bit soupy let it cook a couple more minutes.
When it's done just fluff it with a fork and serve.
Much cheaper and better tasting than the boil-in-a-bag stuff. Parent
Obama better start worrying about the price of gas if he wants to be re-elected. Parent
TSA officers aren't radiologists. The don't really know enough about operating these machines.
And the officers themselves are probably more at risk than the public, but they're not allowed to wear dosimeters.
Something that would ensure some longitudinal readings. And something everyone else who operates x-ray machines is forced to wear for insurance purposes. Parent
So much for raising the level of political discourse, even if he did laugh about it.
After meeting with business leaders in Sanford, LePage told WCSH-TV6 he was not attending Martin Luther King Jr. Day events in Bangor and Portland because he considered the group a special interest. "They are a special interest," he told the station. "End of story. And I'm not going to be held hostage by special interests. And if they want, they can look at my family picture. My son happens to be black, so they can do whatever they'd like about it." When the reporter asked if his absence was an indication of a pattern, rather than an isolated incident, LePage responded by saying: "Tell `em to kiss my butt," he said, laughing. "If they want to play the race card, come to dinner and my son will talk to them." LePage, a Republican who was sworn in last week, has a Jamaican son named Devon Raymond. Raymond watched on stage last week at the inaugural, along with LePage's four other children.
"They are a special interest," he told the station. "End of story. And I'm not going to be held hostage by special interests. And if they want, they can look at my family picture. My son happens to be black, so they can do whatever they'd like about it."
When the reporter asked if his absence was an indication of a pattern, rather than an isolated incident, LePage responded by saying: "Tell `em to kiss my butt," he said, laughing. "If they want to play the race card, come to dinner and my son will talk to them."
LePage, a Republican who was sworn in last week, has a Jamaican son named Devon Raymond. Raymond watched on stage last week at the inaugural, along with LePage's four other children.
For my part, as a member of the political media, and a vitriol-spewing one at that, the Tucson shooting immediately made me ask myself the question: do I personally do anything to add to this obvious problem of a hypercharged, rhetorically overheated political atmosphere? And the unfortunate answer I came up with was, maybe. I've always told myself that what I do is different from what someone like Rush does, because I don't target classes of people and try not to exempt anyone (even myself) from criticism, or favor either party. I've also counted on the belief that anyone who's willing to devote the mental energy to even follow whatever wild rhetoric I'm using is probably also smart enough to tell the difference between reality and hyperbole. I also hope that anyone reading my articles will get the underlying message that I'm pretty sure -- I hope I'm sure, anyway -- I'm conveying at all times, i.e. that violence is irresponsible, that we should use our brains instead of baseball bats to solve problems, etc. But while I tell myself all these things, I also know that I would never talk to my wife or my mother the way I talk to Lloyd Blankfein. Is it ever right to just wind up and let someone have it with all you've got? That's a question that I think has to be asked. It's certainly possible that we've all become too used to unrestrained rhetoric as a form of entertainment, and people like me live right in the middle of the guilt parabola there. Most all of us are grownups and can handle extreme argument, but clearly some people are not, and obviously I'm not just talking about Jared Loughner. To see that, all you have to do is attend almost any family gathering, where once-loving relationships have been completely lost because of the overheated right-left culture war. If real family relationships are being lost to this kind of political debate, if someone on TV can reach into your living room and break up your family without knowing anything about you or even knowing that you exist, that tells us that this mechanized mass-media rhetoric has been almost unimaginably successful at dehumanizing whole classes of people.
I've also counted on the belief that anyone who's willing to devote the mental energy to even follow whatever wild rhetoric I'm using is probably also smart enough to tell the difference between reality and hyperbole. I also hope that anyone reading my articles will get the underlying message that I'm pretty sure -- I hope I'm sure, anyway -- I'm conveying at all times, i.e. that violence is irresponsible, that we should use our brains instead of baseball bats to solve problems, etc.
But while I tell myself all these things, I also know that I would never talk to my wife or my mother the way I talk to Lloyd Blankfein. Is it ever right to just wind up and let someone have it with all you've got? That's a question that I think has to be asked. It's certainly possible that we've all become too used to unrestrained rhetoric as a form of entertainment, and people like me live right in the middle of the guilt parabola there. Most all of us are grownups and can handle extreme argument, but clearly some people are not, and obviously I'm not just talking about Jared Loughner.
To see that, all you have to do is attend almost any family gathering, where once-loving relationships have been completely lost because of the overheated right-left culture war. If real family relationships are being lost to this kind of political debate, if someone on TV can reach into your living room and break up your family without knowing anything about you or even knowing that you exist, that tells us that this mechanized mass-media rhetoric has been almost unimaginably successful at dehumanizing whole classes of people.
Michael Steele dropped out after the 4th ballot in the race for RNC Chair.
