I want to try some of this: http://www.hotsauceworld.com/smacmyassand1.html
700,000 scoville units, or twice as hot as habenaro peppers. I'd saya the colon blow was around 300,000-400,000.
Michael
Well, nobunny else has died. The lethargic kit in the doe's cage seems to be doing fine. Can't tell which one it is, and I can't see the ear tattoo. NZ kit likewise seems to be doing fine. Ann's other prime breeding doe seemed lethargic as well, but it may have just been the heat. Hopped...
The NZ cage with the first fatality is no where near the other cage. There is one NZ kit that is lethargic. You touch it, and it doesn't jump away like the other do. The mother was hovering over it last night.
In the second cage, there's another kit thats laying there. Looks like its...
One of our NZ kits died the other day, but I thought it had been injured. Someone cleaned out the cage using the feed scoop. I was in a hurry and didn't wash/sterilize the feed scoop. Now the breeding doe in another cage is dead. What would cause a doe with older kits to die within a couple...
Ok, I've asked a couple of the scientists doing research on pasture grazing and alfalfa breeding about allelopathicy and alfalfa's toxicity. The response was "Huh?"
The grazing scientist said that the only thing he could think of being a problem is that the freezing/cell disruption could cause...
The basic physics of a pendulum say that the period (time to swing) is directly proportional to the length of the arm on the pendulum.
The longer the pendulum (L), the longer it takes to swing (T). This means the clock will run slower.
I have some questions:
Is this the traditional pendulum...
Just a thread to introduce some common (according to the USDA) definitions, as well as a place for people to list their regional variations, affectionate nicknames, and euphemisms.
According to this USDA publication, here are some definitions...