Medical Forum / Diseases and Disorders / Hepatitis / December 2005
Photoplay
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kjoh - 08 Dec 2005 03:14 GMT Hi all. I worked up a new page in my photobucket. See "November" It's nondenominational. The raku bowl in the last three photos is going to live with Cactus Bob soon :)
Anybody got pet photos they want to put in the "Hep Cats" page? Pinky is my cat, and that stunning cadmium orange radioactive creature name of Mango belongs to Bob. What about you, Dort? You say you have 8 cats?! That would make an interesting photo spread.
Ya know guys, this photobucket site is free. How about some macros of spiders and blooms from your garden Spidey?
Nighty Nite kj http://photobucket.com/albums/b50/kjoh/
Waterspider - 08 Dec 2005 07:42 GMT "kjoh" <kjohyayhoo@nospamyahoo.com> wrote...
> How about some macros of > spiders and blooms from your garden Spidey? > Nighty Nite > kj > http://photobucket.com/albums/b50/kjoh/ I'd be honoured to have my critters in your very hep photobucket. Where do I send them and what dpi do you want?
WS
cactus jammies - 08 Dec 2005 10:07 GMT Hey Kathy, I just sent you a few photos of the most up to date developments in the so-called mandala juanita concept kathy picture files. You may put them in your photobucket collection if you wish. Call it shadows of Raku ( oh yaaaa!)
thanks gday cactus jammies, satyr god panaccolyte ............................................................................................
> Hi all. I worked up a new page in my photobucket. See "November" It's > nondenominational. The raku bowl in the last three photos is going to [quoted text clipped - 11 lines] > kj > http://photobucket.com/albums/b50/kjoh/ elmoemerson@webtv.net - 08 Dec 2005 13:11 GMT ahahahahahaha!!!! We got almost an inch of snow in the middle of the night last night (wooo hoooo) and Buddy got to experience the white stuff this morning for the first time. He didn't quite know what to make of it and seemed reluctant to walk in it for a moment, then took off like a nut running around in it. Buddy made his post-breakfast poopies, then ran up on the deck to come inside, spun out and slid half way across the deck. I get a charge out of that little (60 lb) pup. Pictures to follow for your photobucket later today, Kathy. It's too dark outside this morning. elmo
http://community.webtv.net/elmoemerson/DocElmosHepFile
http://community.webtv.net/elmoemerson/TheFamilyAlbum
Paul2 - 08 Dec 2005 14:52 GMT Inch of snow? Man, on the shoveled parts of town its up to my knees...:)) We Canadians are the Frozen Chosen!
Paul2
> ahahahahahaha!!!! We got almost an inch of snow in the middle of the > night last night (wooo hoooo) and Buddy got to experience the white [quoted text clipped - 10 lines] > > http://community.webtv.net/elmoemerson/TheFamilyAlbum Waterspider - 08 Dec 2005 21:41 GMT > Inch of snow? > Man, on the shoveled parts of town its up to my knees...:)) > We Canadians are the Frozen Chosen! Except those of us on the Sunshine Coast <gloat gloat>. I split up and transplanted some phlox this morning. Yeah, chilly on the fingers but a real treat to be able to do it in December.
Waterspider
Gordo Mondragon - 08 Dec 2005 22:42 GMT > > Inch of snow? > > Man, on the shoveled parts of town its up to my knees...:)) [quoted text clipped - 3 lines] > transplanted some phlox this morning. Yeah, chilly on the fingers but a real > treat to be able to do it in December. Phlox. I might as well put a loaf of bread outside for the amount of mold and fungus it ends up covered in.
Before it does, though, it's wonderful.
G
Waterspider - 09 Dec 2005 01:59 GMT >> > Inch of snow? >> > Man, on the shoveled parts of town its up to my knees...:)) [quoted text clipped - 8 lines] > mold and fungus it ends up covered in. > Before it does, though, it's wonderful. Maybe you're thinking of a lowgrowing plant called Moss Phlox, which is different than the stuff I've been wrestling with. I've found the Moss Phlox difficult for this climate too.
WS
Gordo Mondragon - 09 Dec 2005 04:00 GMT [...]
