One biggest change from early days

There are excellent record players still being sold and those who cherished their vinyl love to play their records on them. The sound is incredible if you have a good system.
I just spotted a player in the drug store on sale. They didn't have a price. Sale starts tomorrow

I also had an ad sent to me because I don't have ad blocking.

We are always looking to buy your unwanted vinyl LPs, CDs, DVDs, cassettes and video games. Please come on in or contact us if you have questions about selling your collections. We buy at all locations every day up to an hour before closing time.

.https://reckless.com/wordpress/sell-to-us/?gclid=EAIaIQobChMIqN-xtNa56wIVpb3tCh0GpQKGEAEYASAAEgIAm_D_BwE

Remember those portable suitcase jobs? phonograph.jpg
 

Composting......
You've all got me thinking about starting to learn how to compost.
All the gardening i've done in my years, i've never done this......on the farm, added a very light spray of pig manure on my garden ground.....had to be careful.....too much would do the opposite.
Covered compost container would have to be a must......would hate to attract unwanted flys, wasps, ants etc.....don't want mice or rats either.

Since i'm adding my raised garden beds, and going to use some of my half barrel planters for veggies....composting is something i'm interested in.

So......i'm open to all advice.......what type of container to use......what all goes in.....etc.

I could google this.......but i'd like advice from real people......all of you composters.
 
Composting......
You've all got me thinking about starting to learn how to compost.
All the gardening i've done in my years, i've never done this......on the farm, added a very light spray of pig manure on my garden ground.....had to be careful.....too much would do the opposite.
Covered compost container would have to be a must......would hate to attract unwanted flys, wasps, ants etc.....don't want mice or rats either.

Since i'm adding my raised garden beds, and going to use some of my half barrel planters for veggies....composting is something i'm interested in.

So......i'm open to all advice.......what type of container to use......what all goes in.....etc.

I could google this.......but i'd like advice from real people......all of you composters.
So glad you asked, Micka! :)

A large plastic barrel inset into the ground for ease of placing compost in and turning, or something like we have where lumber is used to form a box, and there are also store-bought variety composters. Tons of options for you depending on what exactly you want.

As for safe things to go into your compost bin... egg shells, vegetable/fruit scraps/peelings (non-animal), coffee grounds, old wine, dry cat/dog food, teabags, bread, old cereal.

You want to make sure to add water to your compost every now and then to keep it moist not wet, just moist. Too dry, composter will stop composting, too wet, same result, and once a month, give it a turn with a shovel.

A lot of people add grass and leaves to their compost, but in my experience that brings the composting process to an abrupt halt, because grass and leaves are so bulky, so while a little grass and leaves won't hurt, I'd stay away from adding too much (if any at all).

Keep it simple, just the good stuff as I mentioned above, and you won't go wrong.
 

Our city discourages compost bins. Reason. Attracts vermin like mice and rats and even bears.
Unfortunately, this is true. We had racoons (sp?) eating out of our compost bin regularly. They decided to make a home under the deck to be close to their food source. Then, they decided to try to move into our attic.

Our compost bin was supplied to us by the city. It was hard plastic, and had a lid. I would say it was about 3 ft. deep.
 
Unfortunately, this is true. We had racoons (sp?) eating out of our compost bin regularly. They decided to make a home under the deck to be close to their food source. Then, they decided to try to move into our attic.
The little stinkers!

Cute as can be, but can sure be a nuisance if/when they want to.
 
My nephew (in his 40's) is into vinyl records. He buys new releases (some of them are works of art) .. as well as having his parent's old LP's.

Many 'younger' folks scour places such as Goodwill for old records. We donated ours many years ago.
I have a bunch of them I never listen to.
 
Unfortunately, this is true. We had racoons (sp?) eating out of our compost bin regularly. They decided to make a home under the deck to be close to their food source. Then, they decided to try to move into our attic.

Our compost bin was supplied to us by the city. It was hard plastic, and had a lid. I would say it was about 3 ft. deep.
You need to start watching the show Mighty Mike and see what this pug does to the raccoons. It's a funny 3D animated cartoon.
 
