BIO: Ron Schaffer Born: 1941 Denver, Colorado. I went to school at Alcott Elementary School , Skinner Jr. High and North High School in 1959. Lived in North Denver until 18, then moved to Deer Trail, Colorado. Did a tour of Vietnam 1965. I live in Deer trail most of my life, since 1948 off and on. Webmaster of the Deer Trail Community www.Deertraico.net which I DELETED..!! Have a nice day. Ron Schaffer
Friday, July 30, 2010
CoCoRaHS -- Update
The hail stone
Within the past hour, the largest fully-documented hail stone in terms
of weight (1.94 pounds) and diameter (8.0 inches) has just reached its
final resting place at the cold lab at the National Center for
Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado.. Henry Reges of the CoCoRaHS
team had the honors of driving the 3rd leg of the relay that carried
this stone successfully (carefully packaged and packed in dry ice) from
the freezer of its finder in Vivian, South Dakota to the hail research
facility in Boulder. The stone is now in the hands of Dr. Charles
Knight who, interestingly, was already well established as a hail
specialist back in 1970 when the Coffeyville, Kansas record hail stone
was collected and documented.
The plans are to make a casting (mold) of this stone so that replicas
can be displayed at the Historical Museum in Lyman County, South Dakota
and at the Aberdeen, SD National Weather Service Office. We'll also be
posting some photos of the stone and its unveiling this AM in Boulder, CO.
Is this really the biggest hail stone ever to hit the U.S. -- well,
probably not. Chances are a bigger stone fell sometime and somewhere.
But the odds of capturing a stone this large and securing it intact are
very low. So if you ever have giant hail (and please know "giant" is
relative. In parts of the country anything over 2-3" is huge, up and
down the Great Plains those size stones occur fairly often and you have
to be in the 4-5" range to be really unusual. But anywhere in the
country, stones over 5" in diameter are rare and well worth documenting.
By the way, it was 31 years ago today (I may be off a day or two) that
Fort Collins was pummeled by large hail. I left town that day for a
camping trip in Wyoming and didn't find out about if for over a week.
Back then, the Denver Broncos had summer training camp here in Fort
Collins so the big news story was all the fancy football player cars
damaged by the hail. But the tragic part of the story was a local
fatality where a baby was struck and killed while their panicked mother
ran carrying the child to shelter. There were also several injuries --
some broken arms with people covering their heads. So please remember,
large hail is scary dangerous and deserves the greatest of respect.
Copy by: Schaffernews@Deertrailco.net Friday, July 30, 2010
Copywriters of CoCoRaHS
Picture on this page is NOT the actual Hail photo.
Our Love Daisies
Some thing I like to share with you. It was the year of 2004 on September 11th and Ron & Kathy took a trip up to Dillon & Frisco, Colorado for our 11th year anniversary of being married. Most of the time we went to Grand Lake or Granby, Colorado. As we traveled over Trail Ridge Road in the high country, but this year was different and more fun. We toured all around the area of Dillon, but at this time we didn’t have a camper on the truck until April of 2005.
We have driven all over Dillon and Frisco, Colorado for 3 days, and ran across many exciting places plus a camp site that we had loves to return to some day and camp out in our tents and sleeping bags and now with the pop-up truck camper.. I tried to look it up the camp site near Frisco, Colorado this year on the Internet with no luck. It was set up for all kinds of camping, RV’s, trailers, pick-up campers with running water, electricity, etc. But, we were not set up for that kind of camping, just staying in a motel instead for the days we were in the mountains. We had run across the most beautiful wild flowers in the lot next to the parking area by the clean old cabin motel. I had taken some pictures and Kathy had collected some seed from the white and yellow center daisies that were seeding at that time of year.
We had taken the seeds home that fall, and Kathy planted them in the yard, next to the driveway in the corner in front. We never through that they would grow, until we seen them coming up the next spring of 2005. Wow, they came up like crazy that spring and keep on blooming all summer long into the fall and the first snow fall. Here this wild daisy seeds came from the high country mountains and we didn’t think they would survive the lower altitude in Deer Trail, Colorado. Now were sharing the seeds with family and friends in Colorado and out of state into Texas. We think we started some thing in Deer Trail, because the seed for the last 6 years have spread all over Deer Trail, and still spreading and maybe some people might get mad and other might love it as it is gong two blocks each directions. And Sandi Koepke back yard is full of them without planting them. Ron Schaffer
Wednesday, July 21, 2010
HERE'S YER FIRST LAWN CARE TIPS
Though pride is one of the Seven Deadly Sins, we won't hold it against you if you are proud to having a nice-looking lawn. Conversely, you may look at your patchy lawn and get feelings of woe and dread.