> Maybe you're thinking of a lowgrowing plant called Moss Phlox, which is > different than the stuff I've been wrestling with. I've found the Moss Phlox > difficult for this climate too. Summer phlox. The big kind.
Gordo Mondragon - 09 Dec 2005 12:58 GMT In article <ga_mondragon-E7168C.22573408122005@news-rdr-01-dummy.rdc-nyc.rr.com>,
> [...] > [quoted text clipped - 4 lines] > > Summer phlox. The big kind. Powdery Mildew is what it is. From hot humid summers.
elmoemerson@webtv.net - 09 Dec 2005 13:04 GMT Re: Buddy's first snow Group: alt.support.hepatitis-c Date: Fri, Dec 9, 2005, 12:58pm (CST+6) From: ga_mondragon@yahoo.com (Gordo Mondragon) In article <ga_mondragon-E7168C.22573408122005@news-rdr-01-dummy.rdc-nyc.rr.com>, Gordo Mondragon <ga_mondragon@yahoo.com> wrote: In article <11php88ehkb1577@corp.supernews.com>, "Waterspider" <waterspider@moonlight.net> wrote: [...] Maybe you're thinking of a lowgrowing plant called Moss Phlox, which is different than the stuff I've been wrestling with. I've found the Moss Phlox difficult for this climate too. Summer phlox. The big kind. Powdery Mildew is what it is. From hot humid summers. ///////////// Have you considered spraying them with a fungicide? My blackberrys are susceptible to powdery mildew as well and I spray them every two weeks during the spring and summer with a mild fungicide which seems to work rather well. elmo
http://community.webtv.net/elmoemerson/DocElmosHepFile
http://community.webtv.net/elmoemerson/TheFamilyAlbum
Gordo Mondragon - 09 Dec 2005 16:46 GMT > > Re: Buddy's first snow [quoted text clipped - 18 lines] > during the spring and summer with a mild fungicide which seems to work > rather well. I get nervous about too many chemicals in the garden because of the dog, who (being part border collie) is very good about bounadries and not going into the flower beds but who loves to eat grass.
I use a 3-in-one liquid on the roses but in general don't spray anything.
There was a HUGE phlox in one bed that we dug up two years ago but it's starting to come back, so I'll research nontoxic fungicides.
We also have horseradish (I just shoved a root into the ground to see what it would do) that I find out now is like Kudzu.
G
Doug - 09 Dec 2005 16:57 GMT Horseradish spreads - great stuff. Doug
>> Re: Buddy's first snow >> [quoted text clipped - 30 lines] > > G Waterspider - 09 Dec 2005 17:49 GMT >> Re: Buddy's first snow >> [quoted text clipped - 20 lines] > who (being part border collie) is very good about bounadries and not > going into the flower beds but who loves to eat grass. I remember cinnamon powder to prevent fungus on seedlings, but I can't remember the preparation details. You might be able to find something on the net. Otherwise, Safers makes some excellent, non-toxic products for all kinds of garden life that you'd rather not have.
Border collies, they're like the Energizer Bunny on crystal meth... but those eyes, oh those soulful eyes! Cats are a bit of a challenge in gardening too. Fraser eats lavender and reacts like a normal cat would to catnip. He falls over and rolls around like a fool, pawing the air and flattening anything that's not in the shrub category. I have learned to grow lavender away from anything delicate and never in a pot. Tasmaniac enjoys shredding hosta leaves and making a comfy bed in any bed of low-growing annual. Then there's the game of Attack the Weeding Hand which makes the whole procedure, well, interesting because you never know when sharp talons will burst through the vegetation to "playfully" attach to your bare flesh. And all cat owners are far to comfortable with the little surprises left hidden under the surface of the soil. I've learned to distinguish soil-covered catshit and non-fecal things that don't belong in the soil by weight and shape alone. Then, stand up, deep breath, and wing the thing as far as you can up into the bush...
Waterspider <looking forward to spring>
Gordo Mondragon - 10 Dec 2005 00:06 GMT [...]
