One of the hazards of the Internet is the ease with which one can join a site, participate in it, then lose track of it, only to stumble across things again. About two and one-half years ago I posted 4 videos to YouTube. Life intervened, sending me down another path. Months passed. Memory faded. I knew the videos were on YouTube, I just couldn't locate them again! So I started another YouTube account.
Of my original uploads, one had to do with my use of the Critter to make pulp for papermaking, another one was about our honeybees (who have since swarmed off into the wild blue yonder), and two more videos which were posted during the high gasoline prices a couple of years back.
The links to my "forgotten" videos are below. I only found them because someone made a comment about one of the videos and through that comment I found my "lost" videos! Thank you, kind someone. (Some might think the video clips deserved to stay lost, but it was like seeing old friends again for me.)
Maiden Run of the Critter
Honeybees in southwest Oklahoma
Saving gasoline in Rural Oklahoma, Part I
Saving gasoline in Rural Oklahoma, Part II
Welcome to “Life in a Flyover State“. Sometimes I have little clips, pictures or thoughts that have no place on my genealogy blogs. I guess they could be posted there, but it’s nice to have some semblance of order. After all, this is a "fly over state." Our land is laid out in rectangular sections - no meandering section lines for us!
Showing posts with label YouTube. Show all posts
Showing posts with label YouTube. Show all posts
Wednesday, December 29, 2010
Sunday, December 5, 2010
Solar Power
Previously on this blog I have written about how we were without power for 11 days earlier in 2010 because of a horrific ice storm. (See Ice Storm of January 2010) While we had talked about alternative power sources before the ice storm, we never actually did anything about it -- it was just talk. Then when everything went dark and cold for over a week, we decided to make changes as soon as we were on our feet again.
My husband says that we are too far along in life to try wind power even though we live in one of the windiest states in the nation and we live out in the middle of a cow pasture. But he's right. The start up costs for wind power are prohibitive for ordinary people, which is a shame. Start up costs are at least $20,000 -- and that's doing it yourself.
However, Harbor Freight had a deal on solar panels and my husband thought we would experiment with that idea. In addition to living in one of the windiest states, we also live in a very sunny part of our state. He ordered the panels and they arrived promptly. Then he found a video produced by user GoatHollow on YouTube which we found helpful and entertaining about installing and using solar panels from Harbor Freight.
Thank you, GoatHollow!
My husband built a frame for the panels and we installed them on top of my little house, "Summersgaze." Right now the solar panels are powering two lights and my husband is also using the panels to recharge different batteries around our place. We are pleased with the solar panels and if our little experiment continues to work, we may purchase more.
My husband says that we are too far along in life to try wind power even though we live in one of the windiest states in the nation and we live out in the middle of a cow pasture. But he's right. The start up costs for wind power are prohibitive for ordinary people, which is a shame. Start up costs are at least $20,000 -- and that's doing it yourself.
However, Harbor Freight had a deal on solar panels and my husband thought we would experiment with that idea. In addition to living in one of the windiest states, we also live in a very sunny part of our state. He ordered the panels and they arrived promptly. Then he found a video produced by user GoatHollow on YouTube which we found helpful and entertaining about installing and using solar panels from Harbor Freight.
Thank you, GoatHollow!
My husband built a frame for the panels and we installed them on top of my little house, "Summersgaze." Right now the solar panels are powering two lights and my husband is also using the panels to recharge different batteries around our place. We are pleased with the solar panels and if our little experiment continues to work, we may purchase more.
| A box full of three solar panels from Harbor Freight |
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| My husband installing panels on roof of Summersgaze. I helped him lift the panels onto the roof. |
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