The folk singer Donovan had kids smoking 'em in the '60's... "eeelectriical bananas are gonna be the very next phase..."
Very glad here I ain't anywhere in this video
"...if the gentlemen of Virginia shall send us a dozen of their sons, we would take great care in their education, instruct them in all we know, and make men of them." Canasatego 1744
I have a strong urge to buy a 308 , not sure if its related.
Well, at least it didn't induce autonomic Creedmore purchasing disease.
The desert is a true treasure for him who seeks refuge from men and the evil of men. In it is contentment In it is death and all you seek (Quoted from "The Bleeding of the Stone" Ibrahim Al-Koni)
The folk singer Donovan had kids smoking 'em in the '60's... "eeelectriical bananas are gonna be the very next phase..."
For a while when that song was popular and the electrical banana hoax was going on, you couldn't buy bananas if you were under 18 in my town. Not that I smoked them, but I had a friend that did...
Mankind has learned from others by observing how they felt and if they lived after eating various things.
Took hundreds or maybe thousands of years for American Indian women to figure out how well corn, beans and squash complemented each other. Now we know that particular dietary combination provides every essential amino acid.
Present-day Windsor NY lies on the Susquehanna just across the State line from the top NE corner of PA. Up until our Rev War Windsor was the site of a major Indian town called Onoquaga, on the very southern edge of Iroquois territory. It was a polyglot town composed of several refugee Algonquin remnants, Iroquois and a few White folks IIRC including a Christian Missionary. The famous Pro-Brit Mohawk Leader Joseph Brant hisself married a mixed-blood girl from that town.
Relevant to this discussion, prior to the Rev War the town had a reputation as a healing place, where ailing settlers would travel long distances to be treated by what today we would call Native Herbalists practicing "ethnobotany".
When the war broke out, Brant used Onoquaga as a base of operations to raid the settlements, so it was burned out in reprisal by a Patriot force. A pity none of the ethnobotany stuff ever got written down first. Coulda been interesting.
"...if the gentlemen of Virginia shall send us a dozen of their sons, we would take great care in their education, instruct them in all we know, and make men of them." Canasatego 1744
My Labrador retriever thinks banana peels are just wonderful. We cut them up into little pieces, and feed them to her after our breakfast of bananas and cereal.
I'd rather be a free man in my grave, than living as a puppet or a slave....
My Labrador retriever thinks banana peels are just wonderful. We cut them up into little pieces, and feed them to her after our breakfast of bananas and cereal.
looking at the chemicals in the peels I see a lot of feel good stuff and lots of minerals , the sticky teeth feeling goes away. you can also put it in blender and mix it with sugar etc..
Our labs get a banana every morning after they go out. We have been doing that for 15 years. Our dogs are pretty healthy, I think they get extra nutrients from veggies and fruits.
Mankind has learned from others by observing how they felt and if they lived after eating various things.
Took hundreds or maybe thousands of years for American Indian women to figure out how well corn, beans and squash complemented each other. Now we know that particular dietary combination provides every essential amino acid.
Present-day Windsor NY lies on the Susquehanna just across the State line from the top NE corner of PA. Up until our Rev War Windsor was the site of a major Indian town called Onoquaga, on the very southern edge of Iroquois territory. It was a polyglot town composed of several refugee Algonquin remnants, Iroquois and a few White folks IIRC including a Christian Missionary. The famous Pro-Brit Mohawk Leader Joseph Brant hisself married a mixed-blood girl from that town.
Relevant to this discussion, prior to the Rev War the town had a reputation as a healing place, where ailing settlers would travel long distances to be treated by what today we would call Native Herbalists practicing "ethnobotany".
When the war broke out, Brant used Onoquaga as a base of operations to raid the settlements, so it was burned out in reprisal by a Patriot force. A pity none of the ethnobotany stuff ever got written down first. Coulda been interesting.
loads of stuff lost all around the country that way over the years.
The desert is a true treasure for him who seeks refuge from men and the evil of men. In it is contentment In it is death and all you seek (Quoted from "The Bleeding of the Stone" Ibrahim Al-Koni)
Mankind has learned from others by observing how they felt and if they lived after eating various things.
Present-day Windsor NY lies on the Susquehanna just across the State line from the top NE corner of PA. Up until our Rev War Windsor was the site of a major Indian town called Onoquaga, on the very southern edge of Iroquois territory. It was a polyglot town composed of several refugee Algonquin remnants, Iroquois and a few White folks IIRC including a Christian Missionary. The famous Pro-Brit Mohawk Leader Joseph Brant hisself married a mixed-blood girl from that town /quote]
Did a double take when I saw Windsor NY mentioned... somewhat familiar with that area. For those not, it is nothing like Windsor, Ontario. It's a small town, primarily a railroad, logging and stone quarry town, always had a sort of rough reputation. My maternal grandparents lived in a little hamlet outside there by the name of Oquaga. My grandfather had a hunting camp on the Susquehanna River beyond Deposit a ways, in the town of Hancock. It was a two story wooden frame place, living spaces downstairs, barracks style sleeping accommodations upstairs...off the grid before that was a thing. My cousin and I used to fish smallmouths in the river, the other side was Pennsylvania. My mother's step-brothers would come up to stay, fish, hunt. They were all WWII veterans of the South Pacific, big rough, raw-boned guys who really appreciated life and were good to us young kids. The time I could spend there was heaven on earth for a young kid.