Hard water can build up in the soil. There's some plants I've had in the same pot for a long time where the top of the soil starts to look a little "crusty", even though i don't have particularly hard water. If you have a lot of lime scale, your water pH is likely high, which can make it hard for plants to pickup nutrients.
evasive_chimpanzee
Pro tip for killing the lanternflies: they are super quick and jumpy, but it takes a bit for them to build up a second jump, so once they land on their first, it's easy to squash them.
Air conditioning
This is a great example of why to check before killing/removing any bugs from your plants. Same thing when you see eggs planted on your leaves. It would suck to crush a bunch of assassin bug eggs on a plant.
I had yellow jackets build a nest inside one of my potted plants last year. On one hand, it's a little sketchy, on the other hand, wasps and Hornets are great multipurpose predators if they aren't located where they will bother you much.
Yeah, as someone with some all-clad, it's really nothing special. I heard that the handles are geared towards maintaining the ability to prevent twisting of the pan in your hand while using pot holders/towels, and i think they work well for that.
I strongly agree with this. You aren't necessarily going to get fancy brand names, but you can get a stainless frying pan with a big billet of aluminum on the bottom for heat distribution for $20. Spending 5 times that amount basically just gets you a mirror finish, a brand name, and the ability to put it in a dishwasher (and who does that with pans?).
Carbon steel pans are another one. You shouldn't need to spend more than $10 on a carbon steel pan. The materials are cheap and they can be easily mass produced. There's nothing that should make it expensive.
Basically an allied country having a base in your country means that any attacker would presumably also have to attack your ally, drawimg them into the conflict. Obviously agreements like NATO article 5 can do that, but people can back out of agreements. Physical presence is more binding than paper.
The nuts at this stage smell very citrusy, almost. Apparently that doesnt last for nocino, but it might for the "molasses". Also, be forewarned that the nuts are light green-whitish on the inside when you first cut them open, but they rapidly start to oxidize and the liquid inside starts to darken, and I bet it could stain your hands/clothes/cutting board if you don't rinse quickly.
Technically, you can have 1 reservation on their system with multiple cars, so if you booked like a 15 person site, you could arrive in 4 separate cars. The receipt reflects this with a line item of "vehicles=x". For mine, it says "vehicles=0", so somehow it recognizes that the gibberish wasn't a real car, but i was still required to do it.
pH doesn't necessarily tell the right story if you are concerned about acidity for your teeth, GI tract, or taste. Something like distilled water will turn acidic with a pH of 5.8 due to co2 absorption. There's barely any "acid" there, though, it just doesn't have any buffering capability compared to water with some dissolved solids in it (like tap water). What really matters is what they call "titratable acidity".
https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-319-45776-5_22
They sell a "single dose" hopper that in my opinion isn't worth it. It's basically just giving you bellows, which you could just buy yourself and stick with your existing hopper. I'm curious what other mods there are, though, so let me know what you find.
Try the Norwegian Paralysis if you haven't had it.