> Border collies, they're like the Energizer Bunny on crystal meth... but > those eyes, oh those soulful eyes! Our is an interesting mix. He's very smart - learned the play the piano, play dead, roll over, sit with a piece of ham on his nose until told it's OK to eat it - in two days. I can walk him without a leash and he's never more than a couple of feet away. He's been like that since we got him from the shelter at 1.5 years. But he doesn't know any words which is what BCs are known for. He's a companion and not real energetic, so we only need to go out and play twice a day and not very long. Mostly he just likes to hang with us while we're working.
He's larger, with shorter hair, and he has those eyes. So communicative.
He's my baby :)
Waterspider - 10 Dec 2005 08:47 GMT > [...] > [quoted text clipped - 11 lines] > He's larger, with shorter hair, and he has those eyes. So communicative. > He's my baby :) So smart. They're argueably the most intelligent breed of dog, and they ALL have THOSE eyes! Yours sounds like a pretty mellow guy for the breed... but then they do take on some of the better qualities of their owners :)
When I started tx my good friend had just got a BC puppy as a Christmas present. Every Thursday, Lee would drive up from Sechelt with Mezzo (the puppy) and take us for a walk from my place to the end of the road. This went on until the last month of tx when the anemia made it impossible for me to walk across the forkin' room never mind to the end of Dubois Road, so we'd just sit and drink green tea. Mezzo sat with us, listening to every word and being fascinated with the cats glaring at her from under the furniture. She'd often, gently and ever so politely and carefully, climb up onto the couch with me to lay her head in my lap and let me know she was sympathetic to how rotten I was feeling. She was a sweetie.
WS.
Gordo Mondragon - 10 Dec 2005 13:17 GMT [...]
> So smart. They're argueably the most intelligent breed of dog, and they ALL > have THOSE eyes! Yours sounds like a pretty mellow guy for the breed... but > then they do take on some of the better qualities of their owners :) Before I got sick we'd only had him one winter and he was still sort of "house dog" - didn't play favorites. When was on tx he was constantly with me and that behavior is now pretty much the norm.
That head-laying thing I've heard is common to BCs - lay the head down and look up with big soulful eyes.
G
Waterspider - 10 Dec 2005 20:19 GMT > [...] > [quoted text clipped - 10 lines] > That head-laying thing I've heard is common to BCs - lay the head down > and look up with big soulful eyes. And then you're forever lost... talk about con-artists!
cactus jammies - 09 Dec 2005 19:57 GMT try a mild solution of safers soap and water sprayed. apply as the weather and the buds accomodate each other.
bob greengems ....................................
>> Re: Buddy's first snow >> [quoted text clipped - 30 lines] > > G Gordo Mondragon - 10 Dec 2005 00:02 GMT That works for fungus? It's my friend during aphid season. I've been buying it premixed but I think that I use so much I need to buy it in bulk.
> try a mild solution of safers soap and water sprayed. apply as the weather > and the buds accomodate each other. > > bob greengems Bob Mackie - 10 Dec 2005 16:49 GMT all our ferns, etc. are still green, they were treated with safters soap solution in water in September.
Bob
> That works for fungus? It's my friend during aphid season. I've been > buying it premixed but I think that I use so much I need to buy it in [quoted text clipped - 5 lines] >> >> bob greengems Bob Mackie - 10 Dec 2005 17:40 GMT actually add this instead: water based solution of any type of vinegar you have even the stuff you have on the shelf behind the burners on your kitchen stove would work. I use it for cleaning in the kitchen all the time, when it ismy turn, by the way.
