Posted on 01/20/2021 9:04:34 PM PST by weston
You want an outhouse?
Let the law suits commence. I want them to pay for what they did.
That’s the crazy thing, I can’t even leave a message. They have their usual phone menu on, so I pressed one, and it rang and rang. Eventually it gave me the menu again and I pressed every darned number. Nobody ever picked up.
I tried their website, thinking they’d have something posted on it, nothing.
But now that I’m thinking of it maybe I’ll try to send an email. Just to have that base covered, in case they try to charge.
We have electric heat but heat our main level with a wood stove in the winter. We have acres of trees so it’s cost effective for us.
I LOVE our wood stove. When our power was out for a week, we all hung out by the stove and used kerosene heaters for the upstairs bedroom. We used alladin lamps for light
We also got a solar powered battery from Jackery, it worked great to keep our phones/iPads charged. It wouldn’t run my milk machine so I had to milk by hand (my goats were not thrilled)
We did run a generator, but only for our freezer and fridge so we didn’t lose all our food.
Yes, that’s the one I was looking at. I kept trying to press it on my tablet but then nothing showed up. There’s a warning that the website might be slow, so I thought maybe that was it. Slow as in never responded at all.
Thanks for posting the new warning. I think I’ll definitely cancel. Well not that I can but I just won’t go. I’ll tell them later I canceled, lol.
“* WHERE...the northwestern two thirds of middle Tennessee”
Looks like it would be dangerous to travel through Crossville and Cookeville.
I always think of those towns as Middle Tennessee. Is Nashville also middle? I think of Nashville as being in East Tennessee, because I never would go to Memphis anyway. LOL. That sounds pretty narcissistic, doesn’t it?
You are welcome. We care.
Hahahahaha!! Hahahaha!! Wouldn’t you? LOL
👍👍
The only negative is the amount of times per day it needs to be filled. Especially overnight.
@JackPosobiec
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2m
BREAKING: DC residents have begun putting up signs around the Biden Wall around Capitol Hill
“Give Back Our City!”
Sitting next to a wood stove is soooooooo relaxing.
I got my East and West mixed up! Sorry
Nashville is definitely Middle Tennessee. LOL Roughly 200 miles to Memphis, 296 miles to Bristol. They did pretty good in centering in the middle, for having established Nashville in the 1700s.
Crossville is legally East TN. Cookeville is not. That long grade between Crossville and Cookeville where the chain link rock catch fences are is the dividing line; that’s the Cumberland Plateau. Top of the Plateau is East TN; bottom of the Plateau is Middle. West TN starts when you cross the Tennessee River between Nashville and Memphis.
And I wouldn’t go to Memphis for medical care except if I had a child at St. Jude’s Hospital. No need to; I have Vanderbilt. LOL
That’s true, no matter what you get, you have to have the fuel for it. The only reason I lean towards a wood stove is that we have a few acres of wooded property. And don’t call me crazy, but I really love splitting and stacking wood. I treat it like a puzzle, my wood piles will last for years and years, even in the Sierras where they got five feet of snow pack on them.
Thanks for the definition. For some reason I thought it only took us an hour to drive from Arkansas to Nashville, obviously I wasn’t paying attention or I was in a Time Warp.
Um, yeah, something definitely happened along that stretch of highway. We might have an undetected space-time vortex there. LOL
How fast were you driving?
That’s a nice stove!
These are not the SC cases set for conference this Friday; these will be oral arguments heard before the Justices.
The 2020 elections may be over, but the Supreme Court will soon hear oral argument in a pair of voting-rights cases from one of last year’s key battleground states, and the eventual outcome may determine how courts will assess allegedly discriminatory voting rules for years to come.
The cases challenge two Arizona voting provisions: a policy that requires an entire ballot to be thrown out if the ballot was cast at the wrong precinct, and a state law that bans the collection of ballots by third parties, sometimes called “ballot harvesting.” The challengers argue that both the policy and the law discriminate against racial minorities in Arizona, and the justices’ eventual ruling obviously could affect how the state carries out its elections going forward. More broadly, though, the justices could also weigh in on the proper test for evaluating voting-rights claims like these, which could have a sweeping effect nationwide.
The cases, Brnovich v. Democratic National Committee and Arizona Republican Party v. Democratic National Committee, have been consolidated for one hour of argument. The court will hear the cases on March 2.
I am wondering if there is a doctor who will attest that I am allergic to one of the ingredients ... if it comes to that.
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