For both of these "lawn personality types"—and all those in-between—our article today is a hopperful of useful natural lawn care tips that will help you not only have a great-looking lawn but also avoid the toxic array of lawn chemicals that lawn-care companies (and the US EPA) have falsely led you to believe are necessary and safe to apply to your lawn. Most of them are toxic to you, your kids, and your pets; and since rain waters will always carry a portion of these chemicals into nearby streams and ponds, they're bad for wildlife as well.
So, put on your sun hat and get ready for some great lawn care tips.
LAWN CARE TIPS — #1Cut The Grass Higher
Many people like to think of their lawn as their own personal putting green. But close-cropped putting greens are among the most intensively managed—watered, fertilized, and chemically sprayed—patches of land in the world. Your grass will be much happier (and healthier and greener) if you loosen your stranglehold on it, and you'll be able to spend more time relaxing instead of working on your lawn.
The first step to this new paradigm is to raise the height of your mower. If you live in southern states, you'll want something around 2-1/2 inches high; in shadier northern states, 3-1/2 inches is recommended.
Taller grass has multiple benefits:
•The larger mass of grass blades makes the grass look greener overall, and problem spots will look less obvious than they did when you were mowing at putting-green heights.
•The extra green on top delivers more nutrients to the grass' roots and helps them grow deep, giving the grass better access to water and making it more drought-tolerant. Deeper roots also mean better access to soil nutrients.
•The thicker root mass and the taller green parts work to crowd out weeds by keeping weed seeds from germinating and crowding out any unwanted plant pests that do manage to germinate.
•Taller grass leaves help keep the sun off the soil, helping to preserve its water content.
•Your longer-cut lawn will require less mowing. (Cutting the grass short stimulates the plants to try to grow faster to make up for their lost greenery.)
While cutting higher is beneficial, certain fine-leafed grasses tend to fall over or get pushed down by the lawnmower, resulting in uneven cutting. If you're finding this is the case, try lowering the mower deck by a half-inch at a time until you find the preferred height. Alternately, mowing your lawn a little more often may also help allow you to maintain a tall "cut height" but still avoid the falling-over problem. If only a few problem areas suffer from falling-over grass blades, doing a second or third pass
over these areas can help touch them up. This usually works, especially when the additional passes are done at different angles.
Finally, most experts recommend not cutting off more than a third of your grass at any one time—doing so may stress the grass. So, if you're going for a cut height of 3-1/2 inches, you'd want to mow the lawn by the time it gets to about 5 inches tall.
The section of lawn in the top of the photo is a typical chemical-treated suburban lawn. The greener section of grass in the lower portion of the picture is a natural, chemical-free lawn cut to a higher height.
LAWN CARE TIPS — #2Mulch Those Grass Clippings
Somehow the idea got started that leaving the cut grass on your mowed lawn will smother it. Well, put that sham lawn care tip on the compost pile! Remember that grass clippings are 10% nitrogen, and you know that nitrogen is a main component of lawn fertilizers, so... Leave the grass clippings on your lawn to decompose and return their nitrogen to the soil for your lawn to reuse. Organic Gardening magazine notes that a season's worth of grass clippings will contribute almost 2 pounds of nitrogen per 1,000 square feet of soil—half of the lawn's annual fertilizer needs. Mulched grass clippings also shade the surface of the soil and make it harder for weed seeds to germinate.
You can make sure the you don't end up with a heavy layer of grass clippings on top of your lawn by:
•Using a mulching mower to chop up the grass clippings finely as you are mowing. In heavy areas of the lawn you may need to make a couple of passes with the lawnmower to get them chopped up enough. (That may seem like extra effort, but it's less extra effort than bagging!)
A CLIPPING ON CLIPPINGS
William Dest, Ph.D., associate professor emeritus of turf grass studies at the University of Connecticut, compared lawns where the clippings had been left behind with lawns where they had been removed. He found that the lawns with the clippings had:
-- 45% less crabgrass
-- up to 66% less disease
-- up to 45% more earthworms
-- 60% more water reaching plant roots
-- 25% greater root mass
-- 50% reduced need for nitrogen fertilizer
SOURCE: A Healthy Lawn, A Beautiful Lawn from Organic Gardening magazine.
