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Troy
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Soil programmer and code pruner. Gratitude is one of the most powerful tools you have. Liberty over freedom. Community is security. The antidote to fear is confidence. Session Chat: 05bbd5b2a29c3215814823401765e891081f25b6ff60abe2e4161d960a4e05eb05 Delta Chat: https://i.delta.chat/#E0E6A45E52233574F13E6A8777A3C855C8C7C602&a=ciz0ycpr0%40nine.testrun.org&n=Troy&i=J7n8b913uNkTsa9hUqGuXBq0&s=PXPuZ0acdQkTQwMCaeI6zg_X

Set an alarm, so you don't miss free furniture, then nap away!

Yes, constant wetness is a sure death. They love getting soaked, but they need to dry out. When dormant, being wet isn't good. I did give mine drips of water last winter, mostly run-off from the tent. The previous winters they looked like they could have used a few light waterings.

I have ultra-fine hair. The only time my hair has body is if I don't clean it at all. The only "hair product" I use is a shampoo-bar of natural ingredients (burdock, and a couple other oils). I don't shower daily (unless I get dirty daily).

i.e. there is no cure.

Mine have been fine at -3 C (27 F). When it got below -4 C (25 F), they received unrecoverable damage. My peruvian (Blue Mac) didn't survive, and I was able to salvage the rest with cuttings.

The one that seems unaffected by cold (and appeared to grow over last winter while under a clear plastic tent) is my Zeller. It's definitely cold-hardy.

The peoole voted against the current leader, and he's too chicken to leave.

Who are the malandros?

Strip them naked, and walk away.

Here, that's a large 3-4 bedroom home with a garage and yard.