is filling out his status report.
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surf1944: well, it's been quite a ride. It's something this puppy hasn't had the pep to perform for some time.
More nations, such as Spain, will be turning desalination to access potable water for the populace. The recent volume pick up is a good sign.
Look out! The gap has filled.
For the Bureau of Licensing Bureau:
wall: ah, my literary excursions are not what help me sleep at night. You can trust me on that one. If there’s a problem, then my masturbation papers come in with a handy excuse. Snick! Snick!
wall: there’s a time and a place for everything. The infamous Baptist Church congregation protesting military funerals isn’t one of them.
On one of my shamming excursions in ’Nam, I was able to catch a general’s chopper to Cam Rahn Bay to soak off the rear, for a few days. There was a table outside of a cafeteria in CRB. Etched in the table, was two pieces of graffiti, among others. One read, “I will come back and conquer this place.” (PFC Billy Westmoreland, 1959) The other of note: “We are the unwilling, led by the unqualified, doing the unnecessary for the ungrateful.”
Most soldiers in Viet Nam didn’t want to be there. They had little choice, especially given public school and media propaganda. This had a lot to do with the camaraderie of ‘Nam soldiers. We didn’t believe in a cause. We just believed in ourselves. We had to survive.
Just because the State Department and the CIA had manipulated events and circumstances in ‘Nam, that didn’t lay any genuine blame on the soldiers over there. If one wanted to run with that tact, then all those getting high in the states were doing more to support the war and the CIA than the GIs. It’s quite convenient for groupthink and personal dogmas and isms to have pet whipping boys and goats. Soldiers returning from ‘Nam know this all too well. But what did those holier-than-thou practioneers do with the experience? Why, they continued to support the NWO and the corporate monopolies and the guvy toadies.
Vets, like me, worked ferociously to bring down the evil system. We were still spit on and railed against. There were far more stupid animals than us who were pawns and knights and bishops and rooks for the NWO push.
Today, we’re still watchmen and a different kind of soldier and have a better understanding of what is really patriotism. Our sense of brotherhood is as strong as ever. Eddie Freeman was one of us. “He ain’t heavy; he’s my brother.” If we had more Eddie Freemans, we’d have less O’Bombers.
We had another saying in ‘Nam: “Viet Nam, if you haven’t been there, then STFU [fill in the blanks].”
This ‘Nam vet boycotts Stonybrook Farms, among others. I ask, “Who are the morons and pawns who buys their stuff and support GMOs?”
I can spend hours on a soapbox, and not get tired or even too proud, but I’ll just close with a salute to Eddie Freeman. That’s what the post was about.
FJ: I'd be more excited if the volume had some oomph to it.
IxCimi: you sound so much like me. You are ahead of me, as far as permanently leaving the U.S. However, I have long had a plan and have spent months, at a time, in other nations. I have it narrowed down to certain Latin American or African countries. I have mentally, emotionally, and physically prepared myself to instantly live elsewhere. I try to go low-tech as much as possible. I haven’t used a tiller or chain saw in years. A specific application of what you touched on would be in the area of tool making. Making handles for a maddox, shovel, hoe, and/or axe is relatively easy to learn and accomplish. The heads require more skills and resources.
Again, I bring up this site on this board, but their resources the best for the total package in one location. Anyone can visit them, study with them, and/or purchase unique books, tools, and seeds. http://www.echonet.org/
So many things that are taken for granted can be persisted through self-sufficient means. It takes a will and a vision.
excel: naw, their rain is responsible for injury to my personal property. They are in gross neglect. It's a breach of fiduciary.
sumisu: ah yes, yet another paradigm shift from conventional gardening mythology. Weed is simply a concept. Dandelion and squirrel were two common foods that I ate, as a boy, growing up in rural Connecticut. The forest was a natural food forest with beech nuts and birch bark and twigs along with fiddler ferns and low-bush blueberries and wintergreen just to name a few. These "weeds" lend themselves well to temperate food forests.
IxCimi had an excellent post on tropical/sub-tropical food forests a number of days past.
EZ: yeppers, but one of the puppetmasters reigned supreme.