•Cutting the grass often enough that the clippings aren't so thick that no amount of repeated chopping will make them disappear into the lawn. (This is not usually a problem unless you've let your lawn go to the point where your neighbors wonder what's wrong with you.)
Mulching your grass clippings will supply most of the food your lawn needs. By reducing or eliminating your use of chemical fertilizers, you'll reduce the amount of polluting runoff that rains carry from your lawn to local waterways.
Oh, and in case you're thinking that following the above procedures will mean that your lawn will eventually suffer from thatch buildup—it won't. Thatch results when you've used chemical fertilizers and pesticides on your lawn so much that you've killed most of the organisms in the soil than would normally break down the dead grass clippings. Freshly mulched grass clippings are a feast for earthworms, who are instrumental in breaking down thatch and aerating soil.
LAWN CARE TIPS — #3Sharpen the Blade
It's easy to wish that the only care a lawnmower needs is to check the oil once in a while and give it a tune-up once every decade. But the mower blade is something that needs attention at least once a season, and two or three times might even be necessary, depending on your use. Sharpening the blade will make it easier for your mower (and you) to cut the grass and, more importantly, will avoid tearing the grass and wounding the grass blades, which makes them more susceptible to infection and evaporative loss.
Your local power-equipment dealer or lawnmower shop can sharpen your blade for a small fee, as can many hardware stores, but investing in your own sharpening wheel will save you money in the long run. If you go this latter route, read up on the proper bevel angle for your mower blade before you end up grinding yours into a stiletto. For more tips on optimizing your mower's cutting and environmental performance, check out the Union of Concerned Scientists article, Cleaner Yards, Dirtier Air?
LAWN CARE TIPS — #4Be Sweet to Your Soil
Most turf grasses prefer soil that is slightly acidic to neutral. Many weeds, on their other hand, prefer acidic or alkaline soils, so getting the pH balance right can optimize conditions for your grass and make them less favorable for weeds.
If you have naturally acidic soil, sweeten it with lime or wood ash. Hardwood ash has about 50% to 65% of the alkalinizing power of lime, so if you go that route, you'd use half again more of the ash.
Before you use either, though, use a soil test kit to determine the pH of the soil under your lawn. It's better to edge your way up to the desired pH over a few applications than to overshoot and then face the more difficult task of bringing the pH back down. Both lime and ash are best applied in the fall—this enables the material to break down over the winter so the soil is improved for the next season's growth. But if you test your soil in the spring and it's too acidic, go ahead and do an application.
LAWN CARE TIPS — #5Aerate
It may be painful to see those big plugs of your sod coming up when you run an aeration machine over your lawn, but experts insist that doing this every couple of years allows air, water, and nutrients to get deep into the root zone of grasses. Aerating also helps eliminate thatch.
LAWN CARE TIPS — #6Choose the Right Grass Variety For Your Area
Your latitude and average annual rainfall level will govern what type of grass you choose for your lawn. Those in the northern climes usually do better with "cool season grasses," while those in the hotter southern region do better with "warm season grasses." Those in the middle don't have such clear-cut situations—your best bet is to ask your county extension agent, local nurseries, or even neighbors who seem to have good-looking lawns. (Beware, however, of that three-eared neighbor who seems to believe that Better Living Through Chemicals applies to his lawn.)
Finally, if you live in a very dry area, you probably should not be attempting to grow a lawn at all. Try permaculture instead. In the long run, it will save you time and headaches, not to mention water.
LAWN CARE TIPS — #7Feed and Reseed At the Right Time
According to lawn-and-garden guru Mike McGrath one should time feeding and reseeding based on the needs of the particular variety of grass:
•Cool season grasses such as perennial rye, Kentucky bluegrass and the fescues should be sown in mid-August to mid-September so the seeds have warm soil in which to germinate but the young grass shoots have rapidly cooling air (in which they thrive). McGrath also recommends fertilizing in the fall with an inch of compost, watered in; and, if you aren't reseeding, some corn gluten meal, which will also help suppress fall weed germination.
•Warm-season grasses like zoysia, Bermuda, and centipede should be sown and fed in the spring and summer but not in the fall.
