Forwarded from Azazel News (Aries)
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You may need a vehicle like this for a run to the grocery store one day... or learn to live on your own farm. The choice is yours. this does look fun though.
Forwarded from Fireworks Daily Team (Winter ❄️)
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Planned protests on September 16 gaining some traction on ig.
No spending, no going out etc.. for 1 day. Some doing 5 days..
Seems like Lefty thing idk? 🤔
No spending, no going out etc.. for 1 day. Some doing 5 days..
Seems like Lefty thing idk? 🤔
Coffee is continuing to increase. Kirkland espresso was 13.99 on sale for 10.99. In May it went to 17.99 and now it's 19.99 for 2.5 pounds of whole beans.
Plan ahead to plant garlic. A lot of our garlic comes from China and they are no longer shipping. Get yours planted. Grow your food.
Also know the difference between domestic and imported garlic...
Also know the difference between domestic and imported garlic...
Has anyone noticed that the aisles at the grocery store are shorter...like a whole shelf is gone? I normally do costco, the farmers market and a discount store. I went into albertsons yesterday and there was a huge amount of space in the perimeter of the store. It seemed to be twice as wide.
Forwarded from Azazel News (Aries)
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The state of California
Forwarded from Fireworks Daily Team (Remi)
NEW - Allianz Life confirms a cyberattack done using a social engineering technique and says "majority" of customer's personal data stolen, with a spokesperson for the firm saying that a "malicious threat actor gained access to a third-party, cloud-based CRM system used by Allianz Life" and obtained "personally identifiable data."
Allianz life has 1.4 million customers and plans to begin notifying affected individuals around August 1 as per filing with Maine's AG.
https://www.disclose.tv/id/r5bta57il6/
Allianz life has 1.4 million customers and plans to begin notifying affected individuals around August 1 as per filing with Maine's AG.
https://www.disclose.tv/id/r5bta57il6/
Disclose.tv
Allianz Life says majority of customers' personal data stolen in cyberattack
Breaking news from around the world.
Forwarded from Mezlim
#HOMEWORK
20 essential gardening jobs to do this week before August begins ends ; or it might be too late
1. Prune Rambling Roses
Cut them back immediately after flowering—not in winter like climbing roses. Use sturdy gear and thorn-proof gloves. Delay it and you’ll screw up next year’s blooms.
2. Plant Fall-Blooming Bulbs
Stick Guernsey lilies, autumn crocus, and Colchicums in the ground now. They need warm soil to root—miss this and you miss fall flowers.
3. Chop Back Lavender
Faded blooms? Cut it hard and now. Keeps the plant bushy and triggers another round of flowers. Go light and it goes woody, grey, and useless.
4. Cut Down Spent Perennials
Delphiniums, lupins, geraniums—if they’ve finished blooming, chop them. You’ll get a second flush if you do it now. Wait, and you’re out of luck.
5. Take Hydrangea Cuttings
Mid-summer is prime time to propagate. Semi-ripe stems root easily in July warmth. Grab a knife, pots, and soil. You’ll double your plants for free.
6. Feed Dahlias Now
These beasts are hungry. Start a weekly feed schedule with seaweed or tomato fertilizer. Strong feeding now = peak blooms in August/September.
7. Sow Fast-Growers for Fall
Radish, lettuce, bok choy, spinach—get them in now. They need July heat to germinate but will thrive in cool fall air.
8. Start Fall Brassicas Indoors
Broccoli, kale, cabbage, cauliflower—start seeds inside now. Wait, and they won’t mature before frost.
9. Rip Out Spent Crops
Old, bolted, diseased stuff? Yank it. Clean out space and stop pests from spreading. Reset beds for fall.
10. Fertilize Fruit Veg
Tomatoes, peppers, melons—feed ‘em now. Use high-potassium organic feed. No fuel = no fruit.
11. Mulch the Beds
2–3 inches of straw or leaves traps moisture and cools roots. Essential during late summer heat. Focus on tomatoes, cucumbers, and squash.
12. Net or Bag Ripening Fruit
Protect tomatoes, figs, grapes, peaches from squirrels, birds, and wasps. Cover them now or kiss them goodbye.
13. Direct-Sow Beans (Last Call)
Bush and pole beans still have a shot—but barely. Plant fast-maturing varieties this week or forget a fall harvest.
14. Hill Up Potatoes
Cover exposed tubers now or they go green and toxic. Hilling boosts yield and protects the crop.
15. Water Deep, Not Daily
Skip surface watering. Soak roots 2–3 times per week. Deep roots = stronger plants, especially tomatoes and melons.
