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💄超強手作花造型師: MIHO's Style 美好時代 - 整體造型/婚紗攝影

 

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This American flag has been shredded for at least a year. It stands in front of the Frazier Sports Rehab Institute, KentuckyOne Health, Medical Center Jewish Northeast, and the U of L James Graham Brown Cancer Center.

 

This facility was at one point under consideration to become Louisville's newest VA Hospital. For some reason, Brownsboro Road was chosen. One would think this facility would have had the courtesy to at least maintain the flag it flies at its entranceway. I do know they were made aware of it but chose to ignore it.

 

Frazier Rehab Institute/Northeast

2401 Terra Crossing Boulevard, Suite 204

Louisville, KY 40245

P 502.210.4500

F 502.210.4505

 

Medical Center Jewish Northeast

502.210.4200

Cancer Care

502.210.4411

Diagnostic Imaging

502.210.4350

Medical Records

502.587.4416

Patient Accounting

502.587.4397

Patient Scheduling

502.587.4327

Rehabilitation Care

502.210.4500

Sports Medicine Urgent Care

502.210.4600

 

In Kentucky, 75.4% of Doctors take drug/device payments: projects.propublica.org/graphics/d4d-hospital-lookup

  

This is a wonderful local roadside vegetable stand - the best thing about it is there is no human interaction - you choose what you like, place the money in the envelopes provided then place the envelope inside the mail slot in the doorway. There is a scale there to weigh your tomatoes (it is set for tomatoes), paper bags, a pen (tied to a string - I generally try to leave an extra one if they need it), a fridge which contains fresh-picked corn, farm-fresh eggs, free bottled water and Icees for the kids in the freezer. They also take egg cartons in return.

 

The giant yellow squash to the right are free. They have tons of them. There are also homemade jams, jellies & pickles.

 

This wonderful little farm stand is located at 1209 Flat Rock Road, Louisville, KY, USA. They have a beautiful garden directly behind it.

Examining the Effectiveness of Biologicals Against Downy Mildew in Grapes www.growingproduce.com/fruits/grapes/examining-the-effect...

Downy mildew is a challenge for all grape growers, especially on the East Coast where the disease can strike when conditions are wet, particularly when rains occur with temperatures ranging from the 60s to low 80s (°F). The pathogen for downy mildew can spread rapidly. It takes only four to six days from one round of infection until a second-generation of spores develops and new infections occur. This pathogen is one that all Vitis vinifera cultivars are highly susceptible to, as are certain hybrid and native cultivars.

 

“Susceptible cultivars require some sort of a spray program in Eastern climates,” says Wayne Wilcox, Professor of Plant Pathology and Plant-Microbe Biology at Cornell University. “The required intensity of the spray program is determined by the cultivar’s inherent level of susceptibility, weather conditions during the growing season, and the degree to which effective cultural practices are used.”

 

While sustainability has become a major push among winegrape growing regions out West, it’s only natural to see how their Eastern compatriots would be interested in pursuing similar goals. Growers and Cornell Cooperative Extension developed a voluntary self-assessment sustainability program called VineBalance.

 

On Long Island, this has been expanded to a program where growers use a third-party inspector to verify that the vineyard meets the program requirements. So, using more sustainable disease control products is a natural necessity. The trouble is, with wet growing conditions and the high probability of downy mildew, this can be a challenge for growers to achieve.

 

“Effective biocontrol products certainly fit within any sustainability push, since they help to promote the goals. But since one of the pillars of sustainability is ‘economic,’ the products must be effective,” he says. “Because the choice of effective biocontrol materials is rather limited, we’re always looking for something else to supplement what’s available now. Beyond that, a lot of growers would like to be as “green” as they can while still protecting their crop effectively, whether they are part of a formal ‘sustainable’ program or not.”

 

Studying Biologicals for Control

Wilcox has been working with several biological products to study their effectiveness against downy mildew. This includes LifeGard WG, distributed by Certis. Wilcox studied the use of Lifeguard on ‘Chardonnay,’ a highly-susceptible Vitis vinifera cultivar.

 

He compared the results of the vines treated with LifeGard to untreated vines and vines treated with conventional materials. Although he got excellent results in the first year of studying, Wilcox accidentally used a higher application rate of LifeGard. But, in the second year of the study and with the right application rate, Wilcox still saw excellent results.

 

“Disease pressure was almost as high in 2015, and LifeGard again provided control comparable to the best conventional materials, using the correct rate this time,” he says. “We had a drought in 2016 with very little downy mildew developing, so the results from last year didn’t tell us much.”