For feedings, use a natural, slow-release fertilizer or fine compost.
LAWN CARE TIPS — #8Water at the Right Time and
In the Right Way
Most lawns need about an inch of water per week. If not enough rain has fallen to quench your lawn's thirst—a rain gauge can be useful here—use one long, soaking watering (rather than a shorter watering every day) to give your lawn its week's worth of "rain."
If you have to water, do it in the early morning. Watering in the evening invites disease.
Finally, remember that most grass is designed by nature to work around droughts by reducing growing activities when water is in short supply. But if you overuse nitrogen fertilizer or your lawn isn't particularly healthy to begin with, the grass' natural abilities may be defeated.
LAWN CARE TIP BONUS
The Ice Man Slippeth
Slipping or sliding on icy walkways can cause falls and damage your body, but the de-icing products you use to solve the problem can damage your lawn and border plants. They can also corrode concrete and metal and harm pets when they get the substances on their skin or ingest it while licking their paws. The Green Guide recommends forgetting about the deicer and using sand to make ice less slippery; but if you must have a deicer, they recommend the brand name "Safe Paws," which is safe for pets and the environment. If you're still set on using a traditional, salt-based deicer, see the You Bet Your Garden special report, How to Protect Your Plants When You Melt Sidewalk Ice.
LAWN CARE TIPS — #9You Can't Spell “CLOVER” Without “LOVE”
We don't really know why people hate clover in their grass. Maybe we can persuade you to love it by summarizing its benefits:
•Clover fixes nitrogen from the air, providing free fuel for the turf grass with which it peacefully coexists.
•It adds to the greenness of your lawn (except, of course, for the relatively brief part of the year when clover flowers).
•The clover's flowers provide an important source of nectar for honeybees, bumblebees, and other types of beneficial bees and pollinating insects.
•Earthworms, which are great for soil in general, like the presence of clover.
•Clover is disease-resistant and avoided by most common turf pests.
•It's drought-tolerant.
Simply put, clover is part of a healthy lawn, adding to the stability of your "lawn system."
Fork Over the Clover
Clover heads can even be eaten in salads, with nutrients that include protein, calcium, phosphorus, and magnesium.
But if all that doesn't want to make you abandon your dubious mantra "Must Kill Clover," then at least get rid of the clover in a sane manner. By this we mean NOT by using products that contain 2,4-D, a nasty herbicide that can have ill effects on your pets, your kids, and you. Instead, try a multi-year program of applying natural corn gluten meal, which will have the added benefit of killing all of your other seed-based weeds and adding nitrogen to the soil, too. Remember that corn gluten meal will suppress germination of grass seeds as well, so time your applications away from reseedings. For more information about corn gluten meal, see this Eartheasy article or this You Bet Your Garden Question of the Week.
LAWN CARE TIPS — #10Other Weeds — Don't Get Overly Stressed!
Not many people want a yard full of dandelion puffballs or crabgrass. But there's a difference between not having a weed-infested yard and having a lawn that has only one species of plant (grass). Paul James of Gardening By The Yard points out that 100% weed control is nearly impossible and not even particularly desirable for a healthy lawn. Some weeds provide food or habitat for beneficial insects, which are good for controlling pests in your lawn, garden, and other planted areas. As mentioned above, the "weed" clover fixes nitrogen from the air and helps fertilize your turf grass.
Still, we understand that some weed control is necessary, and we will address specific weed control strategies in our upcoming article on organic lawn care.
Lawn Care Tips — Wrap-Up"Don't get overly stressed" is not only good advice for our attitude towards weeds in our lawn, it's a pretty good way to approach lawns in general. To misquote some ancient Greek with a not-so-hot lawn, "Pride goeth before a fall and before having a heart attack over the appearance of the lawn."
This lawn care tips article is part 1 of a two-part series. The next issue covers Organic Lawn Care and is designed to complement the information presented here. Then you will have 100% of the information you need to have a great-looking, chemical-free lawn. The stress-free part is up to you!
Have a nice lawn day?
Wednesday, July 14, 2010
I..R.E.A. Colorado
BOARD UNANIMOUSLY OPPOSES: “AMERICAN POWER ACT” (THE NEW CAP & TRADE BILL)
Senators Kerry and Lieberman have introduced a new version of the "cap & trade" energy tax which is now patriotically called the "American Power Act." At their June meeting, the seven IREA board members voted unanimously to oppose this legislation.
