Looking for a Humminbird Fish Finder On the internet
March 3, 2010 by Janet7 · 29 Comments
HTML clipboardHaving grown up on the New Jersey shore I’ve fond memories of just spending long summer days on the Barnegat Bay fishing or sailing with good friends. I also have memories of coming back home late and needing to explain I had lost track of distance over the water and ended up too far south. Any individual who spent their childhood years around the water can understand the challenge of getting my dad and mom to believe me though it happened over and over again.
Obviously, there isn’t any room for this kind of poor excuse nowadays with all the available Garmin Marine GPS products which are available on the market. Despite the fact that we were hardly ever out of sight of land inside the bay, you nevertheless could lose track of the length of time you could have drifted when fishing. This issue of distance is magnified if you had to sail back against the wind. Using the new Garmin Marine GPS units it is possible to pinpoint your exact location within mere seconds.
One more great marine electronics unit that I would love to have had when young was a good fish finder. Though we were very good figuring out where the fish would hide, our skills simply couldn’t match up against the newest fish finders in the marketplace.
A buddy recently exposed me to the convenience of using an electronic fish finder. He favored the Hummingbird fish finder models which are available in a number of different configurations and styles. They range between somewhat low-cost fundamental fish finders to more advanced chart plotters. I recall testing similar devices a long time ago when they were 1st presented to the marketplace they usually were pricey and often very hard to read. That isn’t true with the modern electronics.
Another intriguing product is the Lowrance fish finder. Of course those who have ever been around the water is familiar with the Lowrance brand. You can see their name dressing many a radar mast on the high priced yachts in the marina. However the Lowrance fish finder isn’t just affordable but very practical. Just like other makes, they offer numerous types of products and you are simply restricted by your budget and fishing needs.
For those who have been away from the water for any length of time as I had been, you actually ought to take the time to look at the large variety of marine electronics that not just will increase your boating pleasure but also will certainly promote your basic safety on the water.
The Durable Landscape Tree – The American Holly
December 8, 2009 by Janet7 · 29 Comments
Broad-leaved evergreens are choice plants for a garden, where they are valued for their permanence and particularly for their color contributions to the winter scene.
American holly is one of these. Its fine qualities are now recognized. There are American hollies in Tower Grove Park in St. Louis which are over 100 years old. Over a century they have been subjected to heat and drought, wet seasons, extreme cold, ice storms and city smoke. This is indicative of the ability of this holly to withstand the changing climatic conditions.
The native habitat of American holly (Ilex opaca) is along the eastern seaboard from Massachusetts to Florida and inland as far as Texas. It is listed as native to southeastern Missouri but is pretty much extinct there. One of the hardiest hollies, it will survive winters as far north as the Iowa-Missouri boundary, but beyond that it might be subject to winter injury in some years. Much interest in holly is centered in Maryland and New Jersey. The Holly Society of America, organized in Baltimore in 1947, is a very lively organization. Holly experts have recognized the superior qualities of certain trees in the East, have named and propagated them, and these are now available as pot plants.
In addition to the American holly, there are several other evergreen hollies that are fairly hardy: crenata or Japanese holly – a black berried kind; and cornuta with its well-known variety ‘Burfordi.’
Not so many years ago just like the sago palm plant, holly was seldom planted because it was considered difficult to transplant and grow. Hollies were raised from seeds and since the sexes are on separate plants there was an interval of many years before one could tell which trees would have berries. A red-berried holly tree is a cheerful sight in winter, so naturally when one plants a holly one hopes it will be the fruiting kind.
It is evident that to have a holly certain to be laden with berries in the winter, we must plant only those which have been propagated by cuttings from trees that are known to produce berries. Many named varieties, propagated this way, are now available from nurserymen. A few such varieties are listed at the end of this article. Furthermore, to insure a good crop of berries, one of the trees in the group must be a male tree (unless there is already one in the neighborhood). The bees are the chief transfer agents of the pollen, which they unwittingly carry from flower to flower in their search for nectar. Thus the flowers on the pistillate, or female, trees are pollinated, and the tree will set fruit.
