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  2. Has anyone tried these with the woodland trust broadleaf cell grown trees?
  3. Judaism.
  4. Today
  5. Yes, I was planning to rack it off three times probably, based on other stuff I've brewed. I'm largely going on what it says in the C.J.J. Berry wine making bible. Regards killing off the yeast, what do you recommend, a Campden tablet, or something else?
  6. This was such a beautiful line! I reduced the tops of these massive limbs because of some mechanical issues, but I don't show the pruning itself in this video. Some of the main mechanical features why I pruned the way I did are not on video... And it is difficult to show this clearly with the footage. This surely is one of the widest London planes I have seen and climbed. And it was not the only one there
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  7. I can't say mine is too standard, I find it almost impossible to pull over....with the decomp in....pop up piston and the base of the cylinder taken down, ported and muffler mod. It is a bit mad and prefer the 346 TBH but it is FAST..
  8. Looking good, keep racking it off in to a new demijohn to get rid of any sludge in the bottom that may taint the flavour. It should stop fermenting at some stage where you can kill the yeast and add a little sugar if needed to taste. 👍
  9. Species dependent really, plus if there’s a through draft etc.
  10. Only the surface of the log will be wet if the thing has been fully seasoned in the past and the only way the log will get completely wet again is to leave it in a bucket of water. Rain will just cause the surface to get wet and a week or two inside will dry it again. Best get a moisture meter, even a cheap one will give you useful information. 20% and under is ready to burn.
  11. Perfect thanks on that note i have a couple of piles that have been on our land for around 3 years im in the process of splittling that now for use in the home, if these logs do get wet how log do they genuinely take to dry and be good use in the fire? thanks
  12. Insufficiently secure with your own masculinity, Mark? Real men wear skirts. Tell Mosh and Thrasher they're wrong.
  13. Totally agree, my boys are 20 and 17 now and had breathing problems for the first few years of their life’s so slept on edge!
  14. Yes, another vote for splitting now. I'll add to stubby.... driving rain off certainly, airflow is more important but if it is stacked, only the top couple of logs will be affected by normal rain, the rest will keep drying if you cannot get it under cover. Even today after this weekends storms the lower parts of my log stacks are surface dry.
  15. And the thing is when they are older and no longer waking you up you will still wake up anyway as you have become conditioned . In fact I have never had a proper nights sleep since they were born and I'm nearly 73 now .
  16. This all day long .
  17. Yep . The underside shot of the center swively bit , I just put a blob of weld on it . You can use either handle .
  18. Jesus. You might as well save time and do it yourself.
  19. A documentary coming on shortly excamining The piece of siht that was a bishop who regularly beat young boys ( his own son being one of the first victims ) in the name of christianity . 60 lashes with a kane every three weeks . The arch twat of Canterbry resigned when it was found that he knew about it and did nothing . The abuser was shipped off to Zimbarbwey to sorta sweep him under the carpet ( more countless victims ) where he eventually died .
  20. I've started wearing a waterproof skirt (bit of tarp I found) to walk the dog. Saves putting waterproof trousers on. Useful when wet dog or wet grass brushes your leg. I give it about a week before someone paints PEDO on the front of my house.
  21. Spit now ( easier to split when green ) but keep the rain off and the air flow going .
  22. I don't have one but think a water proof gilet might be a good idea keep you core warm but let under arms breath There are some brands do them for farmers not cheap though
  23. Great thanks mick
  24. Yes every time I tried a new way/body part to press the levers I’d skew it sideways and both lose momentum and scare motorists.
  25. Bungee and steer by subtraction rather than addition. Obviously hilariously dangerous next to a motorway. I mainly just wanted to raise the point about subtracting rather than adding when using machines. Helped me become smoother when I started thinking of it like that.
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Arbtalk.co.uk is a hub for the arboriculture industry in the UK.  
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