Like the earlier failed cap & trade bill, this legislation calls for a 17% reduction in CO2 below 2005 levels by 2020, and 83% by 2050. To put this in perspective, the last time the U.S. produced so little carbon-based energy was 1867. For each individual, this would mean a huge reduction in standard of living and quality of life.
The bill calls for the cost of "emission permits" to double in ten years and continue to increase yearly thereafter, so the expense would be astronomical. Energy costs would increase by trillions of dollars, plus there would be trillions of dollars in added costs for food and other products because of the increased energy costs for producing food products and the manufacturing all other products.
Furthermore, even if this level of reduction were possible, it is estimated that these draconian measures would reduce temperatures only 1/15th of a degree Fahrenheit by 2050 and 1/5th of a degree Fahrenheit by the year 2100.
The only positive aspect of this legislation would be its support for nuclear energy, but environmentalists have vowed to have this support removed and to fight the construction of any new nuclear plants.
The board resolution (the complete text can be found on our web site) also noted that the "science of climate change is far from resolved, with prominent scientists disagreeing on the extent to which CO2 increases influence climate and especially whether mankind has any meaningful impact."
Not wanting to waste a crisis, the administration seems determined to link passage of this bill to the oil disaster in the Gulf of Mexico. Readers are reminded that oil supplies only 1% of our electric generation (see chart, next column), thus claims that increasing electricity production from wind and solar sources will "reduce our dependence on foreign oil" are specious. Increased use of electricity may prove key to reducing oil imports, but to reach that goal we will need more reliable, efficient base load generation resources. The bill burdens those resources with additional costs.
This is but another effort to force a reduction in energy use by raising the cost of electricity. Xcel Energy is doing this now by implementing a tiered rate structure. Xcel's residential consumers using more than 500 kWh of electricity each month will now pay DOUBLE the kWh charge for any energy above that level. Since the average Colorado consumer uses 750 kWh per month (according to the Colorado Association of Municipal Utilities), this policy will increase rates almost 18% for the average user.
IREA members are already being responsible by voluntarily conserving energy. We speak to individuals every day who are installing compact-fluorescent light bulbs, adding weather stripping and insulation, replacing old windows, and taking other efficiency measures. They tell us they are doing what they can and they just want us to keep electric rates down. We are listening to our member-consumers and we will continue to do everything in our power — including fighting senseless and expensive cap & trade legislation — to keep rates down.
TOP TEN QUESTIONS ABOUT MAN-MADE GLOBAL WARMING THEORY
1. While temperatures rose in the 20th century, why did most of the warming occur in the first half of the century and earlier, when fewer fossil fuels were burned? North America warmed substantially between 1850 and 1930. But in 1971 a spokesman for the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, while noting that global temperatures had fallen during the previous 20-30 years, claimed that industrial pollution would soon reduce the global temperature by 3.5°C.
2. According to the Institute of Economic Analysis in Moscow, the IPCC's Hadley Climate Unit ignored 40% of the data from Russian temperature measurement sites while only using data from sites that supported the hypothesis of global warming. What change did this cherry-picking of sites have on our ability to accurately measure surface temperatures?
3. The reliability of data used to document temperature trends is of great importance in the global warming debate. The Surface Station Project has spent years documenting official surface temperature monitors in the United States and found that, due to encroachment from heat sources, "89 percent of the stations—nearly 9 of every 10—fail to meet the National Weather Service's own siting requirements that stations must be 30 meters (about 100 feet) or more away from an artificial heating or radiating/reflecting heat source." [surfacestations.org]. So, if global warming is occurring, why is it measurable only on the surface (where monitors are subject to "Urban Heat Effect") and not in the atmosphere?
4. Where is the "Hot Spor that was predicted by climate models? Computer models and theoretical expectations have predicted that increases in atmospheric concentrations of greenhouse gases should lead to pronounced warming in the troposphere. The predicted "hot spot" has not been found. Either no warming is occurring, or climate models are not able to accurately predict climate change (which makes them worse than useless).
5. The Earth has cooled 0.74°F since Al Gore released "An Inconvenient Truth" in 2006. Also, there has been no statistically significant global warming since 1995. Why can't climate models account for the latest cooling trend?
