2/ I remember digging a ditch for a sewer pipe, 60' long, 4' deep, by hand, when I was 29. I am no longer 29.
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3/ Things done today: (a) flushed and refilled water jacket in boilerpic.twitter.com/whSUVwXVfG
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4/ (b) disassembled bandsaw guides and replaced ceramic inserts (both, but only top guide shown)pic.twitter.com/TFm9EqZ7J0
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5/ (c) weeded UNDER sun room (weeds and baby trees coming out through lattice)pic.twitter.com/9Z1OhLYNq1
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6/ (d) replaced lattice on this side that has been missing since we moved in 4 yrs agopic.twitter.com/eEgeN50cUs
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8/ (f) pruned, transplanted hops plants (1 of 4 visible in foreground / 6 o'clock)pic.twitter.com/OcRk1A9EBm
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9/ (g) dug in potatoes
("Still life with New England rocks ")pic.twitter.com/RTry2J1OJT
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Replying to @MorlockP
I get that the land will continue to produce rocks (frost pushes them up from below, etc). But if you use that same space next year, do you expect fewer rocks? Or will it always be that bad?
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Yes, fewer. Rocks replenish from below slowly.
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