"Military men are dumb, stupid animals to be used as pawns for foreign policy." Henry Kissinger, quoted by Bob Woodward in The Final Days, 1976
The illegal we do immediately. The unconstitutional takes a little longer. "[The New World Order] cannot happen without U.S. participation, as we are the most significant single component. Yes, there will be a New World Order, and it will force the United States to change it's perceptions." -- Henry Kissinger, World Affairs Council Press Conference, Regent Beverly Wilshire Hotel , April 19th 1994
PegnVA: it’s not so easy and certainly far from cut and dried. While I am personally against a strong federal government, there is logic behind actually utilizing governmental powers to protect the denizens of the nation. I capitulate that The SEC, conceptually, to be about the most necessary regulatory agency, in theory. However, examine what this bureaucracy is truly about. In the environment, that The SEC was created, it seemed quite practical to the uninformed. There were certain unbridled practices (i.e. bucket shops), which should have been considered criminal, by existing statutes, which were laid to blame for the Great Crash. Yet, it was mainly the manipulations of insiders of and in The Federal Reserve that caused the great wealth transfer: both of businesses and of the federal government itself.
The management of The SEC has always been staffed with its toadies and sycophants. The SEC suffers from quintessential bureaucratic corruption, whether governmental or corporate. The workers simply do not work. The infamous “it’s your turn in the barrel” came from The SEC offices. That’s their mentality. More staffing and more funding won’t change this culture. The Federal Reserve also has so many polies at their call. Barney Frank stalled out the call for an audit of The Federal Reserve late last year. Ron Paul now chairs that committee.
Before we can clean house with The SEC, we need to shut down The Federal Reserve. In the end, The SEC is no different from the nefarious FDA. They do the bidding of the very ones that they are supposed to be policing. It’s always been that way. They are just tools for monopoly. Still, The FDA poses a far greater threat to the American populace. Long before the advent of the whore from my native Connecticut, Rosa DeLauro, and the entire Monsanto Administration, The FDA protected big pharma, et al. Let’s not forget the role of The ABTT Networks in this matter. We need to look no further than the commissioning of sainthood to the traitor, Gabby Giffords. Also, let’s not forget that she was one of three donees of Keith Olbermann. These people have names and faces, but the populace makes excuses for them, especially with any scintilla of ideology and/or partisan leanings.
The financial meltdown of Middle America is directly front-lined from The Federal Reserve. The diluted and devalued currency goes to bailouts and contractors first. The trickle down becomes a drop in the bucket.
I haven't played this a bit with the low volume. However, the BB widening could stir up some interest.
oo_buck: I'm glad you posted this. I was looking to see if someone had. Here's what I came across:
Genetic Engineering: Scientists warn of link between dangerous new pathogen and Monsanto’s Roundup
by Rady Ananda
Global Research, February 21, 2011
Urges USDA to rescind approval of genetically engineered alfalfa: “In layman’s terms, it should be treated as an emergency.”
A plant pathologist experienced in protecting against biological warfare recently warned the USDA of a new, self-replicating, micro-fungal virus-sized organism which may be causing spontaneous abortions in livestock, sudden death syndrome in Monsanto’s Roundup Ready soy, and wilt in Monsanto’s RR corn.
Dr. Don M. Huber, who coordinates the Emergent Diseases and Pathogens committee of the American Phytopathological Society, as part of the USDA National Plant Disease Recovery System, warned Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack that this pathogen threatens the US food and feed supply and can lead to the collapse of the US corn and soy export markets. Likewise, deregulation of GE alfalfa “could be a calamity,” he noted in his letter (reproduced in full below).
On January 27, Vilsack gave blanket approval to all genetically modified alfalfa. Following orders from President Obama, he also removed buffer zone requirements. This is seen as a deliberate move to contaminate natural crops and destroy the organic meat and dairy industry which relies on GM-free alfalfa. Such genetic contamination will give the biotech industry complete control over the nation's fourth largest crop. It will also ease the transition to using GE-alfalfa as a biofuel.
"My letter to Secretary Vilsack was a request to allocate necessary resources to understand potential nutrient-disease interactions before making (in my opinion) an essentially irreversible decision on deregulation of RR alfalfa," Huber told Food Freedom in an email.
But, he cautions:
"Although the organism has been associated with infertility and spontaneous abortions in animals, associations are not always evidence of cause in all cases and do not indicate what the predisposing conditions might be. These need to be established through thorough investigation which requires a commitment of resources.
"I hope that the Secretary will make such a commitment because many growers/producers are experiencing severe increases in disease of both crops and animals that are threatening their economic viability."
