The tales of a Georgia girl exploring her new hometown of Bellefonte, PA, the Centre County region, and the whole east coast.
Saturday, December 5, 2015
The End of a Season
Anyway, tonight I jammed. I'm reasonably happy with what I did, which was win lead twice and lose it twice, but work with my team to ensure the losses were minimal. As a blocker and pivot, I think things went better -- we seemed to understand each other tonight, and to play as a cohesive team. I did, however, end up pulled off the bench at the end due to an asthmatic flareup.
Looking back on 2015 as a season, it's been one of my most challenging. I've felt all along that I was frustrated at the difference between what I know and how I perform. To put it summarily, the theory didn't match the actuality. But I have made progress -- I have learned things I didn't think I could learn and gotten better as an individual player and teammate. Now as we head into the off season -- the very brief offseason -- I'm going to just keep skating and cross-training, and get treated for my shoulder injury (annoying and painful, but not really limiting my derbying) as well as my asthma. And here's to 2016!
Sunday, November 29, 2015
I love derby
Here's why. The person in the photos isn't me. She's not on my intraleague team. This Saturday I wholeheartedly want to destroy her and her team. But tonight she finished her 27 in 5. Tonight we were able to be there for each other, and help each other excel. Tonight was wonderful.
Saturday, November 28, 2015
Saturday, November 14, 2015
How do we keep the chickens?
Both creatively and flexibly!
Our coop is made entirely from recycled materials -- mostly wood and screen from other projects.
We know from experience that chickens love having a place to scratch, and that we can boost the warmth in the coop by using the deep litter method. What we didn't know is that building a vertical coop with the scratching and composting pit in the bottom, through a hatch in the floor, would go against that somewhat because convection pulls most of the warmth up and out. Unfortunately, this means the coop is only about 10 degrees warmer than the outside. Right now that's fine, but when it gets seriously frigid it'll be a problem.
And how do we know the temperature? We use temperature and heat monitors. We have a very modern chicken monitoring system.
They also have a run, devised from a very rough alley that runs to the basement window from their coop. I often find them watching the cat -- as the cat watches them back out the window. There's a second compost pile, straw, and I toss scratch grains and vegetable scraps out daily for their entertainment.
Anyway, it's a work in progress. The chickens seem thrilled with a cozy house that gives them everything they need to be happy.
Meet Alices
Meet Alice. And Alice and Alice and Alice. These are our fine feathered friends. They live in an ugly but functional coop at our house.
The worst of times
Remember that photo I posted of all the delicious canned tomato sauce? They all exploded!
Live and learn, right? And at least we didn't try to eat them.