reefer_roulette

reefer_roulette t1_j72h53q wrote

I worked in a barn that was half cows, half horses. The cow side was always warm and the horse side was almost always frozen. The heat the cows put out is impressive.

14

reefer_roulette t1_ixnvl4v wrote

100% fungus gnats.

You're probably over watering your plant. They are attracted to moisture and decaying matter in the soil. They're harmless to you and your plants but they're annoying as hell.

Instead of pesticides, try repotting it in drier soil with better drainage and water it less. The larva lives in the soil. Vacuum the adults (shown), clean the window area and repot.

Don't put rocks at the bottom of a pot for drainage - it leaves a pool of water for the roots to rot in and the gnats to be attracted to. You don't need stones or sand on the soil either. Use a good soil mix with perlite (the white stuff in potting soil) and stop watering so much.

9

reefer_roulette t1_iuhflk9 wrote

I don’t know why they’re called gulfs, but there are others and some over in New Hampshire too.

It seems like they all have terrain in common - usually steep, almost vertical, ledgy/rocky land with a road that winds along a stream or small river. It’s almost always dark, mossy and narrow. Like a deep ravine I guess.

That’s just my observations after wondering the same thing.

4

reefer_roulette t1_itu8p8n wrote

We’re they hand painted or stenciled like this? I wonder if that Ralph Smart guy has been moving east.

The ones linked are all over the western side of the state through Vermont way out to New York.

4

reefer_roulette t1_isxib0g wrote

Since it differs here’s my scenario:

100+ year old, 1,100 SF house with poor insulation at best.

I heat with ONLY wood, no back up. Green wood cost me $260/cord this spring. Bought 5 but use about 4 cords a year give or take.

Wood stove is an Atlanta stove works “huntsman” model. It’s a glorified sheet metal box from the late 50s. Works 1000% times better than my defiant did.

1