I am officially a pro at using a baitcaster. Went down to my local pond and practiced a bit. Easier than it looks.
I haven't fished in years but could handle a caster OK. A light touch of the thumb on the spool does a lot to prevent backlash. The caster I had was a pflueger. My favorite though was a Shakespeare open face that I won in a fishing contest when I was ~15. It came with an Ugly Stick rod and made for a nice rig.I am officially a pro at using a baitcaster. Went down to my local pond and practiced a bit. Easier than it looks.
I'm fortunate enough to have cheap laundry in my apartments. A full load, wash and dry, only costs $1.25 USD. so we are near the same as to cost with yours being $1.38 USD. Compared to a local laundry mat costing at least $5.00 USD for a wash and dry we both get off cheap.It is Monday which means its laundry day.....why do Mondays come around so quickly?
Two washer loads, two dryer loads and the dehumidifier on.....and yes, I have worked out the exact cost, £1.20 for the entire lot, takes around 4 hours in total. Always useful when buying washers and dryers etc...get "A" rated on the consumption department
Oh well, not today. She's now booked in for Wednesday - unless she goes into labour naturally before then.Our son's partner is being induced today
Trampoline?Oh well, not today. She's now booked in for Wednesday - unless she goes into labour naturally before then.
When I had my son in 1982, I had been in hospital for 5 months due to extreme sickness. They decided to kickstart things with the pessary.I was amazed to discover a statistic on the NHS website - 1 in 5 births are now induced
And it's more complicated than 40 years ago. It's now a several stage process;
Cervical sweep
If that doesn't work, prostaglandin pessaries
If that doesn't work, 'break the waters'
Finally if all the previous haven't worked, an oxytocin drip.
I think doctors have to stop playing god and golf and let babies be born when they are ready, and not push em out early so they can play golf on the weekend. Humans have been pushing out babies for several hundred thousand years and doctors have been inducing early for the last 50. They aren't helping the human race by forcing out babies early.
C sections are another thing that shouldn't be done unless it's an emergency. There's a reason babies are born close to their mum's bum, so they pick up bacteria to help get their digestive tract and immune system going. Since C sections became common, there has been a marked rise in people (delivered by C section) having asthma and numerous other allergies and intolerances. And whilst some of this can be blamed on environment, most is due to women saying they want it out the easy way.