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STIHL Electric chipper (in depth)
In the past Iโve accumulated material, then hired a chipper and spent a day reducing the pile to mulch ( click here to view ) This is a hassle because of the room the accumulating pile takes up and the potential fire risk. And there is the time wasted driving to another town to pick up the hire. The Stihl 355 is really light weight so it can be rolled most places in the garden. Nice big wheels. As I detailed in the previous blog entry ( click here ), this chipper has some quirks. The shredded material is deposited inside a shroud where it sits, and builds up until it blocks off the exit chute. Most of the blade clearance issues I have are when this backed up material jams the blades. Last week I did some more mulching into one of the raised gardens. First lot I had to mulch was a softwood tree. Softer than willow. When the shroud fills up, I drag the chipper back a bit clearing the exit chute and creating a trail of shredded material. I swapped between the โleafโ and โbranchโ settings,...
Hostel : Glasgow : Night moves
Iโve dug up a bit out of an old travel journal. One night while tucked up in our beds, all eight guys were woken by loud female shouting, out in the stairwell. A truly sublime pair of unfettered bosoms, filled to the quivering liquid brim with booze, burst through the door. She was atmospherically rim lit by light spilling in through the open doorway as she bounced into the room, and planted rank alcoholic kisses on the guy occupying the bed nearest the door. A girlfriend appeared and dragged our invader back to her room. A heavy, round silence closed around us and when it seemed that no more action would unfold, one of the guys on a bottom bunk got up and closed the dorm door. On another occasion, I was woken by someone moving close to my bed. Something must have been up, cause the guy that sleeps below me usually doesnโt interrupt my slumber. A head was moving around in the dark, and I recognised its silhouette as the young guy who occupies the lower bunk across the ro...
The caterpillars were out of control!
The thing about gardening, is that you never know what the environment is going to throw at you. A problem arises, you fix it, and learn something while you're doing it. I donโt know that you can ever have everything โunder controlโ. This year I thought I had tomatoes 'sussed'. A bumper crop was packing out the raised gardens, Then a few holes started appearing in leaves. 'not a prob' I thought. Like last year, must be a couple of caterpillars lurking amongst the leaves. This week holy armageddon was unleashed up at one end of the bed. I could almost hear the munching rising up from the plants. Day by day, it was definitely working its way down the lenght of the garden. Up until now, Iโve been squashโn them between fingertips. One at a time, search and destroy. In the past Iโd feel a bit sorry for them, as some would pop fully formed, straight out of their skins. Last week I was over it. After the last couple of years of battle Iโm immune to empat...
Vivid festival Light walk time-lapse: Sydney 09
The Light walk is part of the Vivid winter festival, and a series of 'light sculpture instillation's' were placed around Circular Quay. Great stuff though I feel that if this festival is organized again, it needs more moving light displays as I found the pieces a bit more dynamic. As did other spectators who were ohhhhing and ahhhhhing just like crowds do at a fireworks display. Also be nice if there was more playing around with shadow and reflection. I thought I'd get a bit of experience using RAW with After Effects. Also haven't done any night shooting before, so I spent a couple of nights down at Sydney's Vivid light Walk capturing raw stills for time lapse. Vivid festival Light walk time-lapse: Sydney 09 I took these on my Ricoh GX100 using interval shooting and saving as DNG. Most of the frames were one second exposures, taken every ten seconds. The poor old GX was pushing pretty hard to get the DNG's saved in time t...
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