Leaves look like wild service, but I've no direct experience of it. Not at all sure.
BTW - possibly useful resource:
http://www.sxbrc.org.uk/projects/hedgerows/hedgerow_tree_book.pdf
Lists WS, but no ID for it.
It really isn't poisonous from personal experience (with the usual provisos of YMMV etc.)
http://www.millionmenu.info/eng/recipes/collection/drecip1069/
http://www.millionmenu.info/eng/recipes/collection/drecip3565/
Bulldog clips or ratchet clamps (with scrap glued in) for me - I find those spring clamps a bit too aggressive for leather. Marvellous for other gluing jobs, however.
Yup, and to complete it - I'm talking about agar in a petri dish .
Added -
Found this on spore propagation:
http://www.cce.cornell.edu/clinton/ag/forestry/mushrooms/Growing%20Gourmet%20Mushrooms%20bw.pdf
http://mushroomspawn.cas.psu.edu/SpawnGrowth.htm...
The plugs I've seen have been fairly well riddled with mycelia by the time they get to the customer; so for DIY, there's no reason why not. Right about the sterilised plugs though - and the spores are usually brought on initially on agar slides.
I used http://www.yell.com to find paint factors using "Automotive paint" as search terms; my nearest is Autocolours ( http://www.autocolours.co.uk ). I'm still working through a tin that I picked up in York a number of years ago...
HTH.
Hmm. Sounds possible. However, fubar, snafu and the likes are derived from military terms; the adoption of glitch probably predates IT.
I *am* working - I'm waiting for a build to complete :D
Glitch, not hack AFAICT.
Speaking of which - does anyone know if glitch really was originally an acronym for Goes Loopy Initially Then Completely Haywire?
Depends what you want to do with them. Fimo and similar are PVC compounds (that can be hardened in a domestic oven); I feel they tend to leach. Even "fired", they still smell of plasticisers...
When diving in murky waters, my blue-white HID (rated at 10W, but claimed to be equivalent to a 25W halogen) cuts through the crud far more effectively than the more yellow halogens.
Well, the usual suggestion is to use a triangular stone for sharpening. Might be possible to do something with a piece of triangular hardwood wrapped in wet & dry?
I've got a Spyderco Sharpmaker, so I've no real need to try except in the spirit of experimentation...
If you want to get *really* funky, have a look at something like Inlace Acrylester...
Link might work:
http://www.texasknife.com/store/s-pages/TKS_MainframeStore.htm?TKS_7HandleMat-3.htm~smain
Possibly a fractionating column?
I remember one from school days that had glass discs all the way down a central column; the column wasn't fixed, so it could bump up & down in the vertical tube.
This would probably make far more sense if I could find a picture...
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