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Author Topic: My backyard is flooding!  (Read 5909 times)
pelagia
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« Reply #25 on: September 27, 2008, 05:35:19 PM »

I would drive through the rain for flowers!

W&W - Two things I can never seem to get adjusted to about living in the country - snakes and the big spiders we seem to get every fall.  I grew up on Long Island, truly suburbia, and they were hardly any spiders and definitely no snakes around my house!  When we renovated our old farmhouse in the 1980s we found loads of snake skin sheds in the attic. Very creepy.  But, I love this place and it's mostly "out of sight, out of mind for me."
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As for me, I'll borrow this thought: "Having never experienced kidney disease, I had no idea how crucial kidney function is to the rest of the body." - KD
kitkatz
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« Reply #26 on: September 27, 2008, 07:12:05 PM »

If I find a snake in my bathtub, I am moving out!
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lifenotonthelist.com

Ivanova: "Old Egyptian blessing: May God stand between you and harm in all the empty places you must walk." Babylon 5

Remember your present situation is not your final destination.

Take it one day, one hour, one minute, one second at a time.

"If we don't find a way out of this soon, I'm gonna lose it. Lose it... It means go crazy, nuts, insane, bonzo, no longer in possession of ones faculties, three fries short of a Happy Meal, wacko!" Jack O'Neill - SG-1
G-Ma
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« Reply #27 on: September 27, 2008, 07:26:32 PM »

and I wouldn't even pack first....my family all knows that.....eeeeekkkk....
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Lost vision due to retinopathy 12/2005, 30 Laser Surg 2006
ESRD diagnosed 12/2006
03/2007 Fantastic Eye Surgeon in ND got my sight back and implanted lenses in both eyes, great distance & low reading.
Gortex 4/07.  Started dialysis in ND 5/4/2007
Gortex clotted off Thanksgiving Week of 2007, was unclotted and promptly clotted off 1/2 hour later so Permacath Rt chest.
3/2008 move to NC to be close to children.
2 Step fistula, 05/08-elevated 06/08, using mid August.
Aug 5, 08, trained NxStage and Home on 9/3/2008.
Fistulagram 09/2008. In hospital 10/30/08, Bowel Obstruction.
Back to RAI-Latrobe In Center. No home hemo at this time.
GOD IS GOOD
monrein
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« Reply #28 on: September 30, 2008, 04:32:53 AM »

I like snakes but we don't have poisonous ones so that makes a difference I think. The introduction of the mongoose in Jamaica killed them all off there and here in Ontario we only have one type that is venomous.  It's the Massassauga rattlesnake but it is very shy and quite rare.
I like lizards too.
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Pyelonephritis (began at 8 mos old)
Home haemo 1980-1985 (self-cannulated with 15 gauge sharps)
Cadaveric transplant 1985
New upper-arm fistula April 2008
Uldall-Cook catheter inserted May 2008
Haemo-dialysis, self care unit June 2008
(2 1/2 hours X 5 weekly)
Self-cannulated, 15 gauge blunts, buttonholes.
Living donor transplant (sister-in law Kathy) Feb. 2009
First failed kidney transplant removed Apr.  2009
Second trx doing great so far...all lab values in normal ranges
willieandwinnie
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« Reply #29 on: September 30, 2008, 06:13:19 AM »

monrein, we'll send you all we find. Do you care if they are dead or alive.  :rofl;
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"I know there's nothing to it, but I want to know what it is there's nothing to"
monrein
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« Reply #30 on: September 30, 2008, 06:21:17 AM »

Are you giving me a hint about what my secret santa might be thinking? :rofl;

I don't like dead snakes BTW. 
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Pyelonephritis (began at 8 mos old)
Home haemo 1980-1985 (self-cannulated with 15 gauge sharps)
Cadaveric transplant 1985
New upper-arm fistula April 2008
Uldall-Cook catheter inserted May 2008
Haemo-dialysis, self care unit June 2008
(2 1/2 hours X 5 weekly)
Self-cannulated, 15 gauge blunts, buttonholes.
Living donor transplant (sister-in law Kathy) Feb. 2009
First failed kidney transplant removed Apr.  2009
Second trx doing great so far...all lab values in normal ranges
harley08
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« Reply #31 on: September 30, 2008, 06:38:54 AM »

This has been a terrible year for everyone weather wise, I am in Pittsburgh and last week in the area that I work the wind and rains were so bad we had a power outage at work for the entire following week. >:(
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pelagia
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« Reply #32 on: September 30, 2008, 10:40:52 AM »

I like snakes but we don't have poisonous ones so that makes a difference I think. The introduction of the mongoose in Jamaica killed them all off there and here in Ontario we only have one type that is venomous.  It's the Massassauga rattlesnake but it is very shy and quite rare.
I like lizards too.

