I have smoked with Monkeys.
“Hey hey we’re the Monkeys.
People say we monkey around.
But we’re too busy smokin
too drive @Hashpants to town. 
Damn big corn and cabbage! Your watermelons seem to be coming along nicely. Still love the looks of the lb.
I broke down and watered them yesterday morning, 1st good watering they have had. They were not drooping, but I knew we have 100 degree days coming this weekend. Still no food , but I might give them a snack around Aug 1
Oh my. Your garden is beautiful (I may have mentioned before, but I just hit a nice J and feeling mellow). Sending more positive energy your way. 
Many thanks for coming in @Jpaul ! And returning those cool Vibes to you, my friend. If you were closer , you could bring your basket…
Beautiful. What kind of wood is that fence post?
Some of those are Black Locust, they withstand ground contact for many years with no treatment. My bro has a sawmill, I will get some pictures, next time I’m near.
You tube works i think. You can find almost any music on YouTube
That’s incredible you were able to finish that Vietnam Black. If I had a plant to spare I would leave one and see what happened. Unfortunately my season ends a month earlier so it’s doubtful anything good would happen.
1970 vb
@InTheWoods the high is lay on your back with your eyes closed listening to a television program rather than watching it type. Picked a little early it can be somewhat trippy, and I put it in my top five smokes
What kind of smells were you getting from that one? @Upstate .
Last season we had 2 or 3 cold nights around Nov 20. After that it was good until late December. I really think I could have covered one and kept it until Christmas.
That is absolutely hilarious
I keep leftover shower doors and plexiglass around for early season coverings. I have 2 big 59 gal pots for nursery beds . I can lay the glass right across the pot until seedlings get 4 to 5 in high. Later I stack in some bricks to raise the roof and stuff some straw in the airspace around.
That’s this year’s plant from a cutting ive kept a few years. I’ve only kept a handful of cuttings over the years and this is one I’m going to hold on to. Flavor is white grape juice and smell is white grape with a little bit of pissy. It’s another one of those that make the house smell like a litter box if I bring it in to dry. Usually I don’t get away with it more than a day before my wife discovers the smell and makes me move it🤣
@YoBigdaddy found this one from seed found by @romanoweed and paid for by a bunch of us
What’s acapulco breath? That sounds like crossing two extremes from the weed world 
I had a Motorbreath 15 clone set outside in March. It went to flowering early, my buddy found a male Acapulco mist from JP. It was way stinky ,so I put them together until may 1st. I just shucked seeds a couple weeks ago.
My first spring seeds.I know there are some types of gum trees (aka, eucalyptus) that make fence posts that remain sturdy in the ground for more than 75 years. If I recall correctly, those gums don’t split well. They need to be sawed. (Weirdly, I prefer to use “sawn,” but that is primarily a British spelling/usage, not N. American. Not that I’m anti-Anglophile, I just like the way it sounds more than “sawed.” In an odd way, it’s similar to the way I feel about scraping the hair off my face.) Fuck that.
Is your brother’s mill a mobile bandsaw mill? I have a buddy in WA that has one of those and boy howdy is it a nice little rig. As I recall, his will mill a 24" log maybe 15’ long. He could by extensions for the bed but has no need.
When I rafted logs, the guy I worked for had built his own mill. 48" main blade, 12" cutters all powered by a Cummins six with a goat motor. It was built on a 60’ barge. He had a little cold deck above the dry dock on dry land and shovels to move the logs up and down the 25 foot drop from the land’s edge down to the water. Whenever he’d see a nice looking log floating down the river he’d go out and grab it and put it on the deck. It was a great way to make lumber!
To my mind, the beauty of these new band saw mills is the super thin kerf they cut. I believe the main blade of Dick’s mill’s, which was carbide tipped, had 3/8" wide teeth. Over the course of an entire log, that can can mean a lot of lost lumber.