Wisconsin is gone for 2012. That's what this means. Parent
(and I think by Feingold-Johnson expenditures you mean a record for fed office in Wisconsin, no? chump change compared to what we spend out here in CA) Parent
By the way, it also said that "Sunspots" Johnson now is one of the richest men in Congress -- close behind Senator Kohl of Wisconsin, the richest of all.
I'll try to find the link later. Have to head out now. . . . Parent
Accd'g to this site, Feingold and Johnson in WI combined for only $27 mill, about evenly split. Parent
In fairness, many localities have stupid war on the poor rules like this.
All the money we're dumping into war and we can't even take care of the ones who have to fight them. Parent
Hope the guys collecting had a permit, or a different rules different fools exemption. Parent
I can explain this in one word, yuppie gentrification.
It sucks because people like myself (I am by definition, not by heart, a yuppie) who found this great section of downtown. Great bars, industrial, a little sketchy, lots of property crime, but no violence. We bought/rented in the buildings here, harmonize with the all, including the homeless. It was a great mix of young/old, mixed race and social status. It was miles from the burb yuppies on the other side of downtown. It was shady and dirty enough that those yuppies stayed clear, yet safe enough and friendly enough to attract really great people. Planned Parenthood 3 blocks away, the NAACP even closer, we have everything, not that those places are cool to live by, but they kept the uptight, the money hungry, and the christian morality far a clear.
Side note, PP is gone, but nothing gave me greater pleasure than driving by the daily protesters after work in my BMW, honking, watching them assume I was friendly, their watching their obvious disgust when my rather large index finger appeared.
Then came the light rail right through our hood, which was awesome at first, we were connected to everything, including the Medical Center, which you may have guessed employees a lot of those burb-yuppies, so the past 4 years has been a slow evolution into martini bars, clubs, frou frou shops, townhouses, and a giant eye soar called CVS smack dab in the middle. All of it new construction.
So now we have everything one could possibly want from the burbs, including the a-holes who think they should be able to live in Downtown Houston while simultaneously experiencing suburban life. And devoted to making that dream comes true.
Anyways, same all over, just feel like I need to defend my city or at least explain it. While I never fed the homeless, I certainly helped with their two greatest needs, beers and cigs, and in return, a certain sense of security at 4am when stumbling home.
Now, it's sanitized, no more beer in hand while on the way to a friends, no loud parties, nothing, just a cold lifeless street void of all humanity and the constant hardness of patrol cars cleansing the hood anything resembling fun. Parent
And you're so right, things are tough all over on that front. Here's to filling that humanity void on the sneak my friend, down low liberty. Parent
In its defense of the 1996 law, the government today stated: DOMA is supported by rationales that constitute a sufficient rational basis for the law. For example, as explained below, it is supported by an interest in maintaining the status quo and uniformity on the federal level, and preserving room for the development of policy in the states. When DOMA was enacted, the institution of marriage had long been understood as a formal relationship between a man and a woman, and state and federal law had been built on that understanding. But our society is evolving, and as is well-established, the "science of government . . . is the science of experiment." Over the years, the prevailing concept of marriage has been challenged as unfair to a significant element of the population. Recently there has been a growing recognition that the prevailing regime is harmful to gay and lesbian members of our society. That recognition has prompted ongoing dialogue and change in many states, with some states opting to authorize same-sex marriages and other states opting for other forms of legal recognition for same-sex couples, such as civil unions and domestic partnerships. Still other states have reexamined their legal systems and reaffirmed their support of their preexisting concept of marriage and provided that their constitution or laws authorize only marriages between a man and a woman. In the end, the large majority of states today do not recognize same-sex marriage.
DOMA is supported by rationales that constitute a sufficient rational basis for the law. For example, as explained below, it is supported by an interest in maintaining the status quo and uniformity on the federal level, and preserving room for the development of policy in the states.
When DOMA was enacted, the institution of marriage had long been understood as a formal relationship between a man and a woman, and state and federal law had been built on that understanding. But our society is evolving, and as is well-established, the "science of government . . . is the science of experiment." Over the years, the prevailing concept of marriage has been challenged as unfair to a significant element of the population. Recently there has been a growing recognition that the prevailing regime is harmful to gay and lesbian members of our society. That recognition has prompted ongoing dialogue and change in many states, with some states opting to authorize same-sex marriages and other states opting for other forms of legal recognition for same-sex couples, such as civil unions and domestic partnerships. Still other states have reexamined their legal systems and reaffirmed their support of their preexisting concept of marriage and provided that their constitution or laws authorize only marriages between a man and a woman. In the end, the large majority of states today do not recognize same-sex marriage.
Why, why, why does the DOJ keep doing this? There is no law that obligates the DOJ to defend against these lawsuits. Nor are they required to appeal these cases.