16. Prune & Tie Cucumbers
Tame the chaos. Trellis and trim excess runners for better airflow and fruit access. Helps prevent powdery mildew.
17. Inspect Tomatoes for Trouble
Strip lower leaves, check for hornworms or blight. Treat early with neem or BT before it explodes.
18. Thin Fruit Trees
Overloaded branches on apples or pears? Thin them out now. Prevents breakage and gets you bigger, healthier fruit.
19. Clean Up Rotting Fruit/Veg
Don’t let fallen fruit or squash rot in place. That’s pest fuel. Rake it up and compost what’s clean.
20. Shade Young Seedlings
Newly sown fall crops will fry in July heat. Use row cover, shade cloth, even cardboard. Protect now or they won’t make it.
https://t.me/c/1176713490/100500
20 essential gardening jobs to do this week before August begins ends ; or it might be too late
1. Prune Rambling Roses
Cut them back immediately after flowering—not in winter like climbing roses. Use sturdy gear and thorn-proof gloves. Delay it and you’ll screw up next year’s blooms.
2. Plant Fall-Blooming Bulbs
Stick Guernsey lilies, autumn crocus, and Colchicums in the ground now. They need warm soil to root—miss this and you miss fall flowers.
3. Chop Back Lavender
Faded blooms? Cut it hard and now. Keeps the plant bushy and triggers another round of flowers. Go light and it goes woody, grey, and useless.
4. Cut Down Spent Perennials
Delphiniums, lupins, geraniums—if they’ve finished blooming, chop them. You’ll get a second flush if you do it now. Wait, and you’re out of luck.
5. Take Hydrangea Cuttings
Mid-summer is prime time to propagate. Semi-ripe stems root easily in July warmth. Grab a knife, pots, and soil. You’ll double your plants for free.
6. Feed Dahlias Now
These beasts are hungry. Start a weekly feed schedule with seaweed or tomato fertilizer. Strong feeding now = peak blooms in August/September.
7. Sow Fast-Growers for Fall
Radish, lettuce, bok choy, spinach—get them in now. They need July heat to germinate but will thrive in cool fall air.
8. Start Fall Brassicas Indoors
Broccoli, kale, cabbage, cauliflower—start seeds inside now. Wait, and they won’t mature before frost.
9. Rip Out Spent Crops
Old, bolted, diseased stuff? Yank it. Clean out space and stop pests from spreading. Reset beds for fall.
10. Fertilize Fruit Veg
Tomatoes, peppers, melons—feed ‘em now. Use high-potassium organic feed. No fuel = no fruit.
11. Mulch the Beds
2–3 inches of straw or leaves traps moisture and cools roots. Essential during late summer heat. Focus on tomatoes, cucumbers, and squash.
12. Net or Bag Ripening Fruit
Protect tomatoes, figs, grapes, peaches from squirrels, birds, and wasps. Cover them now or kiss them goodbye.
13. Direct-Sow Beans (Last Call)
Bush and pole beans still have a shot—but barely. Plant fast-maturing varieties this week or forget a fall harvest.
14. Hill Up Potatoes
Cover exposed tubers now or they go green and toxic. Hilling boosts yield and protects the crop.
15. Water Deep, Not Daily
Skip surface watering. Soak roots 2–3 times per week. Deep roots = stronger plants, especially tomatoes and melons.
16. Prune & Tie Cucumbers
Tame the chaos. Trellis and trim excess runners for better airflow and fruit access. Helps prevent powdery mildew.
17. Inspect Tomatoes for Trouble
Strip lower leaves, check for hornworms or blight. Treat early with neem or BT before it explodes.
18. Thin Fruit Trees
Overloaded branches on apples or pears? Thin them out now. Prevents breakage and gets you bigger, healthier fruit.
19. Clean Up Rotting Fruit/Veg
Don’t let fallen fruit or squash rot in place. That’s pest fuel. Rake it up and compost what’s clean.
20. Shade Young Seedlings
Newly sown fall crops will fry in July heat. Use row cover, shade cloth, even cardboard. Protect now or they won’t make it.
https://t.me/c/1176713490/100500
Forwarded from Azazel News (Aries)
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Forwarded from Fireworks Daily Team (Pirate Ballz NotADude)
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Look closer — that’s not dust. It’s LOCUSTS!
Russia’s Dagestan choked by swarms in a biblical-style invasion — authorities says it’s under control
Russia’s Dagestan choked by swarms in a biblical-style invasion — authorities says it’s under control