Not exact matches
Probert: And so partnering with them to install for your home use though and I guess the different chargers
on this stage
on the market a lot of them are very structured, you got to built it in your
house, obviously you got out the electrical supply
anyway but you built the charger physically in your
house, or if you move you know what you do, you have to go
buy a new charger.
Two maybe three years ago I
bought a bag of Chicken Jerky at Cost - Co thinking it would be a healthy treat for my Pug, after eating these treats I noticed he Mugsy would drink water like he could not get enough... Then one night he kept coming to me with his ears laid back and hanging with a look in his eye that I knew something was wrong, went to my daughters
house as she is really into dogs and hoping she could figure it out, well she noticed he could not pee no matter how much he tried, so rushed him to the vet, thank God, had I waited he would have died as his bladder was full of crystals and was near rupturing,
anyway the vet catheterized him after putting him under anesthesia as it was so painful, after all was said and done and $ 1, ooo.oo later, he ended up
on a special diet which we kept him
on for well over a year... decided to try a good, but less expensive dog food, had his urine checked and he was doing fine... I believe it was the chicken jerky and the salt content, but of course I can not be sure and I do not remember the brand... Thankfully he has had no more occurrences, needless to say he does not get chicken jerky anymore and definitely nothing from China at least not that I know of.
-- CREDO calls State Dept's EIS
on Keystone XL «coward's logic» in statement: «The State Department's environmental assessment is a vehicle for the White
House to test the waters to see if the public will
buy its false and cynical argument that the Canadian Tar Sands are going to get burned
anyway, and so the government's chief climate scientist's assertion that Keystone XL will spell «game over» for the climate may be true but is essentially irrelevant,» said Becky Bond, political director at CREDO.
This concluded that along with a rise in
house prices, the actual effect was limited in any event in that most people who
bought with the benefit of the relief would have
bought anyway — raising the question, then and now, of whether the money would have been better spent
on genuinely affordable
housing for those who would not otherwise be able to
buy.»
An example of this would be
buying a
house you intended to tear down
anyway, which happened to catch
on fire.
Since we
bought the
house we have been tackling the backyard in phases, because, well, money doesn't grow
on trees, but I am still holding out hope for The Powerball or Mega Millions
Anyway, phase one was the paver patio.