Seachem's Prime- Ingredients?

Even a backhoe had a hard time removing some 3-4' drifts we had over the driveway

Ever hear of a "Snowblower", they look like this

CC66%20640x480%20snowblower.jpg


and come in different sizes

This is all you need for the little snow you got :D

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Looks like too much work to me. I'd rather pay my backhoe operator a couple hundred bucks every 8-10 years we get storms like this. Although with the Global Warming coming on, I may have to break down. On second thought, maybe I'll save up for a boat when the Bay reaches inland to the farm. :lol:
 
You got hit pretty hard Cliff. I lived in Northern Virginia for a few years and I know what that kind of snow can do to you guys.

Don't listen to Boomer. Why do you think he goes to Texas every winter. :lol:
 
Heyyyyyyyyy, it has only been the last 3 winters and only 1/3 of the winter :D So, Cliff, should listen to 2/3 of what I say :lol:
 
So, buddy, how much did you get ? We didn't get much in Duluth, according wo my neighbor that is watching the house but has been realllllllllllllly cold.
 
Hi all- I'm new to this community and wanted to thank everyone for their knowledge and input. I have a question re: the original post- and this might sound a bit off topic but I believe that one of you all may have the answer...
Hypothetically speaking- Would any products that are made for fish tanks safely neutralize the halogens (chlorine, bromine) in tap water for, say, a human bath? i.e. Prime or any others? I understand they don't neutralize the fluorine and that calcium citrate would do that job...
I realize it may not be a main stream question but if you have any knowledge or reference that might help- I'd really appreciate it- thanks!
 
I don't think those chemicals would help any with bath water. I wouldn't use them for that purpose, personally.
 
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