Infused with oats, blackberry and quinoa protein this heat shield mist distributes across strands for protection against heat and color fade. Proteins help to protect hair from damage often seen from coloring, blow drying or other heat tools. Sulfate free hair treatment; no dyes or parabens.
Kiwi Cat Tools 3.9 Crackl
Perfectly sized cleaning tools inspire imaginative play while building early vocabulary and social skills. Little ones can have fun while lending a hand with cleaning essentials including a duster, dustpan, spray bottle, sponge, a bottle of cleaner, and hand vac that rattle and rolls.
Little campers can "rough it" wherever, whenever! Let's go camping with a unique battery powered pretend stove and lantern that make play campsites almost like the real thing. Perfect for independent or collaborative play. Camp set provides a realistic play experience anytime; great for indoors or out! Invites kids to participate in the "grown-up" tasks that are part of family camping trips. Includes lantern, stove, compass watch, shovel, pan, first aid kit, canteen, and cooking tools. Lantern and stove each require 2 AA batteries, not included.
When Zapdos flaps its glittering wings, it releases electricity that can potentially cause thunderstorms. It produces massive crackling and snapping sounds when it flies; these are attributed to the lightning bolts it sheds when airborne. Zapdos reportedly appears only during thunderstorms and gains power when struck by lightning. It is said to live among thunderclouds, but it is rarely seen.
Belligerent by nature and ever thirsting for battle, Galarian Zapdos seeks out opponents stronger than itself so it could test its might. Its powerful legs allow it to perform devastating kicks capable of destroying a dump truck, and it can run across mountains at up to 180 mph (300 km/h). Its wings have atrophied to the point that it can barely fly, but its movements are so swift that they have been compared to a lightning strike. This Pokémon earned the name of its Kantonian counterpart due to the electric-like crackling sounds that come from its feathers rubbing together. It is migratory and appears in the Crown Tundra once every few decades at Dyna Tree Hill.[1]
Galarian Zapdos appears to be based on ratites, with kiwis in particular matching its brown feathers and long beak. Due to its speed, it may also be based on a roadrunner. Its powerful kicks might also draw influence from the secretarybird, a mostly terrestrial bird that hunts by stomping and kicking its prey. Its Shiny coloration is similar to Kantonian Zapdos's regular coloration.
Now, it seems I hear that someone buys some ready-to-go painted-up kit from a magazine, then takes it to a garage to have someone else bolt it in, cuz the owner substitutes money for the lack of tools and motivation. Pffffft.
Perhaps stretching a bit, but wondering if the houses-of-knowledge under-construction are being built on poor foundations - with lots of symbolism and style as compared to the intrinsic value and substance. Or is it that the ability to use today's tools has become more important and more valuable than understanding them? Here lies my interest in the various education topics, articles, comments, and feedbacks presented.
As I hear tell, the computer also has a hard, unresettable flag that sets if one tries to dodge miles by driving with the speedo cable unhooked. Of course, one has to know this, and the tools and know how to look at the flag...
The extendable magnet - looks like an old-school car antenna - is one of the most used tools in my box. Nothing like that feeling when poking around to hear that 'tic' when the magnet grabs the elusive ferrous item. Doesn't work so well on plastic items :-)
Yeah, it's a "pick-through-and-find-it" puzzle, of sorts. He wanted to know what that "thing" was on the floor, just behind the drivers seat. I told him it was a toolbox.(Probably a steering-"tree"-mount?) He says, "Ya' sure couldn't put many tools in there, though."
There are the two pen and pencil stands full of pens and pencils. I need to see if any of them still work. I know some were mighty fine writing tools and some have printed reference to fine companies and individuals I've done business with.
To locate the program you click Start, Programs, Accessories, System tools, defragmenter. Hope that does it. Shutting down everyday is important too. With the Mac I could just let it go to sleep and not have to worry. A pc needs it's rest!
I'm with Donk - the late 80s / early 90s seemed to be the best of both worlds - enough technology for enhanced mechanical and electrical reliability and reduced troubleshooting time, but not so much complexity that one requires high dollar training and tools.
fxpwt, The new format for onboard diagnostics was a government mandate and only applied to federal emmisions issues. It did over the years seem to help in synchronizing the nomenplature of those code cards. Fast forward and $3,000 scan tools could read all model info but some areas still required dealership interaction. I'm not sure where it has led since I've been out of the loop since early '80s.
A church key was one of the original multi-purpose tools, enabling one to drink their favorite beverage, whether it required popping the bottle cap using one end, or puncturing a drinking hole and a venting hole with the other end in the days before those handy-dandy pull tabs.
The electrical part of the project involved a lot of wire-pulling and terminating. Was somewhat bummed out when I saw that the extra electrician requested from the Core Maintenance group was 'the' female - the only non-male craftsman at the plant. Perfect! Not exactly known for being an enthusiastic blazin' ball o' fire, but very well-known for painting her tools DayGlo pink - the pre-engraving theft-deterrent device.
I new an old blacksmith back in the day that fashioned his grandson a mini-car that was pretty impressive considering the tools and material he had to work with but it wasn't modeled to look like any particular car.
Heather - I have a group of undergraduates and they go out and they bring us soil samples and then they take the soil samples and they search for bacteriophages. So far, we've found about a half-dozen bacteriophages. We've sequenced 3 and what the students are able to do is find their very own bacteriophage, completely unique, it's never been seen before. They're able to name them and then we sequenced the genome of each of these bacteriophages. And so, the students actually get the opportunity to look at the DNA of a completely novel organism and using the kinds of bioinformatic tools that we have access to today. Figure out where the genes are and what the genes are in this completely new entity. The undergraduates in my class are going to be publishing a paper with me on this.
Heather - Yes. So this is a pseudomonas that's like really beneficial to plants, but it's very closely related to Pseudomonas originosa which is the really problematic agent in cystic fibrosis. It's also very closely related to Pseudomonas Syringae actinidiae which is the kiwifruit pathogen. And so, we're hoping that in the future, we can find bacteriophages that you would be able to - for example, if you had a big load of pollen that was headed on into the kiwifruit industry here in New Zealand. you could spread these bacteriophages onto...
David - Well actually, bumblebees have one thing in their advantage. So, some of the studies, especially with kiwi fruit, I found that one of these bumblebee workers does the job of 50 honeybee workers. So, that starts to even out a little bit more, but you still need a whole lot of these and these are simply too expensive. So, what we're trying to do is develop ways that growers can harness the power of wild bumblebees because there's bumblebees out there in the environment anyway. The key thing for the grower is that they like to count things. If they can't actually count and say, "I have 10 colonies of bumblebees," they won't change their management at all. They'll just bring in the same amount of honeybees. So, we want to give them away to find out how many bumblebee colonies they have in their orchards and then give them tools to manage those colonies. So, what we've developed up on your screen there is the picture of our bumblebee bunker. And that's mark 2.0. It looks kind of like a popcorn - not popcorn, the rice crispy slice. 2ff7e9595c
Comments