Actually I like snakes just fine, just not in my house/bedroom/closet/kitchen/etc.  I also like lizards. 

The only sentence I can say in Thai is "Linda keeps her house lizard in the bananas!"  or "Linda keeps her house lizard in the kitchen." depending on my pronunciation!
 :rofl;
 
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As for me, I'll borrow this thought: "Having never experienced kidney disease, I had no idea how crucial kidney function is to the rest of the body." - KD
annabanana
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« Reply #33 on: September 30, 2008, 11:42:24 AM »

 :rofl; :rofl; :rofl;
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caregiver to Randy:
HepC and stage 4 ckd
1 kidney removed (cancer)Aug07
monrein
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« Reply #34 on: September 30, 2008, 04:04:21 PM »

Where else would one keep a house lizard besides in the bananas or the kitchen?  As kids we always had at least two lizards on the wall of our room every night eating the mosquitoes.  They were croaking lizards so they'd arch up and stick out a fan-like thingy under their necks and croak.  Charming (said in a sarcastic British way).
We also used to make tiny lassos out of the spine of a palm leaf and try to lasso their tails to see them detach as the lizard wriggled away.  I once suggested that we lasso one as a pet and walk it but my Mum sent me to my room (or some other punishment can't remember exactly) for being an "uncivilized barbarian".  I had to go look up what a barbarian was  but I got off lizards and switched to pet wasps.  That's a story for another time.  All my wasps had names ending in -ert.
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Pyelonephritis (began at 8 mos old)
Home haemo 1980-1985 (self-cannulated with 15 gauge sharps)
Cadaveric transplant 1985
New upper-arm fistula April 2008
Uldall-Cook catheter inserted May 2008
Haemo-dialysis, self care unit June 2008
(2 1/2 hours X 5 weekly)
Self-cannulated, 15 gauge blunts, buttonholes.
Living donor transplant (sister-in law Kathy) Feb. 2009
First failed kidney transplant removed Apr.  2009
Second trx doing great so far...all lab values in normal ranges
petey
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« Reply #35 on: September 30, 2008, 04:39:06 PM »

pelagia, they have us under a flood watch until 10 pm tonight and then said with Kyle passing to the east we will again see higher tides. It has poured here this morning, cloudy and windy right now but calling for thunderstorms. My daughter called a little while ago in tears, there was a snake in her bathtub. They managed to kill it and the neighbor told her it was a corn snake (yeah, a snake is a snake), so she has already said she probably won't sleep tonight. We don't have much standing water but the mosquitos are horrible. I won't let Len go outside because of them.

flip, Maggie and Jeff, have you guys managed any rain out of this?

petey, how did you guys make out? You know, weather wise. :rofl;

We made out just fine... nothing that shook the house, but a little howling at the windows, .......the weather wasn't too bad, either.   :rofl;  :rofl;  :rofl;  :rofl;  :rofl;  :rofl;  :rofl;  :rofl;


A snake?  In your daughter's bathtub?  I would have literally passed out.  I don't like live snakes.  I don't like dead snakes.  I don't like pictures of snakes.  I don't like thoughts of pictures of snakes.

Here's a snake legend that my grandmother taught me...If you kill a snake, you MUST chop its head off.  Then, Grandma would throw the body in the woods across the road in front of her house and the head in the woods behind her garden (way back behind the house).  When, as a little girl, I watched her perform this ritual and asked her why, she said if you didn't totally separate the head from the body by a great distance, it would reattach itself and come back to life before the sun set.

I, personally, have never killed a snake, but I've stood back 100 yards and screamed and paced while Marvin has killed some with a hoe, a rake, a shovel, and even one time, a baseball bat.  Marvin doesn't like snakes, either.
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pelagia
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« Reply #36 on: September 30, 2008, 04:47:05 PM »


I, personally, have never killed a snake, but I've stood back 100 yards and screamed and paced while Marvin has killed some with a hoe, a rake, a shovel, and even one time, a baseball bat.  Marvin doesn't like snakes, either.

Stephen had a big snake in his closet one time.  Thought the tail was his belt and then it moved.  He killed it by chopping it's head off!  My son was there (I wasn't) and then he didn't want to go upstairs to his bedroom unescorted for a couple of years.

A herpetologist once told me that the best way to catch a snake is to offer it a box to crawl into through a small dark hole.  They will head for something like that when confronted.
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As for me, I'll borrow this thought: "Having never experienced kidney disease, I had no idea how crucial kidney function is to the rest of the body." - KD
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