I’m sorry for your loss.
I sometimes will bring a rookie hat along with the experienced hat a few times and get it some instruction from the experienced one. That way if disaster strikes or the wife forces it into retirement you’re not stuck starting from scratch. I think it also adds a little...
They had planned to implement it for this license year, but the vendor underperformed and they terminated the contract and it’s currently under litigation. And with current budget situations it might be delayed even longer since they do not have a vendor in place yet.
That sounds delicious, I’ll have to try it. But I’ve never seen a boiling soup reduce liquid volume by 1/3 in ten minutes, that part has got to be wrong or it’s one heckuva boil.
Feb-March walleyes…
End of March retirement :)
April-May springers
June bass (going to try some poppers on the fly rod this year)
End of June sockeye and a Montana trip
July sockeye and summer kings and walleye and a Montana trip
August walleye and fall chinook and a Montana trip
September fall...
Looks nice. How does it work/interact with the existing building roof/shingles (impact on water resistance, and longevity) and with the roof structurally? If you get a roof leak can the panels be removed easily to access/fix?
A trash pump can handle pretty large solids. The pump I bought from Harbor Freight for $350 is semi-trash and says it can handle solids up to 3/4”. A full trash pump that can handle up to 1-1/4” solids was $900 so I figured I’d try this one first. At the very least it’ll pump the level down...
Great topic. I have a spring fed pond at my place in Montana that has silted in with muck over the last hundred years and needs some rehab as well. I’ve decided to try to dredge it with a pump… will find out this summer how it works out. My idea is to float a gas—powered trash pump on a raft...