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Archive for the ‘fishhook’ Category

Finding Your Passion In A Small Space – Try These ‘big Garden’ Tips – Part 1

14 Sep

In our dreams we see an acre of vegetables, yet every time we look out the back door all we see is a postage stamp sized area for a garden. Finding your passion in gardening gives you the opportunity to forget about the stress of your job and other obligations and the chance to grow something of your own. Gardening may be for us past farm kids who like to dig in the dirt, for those of us who want to eat more healthily, or just save a few dollars off the grocery bill. A big garden may be only a dream, yet the homeowner with a small space in the corner of their yard may still be able to experience that dream.

What do you have a passion for? What has made you want to jump out of bed? Catherine Pulsifer

Lets start with the location for the garden as a means of finding your passion. You want as much exposure to the sun as you can get. Avoid a garden by large trees or any structure which will shade the area and stunt the growth of your plants. Try for a level area with decent drainage. If you have a yard with a chain-link fence, look at one of the back corners. Dont overlook a space because you think it isnt big enough you would be surprised what you can grow in a garden with a total of 100 or 200 square feet of space and the enjoyment you can receive.

The type of soil in your yard is a big factor in the success of your garden. If you are blessed with black dirt in your yard, say thank you! The first two homes we lived in had plenty of black dirt. At our current home we have clay, and only clay. This gives us a couple of options – one was to mix mulch and peat moss into the soil to help loosen the very compact and dense clay. Or you can do what I did I dug a trench around 24 inches or more deep and moved the dirt to another part of the yard. I started a mound for flowers, thats another opportunity for finding your passion in a different type of gardening flower gardening. Next I had a truck load of black dirt brought in and I filled the trench in my garden.

Now you can stop there, but I didnt. I wanted a raised-bed garden which offers a couple of advantages. A raised-bed garden will dry quicker in the spring allowing you to plant sooner. You can have defined rows with a walkway on one or more sides which will allow you access to your plants without walking on the area where they are growing. This reduces soil compaction. A raised-bed garden also means you dont need to stoop down as far when weeding or picking your produce. There are various means of confining the dirt in a raised-bed garden, the most common is railroad ties or with treated 4x4s or 6x6s. I dont like either due to creosote in the ties and the chemicals used in the green or treated lumber. My concern is the chemicals will leech out of the wood into the ground and end up in your vegetables that would not be very healthy for you. One can use stone if you have access to that on your property or if you are willing to spend a lot of money. I use the white vinyl 2×6 fencing material you might see in a fence on a horse farm. It is relatively inexpensive, you can cut it with a hack saw, and with a few pieces of re-rod pounded into the dirt on each side, and it will stand upright for years. Both items can be found at most of the big home improvement type stores.

Chase down your passion like it’s the last bus of the night. Glade Byron Addams

If you truly want a big garden in a small space we have one last factor to consider – that is having your plants grow up instead of spreading out on the ground taking up the amount of space stated on the back of the package. I use what is called a cattle panel – your larger home improvement stores or a farm store will stock these. They are 16 feet long and 5 feel high comprised of galvanized steel rods of about 3/8 inch thick fastened together. Farmers use them to build a mesh type fence to hold livestock. I cut the panel into 2, 3 or 4 pieces, ending up with 8 foot pieces, about 5 foot pieces, or 4 foot pieces. Then with a t steel post of 6 feet length on each side, I stand them on end about 3-4 inches off the ground. This allows your plants to grow on a support up to 6 or 8 feet high in the air.

Growing your plants up will dramatically alter your planning and the amount of vegetables you can plant in your garden. This will truly allow you to have a much bigger garden in a small space.

Before heading off to the garden center to buy your seeds or plants, you will want to have a plan showing what to plant in each spot in your garden. Determine where you will place your cattle panels and what type of vegetables you will grow on each length. Understanding the amount of space a plant will require is an important step in your planning. A common mistake is to plant too closely together, this will hurt your overall yield. You will want to select a vine-type plant rather than the compact bush-type so the plant will grow up your fence.

