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Posted

That's just looking for ****. Beans and Curry in one dish spells disaster in the bathroom....if you even make it in time.

Only if you're doing it wrong... 

 

a proper 3 bean bunny is marvellous. As is, actually, a butter chicken bunny. Had one last year sometime and it beats the pants off a mutton bunny. 

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Posted

To all the "plant breeders" I say... 'Tsek'...

 

 

 

 

Brain dead comment. Pretty much all commercial produce is bred for various desirable traits. Without Mendels discovery, humanity would be buggered. But you know this..... right? 

Posted

Dagga lab? Have you ever heard something so ridiculous. Are tomatoes a cucumbers purchased at Spar, PnP and Woolies from Tomato and cucumber labs?  R700k worth ??????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????????

ha ha. so funny story. a few years back a friend of mine's parents bought a farm and moved to a smallholding in the sticks - had enough of 9 to 5 and was going to try this farming thing. The youngest kid was still at varsity, and he somehow ended up staying at the massive family home in constantia as they weren't quite sure if they would keep it or sell it.

 

Dad comes back to town once and takes a look around in the basement.

the old store room had been converted to a semi industrial grow lab.

got imported hydrostrains in the old shower with lights and timers and alles.

Dad is super pissed off. 

Dad is really pissed off.

Dad is also bloody impressed, and since this whole farming malarkey is not as easy as it looks he now has a new consultant that as punishment had to come and give advice on all things farming

 

 

so i chuckled when i saw this article.

Posted

ha ha. so funny story. ...........

I have a true story.......

 

In the early 1900s my grandfather grew his own patch of dagga - for his horses. Yup, if he knew he was going to have a long days work with the horses,he fed them half lucerne and half dagga that morning. They were happier, less headstrong and carried on going at a steady pace for much longer. Of course, there was no law against it back then. He harvested his dagga and dried it in the attic - where he also dried the rooibos and honey tea that he harvested in the mountains.  I always wondered whether they ever got the 2 things mixed up? He was an incredibly dignified and patient man! Perhaps that was part of the reason for his inner peace?  

Posted

I have a true story.......

 

In the early 1900s my grandfather grew his own patch of dagga - for his horses. Yup, if he knew he was going to have a long days work with the horses,he fed them half lucerne and half dagga that morning. They were happier, less headstrong and carried on going at a steady pace for much longer. Of course, there was no law against it back then. He harvested his dagga and dried it in the attic - where he also dried the rooibos and honey tea that he harvested in the mountains.  I always wondered whether they ever got the 2 things mixed up? He was an incredibly dignified and patient man! Perhaps that was part of the reason for his inner peace?  

WOW, thats a great story! Did you know, the first law prohibiting the sale of dagga in south africa was put in motion in 1908. 

Posted

That's just looking for ****. Beans and Curry in one dish spells disaster in the bathroom....if you even make it in time.

Top tip, don't do this on your shore break between dives - bean there and done it, not good for buoyancy control

Posted

Having the vegan in the dish would make it non vegan methinks!

A high protein re-fried Mexican bean stew then, with liberal chilies.

Posted

I have a true story.......

 

In the early 1900s my grandfather grew his own patch of dagga - for his horses. Yup, if he knew he was going to have a long days work with the horses,he fed them half lucerne and half dagga that morning. They were happier, less headstrong and carried on going at a steady pace for much longer. Of course, there was no law against it back then. He harvested his dagga and dried it in the attic - where he also dried the rooibos and honey tea that he harvested in the mountains. I always wondered whether they ever got the 2 things mixed up? He was an incredibly dignified and patient man! Perhaps that was part of the reason for his inner peace?

Your oupa didn’t grow me!

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