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12:04 AM
A airbnb guest is not responding to my messages. I have sent her like 7 messages, she responded to none of them. Even if she cancels now, she still has to pay half of her stay under the policy she booked accommodation in & there are only 3 days until her check in.
She didn't indicate her check in details.
 
 
5 hours later…
5:01 AM
airbnb guest broke a chair, I don't really care because it's an old chair. The place was left otherwise tidy and clean.
So like 5 star review ... albeit broken chair @_@
 
 
3 hours later…
8:22 AM
Most viewed today - all but one were to do with the current bushfire.
 
9:16 AM
Looking forward to visit the rural property next week, have not been doing so for more than a month. I am getting a little excited even thinking about it.
Airbnb is not bad, but it's a lot of effort, even if it's extra money. I need to save time and effort building other more useful things.
 
9:59 AM
The one thing I wish I would have known before getting them would be how addictive they are. I absolutely love new breeds and adding them to my flock. I started out with 5 chicks one day last July and today I have almost 30 chickens.
Sounds like the confession of a chicken hoarder ...
 
 
1 hour later…
11:24 AM
30 chickens :o
Damn, that's a lot
How's the country coping with the fire so far?
> It makes one thing really simple: to await an operation that can take some time to finish. It makes it so simple, that it creates innumerable new ways to blow ones foot off.
Yeees, we always need new powerful footguns
 
11:39 AM
@Morwenn The fire has been burning for a while, roughly 3 months. I am getting used to it, not sure about other people. I guess if the area is directly affected by the bushfire, people there would be more concerned. Air quality is frequently bad, but it's not really otherwise affected where I live.
 
11:49 AM
> the country
so some people are affected and that's it? x)
 
12:02 PM
Bushfires in Australia impact extensive areas and cause property damage and loss of human life. Some of Australia's native flora have evolved to rely on bushfires as a means of reproduction, and fire events are an interwoven and an essential part of the ecology of the continent. For thousands of years, Indigenous Australians have used fire to foster grasslands for hunting and to clear tracks through dense vegetation. Major firestorms that result in severe loss of life are often named based on the day on which they occur, such as Ash Wednesday and Black Saturday. Some of the most intense, extensive...
1516 homes currently confirmed destroyed (as of 1 January 2020)
(NSW 1298+ homes destroyed )

(SA 86 homes destroyed)

(Vic 46+ homes destroyed)*

*However this number expected to rise significantly pending updated count in East Gippsland region of Victoria
Largest bushfire in history by area burnt. 18 casualties so far.
 
Wow, that's indeed a major event o_o
 
Some trees here burns naturally every so often as they need fire to reproduce.
It's just that there has been a drought which made vegetation very dry, so it's easier for fire to start and continue.
Last time when I was at the rural property, grasses were crispy. Grasses shouldn't be dry & crispy.
 
 
5 hours later…
5:03 PM
@Mikhail Was in CA. Back in Chicago.
 
 
5 hours later…
9:34 PM
Sounds like you should be watering a bit more the lands
 
 
2 hours later…
11:46 PM
The land is like 32400 square meters. There is only rain water & no town water.
 

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