latest news erie pa image
Q. Ok so in late March of this year some guy in Erie PA used radio waves to light water on fire and everyone went crazy b/c they believe that water could be used as a fuel source now, but is this news really that big? Anyone who studies chemistry extensively already knows that water can be lit on fire and we have know for a very long time, this being so is his accomplishment really that special? Also some argue that while water can be made combustible the cost to actually put radio waves into a car as to use water for fuel would be so high that we would probably be paying around the same amount of money as we already pay for gas. As such does this kind of deflate our expectations from this event? What are you thoughts on this issue?
Answer
The only way water can be lit on fire is to break it down to hydrogen and oxygen and burn that and doing that requires more power than will be gotten out.
The only way water can be lit on fire is to break it down to hydrogen and oxygen and burn that and doing that requires more power than will be gotten out.
Is this to good to be true?
Josh
I am looking into buying a new German Shepherd Puppy. I have a mix right now and I love her.... But shes nine years old and is getting lazy. I want another puppy that likes to play.
So I start looking in the news paper and right off the bat, German Shepherds $250.
I'm thinking excellent right in my price range until I noticed all the other breeders wanted 400 on up. I still called the lady asked about papers and if the parents were on sight and if the shots were up to date. She informed me that the mother was but not the father and that the shots are but they havn't been wormed because her vet was out of town. This concerns me that I'm not getting a full blood. I really want the larger pure bred. And people on the phone just didn't seem to be real professional. They had there tv blaring in the phone and just didn't sound so great. It was sorta late so maybe i called at a wrong time.
How would anyone else feel. I mean if she took the mother to have it bred wouldn't one think there had to be some type of documentation on it?
If I were to go look at the dog is there signs i can look at to be sure its 100% German Shepherd?
Btw if anyone has any information on a reliable breeder close to ERIE PA that would be great.
Answer
Actually, it's not good at all. If you want a purebred dog, you have to buy one that comes with registration papers from the AKC. Also, the Sire and Dam have had NO genetic health testing so therefore you could easily end up with a dog with Hip Dysplasia. Good breeders also don't advertise in the newspaper, and quality PET quality puppy from a reputable breeder would cost you at LEAST 5 times the $250.00 you mentioned. Of course they didn't sound professional, because they aren't. They are BACK YARD BREEDERS trying to suck money off of whoever will hand it over to them for their poorly bred junk. Go to the Website of the German Shepherd Dog Club of America and look at their breeder referral list. You won't find a puppy in your price range, but if you save up for a well bred dog, you won't be spending thousands and thousands of dollars on Vet bills in the years to come. You get what you pay for, so buyer beware.
Actually, it's not good at all. If you want a purebred dog, you have to buy one that comes with registration papers from the AKC. Also, the Sire and Dam have had NO genetic health testing so therefore you could easily end up with a dog with Hip Dysplasia. Good breeders also don't advertise in the newspaper, and quality PET quality puppy from a reputable breeder would cost you at LEAST 5 times the $250.00 you mentioned. Of course they didn't sound professional, because they aren't. They are BACK YARD BREEDERS trying to suck money off of whoever will hand it over to them for their poorly bred junk. Go to the Website of the German Shepherd Dog Club of America and look at their breeder referral list. You won't find a puppy in your price range, but if you save up for a well bred dog, you won't be spending thousands and thousands of dollars on Vet bills in the years to come. You get what you pay for, so buyer beware.
Powered by Yahoo! Answers
No comments:
Post a Comment