Maybe if Holder's staff spent less time pursuing a homophobia agenda they would have the time and resources to pursue the criminals on Wall Street. Just a thought. Parent
Just sayin'. Parent
1. Congress Could Have Rationally Concluded That DOMA Promotes A Legitimate Interest in Preserving a National Status Quo at the Federal Level While States Engage in a Period of Evaluation of and Experience with Opening Marriage to Same-Sex Couples. Congress Could Reasonably Conclude That DOMA Serves a Legitimate Federal Interest in Uniform Application of Federal Law Within and Across States During a Period When Important State Laws Differ. Congress Could Reasonably Have Believed That by Maintaining the Status Quo, DOMA Serves the General Federal Interest of Respecting Policy Development among the States While Preserving the Authority of Each Sovereign to Choose its Own Course.
But historian David Greenberg today tosses some cold water on the rosy depiction by libruls of Ike and his attitudes towards the military and cold war foreign policy. Sample
In the geopolitics of the 1950s, moreover, Eisenhower was a Cold Warrior nonpareil. His Secretary of State John Foster Dulles belittled containment and talked with George W. Bush-like braggadocio of what he called "liberation" or "roll back"--an active program to free countries under Soviet domination. Dulles never quite pulled that off, but he did create a new American foreign-policy doctrine of "massive retaliation," the readiness to use nuclear weapons against conventional attacks. During Eisenhower's years in the White House, the nation's nuclear arsenal swelled from roughly 1,000 warheads to 23,000. Nuclear diplomacy was part of Eisenhower's "New Look" foreign policy. So, too, was the brave new world of CIA-led coups and assassinations. It was Eisenhower whose CIA deposed the leaders of Iran, Guatemala, and possibly the Belgian Congo. The Eisenhower administration also planned the Bay of Pigs invasion to overthrow Fidel Castro in Cuba, which John F. Kennedy was left to carry out. These ruthless operations of Ike's may not have required a multibillion-dollar industry, but they hardly exemplified the anti-interventionist politics that today's farewell-address enthusiasts tend to share.
Nuclear diplomacy was part of Eisenhower's "New Look" foreign policy. So, too, was the brave new world of CIA-led coups and assassinations. It was Eisenhower whose CIA deposed the leaders of Iran, Guatemala, and possibly the Belgian Congo. The Eisenhower administration also planned the Bay of Pigs invasion to overthrow Fidel Castro in Cuba, which John F. Kennedy was left to carry out. These ruthless operations of Ike's may not have required a multibillion-dollar industry, but they hardly exemplified the anti-interventionist politics that today's farewell-address enthusiasts tend to share.
PARIS - After four weeks of steadily escalating riots across Tunisia, President Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali lost his grip on power Friday. Prime Minister Mohammed Ghannoushi announced he was taking over the North African country to organize early elections and usher in a new government. News reports said Ben Ali, 74, had fled the country, but his whereabouts were not publicly known. Wherever he was hiding, the day's events suggested his 23 years as Tunisia's ruler were over, submerged by a wave of popular unrest set off by economic deprivation, official corruption and political frustration among the country's 10.5 million mostly Sunni Muslim inhabitants. The spectacle of an iron-fisted former interior minister apparently being swept from office by an uprising of the unemployed and politically shut out was certain to be closely watched elsewhere in the Arab world. The region's many authoritarian governments, often in power without the underpinning of democratic elections, have come under increasing pressure from similarly frustrated youths.
News reports said Ben Ali, 74, had fled the country, but his whereabouts were not publicly known. Wherever he was hiding, the day's events suggested his 23 years as Tunisia's ruler were over, submerged by a wave of popular unrest set off by economic deprivation, official corruption and political frustration among the country's 10.5 million mostly Sunni Muslim inhabitants.
The spectacle of an iron-fisted former interior minister apparently being swept from office by an uprising of the unemployed and politically shut out was certain to be closely watched elsewhere in the Arab world. The region's many authoritarian governments, often in power without the underpinning of democratic elections, have come under increasing pressure from similarly frustrated youths.
Dude.
This should provide some entertainment, but then again I am going to have to hear how great Reagan was a couple million more times.
Of course, the MSM back then also should have gotten Oscars® for at least Best Adapted Screenplay. Parent
Not that he was all there when he was all there. Parent
Don't use zip codes, either, as I found out on my first dissertation proposal defense.
Census tract is best, but hard to get deaths from census tract data. Even county-level is problematic because someone from a rural county may be taken to a trauma center somewhere else for treatment. Level of analysis is important. I didn't find the variables selected compelling, other than poverty. I'd prefer county level with incorporated area versus nonincorporated area, and not where the death occured, but where the shooting occured.
If one used death certificates, one would find that hospitals are the most dangerous places on the planet, for instance.
Again, state-level analysis isn't terribly revealing. If one threw in Baptist religion, there'd probably be a medium positive correlation by state-- probably spurious, but without the data used to run my own analysis, I can't say.
Statistics are a wonderful tool, but one has to be aware of the limitations. Parent
While the John Wayne movie is sometimes thought to be a classic, it does not hold a candle to the Coen Bros. movie. The cast, the visuals all of it is good.
Go see this movie.