I worked in "Hi Tech" pretty much all my life, but now that I'm living a simpler life, I really don't miss all this Gee Whiz stuff. Having good Internet and TV service is almost a Must, but I sure can't see being "married" to a cell phone, or having something like Alexa tracking every word we say in the house. Heck, some of today's people can't even turn on their house lights without a "app" on their cell phone....ridiculous.
I hear the younger generation take vows for electronic ownership
 
Used to be you could tell someone something & it would be ok. Now you tell someone something and they say you're yelling at them. I like the convenience of my cell phone but it has gone too far.
Isn’t it called “built in obsolescence”I remember folks buying appliances in their 1st house and the item was still chugging along 20+ years later...
 
Franky that is a falsehood. I learned that a number of years back. Too many people bought records and too many took good care of them and there is really not much of a market or them overall.
I have a friend that at one time owned 9k records, he is selling for pennies on the dollar, finding out they don’t have much value,the exception being certain ones of course.
But pretty much anything that was mass produced:Hess trucks, beanie babies come to mind, don’t seem to hold much value contrary to popular belief.
 
Isn’t it called “built in obsolescence”I remember folks buying appliances in their 1st house and the item was still chugging along 20+ years later...

We have an old Montgomery Wards chest freezer in the basement....we bought it in the early 1970's, and it is still working good. Good luck on finding anything that lasts that long today. Hope my "bragging" about it doesn't jinx it......
 
And I don't know about all of you but I hear a lot of "I don't care" when it comes to work and other things. Not many care about anything or anyone except themselves.
 
There was a sports talk radio host I use to listen to everyday around twenty years ago who always said the biggest change to come along in our lifetime was the microwave oven. It created a want for instant gratification. Twenty years later I think he is right. We can get just about anything we want in a very short time now and if we can't we often get frustrated. I say "we" in a general way of course. If I want to watch Casablanca right now I can do it with a couple of clicks with my Roku remote on my phone but will grip if my broadband is acting up. I am not saying it is a good thing or bad thing. Just the way it is. So I would say the biggest change in my lifetime is the microwave oven.
 
We have an old Montgomery Wards chest freezer in the basement....we bought it in the early 1970's, and it is still working good. Good luck on finding anything that lasts that long today. Hope my "bragging" about it doesn't jinx it......

I've got an old Montgomery Wards chest freezer, too. I got it in the early 80s and it's still working fine, too. (Hope saying that doesn't jinx mine, either.)
 
What about when you needed to make a phone call before cell was invented??
You can not find one today!!
00-daz3d_pay-phones_.jpg
 
What about when you needed to make a phone call before cell was invented??
You can not find one today!!
00-daz3d_pay-phones_.jpg
Yes you still can find them today but not out in public where it can be accessed for theft. That's why they disappeared. However in my city there is plenty of access in places like medical clinics and bowling alleys. I use them whenever I want to check a number received on my cell phone that I don't recognize. If you are on a pay phone, they can't track you.
 
And all the throw aways end up in the landfill.
I watched a program about Pompeii and how they traced how people lived by the stuff they threw out 2000 years ago. They were able to trace whether the people were ordinary working folks or well off.
So I wondered about landfills and what the archeologists will have to say about us.
What do we throw out the most in our generation that doesn't deteriorate over time?
In my opinion? Household appliances that no longer worked.
If you go into a Goodwill store, you will see what I mean. All the old fads are represented, like bread machines.
 
With the rapidity of climate change, civilization isn't going to be around long enough to dug up our trash.

Even though I think that climate change isn't being taken seriously enough and that we are not taking as extreme action as we should to mitigate it's effects, I'm not quite as pessimistic about the future of civilization. Life will be very different but I think that civilization will survive and really be pissed at us for doing so little.
 
Our throw-away society. Years ago things when something became worn you renewed it. If it broke you fixed it. If you could no longer use it you passed it along. Today's mindset is "buy it, use it, throw it away". The logic of this totally baffles me.
Funny... I was just speaking of this yesterday!
A friend of mine was having a yard sale and in her pictures that she posted I saw she had a Kirby vacuum up for sale. I had to laugh because it hadn't been that long ago that I got rid of my Kirby of 36 years. I just became too dang heavy for me to push around.

I have to agree with you, we do live in a throw away society today. Just take a trip to your closest city dump and you will see a heap of tvs just waiting to be recycled.
 


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