kitchen kook greengems
> all our ferns, etc. are still green, they were treated with safters soap > solution in water in September. [quoted text clipped - 10 lines] >>> >>> bob greengems elmoemerson@webtv.net - 08 Dec 2005 22:29 GMT Yeah, I know. This isn't exactly 'The Great White North' here. We DO get some pretty good snowfalls once in awhile tho. :-) elmo //////// Inch of snow? Man, on the shoveled parts of town its up to my knees...:)) We Canadians are the Frozen Chosen! Paul2 <elmoemerson@webtv.net> wrote in message news:4922-43983111-132@storefull-3254.bay.webtv.net... ahahahahahaha!!!! We got almost an inch of snow in the middle of the night last night (wooo hoooo) and Buddy got to experience the white stuff this morning for the first time. He didn't quite know what to make of it and seemed reluctant to walk in it for a moment, then took off like a nut running around in it. Buddy made his post-breakfast poopies, then ran up on the deck to come inside, spun out and slid half way across the deck. I get a charge out of that little (60 lb) pup. Pictures to follow for your photobucket later today, Kathy. It's too dark outside this morning. elmo http://community.webtv.net/elmoemerson/DocElmosHepFile http://community.webtv.net/elmoemerson/TheFamilyAlbum
http://community.webtv.net/elmoemerson/DocElmosHepFile
http://community.webtv.net/elmoemerson/TheFamilyAlbum
kjoh - 08 Dec 2005 18:30 GMT Way cool. This could morph. Y'all send photos to my montana address or to kjohyayhoo at yahoo dot com. Spidey i don't even know what dpi is. I'm learning and forgetting as I go. I think I can handle high-resolution large-size images though. Send ‘em and i'll figguritout. CJ can help me with that stuff (somehow I knew you were a panaccolytebud ;) that's not in wikipedia ya know). I must must must bundle up and go out there now and photograph this big brittle blue and white. ‘Bout zero out there.
kj sleeps with trees
Famous quote from Buddy Hubbard : "Pansexual?! Sex with pans?!"
>I'd be honoured to have my critters in your very hep photobucket. Where do
>I send them and what dpi do you want? >WS
>Hey Kathy, >I just sent you a few photos of the most up to date developments in the
>so-called mandala juanita concept kathy picture files. You may put them >in your photobucket collection if you wish. Call it shadows of Raku ( oh
>yaaaa!) >thanks gday >cactus jammies, satyr god panaccolyte
>Pictures to follow for your photobucket later today, Kathy. It's too >dark outside this morning. >elmo
>by "kjoh" <kjohyayhoo@nospamyahoo.com> Dec 7, >2005 at 10:14 PM Hi all. I worked up a new page in my photobucket. See "November" It's nondenominational. The raku bowl in the last three photos is going to live with Cactus Bob soon :)
Anybody got pet photos they want to put in the "Hep Cats" page? Pinky is my cat, and that stunning cadmium orange radioactive creature name of Mango belongs to Bob. What about you, Dort? You say you have 8 cats?! That would make an interesting photo spread.
Ya know guys, this photobucket site is free. How about some macros of spiders and blooms from your garden Spidey?
Nighty Nite kj http://photobucket.com/albums/b50/kjoh/
Bob Mackie - 08 Dec 2005 22:23 GMT DPI is dots per inch. 300 dpi on a 4 x 5 page layout works well. All pix should reduce according to your presets you configure. You have PSP, you can import files right in that program right from the memory in your camera, using a USB or USB2 hookup on your comp.
OK for starts? Bob
> Way cool. This could morph. Y'all send photos to my montana address or > to [quoted text clipped - 46 lines] > kj > http://photobucket.com/albums/b50/kjoh/ Gordo Mondragon - 08 Dec 2005 22:44 GMT 72 dpi for displays is a good rule of thumb - so calculate the number if inches wide you want it, multiply that by 72, and that's how many pixels wide it should be.
> DPI is dots per inch. 300 dpi on a 4 x 5 page layout works well. All pix > should reduce according to your presets you configure. You have PSP, you [quoted text clipped - 54 lines] > > kj > > http://photobucket.com/albums/b50/kjoh/ cactus jammies - 08 Dec 2005 23:29 GMT ya the windows compatible programs all reduce to default 72 dpi for their thumbnail previews. I refuse to work with numbers today, fire, air, water and earth are helping me shape guitar bodies. So without looking at a calculator, I would say that the 300 dpi is close to 4 x 5. Maybe not.
Bob cj ....................................................................
> 72 dpi for displays is a good rule of thumb - so calculate the number if > inches wide you want it, multiply that by 72, and that's how many pixels [quoted text clipped - 69 lines] >> > kj >> > http://photobucket.com/albums/b50/kjoh/
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