On Feb. 16, Paul Tukey of SafeLawn telephoned Dr. Huber who told him, “I believe we’ve reached the tipping point toward a potential disaster with the safety of our food supply. The abuse, or call it over use if you will, of Roundup, is having profoundly bad consequences in the soil. We’ve seen that for years. The appearance of this new pathogen may be a signal that we’ve gone too far.”
Tukey also conveyed that while Huber admits that much further study is needed to definitively confirm the link between Round-Up and the pathogen, “In the meantime, he said, it’s grossly irresponsible of the government to allow Roundup Ready alfalfa, which would bring the widespread spraying of Roundup to millions of more acres and introduce far more Roundup into the food supply.”
Huber, who has been studying plant pathogens for over 50 years and glyphosate for over 20 years, has noticed an increase in pathogens associated with the herbicide. In an interview with the Organic and Non-GMO Report last May, he discussed his team's conclusions that glyphosate can, “significantly increase the severity of various plant diseases, impair plant defense to pathogens and diseases, and immobilize soil and plant nutrients rendering them unavailable for plant use.”
This is because “glyphosate stimulates the growth of fungi and enhances the virulence of pathogens.” In the last 15-18 years, the number of plant pathogens has increased, he told the Non-GMO Report. “There are more than 40 diseases reported with use of glyphosate, and that number keeps growing as people recognize the association (between glyphosate and disease).”
In his undated letter to the USDA, Huber highlighted "the escalating frequency of infertility and spontaneous abortions over the past few years in US cattle, dairy, swine, and horse operations." He reported that spontaneous abortions occurred in nearly half the cattle where high concentrations of the pathogen were found in their feed. Huber notes that the wheat "likely had been under weed management using glyphosate."
Other Research Supports Huber's Warning
Last year, Argentine scientists found that Roundup causes birth defects in frogs and chickens. Publishing their paper, "Glyphosate-Based Herbicides Produce Teratogenic Effects on Vertebrates by Impairing Retinoic Acid Signaling," in Chemical Research in Toxicology, Alejandra Paganelli, et al. also produced a large set of reports for the public at GMWatch:
"In Argentina and Paraguay, doctors and residents living in GM soy producing areas have reported serious health effects from glyphosate spraying, including high rates of birth defects as well as infertility, stillbirths, miscarriages, and cancers. Scientific studies collected in the new report confirm links between exposure to glyphosate and premature births, miscarriages, cancer, and damage to DNA and reproductive organ cells."
One of the researchers, Andrés Carrasco, told GM Watch, “The findings in the lab are compatible with malformations observed in humans exposed to glyphosate during pregnancy.”
When trying to present these findings to the public in August of last year, Dr. Carrasco and the audience were attacked by 100 thugs who beat them and their cars with clubs, leaving one person paralyzed, Amnesty International reported. Local police and a wealthy GM rice grower were implicated in that attack.
In a 2009 study, researchers linked organ damage with consumption of Monsanto’s GM maize, based on Monsanto's trial data. As we reported last year, Gilles-Eric Séralini, et al., concluded that the raw data from all three GMO studies reveal that novel pesticide residues will be present in food and feed and may pose grave health risks to those consuming them.
In a 2005 paper published in Environmental Health Perspectives, Sophie Richard, et al. compared the toxicity of Roundup with that of just glyphosate, its active ingredient. They found Roundup to be more toxic, owing to its adjuvants. They also found that endocrine disruption increased over time so that one-tenth the amount prescribed for agriculture caused cell deformation. Citing other research, they also reported that Roundup adjuvants bond with DNA.
Such negative findings probably explain why Monsanto and other biotech firms so vociferously block independent research.
Tom Laskawy at Grist estimated that in 2008, nearly 200 million pounds of glyphosate were poured onto US soils. But, he notes that “exact figures are a closely guarded secret thanks to the USDA’s refusal to update its pesticide use database after 2007." This figure more than doubles what the EPA estimates was used in 2000.
Rady Ananda is a frequent contributor to Global Research. Global Research Articles by Rady Ananda
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=23303
Whoopie! The company is making money. Hmmm, no one is interested.
Well, the ole retracing to the gap seems to be underway.
Gmenfan: with the spectre of the U.S. dollar no longer being the world's reserve currency and peak oil, one must have an entirely different set of strategies and tactics with and in and out of the market. Are Corning shares "pricey" compared to a bushel of corn in 2011? GLW is not the end-all; however our perspectives are massively altered.
