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Summer 2020 Banter and random observations


Baroclinic Zone
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6 hours ago, weathafella said:

The $600 fine is not at all a deterrent.  How much did the hotel make by hosting the events?   $600 eating into the typically substantial profits vs nada kind of gives the venue the opportunity to put some language in and pass the cost onto the customer.  For flattening the curve to continue to work you. Have to have voluntary compliance.   Human beings have a wide range of what some consider acceptable behavior.   It’s been a long spell.  Those of us older don’t really feel so constrained but younger folks do.  We need a vaccine or a petering out of covid.

I would assume that at this point the hotel would include the expected $600 fee in the contract for the event, if they were not already doing so.  If customer doesn't agree to pay the fee, no event.

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9 minutes ago, TauntonBlizzard2013 said:

Yup... I’ve done everything we’ve been asked to do. Can’t control the 6 million other people in mass though 

Max of 50 people for outdoor gatherings.  25 for indoor gatherings.  And updating restaurant guidelines to clamp down on bars masquerading as restaurants requiring on-site alcohol consumption to be accompanied by food that is "prepared onsite".  Indefinite delay on step 2 of Phase 3 re=opening.

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Anyone here good at identifying caterpillars? I've got a ton of these little green inchworms devouring things around here. :angry: They have stripped many of the white ash trees bare and are now eating birches (especially the yellow birches) and maples (especially the striped maples). DIT would approve. Fortunately, the latter species are not being stripped like the ashes so it shouldn't have a huge impact on the fall foliage, but with emerald ash borer now making an inroads into the area, the inchworms will only put more stress on the ashes, making them more susceptible to EAB infestation. 

They hang from the trees on a long thin strand of hair and appear to float in midair. I must've found half a dozen of them on me after mowing the lawn. My inclination is that they're the dreaded winter moth, but I'm not sure. I didn't think we had them up here and thought they were more of a spring caterpillar.

 

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1 hour ago, wxmanmitch said:

Anyone here good at identifying caterpillars? I've got a ton of these little green inchworms devouring things around here. :angry: They have stripped many of the white ash trees bare and are now eating birches (especially the yellow birches) and maples (especially the striped maples). DIT would approve. Fortunately, the latter species are not being stripped like the ashes so it shouldn't have a huge impact on the fall foliage, but with emerald ash borer now making an inroads into the area, the inchworms will only put more stress on the ashes, making them more susceptible to EAB infestation. 

They hang from the trees on a long thin strand of hair and appear to float in midair. I must've found half a dozen of them on me after mowing the lawn. My inclination is that they're the dreaded winter moth, but I'm not sure. I didn't think we had them up here and thought they were more of a spring caterpillar.

 

116436605_2944993228945347_385116636544246991_o.jpg

117257130_2944995922278411_758581724262391628_o.jpg

116175020_2944994165611920_4114966439809122869_o.jpg

117107205_2944995198945150_4025893794920270614_o.jpg

117221204_2944994212278582_3280725995055391547_o.jpg

winter moth, they are destroying trees in Rhode Island too. 

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2 hours ago, wxmanmitch said:

Anyone here good at identifying caterpillars? I've got a ton of these little green inchworms devouring things around here. :angry: They have stripped many of the white ash trees bare and are now eating birches (especially the yellow birches) and maples (especially the striped maples). DIT would approve. Fortunately, the latter species are not being stripped like the ashes so it shouldn't have a huge impact on the fall foliage, but with emerald ash borer now making an inroads into the area, the inchworms will only put more stress on the ashes, making them more susceptible to EAB infestation. 

They hang from the trees on a long thin strand of hair and appear to float in midair. I must've found half a dozen of them on me after mowing the lawn. My inclination is that they're the dreaded winter moth, but I'm not sure. I didn't think we had them up here and thought they were more of a spring caterpillar.

 

116436605_2944993228945347_385116636544246991_o.jpg

117257130_2944995922278411_758581724262391628_o.jpg

116175020_2944994165611920_4114966439809122869_o.jpg

117107205_2944995198945150_4025893794920270614_o.jpg

117221204_2944994212278582_3280725995055391547_o.jpg

Gypsy moth caterpillars. So many dead oaks here because of those. 

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1 minute ago, HoarfrostHubb said:

We set out a hummingbird feeder earlier this year.  3 hummingbirds have set up residence somewhere around our house and are going to town. 
 

Just now we are sitting in our screen porch and two of them keep coming up to it and hovering to watch us.    So awesome 

We have dozens of those. They set up shop in the trees in front of my dining room and take turns at the feeders. It's like an airport of tiny birds. I love watching them - they're feisty little suckers. And fortunately our bears don't seem to care at all for the feeders. 

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1 hour ago, HoarfrostHubb said:

We set out a hummingbird feeder earlier this year.  3 hummingbirds have set up residence somewhere around our house and are going to town. 
 

Just now we are sitting in our screen porch and two of them keep coming up to it and hovering to watch us.    So awesome 

Love it.  I’ll see a couple around here in Spring.  Simple things that bring joy to the day to day.

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2 hours ago, tamarack said:

Winter moth or Bruce spanworm (they're somewhat similar in appearance and phenology, moths flying in late fall) would be my guesses.

Thanks. According to some research, it could be either and the two are known to hybridize. The Bruce spanworm is native, but the winter moth isn't. Without DNA analysis it's nearly impossible to tell them apart.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operophtera_bruceata

https://www.maine.gov/dacf/mfs/forest_health/insects/bruce_spanworm.htm

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2 minutes ago, TauntonBlizzard2013 said:

Does anyone know why we suddenly have very very small ants in our kitchen and 2 upstairs bathrooms. They are so small that we just happened to notice them yesterday and today, we saw some in both bathrooms. 

What kind could they be? I put down Terro 

Sugar ants probably.  We get them in the house when things are abnormally dry. 
https://www.terro.com/articles/get-rid-of-sugar-ants-in-3-steps

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47 minutes ago, TauntonBlizzard2013 said:

Does anyone know why we suddenly have very very small ants in our kitchen and 2 upstairs bathrooms. They are so small that we just happened to notice them yesterday and today, we saw some in both bathrooms. 

What kind could they be? I put down Terro 

Had them a month ago, I put down WP Demon around the perimeter of my house and havent seen any since.

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11 hours ago, HoarfrostHubb said:

Sugar ants probably.  We get them in the house when things are abnormally dry. 
https://www.terro.com/articles/get-rid-of-sugar-ants-in-3-steps

We had hundreds of the teeny things appear quite suddenly in June.  Put out some ant traps and some borax-sugar mix (our recipe for carpenter ants) and we're now seeing them only rarely.

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