6. Why is the sea level rise lagging behind predictions of approximately 14 inches this century? Antarctica isn't melting, and ocean temperatures seem to be going down recently, so water isn't expanding. The small Palmer Peninsula of Antarctica is getting warmer, while the main Antarctic continent is actually cooling. Ice thicknesses are increasing both on Greenland and in Antarctica.
7. Why did climate scientists feel it necessary to manipulate data and suppress dissent ("Cli-mateGate") if their position is unassailable?
8. Why don't climate models acknowledge a link between solar activity and global temperatures? Researcher Dr. Timothy Patter-son, director of the Geoscience Center at Carleton University, finds "excellent correlations" between solar fluctuations and past climate changes. "The sun [is] the ultimate source of energy on this planet," he says.
9. CO2 exists in nature and is essential to life on earth. It is necessary for plant growth, and increased CO2 intake as a result of increased atmospheric concentration causes many trees and other plants to grow more vigorously. How can the Environmental Protection Agency declare it a pollutant?
10. Are polar bears really in danger? Actually, polar bear populations have increased 400-500% since 1950. The western Arctic may be getting somewhat warmer, due to unrelated cyclic events in the Pacific Ocean, but the Eastern Arctic and Greenland are getting colder.
IREA OFFICERS, DIRECTORS AND GENERAL MANAGER
TIMOTHY WHITE, President
SIDNEY HANKS, Vice President
EUGENE M. SPERRY, Secretary/Treasurer
GEORGE R. HIER, Asst. Sec./Treas.
JAMES DOZIER, Director
BRUFF SHEA, Director
MIKE KEMPE, Director
STANLEY R. LEWANDOWSKI, JR., Gen. Mgr.
INTERMOUNTAIN RURAL ELECTRIC ASSOCIATION
5496 North U.S. Highway 85
Sedalia, CO 80135
303-688-3100
www.intermoutain-rea.com
One copy by: Schaffernews@Deertrailco.net 7/14/2010 12:07 PM
Friday, July 2, 2010
Why Do We Celebrate the 4th of July?
After learning about why we celebrate the Fourth of July, check out our main 4th of July page more great crafts, activities, and recipes to try out during your Independence Day celebration.
Most people in the United States celebrate the 4th of July, but do you know exactly why the holiday is so important to our country? Imagine how you would feel if someone older than you (maybe an older sister or brother) kept telling you what to do all of the time and kept taking more and more of your allowance. That is how the colonists felt in the years leading up to 1776. Great Britain kept trying to make the colonists follow more rules and pay higher taxes. People started getting mad and began making plans to be able to make their own rules. They no longer wanted Great Britain to be able to tell them what to do, so they decided to tell Great Britain that they were becoming an independent country. (To be independent means to take care of yourself, making your own rules and providing for your own needs.)
The Congress met in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and they appointed a committee (a group of people working together to do a specific job) to write a formal document that would tell Great Britain that the Americans had decided to govern themselves. The committee asked Thomas Jefferson to write a draft (first try) of the document, so he worked for days, in absolute secret, until he had written a document that he thought said everything important that the committee had discussed. On June 28, 1776, the committee met to read Jefferson's "fair" copy (he put his best ideas together and wrote them neatly.) They revised (made some changes) the document and declared their independence on July 2, 1776. They officially adopted it (made it theirs) on July 4, 1776. That is why we call it "Independence Day." Congress ordered that all members must sign the Declaration of Independence and they all began signing the "official" copy on August 2, 1776. In January of the next year, Congress sent signed copies to all of the states.
The Declaration of Independence is more than just a piece of paper. It is a symbol of our country's independence and commitment to certain ideas. A symbol is something that stands for something else. Most people can look at a certain little "swoosh" and know that it stands for "Nike." Well, the signers of the Declaration of Independence wanted the citizens of the United States to have a document that spelled out what was important to our leaders and citizens. They wanted us to be able to look at the Declaration of Independence and immediately think of the goals we should always be working for, and about the people who have fought so hard to make these ideas possible. The people who signed the Declaration risked being hanged for treason by the leaders in Great Britain. They had to be very brave to sign something that would be considered a crime! So every time we look at the Declaration of Independence, we should think about all of the effort and ideas that went into the document, and about the courage it took for these people to stand up for what they knew was right -- independence!
I want to read The Declaration of Independence.
Now that you know more about the Declaration of Independence, take this quiz to learn even more amazing facts. Copy by: Ronschaffer@Deertrailco.net July 2, 2010
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