GEO928: what total nonsense. Your post means what? This isn't about bandying worthless factoids in lieu of depth of the subject matter. This is not like serving up two-day-old, cold oatmeal or a piece of raw meat to a caged lion. It is too bad that you do not have a point to make.
Are you making the claim that the DTTC is squeaky-clean?
Yes_______________________ No __________________________________
Amerikkka lies on its deathbed. Egyptians were able to take to the streets in consecutive days and some governmental change, whether for better or worse, has occurred. While the event has the hoof prints of Amerikkkan intelligence modus operandi oozing out of every pore, there is something far simpler to consider. Why isn’t it happening in Amerikkka?
The reason cannot be that populace should not have concerns and even genuine fears. However, the Goebbelsesque apparatus, especially utilizing the partnership of The ABTT Networks, has long since anesthetized the sheople. The lessons of history have not been learned. Thus, the wash, rinse, and repeat cycles.
One of the most successful tools of populace control has been fractionalization. The populace has been indoctrinated that events, philosophies, factions, isms, and schisms are linear. They have also been persuaded to play out these in a zero-sum arena. The apparatus easily manages this phenomenon with the adherents of each fraction possessing single-issue cadence.
This was first axiomatic to me, when I was fighting against The Con-Con. For example, hard-core feminists refused to cooperate with anti-abortion people and visa-versa. At stake was each one’s ability and right to carry on and express their beliefs, but planned opposition had been so engrained that they would rather hang separately than hang together. Again, during the Iran-Contra Hearings, one’s opinion of Oliver North was solely dictated by what fraction that someone belonged to. Almost everyone missed Rep. Jack Brooks’ attempt to expose the COG. Hmmmm, Ollie and The O’Bomber want the same thing.
Back at ya, buddy. Do yourself a favor and do the DD on this company and then you can make a decision. On side note, Corning has been the longest that I've held a position in about three years.
Hey rascal: are you holding Corning or did you just drop by to say, "Hello?" The company has a great thing going. I hope they don't lose focus. I'm obviously not alone in that department. I don't remember you and me talking stocks on IHub. What a concept.
maybe_this_time: you and others may need to hurry. These folks are sold out!
http://www.heirloomseeds.com/main/index.html
Major Lithium Producer to Transfer Cathode Patents
Wed, Feb 2, 2011 Feature Articles, Lithium Articles
By Dave Brown —Exclusive to Lithium Investing News
A top lithium producer, FMC Corporation (NYSE:FMC) recently announced that Belgium-based materials technology group Umicore (EBR:UMI) will be acquiring a series of FMC product and process patents covering “high end active cathode materials.” This patented technology increases the performance and safety for lithium-ion batteries that utilize lithium cobalt oxide (LCO) and mixed metal lithium oxides (NMC) as the cathode material. The patent family covers a unique way of stabilizing cathode material at the molecular structure level that avoids degradation of battery performance even at severe operating conditions such as high temperature, high charge and discharge rate and large number of cycles. Ultimately, the patented technology could lower the costs for li-ion batteries.
Umicore’s activities are focused on multiple business segments with global industrial operations to serve a broad customer base. Umicore generates approximately 50 percent of its revenues and spends approximately 80 percent of its research and development budget in the area of clean technology, such as emission control catalysts, materials for rechargeable batteries and photovoltaics, fuel cells, and recycling.
The market responded strongly to the news release from FMC sending share prices to the $79.96 range from the previous trading session on a volume of shares traded over 24 percent greater than the previous day. On Monday, January 3rd analysts at Credit Suisse upgraded ratings and price target for shares of FMC from $90.00 to $100.00 in a research note to investors.
Leveraged strategic alliances
Umicore has additionally formed a partnership with electric automobile manufacturer Tesla Motors (NASDAQ:TSLA) to establish a lithium-ion battery recycling program in Europe. Under the agreement, Umicore will recycle Tesla’s used lithium-ion battery packs, converting the materials into an alloy that will be refined into individual components such as cobalt, nickel and other metals. During the final recycling step, Umicore will transform, via specialized processing methods, the remaining cobalt into lithium cobalt oxide, which it will then market to battery manufacturers.
A byproduct of Umicore’s lithium-ion battery recycling is an inert slag material, which contains calcium oxides and lithium and can be utilized in the construction of roadways. Umicore claims that its proprietary battery recycling technology, which recovers metals, cuts back on the need to extract these components from the ground, reducing carbon dioxide emissions by as much as 70 percent.
