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When I was very young I picked cherries, actually hand-picked cherries using orchard ladders. This farm like many had guys that came from the south to harvest produce, the farmer had beautiful cabins for them to live in. I still remember one guy who sounded just like Hank Williams and I loved it, every other kid was listening to the Beatles and that kind of crap. I made pretty good money for a young kid picking those cherries. Hardest part was moving the ladders amongst those huge trees.
Good video but in all honesty by the time you buy the jar, the lid, rings ,etc equipment Just go to grocery store and buy a can of beans for 1.50 I suppose if you had a tractor,some land and could grow it you maybe a little cheaper I think you get better food in a glass jar vs metal can but it's cost is what is more important now than quality
1:40: start with the brain: Open/close hands, wander gently, laugh 2:09: neck: - Breath in, Bring hand up (palm facing me, direct down) - Exhale, pull hand back to face, palm facing chin - Inhale, palms out, push hands out - Exhale, hands down, chin rest on chest - Do 3 times (?) 3:20: neck 2: - hands at lower belly, palm facing in - one hand is now petting a dog, other hand is lifted facing my face, 60 degree turn (stretch neck) - switch hands - do 3 times 4:40: shoulder - gently roll shoulder forward, 3 small, slow pushes - push backward, 3 pushes - repeat 3 times 5:05: core, front and back - hands hold a taichi ball - turn body 60 degree to one side - switch hand position while holding back - turn body the other way - change hand - repeat 3 times 6:22: core 2: - cut taichi ball in half, vertically - one hand touch the earth, one hand touch heaven - repeat 3 times 8:05: hips - hands reaches out, palm facing each other - hands and left leg lean against left wall, right leg step out - change side - repeat 3 times 10:20: hips 2 - push hands back, bring one heel forward, (hands are pushing on imaginary surface to keep balance) - push hands forward, feet backward (use the other leg as stance) 12:37: legs - feet stand still, shoulder width apart - palm facing outward, the gently hold fist - shift weight to one side, the other leg hovers slightly - punch hand on weighted side, other hand kept still next to hips - change side - do 3 times 14:30 legs 2: - same set up as legs-1, once you have shifted weight to one side, the (non-weighted) feet reach slightly forward, feet flat, slightly hovering - punch hand on weighted side, other hands kept still 16:45: - hands facing inward at tummy, - shift weight to one side, - non-weighted feet hovers forward slightly, touch toe, then heel (repeat 3 times), then seitch side - non-weighted feet hovers forward slightly, touch little toe first, then big toe (repeat 3 times), then switch side
I grew up in Michigan I never knew that they were known for potatoes. Only here in Amarillo Texas when I was given a can of Michigan-Made brand potatoes and googled it did I find this out.
Just realise how long i have been followed you. Watching Ahao grow up, Dawang be fatten up and your baking skill level up over years has been one of my great joys.
I have a canner like the first one in this video. It has a circle vent weight, with 4 holes. I tested it and the weight spins. Is that the same as jiggle.
The original idea was to replace the wood rail fencing that horses were notoriously known to chew on. The fence originally was plastic coated lumber. I installed miles of it in Southern California in the 70's and 80's, where it proved to be highly effective. We began to export it to other western regions when the patent ran out other companies took up the idea but removed the costlier wood core and manufactured this cheap hollow version that is so popular and useless for horse ranches as originally planned. I had left the company actually before Clyde ( the inventor and owner ). Sold the rights and have often wondered what had happened to the original FANTABOARD. A search through Google came up empty. However I believe big business with with an eye solely on maximum profit ruined what was intended to be a horse friendly 3 rail fence enclosure.
Its amazing that you guys are calling this weeder new . In cotton in the panhandle of Texas we have been using tillage tols like that since the 60's. If you want to see good cultivato0rs come see us in Hale Countty Texas