John Boyd Thacher State Park, is situated along the Helderberg Escarpment, one of the richest fossil-bearing formations in the world. Even as it safeguards six miles of limestone cliff-face, rock-strewn slopes, woodland and open fields, the park provides a marvelous panorama of the Hudson-Mohawk Valleys and the Adirondack and Green Mountains. The park has volleyball courts, playgrounds, ball fields and numerous picnic areas with nine reservable shelters. Interpretive programs are offered year-round, including guided tours of the famous Indian Ladder Trail. There are over 25 additional miles of trails for summer hiking and mountain biking, and winter cross-country skiing, snowshoeing, hiking, and snowmobiling.
That’s an awful bigoted slogan in my book. While one should pay attention to anything that follows the rule of three – be it the fire gong in an office building or three leaved plants, not all three leaved plants are harmful. Box alder and virignia creeper is common along river banks and partial sun exposure ecosystems in Upstate NY but it is harmless – it’s not Urishol bearing poison ivy.
I am terribly allergic to Urishol. This sap gives me blisters that can easily explode on my skin, pop and be an itchy, goo filled mess. One my face I’ve had my eyes swell shut and it’s hard to breathe. Often poison ivy hangs out close to immature box alder and Virginia Creeper as they like similar ecosystems and in some forms can look alike. But I don’t fear or stay away from Virginia Creeper and all three leaved plants, I just look carefully to ensure no poison ivy and be on my way.
It’s just messed up that the Latitude is the Y axis, longitude is the X axis, but most of the time you write Latitude (Y), Longitude (X) — but Y does not come before X in the alphabet unless you are a Little Endian and think Z is the first letter in the alphabet.
As much as horrifies my liberal friends I really love my Gadsden flag.
You donβt know how long Iβve wanted to own my own Donβt Tread on Me Flag but was too embarrassed to spend the $8 to buy it.
Iβm a life long liberal Democrat who loves guns and burning things that government is involved in too much in our private lives. Β Iβve always kind of liked the Tea Party message of defending the second amendment, individual empowerment and less government interference with the lives of private citizens.Government shouldn’t regulate individuals like it does large corporations. You might say my views are closer to Malcom X and Huey Newton then Donald Trump or Paul Ryan but I couldnβt find an inexpensive Black Panther flag that I liked. Moreover, nobody knows what the meaning of the Black Panthers is anymore. The Panthers flag just isnβt that nice color wise, especially next to my Blue Marble Earth Flag or now my Rainbow Flag. I thought about getting a Molon Labe flag but I didnβt like the colors or the military undertones. Iβm not a war monger but I believe in citizen empowerment and the right of self-defense and self-reliance.
Iβve long flirted with the Tea Party because I love the Man (lol!) and his aerial highway patrols as much as the next person, but I also think that Obamacare has helped a lot of people even if I think that the subsidies should have been a lot more generous for middle class families. Why canβt government help people get healthcare and an affordable college education without spying on our emails or beating up on the farmers just trying to do their jobs? Animal rights and environmental extremists have gotten much too much control in our society today. People who are ill informed and act only emotion, have no role in our governing. Iβm more concerned with air pollution from coal power plants and large landfills then marginal farmers in the mountains grazing cattle and rednecks burning trash and riding quads in the woods. Not every acre of land should be declared wilderness. We can have public lands with great backcountry camping and trails, hunting and fishing but we can also have logging and mineral production to help pay for upkeep of the land.
I believe we can have a government that works for the people and promote the common good without treading on peopleβs rights.
Solar panels are made up of solar cells which are diodes or silicon junctions or check valves that put out 0.5 to 0.6 volts each without load (open circuit). To charge a 12 volt battery, you put 10 solar cells in series to get roughly 20 volts which under load will drop down to closer to 15 volts.
Every solar cell is a diode and not only prevents the backwards flow of current it also prohibits forward flow of current without sunlight to excite the electrons and bridge the junctions.
As solar panels are strings diodes wired in series, if you partially block one diode by providing less light due to a shadow the performance of the entire panel suffers disproportionately. It’s actually bad for the panel to be exposed to shadows continously as when you are blocking flow of current due to shadows you are starting to wear down the silicon junctions in other cells eventually causing permanent damage to the panel.
Suicide has been in the news a lot lately. The liberal media likes to blame guns and conservative media blames social media but I think there is little convincing evidence given on either side of the debate.
I have a different take – growth of consumer culture and the promotion of immediate gratification over saving, investing and planning for a better tomorrow – is leading to increased suicides. Is there any reason to live if you are not working for a better community and a better tomorrow in your own life?
From fast food to easy credit, it seems like everything is promoting live for today, don’t worry about tomorrow. Your life is busy, says the mass media, so focus on labor savings like drive thrus and trinkets and not a better tomorrow.
Most products you buy today are designed to be disposable, sent to the landfill or incinerator shortly after purchase. In such a culture, why is it not surprising that thousands of Americans view it totally acceptable to throw away their lives like they do their iPhone or overpackaged item from Amazon?
If we became a culture that valued saving, planning for tomorrow and reduction of waste, maybe life could once again become more valuable to more Americans. Too many think everything in this world is disposable, to be consumed and discarded.
We should work to build a society that is
more inclusive and less disposable.