86,100,69,0,B,0
Friday, July 13, 2012
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Life off the grid in the SW Texas desert. An experiment in sustainable living. NUMBERS AT THE END OF EACH BLOG POST: temp at 8PM,high temp,low temp,rainfall,wind conditions(CalmBreezyWindyGusty). YouTube Channel https://www.youtube.com/c/TheFieldLab Daily live streams at https://www.youtube.com/thefieldlab/live
7 comments:
We always called them Rain Bugs. Been living with them at times for ever and never had a problem. They seem to show up around the rainy season.
Hmm, velvety.
He looks yummy; how would you prepare him? Stir-fried with bok choi? Chocolate dipped?
;0) just kidding. So what is his name?
I'm having calf viewing withdrawals over here. Velvet bugs just ain't gonna cut it. (But it's pretty)
Mr. Wells - am trying to catch up on things @ tfl -
sorry about how it went with Bob - hopefully, her parting legacy to Ben was a king sized dose of colostrum - the little guys have to be on the tough side just to make it down in that country - Ben certainly has a better shot with you on his side.
You probably have seen these & have more advice and help than you need, but thought I'd throw in my 2¢ too - good luck.
Recent research has indicated that many scour cases can be directly related to lack of colostrum intake by the newborn calf. A calf that is well mothered and consumes 1 to 2 quarts of colostrum in the first few hours after birth absorbs a higher level of antibodies and is far less susceptible to scours and other calfhood diseases.
scours
scours/UC Davis
from the velvet underground
Amazingly intense color on that bug. Never seen one before. I bet the birds love 'em!
Cool critter, would love to see one some day!
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