Tesla claims that its battery packs will last, on average, seven to ten years under normal driving condition of approximately 160,000 kilometres. Additionally, Tesla highlights that drivers will not be charged an extra fee for recycling spent batteries.
European development
Last week a report from the Future Transport Fuel Expert Group on Clean Transport Systems (CTS) was presented to the European Commission’s Mobility and Transport division. The study was designed to assess possible scenarios that can provide full substitution of fossil oil as fuel for transport by 2050, and progressively move to environmentally preferred transport alternatives.
The study designed a number of potential scenarios to completely address the energy demand of the transport sector with sustainable and secure carbon dioxide free sources by 2050. The quantitative assessment includes a cost-benefit analysis and address the availability of feedstock of the different fuels, resources required, security of supply, market potential, technological issues, economic viability and industrial, social and demographic aspects.
The group of industry experts on future transport fuels stated ambitiously that in order to reduce carbon emissions in Europe, transport must be oil free and largely carbon dioxide free within the next 40 years. According to the report, fossil fuels could be gradually replaced over the coming years, most likely by a mix of different sources, including electricity and biofuels.
Given the backdrop of Asian and US policy driven interest and commitment to electric vehicles, the European Commission appears to be examining forecasts, models and options which could permanently change the continental transport infrastructure. The potential for the lithium mining, development and exploration sector may just be realizing truly global secular trends.
http://lithiuminvestingnews.com/2661/major-lithium-producer-to-transfer-cathode-patents/
stockinvestor777: back in mid-October of 2002, fiber optics had looked like they had seen their best days. Corning made a marketing push and those of us that gambled on them, at the time, rode a mother wave. So I have a historical affection for Corning.
The Gorilla Glass got me back in. Again, I've been rewarded. One just does not have these kinds of plays in "blue chips." You take in glee. Products often have their best market in second-tier and/or peripheral applications. It seems as they're looking to have value added for their telecommunications customers. It seems logical to me.
Corning does not deliver Gorilla Glass. Their sizzle is delivering to their customers a lighter, sleeker, and more durable option for their customers’ desires. The draw of a quarter-inch drill bit is not some excellent piece of metal, but the ability to make quarter-inch holes. Okay, I seem to be rambling. I hope that I answered your question.
stockinvestor777: maybe Corning should acquire Brinks or something for its shareholders.
moxa1: while I have no affection toward the Republican Party, I have even less toward the Democrats. Their history of racism, bigotry, sheer deception, social engineering, and being the long-time backbone of the Federal Reserve (both from protection and the advancement of spending to keep them in office and the subsequent debt), makes them the out-of-touch party.
There is now a lack of the public-consumption ebb and flow, which deceived the voting populace for so long. It is now simply take it or leave it. Partisan politics is a zero-sum fools' game.
The days of the dollar [sic] (Federal Reserve Notes) being the world's reserve currency are certainly numbered. Few Amerikkkans can comprehend what it will do to this nation's economy. Denial is not a river in Northern Africa.
GEO928: The Deflector is at it still. He even has the brand of his favorite intoxicants, down pat. Those corrupt bureaucrats are part of the fabric of corporate government: your strong central government that you advance.
Too bad you lack research skills:
http://www.nytimes.com/gwire/2010/06/09/09greenwire-ingredients-of-controversial-dispersants-used-42891.html
The thrust of the point wasn't about the ingredients, but your lack of proof to back up your dismissive post to him. Then again, what else is new?
Cool, GLW is my kind of Gorilla. This is a rare blue-chip success story for this day and age.
Suetta915: indeed and that certainly facilitates its quality to a certain degree. The show is well written and the characters and their development and the acting are outstanding. The casting of Leonard Nimoy as William Bell and he and Walter Bishop's association with Richard Bradbury plays upon this very genre. In one episode, there is a television in the background and Mulder and Scully (of X-Files fame) are holding hands. The heavy references and usage of LSD through the fabric of shows adds to the tilt.
The Original dpb5!: how's it going? We have chatted much lately. Fringe is on Fox. You can catch up on TheWB or others. You might want to know the basics first, before seeing the most recent episodes.
excel: maybe consider this option:
http://www.aaagreenhouse.com/single_level_benchmaster_display.htm
excel: I was glad to see that Cypripedium acaule (Lady Slippers) were not on the list. They massed in a large section of the woods where I grew up. However, many specimens sold over the past couple of decades have not been cultivated from start, but rather collected: leaving the plant not quite rare in the wild.
