PSoTD

Thursday October 25, 2007 at 8:34am

Morning Soreness

Thursday mornings are usually a time for soreness for me, but one I appreciate. For 2/3rds of the year, I play basketball on Wednesday nights, and I've always had some tightness or ache the day after, but at 48, well, these occurrences have increased. I can count on my ankles or feet to be achey - not pain as much as the dull reminder that they were used harder than normal yesterday, and they comment for a while after I get up, and then those aches go away.

Sometimes my right shoulder is sore, sometimes a tendon or ligament elsewhere. Lately my lower back has been tightening up a bit. Sometimes I know when something occurred during basketball that snagged me, most of the times I don't. I used to bemoan the Thursday Aches, if only as a reminder that hell, I'm getting older, my body's not as prepared as it should be for Wednesday nights. But I've actually learned to appreciate, if not enjoy, the Thursday aches now. Not because I like pain, but because it's at least hope that I'm doing something to slow down my decay.

What I really ought to do is pick up the regimen so that I "enjoy" the soreness three mornings a week, but it will have to be something other than hoops, something I can fit in while the kids are at school.

Posted by PSoTD
Posted on Thursday October 25, 2007 at 8:34am | Permalink | 7 Comments |

Sunday October 14, 2007 at 8:27am

Field of Sludge

This sounds like the kind of national business that George W. Bush might run after he leaves office.

A company that spreads processed human waste from New York on north Alabama farmland has agreed to make changes after complaints about strong odors.

Alabama Agriculture Commissioner Ron Sparks and officials of Synagro Technologies talked Friday and both sides then issued statements about the planned changes.

Sparks said the officials of the Houston-based company had assured him “they will no longer distribute the fertilizer on pasture land.” Where it is spread, it will be worked into the dirt instead of being placed on top of the soil.

The company said it will continue going to the most remote locations for applications and will make deliveries just before application to reduce odor concerns. It also plans to alter transportation routes to avoid populated areas and schools.

Synagro Technologies has a contract to dispose of human wastes from New York. The company, which operates with approval from the Environmental Protection Agency, treats sludge from wastewater plants in New York and ships it to Alabama by rail car. The sludge is treated at a plant in Leighton, then offered at no charge to farmers in Limestone County to fertilize their fields.

About 40 farmers have signed up and more are on a waiting list.

The spreading of the fertilizer has drawn opposition from the Limestone County Commission and complaints from neighbors.

Meanwhile, Commission Chairman David Seibert said Friday he will meet next week with Synagro officials.

“We have a meeting set up with them Thursday,” Seibert said. “Hopefully, something can be worked out at that time.”

Commissioners voted Wednesday to seek an injunction to stop the spread of the human wastes on Limestone County farmland as fertilizer. Seibert is in the process of seeking that injunction in Limestone County Circuit Court.

Residents in the Goodsprings area of Northwest Limestone County complained two weeks ago that the sludge being spread on farmland there has created an unbearable odor.

Posted by PSoTD
Posted on Sunday October 14, 2007 at 8:27am | Permalink | 1 Comments |

Friday October 5, 2007 at 7:46am

Will This Ever Make The Top 1000 Baby Names?

Borborygmi.

Posted by PSoTD
Posted on Friday October 5, 2007 at 7:46am | Permalink | 0 Comments |