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No, we do not grow peppers, at least not in quantity. When you are raising goats on open range, they get into everything and everywhere. They are foragers. Sheep and cattle are grazers and prefer pasturage. Goats want more variety and will exercise considerable ingenuity and effort to get it. One of our major issues is keeping them out of the kitchen garden. As you can imagine, they love to eat any foods we grow for our own consumption.
The appellation "Jalapeño" comes from my love of eating these tasty and often spicy peppers, whether diced into an egg dish, sliced on pizza or on a burger or in a sandwich, pickled whole or sliced, or any other way.
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Lord, grant me the serenity to accept that there are some things I just can’t keep up with, the determination to keep up with the things I must keep up with, and the wisdom to find a good RSS feed from someone who keeps up with what I’d like to, but just don’t have the damn bandwidth to handle right now.
© 2009, Rex Hammock
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Have you ever heard of "Madame Jeanette" peppers ? It's quite popular over here, probably because a lot of Surinam people live in the Netherlands.
I only ate a dish with a tiny amount of it, but that was already very hot !
On television there was an unsuspecting reporter who put a whole pepper in his mouth, he looked like he was going to faint, I heard it took days for him to recover from this experience
Madame Jeanette - Wikipedia[^]
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'Retirement' is a puzzle right now. I'm a little over 57 and I really don't have enough assets that I can rely on the future to put myself in retirement. For me, Job insecurity was the big factor for my entire life span till now.
The best way to make your dreams come true is to wake up.
Paul Valery
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I am fully retired. It happened a few years earlier than planned but I am now older than the standard retirement age of 65. Anyone who is still writing code for money or supporting old projects in any substantive way is not retired.
My partner is still working 3 days a week but that will soon come to an end as she also retires.
As I have let go of my working life I have found many ways to fill my time. I started off thinking I would keep my hand in and write code for interest but I am a long way over that. If a need arises for something that requires some coding I am more than happy to do it (For example a stepper motor controller to focus a microscope). This has been mostly Arduino and to a lesser extent Raspberry Pi projects.
To mention one interest in particular in Australia we have the Australian Men's Shed Association[^] and I have joined my local one which is well equipped for wood and metal work. Even though I have a decent workshop of my own this has been a huge motivator for me to pursue my own projects as well as help others.
As for CP when my computer is switched on I am logged in to the site and as a long time member I know quite a few of the tags and watch their antics. This is a sort of side interest. I sometimes wonder what has happened to members who suddenly stop appearing after being active for many years and of course hope they are OK although I know some have passed on.
Peter Wasser
"The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, and wiser people so full of doubts." - Bertrand Russell
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63, hopefully with enough assets to survive in retirement. No overheads and a small income. I used to love woodworking when I was younger so I want to get back into making furniture. I have intentions of joining a Mens Shed but expect to build up a reasonable workshop at home. 4 months to go!
I don't think many have karked it but have moved on.
Never underestimate the power of human stupidity
RAH
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The one big problem is Her Indoors. I retired about seven years ago now and have been sitting at my computer in my office every day since then to keep out of her way. Suddenly I hear her sweet tones. "Can you cut the lawn? Can you just give my car a wash? ---". She has never worked since we married 55 years ago, so you would think she would be very adept at these things by now. It appears she still can't start the petrol mower. If she uses the electric mower, she keeps running over the cord! Sometimes I think she does this on purpose. Still, she looks after me very well so some would say it's a small price to pay.
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He is a natural at travelling (got that from me!). He loves seeing people at the airport, so far loves being in queues, and does not cry during take off!
He is well awake during take offs and get extremely happy as plane speeds up. He will look out the window for 15-20 min and then sleep. During landing time, if there are other kids crying he will make a cry face but we just need to talk to him and he laughs.
His first flight was when he was a month old and second one recently. Both were hassle free.
We have already done couple of road trips and he enjoyed them too.
"It is easy to decipher extraterrestrial signals after deciphering Javascript and VB6 themselves.", ISanti[ ^]
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My children grew up traveling. My oldest daughter had a 1 week road trip when she was about 2 weeks old. They were used to travel sand never did give any trouble! They knew what my mother used to say "Children are to be seen and not heard!"
CQ de W5ALT
Walt Fair, Jr., P. E.