Out of curiosity, is there anyone here that is addicted to the program, Fringe, as I am? This comes from someone who has made it a point to not watch television for years.
GEO928: give it a rest already. None of us here are interested in your old-fartism proselytizing. You fail to back up your trollesque salvos with any substance. Whether the post by Moxa is valid or not is certainly not altered by your lame criteria. This is not different than you offering the "Cliff Notes" version of The Articles of Confederation. Hmmmm, The Constitution, before the addition of The Bill of Rights, did NOT guarantee religious choice, assembly, bearing arms, states' rights, and personal liberties. This escapes you.
Like the good lil' statist boy, that you are, you advance reasons for a strong federal government. Yet, you complain about that very same strong federal government. Duh! You complain about being classified a "conservative," yet take pot shots, on nearly every occasion, afforded you, to decry liberals and socialists. That's rich coming from Mr. Cubby Hole.
The O'Bomber Administration is not socialist. It's fascist. They are really the same; certainly having the same goal of monopoly for an oligarchy. The O'Bomber Administration hardly has benefited the poor. The clunker program is one example. However, in your religious fervor, you only see communism verses capitalism, as personified by corporations. It doesn't matter, to you, that corporations crush the essential elements of laissez-faire capitalism. Onward you push, flaunting your high priest uniform, preaching of the joys of mega-corporate oligarchy.
It is you that looks to squeeze and justify and twist and deflect to defend your religiously governmental theory beliefs. These beliefs you keep secret from every one else. It's much easier for you to cry for solutions and offer zero, while advancing the very problems that you complain about. The oligarchy must be exceedingly pleased with having produced such a nice lil', wind-up automaton sheople, like you. Be sure to bow down.
excel: technically, one does not need light for germinating seeds. However, as soon as they break ground, certain dynamics take over. Virtually, all plants fall into categories of Photoperiods. Furthermore, weak and/or spindly seedlings rarely make good plants. Therefore, the medium (usually soil) temperature is quite key. One needs to have a good correlation between air heat and bottom heat. It's rather simple, but usually ignored. I hope this helps.
GEO928: chasing the elusive white ball is quite an allegory. Too bad my post was beyond your grasp. Yeppers, deflect and more deflect. Let's see: The Articles of Confederation contained what is in The Bill of Rights, but it wasn't stripped. Have fun with the rest of your justification.
4Kismet: not all together dissimilar to events, like VT. This certainly showcased planned opposition. Certain ones, on cue, blamed Sarah Pain-in-the-arse. She responded with "blood libel." It was so neatly scripted.
The monopoly of the fascist state marches on.
excel: yes, of course; those designs are certainly practical for urban gardening. Out in the country, the family of eagles and numerous hawks would drool over the new lunch box. Snick! Snick! Still, moving them around during the daylight to where one would want them to be, I see as a great help.
When I grew up in Connecticut, mink and weasels were far and away the greatest threats to chickens. The coons had such a plethora of food, that they didn't bother most farms. Now when they did, they were the most severe of nuisance. Foxes were plentiful and careless operations would get birds picked off by rats. There were also feral cats and aggressive dogs.
At least, we don't have to face a problem that they do in places like India: cobras.
While chasing a rabbit trail ... err ... chicken trail, I came across this on chicken tractors ... Wow! They're way ahead of me. It definitely solves problems with chickens. Take your pick:
http://www.google.com/images?hl=en&expIds=17259,17291,17311,23756,24692,24878,24879,27400,27615,27955,28060,28156&sugexp=ldymls&xhr=t&q=chicken+tractor+plans&cp=14&qe=ImNoaWNrZW4iICJ0cmFjdCI&qesig=OVhkwspSJ0B_WBEQdlkywA&pkc=AFgZ2tnfuz1aAn7y6qAj3JnSm33OFc6F4OA_DaXqd0sjQQs-Y2jok-iS4gl3mSRVWgfM1jGGzcBfDF3Q91MlAaIQWcsSEyI_4w&safe=off&wrapid=tljp129472540159303&um=1&ie=UTF-8&source=univ&ei=IPErTZC4DcL48Abn5b3qCA&sa=X&oi=image_result_group&ct=title&resnum=2&sqi=2&ved=0CDMQsAQwAQ&biw=1268&bih=534