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teepeeat

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Posts posted by teepeeat

  1. Na they were trying to get my address to send stuff out I told them to email it and the same letter arrived today (below).

     

    Please find attached a copy of a letter which is being sent to all firewood sellers in Perth and Kinross who are selling by volume, providing advice about how these sales should be conducted.

     

    Under current legislation you are also required to have the geographical address of your business on your website whether it is for sales or marketing.

     

     

    Do not hesitate to contact us if you require any further information or advice.

     

    Regards

     

    Angie Menzies

     

    Trading Standards Technician

     

    Perth & Kinross Council

     

    Pullar House

     

    35 Kinnoull Street

     

    Perth

     

    PH1 5GD

     

    Tel; 01738 476419

     

    E-mail; [email protected]

     

    Twitter; @PerthandKinross #TS_Alert

     

    Better Business Partnership Better Business Partnership - Perth & Kinross Council

     

    Have to ask, what is a 'Trading Standards Technician'??

  2. Hi, we have this:

    [ATTACH]192230[/ATTACH]

     

    An Irus Deltrak equipped with a 105cm heavy duty flail. Available with operator - up to 5x times as efficient as clearing saws on any terrain, including 60 degree slopes.

     

    ooo, nice beasty!

    How would this cope with 6-8 foot high bramble..... on a slope?

     

    Terry

  3. Correct me if I am wrong, but does Huqvarna not market Aspen as well, albeit rebranded?

     

    Came across another positive comment on aspen in the camping section of a motorcycling forum. Seems it is popular in multifuel camping stoves as it burns clean and is apparently a quarter of the price of the normal branded camping stove fuels.

     

    Perhaps another market to investigate Eddie - if you have not already.

  4. sag will depend on incline of the wire as Waterbuoy has pointed out.

     

    With regard to getting the logs down the hill I shifted a few tons by cunningly harnessing gravity by tossing them down the hill - simples :lol:

    My braking system consisted of a level area about 10m wide at the bottom that seemed to stop most of the logs. The few bouncers that went beyond only went as far as a few dodgy hazel bushes and an old fence that needed some repair anyway. Didnt do any damage to the fence in the end.

     

    To turn the question on its head, suggestions would be welcome on how to get similar logs UP the hill using simple rigging and a small powered winch ??

  5. What everyone's forgetting is....they look cool as well!!!:thumbup:

     

    certainly do - just looking at a new 42" that was delivered with the Alaskan.

     

    For what its worth, my ten year old thought it looked the bees knees, although he might be getting confused with viking swords as he was supposed to be drawing one for his school project :lol:

  6. Cheers Eddy

    Had guessed at the 25 .063 bit based on the chain that came off it and te numbers, but good to have it confirmed as I had a 038 off the same person with mismatched chain/bar :001_rolleyes:

    Had thought there may be some other significance to the rest of the numbers so was curious.

    Am familiar with the newer Oregon codes.

     

    Any how, its going to be put back in service attached to an Alaskan once its been checked over :thumbup:

  7. Afternoon all

    Have a bar on an old 075 which does not match the normal ID codes.

    Info on the bar is :

     

    18283

    2563B1819HY

    OREGON

    made in Canada

     

    Would be grateful for any info that can be derived from this

     

    Terry

  8. sounds like a good excuse to buy yourself a radio controlled drone ??

     

    :lol:

     

    Look forward to the pictures, which ever way you go.

    Have to say, Mr Blairs suggestion to fell in a oner would make for some good video :lol:

  9. Couple of milk crates on the flat roof and a scaffold board from milk crates to the outhouse ridge. Sling a climbing rope over the roof and tie your self in. Job done

     

    about the simplest idea.

     

    Dont forget to repair the cow shed roof while you are up there then the dogs can be in the dry and the water wont do anymore damage to the rest of the structure :thumbup:

  10. That Sir is the problem; empty calories. Get some vegetables!

     

     

     

    Correct

     

     

     

    +1

     

     

     

    +1

     

     

     

    again, +1.

     

    Not designed to work 7 days, simples.

     

    Another thing; the comment above about clean organic natural food... couldn't agree more. <90% of the produce we buy in shops and supermarkets isn't food! Mass produced, refined, dead, junk, chemical soup is what it is. Aswell as the malnutrition, people are killing themselves with calorific poisoning - we eat way too much, myself included until I got sick.

     

    I got seriously ill - CRON diet became a matter of life and death.

     

    It the tree industry you are ahead of the paper pushing, office working types in as much as you get regular exercise out doors in the elements, but too much of a good thing can be a bad thing, so TCD's post is a good summary of the various bits of good advice already given.

  11. I used to deliver gravel. The membrane is an expensive modern idea, I wouldn't use it.

    Just a 2 inch layer of gravel on firm hardcore. It will need topping up from time to time.

    Harrow or take it on occasion before heavy rain it will wash up nice and clean.

    I used to tie tailgate with rope and trail it out for customers. I got so good at it.it seldom needed a raking to level it on a straight long run. Also if you have a grass strip up the middle make gravel go further and wedge a block of wood in middle of tailgate.

     

    A geotextile membrane such as Teram is not particularly expensive and serves to separate the gravel from whatever you have below. The only reason you have to top up is because without the separating membrane, the gravel migrates down into the hardcore which in turn migrates up - regardless of compaction.

    After 5 years I have not had to top up mine at all.

    An added benefit of the membrane is it limits weed roots to the extent that when they inevitably grow, they are very quick and easy to pull out - takes me about 5 minutes every other month to keep on top of weeds

    I have used the plastic grids as I am on a slope, so no option not to and it has not moved at all.

    I do drag a bit of mud onto mine from time to time, but the plan is to lift the grid, sweep/rake the gravel off the membrane then get rid of the mud and relay. The area is broken up by brick retainers following the contours and edging which makes for managable areas and the grid is 40mm deep and only filled to that depth so not a huge amount to shift when I do need to which might be after another 5 years ... perhaps, but probably longer.

  12. Decay can be accelerated by drilling holes and filling with high-N substances, such as urine.

     

    are you taking a piss .....

     

     

     

    someone had to say it :lol::lol:

     

    It does seem to work, judging by efforts on a particular stump coincidentally positioned along the track between the house and pub :thumbup1:

    Not particularly speedy mind, but didnt drill it and wasnt in a rush anyway.

  13. Hi Billy

     

    Many thanks for the package - 20kg of bird feed - been away for a few weeks so just been delivered today. Will come in handy.

    Very generous of you and well done for supporting the raffle.

    No doubt the local bird population will be wanting me to pass on their thanks as well - once I have put some out :-)

     

    Regards

    Terry

  14. I think you're missing the point Tom...its juicing all the veggies aswell remember which don't have all the sugar that the fruits do

     

    My take is that it is not just about sugars, but that everything that is left is in a more concentrated form........ and is this a good thing.

     

    I think that the whole question about foods is very confusing. We as a bunch of amateurs have a particular take on it based on our own personal experiences and what we have read and even the professionals dont seem to agree and not a day goes by without the press going on about new discoveries on how the body works and what is good or bad for it. Even the younger members on here have probably experienced the wild swings of nutritional advice - one day red wine is bad for you, the next its the best thing ever, not to mention all the others over the years.

    I find it all very interesting, but take it with a pinch of salt - proverbially speaking of course :lol:. The strategy that works for me is to have a varied diet and have a little bit of many things - that way anything that turns out to be bad is a relatively small proportion of my diet. As they say, variety is the spice of life.................... so live a varied life and be well seasoned :thumbup1:

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