Training your vegetables to grow on the wire panels offers other advantages. Your vegetables will be off the ground and will be less likely to rot. Finding your ripe vegetables, especially cucumbers, is easier as you move aside the leaves and look for a cucumber hanging down compared to finding one laying on the ground against a dark background. On top of that, it will give the neighbors something to talk about 2 years ago I had a 28 pound banana squash which grew 5 feet in the air completely unsupported. If you are not sure when to pick your muskmelons, just wait, when they are ripe they will fall off. Ive used a step ladder to pick pole beans and the big fishhook lima beans. Now lets not get too carried away trying to grow watermelons or your Halloween pumpkin off the ground as the vines or the stem will not support that much weight.

Ive provided some basics for finding your passion with a small vegetable garden. With a little water and bit of your time, you also will be successful in growing items for your dinner table, while finding peace and relaxation in your life.

About the Author:

Neil Graber, Life Style Mentor and Successful Entrepreneur, is helping many become the next success story. Whether you’re looking to create an extra few thousand dollars per month, be an ex-corporate executive, or the next millionaire Mom, Neil can assist you to create a second stream of income and greater peace of mind. visit : Success

 
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Bass Fishing Without A Pole

14 Sep

Bass fishing usually requires a fishing pole, but there are other ways, and that is what this story is about. A warning though: The techniques described here are almost certainly illegal wherever you go fishing. They were fun when we were kids though…

Bass Fishing From A Raft

Wilsey Bay in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula is known for its good smallmouth bass fishing. The swimming isn’t that bad either, which was why we built the raft. My friend Bruce was probably the oldest at the time, about twelve-years-old. It was probably his idea to use the oil barrels for flotation. Four of them, topped by some wooden pallets and plywood nailed together, made a raft that could support seven or eight people.

We anchored it in the middle of the bay. It is a shallow bay, so the middle was still only six feet deep or so. This would be our swimming area, but more than that. We started to bring small trees out and sink them with milk jugs full of sand and pieces of cinder blocks. Of course, we didn’t know that it was illegal to build an artificial environment for fish. In fact, we didn’t know that this was what we were doing. We built walls of rocks underwater as well.

Within a few weeks there were schools of fish hanging out below our raft in the racks and tree branches. There were some perch, but most of them were smallmouth bass. As we watched then swimming below us, and then as we watched them next to us during our dives. I had an idea. Who needs a fishing pole when you can get this close to the fish?

Bruce kept the bucket ready in the boat, which was tied to the raft. I had one fishhook and three feet of line. I tied the hook to one end of the line and tied the other end to my finger. I treaded water while Bruce baited the hook with half of a worm. He threw the line over the edge of the boat.

Swimming by the trees, I simply let the baited hook float alongside me, trying to hold it out from my body a couple feet. I could only hold my breath for a minute or less, but by the second dive a ten-inch bass darted out of the tree branches and took the bait. I swam to the boat and lifted it up for Bruce to take. Just barely legal – or at least it would have been if it weren’t for the trees. Then again, maybe a fishing pole is a legal requirement. Bruce threw it in the bucket and I went back down for more.

Perch Fishing By Hand

The little creek that enters the bay was occasionally stopped by the sand that built up during storms. Then the water would build up behind the sand for days until it broke loose and opened up the stream again. We didn’t always wait, however. Once there was sufficient water pressure, a simple channel dug through the sand by hand, from the dammed creek to the bay, was enough to get it going. It would start out slowly, and then, within an hour the creek would be gushing out into the bay, twenty-feet across where our three-inch channel had been.

Since the creek rarely flowed this fast normally, other things happened that weren’t normal. The fish that had been in the creek behind the dam would all get flushed out, for example. The day of the “perch flush” the creek had opened up almost thirty-feet wide, but only a few inches deep. As the perch came out, we grabbed them by hand until we had a couple dozen in a bucket. We built a pond on the beach for these, since it was too many to eat all at once.

Other Childish Fishing Techniques

We caught smelt one at a time by hand with a flashlight, as many as forty in a hour or two. We shamelessly clubbed suckers in the creek ad brought them to the neighbor. She would pressure-cook them with ketchup, and they came out looking and tasting almost like canned salmon. Half for herself – that was the charge for cooking them for us.

Whether bass fishing without a pole or clubbing suckers, these are probably not techniques you’ll want to try unless you want to meet the local game warden. And I do have to warn you that the last time I tried using just a hook and a piece of line, the fish bit my thumb and drew blood. Yes, I may be the only person to ever had blood drawn by the bite of a smallmouth bass. But it is fun to remember how much fun childhood fishing could be.

