Always

Vote like the lives of your children depend on your doing so!

Monday, August 12, 2013

Do You Type with 2 Fingers or Ten?

ATTENTION...ATTENTION:

SCHOOL YEAR 2014 - 2015 - MOST LIKELY IN THE SPRING


YOUR 3RD GRADER WILL BE REQUIRED TO COMPLETE A 
STANDARDIZED TEST ONLINE. 

Are they Ready? Are you Ready?

Speed and Accuracy: In order to ensure success, the Computer Keyboard and all its functionality must become as easily utilized as the pencil, pen, crayon, or paint brush.

Buy a program and have your children practice or go to a free online site and have them practice. Some purchased programs combine the learning of the keys with fun games. The time is now, you have no choice. Begin now or face failure. The 1st set of 3rd graders required to take the test is already behind. 


How many of your 8th graders are ready? All parents must be concerned with students learning to type with ten fingers. Typing or keying in DATA must become 2nd nature to our children. They must learn now in order to compete in the school building and in the job market.

Try this online TUTORIAL..http://www.sense-lang.org/typing/tutor/keyboarding.php?lang=EN

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Where Are the Trolleys?

In the parking garage.





It is August 7, 2013. The Trolley's were discontinued on June 30, 2013. They were supposed to be returned to the Department of Transportation. As you can see, they are still parked in the Englewood City Parking Garage. There has been a great deal up push back from the Community, but we were ignored. Like many services that were not used by a  larger cross section of the community it was discontinued when the City was called upon to fund it. No bond ordinance was floated in an effort to save it.

Saturday, June 29, 2013

Dwight Morrow High School Alumni Say Goodbye to the Trolley


June 30, 2013 the Englewood Trolley will be decommissioned and returned to the
the Department of Transportation







Sunday, June 23, 2013

A Century Old Garden Spot on the Mend

percolation test (from percolation, colloquially called a perc test) is a test to determine the absorption rate of soil for a septic drain field or "leach field". The results of a percolation test are required to properly design a septic system. In its broadest terms, percolation testing is simply observing how quickly a known volume of water dissipates into the subsoil of a drilled hole of known surface area. While every jurisdiction will have its own laws regarding the exact calculations for the length of line, depth of pit, etc., the testing procedures are the same. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Percolation_test
In general, sandy soil will absorb more water than soil with a high concentration of clay or where the water table is close to the surface.
A percolation test, or perk test, is a way to evaluate the absorption of a particular area of soil. Perk tests are important because septic systems cannot be designed appropriately without understanding the absorption rate of the soil. Regulator agencies require that all land undergoes a perk test before a septic tank is installed. Even if a septic system is not being installed, a perk test can be beneficial in that it determines the quality of the soil in a given tract of land. 


Unfortunately our garden has been transformed into a new garden. We must begin at the beginning. The soil that replaced the long tilled and maintained garden soil that was here previously does not have the same absorption quality. The loam is not of the same high quality. It is going to require some really hard work to get that great loam back. We are going to have to start from the beginning. We already see that the present conditions involve very slow absorption rates. We are forced to change the current drainage problem created by the topsoil removal and the packing down of the subsoil in the planting site to decrease runoff and to make it a garden space all over again. We need lots of compost and organic matter to accomplish this.

The remaining soil has a high content of clay and it is draining slowly. We must move forward and rebuild the great loam created in over a 100 years of gardening in which compost of various kinds were added to the soil. A good loam  has just the right combination of sand, clay, and silt. Soils with high contents of sand will drain too quickly and high contents of clay will cause standing water.  A good loam will minimize the amount of standing water in low areas of the garden plot. Mr. Gainey's across the garden plot way of laying the rows will also work to decrease run off and increase absorption rate. Those previous conditions that made this a good space for gardening will take quite a few years to replace.  http://www.veggiegardener.com/how-to-measure-soil-drainage/