Comport Computing
Specializing in Technical Engineering Software
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The only time we had a problem was when we landed at Ankara airport after a trip home, and walking to the arrivals building, my 4-year old son asked me, "is this Turkey?". When I replied in the affirmative he burst into tears wailing, "I din't want to come to Turkey"; but he did calm down before we got to passport control.
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No, and he was happy enough when we got back to our apartment.
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Nice! Mine was the same way. The stewardesses were happy and grateful for that.
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So it was supposed to be https://noworky.firebaseio.com/Path.json?auth=... , but I decided in my utterly immesurable wisdom to use https://noworky.firebaseio.com/Pathjson?auth=...
But it has to work! Read, reread and tripple read the api documents.
Digest to regurgitation point how HttpClient works.
Don't check for a single missing elephanting . !
So how was your morning?
A pox upon the world of 'puters, I'm off for the tranquility of alligator wrestling!
veni bibi saltavi
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My URL is bigger than yours, mate.
... such stuff as dreams are made on
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Nagy Vilmos wrote: Don't check for a single missing elephanting . !
Easy to do - I read what I intended to write as well...
Nagy Vilmos wrote: So how was your morning?
Don't ask: I spent most of it - literally most of it, 3 hours - on hold to my local council. Three "songs", all quiet so you can't just put it on speaker and get on with stuff. And worse, every now and then the music cuts out in mid song for five or so seconds, giving you the illusion of hope that you are about to speak to a real human! Then their phone lines closed because it was 13:00 on POETS day...
Bad command or file name. Bad, bad command! Sit! Stay! Staaaay...
AntiTwitter: @DalekDave is now a follower!
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OriginalGriff wrote: Then their phone lines closed because it was 13:00 on POETS day...
In any mature society, civil servant is equivalent to civil master.
-- Lazarus Long
Ad astra - both ways!
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Always nice to see someone with an appreciation for classic literature (Bob just spun in his grave).
Software Zen: delete this;
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OriginalGriff wrote: hold to my local council. Three "songs", all quiet so you can't just put it on speaker and get on with stuff. And worse, every now and then the music cuts out in mid song for five or so seconds, giving you the illusion of hope that you are about to speak to a real human!
I've dealt with the same hold system. Actually, I guess all phone hold systems work like that.
I don't understand why the phone hold systems are so terrible. It ain't rocket science.
Just play music until a real person picks up. What is so difficult about that?
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I feel much better adfter reading that, so my morning has been just fine. I even have news on my imminent graduation!
CQ de W5ALT
Walt Fair, Jr., P. E.
Comport Computing
Specializing in Technical Engineering Software
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wasnt some error message speaking to you about "404".
I was in alarm mode about a bug and the result was changig an assigment: "Job done" puh ...
Press F1 for help or google it.
Greetings from Germany
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Recognizable, but nothing compared with the days wasted by ... certificates
My god, this must have been the work of some mystical sect aiming to drive developers crazy
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The Gathering - My Electricity[^]
Last week I've been listening to The Gathering, a pretty (internationally) famous Dutch rock band.
You may know them from their former singer, Anneke van Giersbergen, who is also known for her solo projects Agua de Annique and VUUR (Dutch for Fire) or one of her many collaborations with other artists.
I've known them for a long time, listen to them once in a while, always enjoy it, but never really got into it like I got with other bands.
Except for a few songs, of which My Electricity is one.
My Electricity is an older and not-so-rocking song, but beautiful.
So enjoy, and do yourself a favor and listen to some other songs as well
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Honestly. the only Dutch rock band I'm aware of is Golden Earring, So I wouldn't know if any other radar lovers are gone!
CQ de W5ALT
Walt Fair, Jr., P. E.
Comport Computing
Specializing in Technical Engineering Software
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They're probably the best known (and still existing) international Dutch rock band, but the only Dutch rock band who scored a #1 hit in America was Shocking Blue - Venus[^].
And then there's Focus[^] with guitar player Jan Akkerman who had the title of best guitar player in the world some 40 years ago.
And surely you've heard of George Baker - Little Green Bag[^] from Tarantino's Reservoir Dog's, also Dutch
I don't know any current international famous bands though...
But I'm sure there are a few
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