About the Author:
Copyright Steve Gillman. For more Fishing Stories visit: http://www.999FishStories.com

 
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Top Ten Schools In Gov. Sarah Palin’s Hometown Of Wasilla, Alaska

13 Sep

Gov. Sarah Palin came into the national spotlight in September, 2008 and so did her small hometown of Wasilla, Alaska. Americans in the ‘Lower 48,’ as named by Alaskans, were given a crash course on Alaska and all things Alaskan. This has started dreams of snow machine races and moose stew in the heads of some of my friends and I’m sure, many of you reading this article.

To that end, I have decided to see what the poor kids who are about to be dragged by their starry-eyed (or maybe snow-blinded) parents would have to deal with in terms of continuing their education. Here are the top 10 schools in Wasilla, Alaska that parents (and children) might want research before renting that Budget truck.

1)Teeland Middle School
2788 N. Seward Meridian Parkway
Wasilla, Alaska 99654
Phone: (907)-352-7500

Type of school: Public
Grades: 6-8
Enrollment: 648 students
Student-Teacher Ratio: 17.3
Met AYP (No Child Left Behind): Yes

2)Cottonwood Creek Elementary School
800 N. Seward Meridian Parkway
Wasilla, AK 99654
Phone: (907)-376-7577

Type of school: Public
Grades: PK, K through 5
Enrollment: 440 students
Student-Teacher Ratio: 16.9
Met AYP (No Child Left Behind): Yes

3)Iditarod Elementary
801 N. Wasilla Fishhook Road
Wasilla, AK 99654
Phone: (907)-376-5371

Type of school: Public
Grades: PK, K through 5
Enrollment: 469 students
Student-Teacher Ratio: 16.8
Met AYP (No Child Left Behind): Yes

4)Tanaina Elementary School
2550 Lucille Street
Wasilla, AK 99654
(907)-376-7117

Type of school: Public
Grades: PK, K through 5
Enrollment: 492 students
Student-Teacher Ratio: 16.4
Met AYP (No Child Left Behind): Yes

5)Wasilla Middle School
650 Bogard Road.
Wasilla, AK 99654
Phone: (907)-376-5308

Type of school: Public
Grades: 6-8
Enrollment: 756 students
Student-Teacher Ratio: 16.1
Met AYP (No Child Left Behind): No

6)Goose Bay Elementary School
6400 Hollywood Blvd.
Wasilla, AK 99687
Phone: (907)-373-5955

Type of school: Public
Grades: PK, K through 6
Enrollment: 532 students
Student-Teacher Ratio: 16.1
Met AYP (No Child Left Behind): Yes

7)Finger Lake Elementary School
5981 Eek Street
Wasilla, AK 99654
Phone: (907)-373-3242

Type of school: Public
Grades: PK, K through 5
Enrollment: 481 students
Student-Teacher Ratio: 16
Met AYP (No Child Left Behind): Yes

8)Meadow Lakes Elementary School
1741 Pittman Road
Wasilla, AK 99687
Phone: (907)-357-9840

Type of school: Public
Grades: PK, K through 6
Enrollment: 409 students
Student-Teacher Ratio: 14.6
Met AYP (No Child Left Behind): No

9)Cornerstone Christian School
4001 Ederrington Village
Wasilla, AK 99654
Phone: (907)-357-9798

Type of school: Private
Grades: K through 12
Enrollment: 97 students
Student-Teacher Ratio: 10.8
Met AYP (No Child Left Behind): N/A

10)Wasilla Lake Christian School
2001 Palmer Wasilla Highway
Wasilla, AK 99654
Phone: (907)-373-6439

Type of school: Private
Grades: K through 12
Enrollment: 129 students
Student-Teacher Ratio: 9.9
Met AYP (No Child Left Behind): N/A

So there you have it! This is your first step in moving the family to Wasilla, Alaska where you can enjoy the fresh mountain air, wonderful natural scenery and interesting meals. Good luck and happy snow machining.

About the Author:
Zander Smith
Site Representative, Kali Network
Internet Yellow Pages

 
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