Roger A. Shrubber
Well-Known Member
that aint sand, thats rocks...Nice. There is a beach near me, Cambria that has sand looking just like that
that aint sand, thats rocks...Nice. There is a beach near me, Cambria that has sand looking just like that
tiny rocks. The avg is around 1/8 in.that aint sand, thats rocks...
Thanks man, today was the first day I didn't have a full on flare up yet. I can feel it just want to start up, but it is like one or two pricks rather than a hundred at the same time.drink it for a day with half a spoon full, the next day with a full spoon full will taste a lot better
Looks like we may have found the cause thenThanks man, today was the first day I didn't have a full on flare up yet. I can feel it just want to start up, but it is like one or two pricks rather than a hundred at the same time.
Yeah, they use the same argument with me. I play with them just so far (so I don't get cited) but you can't win. I'll point out the all the giant rock formations in the water, the mountain slides in context past present and future of constant ongoing erosion and geologic activity and note that 100's the amount of sand in my bucket has just been produced as we've been talking. I'll then dump my bucket, meander back towards my car, have a smoke and then refill the bucket when they leave. I use it as a dressing for my bonsai's and shit.has he caught you taking it? have you explained the difference between rocks and sand to him?......
i live right next to the great smoky mtn national park, they're very big on not taking stuff out of the park, and i can understand, over ten million people a year come through the park, if everyone took one flower or one rock, in a few years it would be the "big hole in the ground national park"
I've always wondered where they get that stuff.Nice. There is a beach near me, Cambria that has sand looking just like that
I've always wondered where they get that stuff.
They must have a dying process because you can get vivid colors also. Most people want a natural color. I actually wanted purple for the other place, the owner of the epoxy stone company talked me out of it, insisting this color perfectly compliments musket brown walls. So I went with it.
They do have a color chip that matches that beach. Lol.
These are all natural colored, the coast is a subduction zone,about 40 mi west of the where the N. American and Pacific plates meet. Just tons of extreme deep earth metamorphic and igneous rock. I posted some pics of that area a few years back, for some reason I can't post pics from my computer any more so I can't repost. Anyway, I was on the NA side at the San Andreas fault looking a across a deep valley to the Pacific plate. All around were these heavy igneous and metamorphic rocks, boulders, hillsides of various colors. Lots of serpentine (greens, whites and reds). Just fascinating stuff.I've always wondered where they get that stuff.
They must have a dying process because you can get vivid colors also. Most people want a natural color. I actually wanted purple for the other place, the owner of the epoxy stone company talked me out of it, insisting this color perfectly compliments musket brown walls. So I went with it.
They do have a color chip that matches that beach. Lol.