Thanks to MB members Anna and S_A, I'm ready to convert temperatures from F to C and now know how to get rid of moths using the stuff I've got growing in the garden...lavender and lemon balm! We get moths from time to time though our house is anything but modern and airtight. Blocks of cedar or cedar shavings also help keep the pesky critters at bay. I'm a great fan of lemon balm and lemon verbena (vervain) for making tisane. In early July, I collect linden (lime) flowers from nearby trees for making a fragrant, soothing, and sleep-inducing herb tea. The mild winter and plentiful spring rain we've had is sure to bring swarms of mosquitos this summer. I'm going to make an infuson of almond oil and lemon balm, calendula, and lavender as a bug preventative. If nothing else, it will smell heavenly and be soothing to the skin.
Stormy Weather
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marthe
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I have become used to thew Centigrade measurement now. The only thing I cannot get used to, is the Metric Measurement of metres, kilometres and heaven knows what else! I watched a documentary of Nat Geographic Channel, yesterday, and they were talking about 300 metere waves! I guess thats a lot, but what's that in Imperial?Last edited by BBMmk2; 27-05-12, 06:54.Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View Posttalkin g about 300 m,etere waves! I guesds thats a lotbut what's that in Imperial?
blimey - is that what global warming is going to give us ?
[it wasn't 30 metre waves was it ?]
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Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View PostI have become used to thew Centigrade measurement now. The only thing I cannot get used to, is the Metric Measurement of metres, kilometres and heaven knows what else! I watched a documentary of Nat Geographic Channel, yesterday, and they were talking about 300 metere waves! I guess thats a lot, but what's that in Imperial?
And whilst "centigrade" is indeed a description of a measure, it is not a measure in itself; temperature is calibrated in degrees Celsius, not "Centigrade"!
Where the Brits have made matters so unnecessarily difficult in the past has been in the unwelcome habit of encouraging conversion mindsets rather than sensibly ditching one set of measures for another far simpler one that is much more widely used; I recall the sheer nonsense that followed the transition to what was then called "decimal currency" and which gave rise to the all too often used phrase "what's that in the old money?".
980+-foot-high waves? Even certain posters on this forum surely couldn't make waves that big?!...
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Originally posted by mercia View Post300 metres is approx 985 feet = 70 double-decker buses [on top of eachother]
blimey - is that what global warming is going to give us ?Last edited by ahinton; 27-05-12, 11:51.
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Well with an asteroid that was as high as Mount Everest hitting this planet, and weighing aproximately a trilllion tons, I am sure that would be the height of the wave. Personally, with an impact of that size, i am surprised that the wave was'nt higher.Don’t cry for me
I go where music was born
J S Bach 1685-1750
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Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View PostI have become used to thew Centigrade measurement now. The only thing I cannot get used to, is the Metric Measurement of metres, kilometres and heaven knows what else! I watched a documentary of Nat Geographic Channel, yesterday, and they were talking about 300 metere waves! I guess thats a lot, but what's that in Imperial?
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Originally posted by mercia View Post300 metres is approx 985 feet = 70 double-decker buses [on top of eachother]
blimey - is that what global warming is going to give us ?
[it wasn't 30 metre waves was it ?]
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