 

Expanding the Scope

This year, Wilcox will be looking at the efficacy of several biological products against downy mildew, powdery mildew, Botrytis bunch rot, and sour rot. His research will again include LifeGard’s effectiveness against downy mildew. He says the mechanism that is claimed to provide LifeGard’s activity is a promotion of the plant’s natural resistance to diseases, so he’s also looking to expand the research to examine LifeGard’s efficacy against other grape diseases.

 

An important difference, Wilcox says, between his trials and application to a typical commercial vineyard is he targets the most susceptible cultivars and high inoculum pressure.

 

“This does allow us to distinguish between stronger and less-strong materials. However, some of the ‘weaker’ materials look worse than they would in many commercial settings where inoculum carryover from one year to the next is relatively low and there are no unsprayed vines scattered throughout the vineyard from which disease can easily spread.”

 

What Else Can Growers Do

Wilcox suggests growers be mindful about site selection and canopy management as non-chemical ways to help control disease. He suggests management practices that promote drying of fruit and foliage can help reduce disease pressure.

 

For those growers interested in sustainability, Wilcox says there are a few newer biological products that look promising, in addition to some of the greener conventional options. He also says that sustainable and organic approaches should view sprays as supplementing cultural control practices. But, above all he says growers, especially organic winegrape growers, should consider the susceptibility of cultivars prior to planting. “There’s not a lot of meaningful difference among cultivars if they are committed to growing vinifera grapes, but there are huge differences among hybrids and natives,” he says. “If some of the relatively resistant cultivars in these groups will suit the business plan, this is the first, and often most effective,

 

“There’s not a lot of meaningful difference among cultivars if they are committed to growing vinifera grapes, but there are huge differences among hybrids and natives,” he says. “If some of the relatively resistant cultivars in these groups will suit the business plan, this is the first, and often most effective, line of defense.”

 

www.growingproduce.com/fruits/grapes/examining-the-effect...

  

Yet in almost 20 years neither Jefferson County nor Oldham County enforces this. Not in Kentucky, USA. More particulate, anyone? It's actually quite comical considering the glut of black vehicles & opaque tinted windows in the area - more paying customers for the local car wash, cancer centers, ENTs, eye doctors, windshield companies and drug stores. Decreased productivity in the remaining workforce. Kentucky taxpayers pay the legislative & executive branch of this government over $1 Million USD each for their "lifetime" of *service* plus paying local and State taxes, local and state officials and enforcement agencies, yet in their lifetime not one thing has changed. People, wildlife, and the environment are suffering the same fate here as they did a lifetime ago. Why are all of the above still getting paid millions for *jobs* and work they never did? Welcome to Kentucky, USA, aka "Little New Jersey".

 

It would take ONE person - ONE - to be at the exits of these quarries and gravel pits to ensure *all* trucks were tarped prior to leaving the area. If that is beyond their budget, how about a BIG SIGN?

 

Respiratory ailments, lung cancer, cataracts, and COPD are a way of life here.

Spider spotted yesterday afternoon with a small amount of gnats captured closer to the center of the web. Although rather sparse, spider appeared somewhat content with what was gathered this day. Not sure what spider was planning on catching but I do believe spider was banking on something much greater than these tiny gnats as the tensile strength of this web could probably have snagged my dog, Pancake. Perhaps that's the plan?

 

******

 

Darwin's bark spider (scientific name Caerostris darwini) is an orb-weaver spider that produces one of the largest known orb webs, ranging from 900 to 28,000 square centimetres (140 to 4,340 sq in),[2][3] with anchor lines spanning up to 25 metres (82 ft). The spider was discovered in Madagascar in the Andasibe-Mantadia National Park in 2009.[4] Its silk is the toughest biological material ever studied, over ten times tougher than a similarly-sized piece of Kevlar.[5] The species was named in honour of the naturalist Charles Darwin, with the description being prepared precisely 150 years after the publication of The Origin of Species, on 24 November 2009.[2 ] en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Darwin%27s_bark_spider

  

General Mills Class Action Says Cheerios Contain Dangerous Weedkiller - topclassactions.com/lawsuit-settlements/lawsuit-news/8557...

 

Monsanto Ordered to Pay $289 Million in Roundup Cancer Trial - www.nytimes.com/2018/08/10/business/monsanto-roundup-canc...

