I LOVE my MVP... So does fiance!!! I'll Update more later, we are gonna go sit on the porch and enjoy our stormy weather!!!!
Lizzie, how did I know you'd think ripping up floors would be fun? You were my inspiration to get the portrait of Corky done. I just kept thinking of how hard you always work, and kept my nose to the grindstone. And it's done, just in time, too. Here's the final version. Not perfect, since no drawing of mine will ever be, and I had to stop to get it done in time, but acceptable, I hope.
The baked potato salad is in the oven, and I think I'll be about 15 minutes late to the party -- fashionably late.
Excellent job Sandy on all points and the mane looks so much better. I bet you are glad to be done with it.![]()








Well I know it is late but here is my day one experience with my mvp. Mine was almost fully charged and my fiance's was at 3.6v (yellow). So while his charged we both vaped mine. I played with the watt settings and found so far that I really like 8 to 9. All in all the mvp is really amazing and words can't possibly express how much I love this little box.
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The bamboo laminates look nice on the HG tv shows, and reasonably priced. I watch their makeovers when I want to give my brain a rest. It seems like nobody is doing carpet anymore.
Not terribly experienced, but I really like hardwood floors. They look good and clean up well. I think pine is softer, and you have to be careful that sharp chair legs, etc., don't mar the surface. I've had that happen, though I'm not sure what kind of broad-planked pine it was. I guess you get what you pay for. For the kitchen area and mudroom, you might want to consider linoleum in squares. If you get a kind with streaks in it, the dirt sort of blends in, and linoleum is easy to clean. If you do use linoleum squares, get some extra squares so that if one chips 10 years down the road, you can replace it with a matching one. Often, you won't be able to find the exact same one years later.
Pine is softer and not a hardwood but they have used it in southern houses for many decades into the past.
I think I won't mind if it gets scratched up a bit. I can live with that as long as the floor is durable and relatively easy to clean.
With oil, any cosmetic repairs for deep scratches would be easy.I would have to sand and stain. Hubby wants to finish with oil and I want to finish with spar varnish![]()
I'm not talking about a scratch here & there, which can happen even with hardwood floors. We have director's chairs that gouge the wood floor. It looks awful. Fortunately, it's in the back shed, which is sort of rough, anyway.
Sandy, that video was interesting. I think it's the "law of unintended consequences" in action. Letting things get back to a more natural state can have positive benefits, but it is a two edged sword.
My favorite story is when trapping was outlawed in an semi-populated rural area. The area had nice meadows, lots of deer, rabbits, birds and all the trimmings. In a few years the beaver population had increased and they built dams on the streams. That turned those nice meadows into swamps. The trees died, the wildlife moved out and the mosquito and snake population became unmanageable making the neighborhoods around it far less "fun".