 

Roundup Weed Killer Chemical Found in Cheerios and Quaker Oats - fortune.com/2018/08/15/roundup-in-cheerios-weed-killer/

 

General Mills: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_Mills

 

RevenueDecrease US$15.620 billion (2017)[1]

Operating income

Decrease US$2.566 billion (2017)[1]

Net income

Decrease US$1.658 billion (2017)[1]

Total assetsIncrease US$21.813 billion (2017)[1]

Total equityDecrease US$4.328 billion (2017)[1]

Number of employees

~38,000 (May 2017)[1]

 

****

CEO Ken Powell:

 

Powell joined General Mills in 1979. He has served as its chief executive officer since September 2007. As CEO of General Mills in 2009, Powell received total compensation of $9,221,035, which included a base salary of $959,583, a cash bonus of $1,910,770, stocks granted of $3,720,566, options granted of $2,276,223, and other compensation of $353,893.[3] His 2011 total compensation of $8,609,199 included a base salary of $973,042, a cash bonus of $1,926,622, stocks granted of $3,724,528, options granted of $1,705,426, and other compensation of $278,981.[4]

 

General Mills, Inc.: www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/40704/000119312517217396/...

 

Powell serves on the board of directors of Medtronic, Inc..[5]

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medtronic

Apparently the Commonwealth of kentucky flag was taken down for laundering.

Cheltenham Wetlands Park was once part of the U.S. Naval Radio Station, Cheltenham, Maryland. It was commissioned in 1939.

“The original antenna fields, comprising creosoted wood telephone poles and metal antenna towers, were located in the acreage surrounding the buildings. All metal antenna poles have been removed from the installation. Some abandoned creosoted wood poles remain in the wooded and swampy sections of the installation.

Established as a radio receiving station before World War II, the installation's mission evolved to administration during the Cold War era.”

This "scary" orb spider was spotted hanging out nearby. After displaying some threatening poses the spider reached up with one leg and skillfully detached the top half of it's web instantly (releasing it's massive collection of small flies it captured to a secured area safe from predators). It was comical, however, as it appeared spider was making the statement "if you want to get past this web you'll need to jump over it because I'm a badass spider". The spider never budged or flinched other than a few deimatic poses and Pancake and I did in fact walk around the web. Also got some great shots while Pancake snoozed contentedly in the sun.

Sign spotted at Papa John's Pizza Corporate Headquarters Duck Pond.

 

Actually, the reason I went over to see this place today is because I wanted to thank Papa John's (in pictures) for all his support to the Occupy camp in downtown Louisville a number of years ago - he supplied pizzas to the encampment down there which helped feed the supporters of the Occupy cause. I did not expect it to be this beautiful at his Corporate office. Thank you, Papa John, your pizzas very much appreciated by the many wounded, discarded and lost and homeless US Military Veterans (many from Kentucky's 101st Airborne whom the VA as well as local hospitals shunned, abused and abandoned) who visited there during those months. Some of these kids still had peach fuzz on their faces - with half their body parts shot off, abandoned by their friends and families. It was a very trying time for many - your pizzas were excellent. We did not forget - just couldn't get around 2it. : )

  

13508 Factory Lane, Louisville, KY 40245

 

Sign in front says funded by Stock Yards Bank & Trust. Totally wiped out a natural area & migratory path.

 

www.youtube.com/watch?v=953PkxFNiko - Music video by Primus performing My Name Is Mud. (C) 1993 Interscope Records

These bones are found in the head of guinea pigs. These are the lucky bones.

 

Our guide placed them in a shot glass of liquor. We took turns downing the shots. Whoever drank the atuqcha was the lucky one.

Amazing how when Lent arrives the seafood suddenly gets better. Even the shrimps clean themselves up. The card is for size comparison only. If you do purchase shrimp here in Kentucky be sure to de-vein them and soak them in milk to absorb the toxins and odor prior to serving.

 

Yet the US Government now does not require a certificate of origin from seafood, hence these shrimps could be from a sewage laden shrimp farm in Thailand or oil laden Gulf of Mexico. Know where your shrimp originate from. Learn about seafoods you're consuming: www.whfoods.com/genpage.php?tname=foodspice&dbid=107#...

 

Read about food poisoning from Marine (fish and shellfish) toxins here - gastrointestinal and neurologic illness: wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/yellowbook/2018/the-pre-travel-consu...

 

KENTUCKY fish advisories here (while our Governor Matt Bevin encourages fish consumption from Kentucky's rivers, lakes, streams and ponds: fw.ky.gov/Fish/Pages/Fish-Consumption-Advisories.aspx

Apparently this one was clipped by a lawnmower (card is for perspective). Spotted next to a kidney dialysis center, Louisville, KY 40241 USA

Louisville Metro City Hall

601 W Jefferson St # 19

Louisville, KY 40202

Phone: (502) 574-1100

 

"Nati9onal Register of Historic Places"

"Since the merger of the former City of Louisville with Jefferson County, Kentucky, it now primarily houses the offices and chambers of the Louisville Metro Council. The former Jefferson County Courthouse, now known as Louisville Metro Hall, is now primarily home to the offices of the metro mayor of Louisville." -

Read More Here: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louisville_City_Hall

 

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