(Part 3) Top products from r/baltimore

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We found 22 product mentions on r/baltimore. We ranked the 221 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the products ranked 41-60. You can also go back to the previous section.

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Top comments that mention products on r/baltimore:

u/mccrackinfool · 2 pointsr/baltimore

I'm selling all my home brew equipment and books asking 300, its an all or nothing deal sorry. I will provide pictures for any one interested.

1-glass carboy and hauler

1-bottling bucket with spout

1-fermenting bucket with lid

1-1 gallon glass carboy

1-2 gallon bucket

1-Hydrometer

3-Air locks

1-Thermometer

1-wood stirring paddle

1-40 quart stock pot

1-turkey fryer with the timer removed

1-20lb empty propane tank

1-capper and about 50 -60 beer bottle caps

1-corker for wine bottles and some corks

Auto siphon, tubing, racking cane,some PBW cleaner and Star Sanitizer left over, I have I think 12 empty wine bottles and probably have about an empty case worth of beer bottles.....I mean pretty much everything you need to brew or make wine.

Books are listed below and are in great shape.

How to Brew Beer

Designing Great Beer

For The Love of Hops

Yeast: The Practical Guide to Beer Fermentation

Hop Variety hand book

The Homebrewer's Garden


u/The_Waxies_Dargle · 4 pointsr/baltimore

Louder Than Bombs is in my Top 25 albums of all time. Marr is kind of an afterthought (in some ways) as the guitar stuff sounds pretty straight forward, but the shit he's doing on guitar is incredibly complex.

I'm the jackass that thought DinoJr was coming to Pier 6. Oh, hey, you a reader? This is one of the best music books I've ever read.

u/JesusOnTheDashboard · 2 pointsr/baltimore

Depending on the complexity of the task, don't discount the possibility that you can tackle this yourself. Home Depot sells an awesome book called "Wiring 1-2-3" which has a ton of useful information. I used it to teach myself how to do some minor work, and eventually to take on larger jobs like installing new lights and receptacles and even whole new circuits. It's really not rocket science.

At this point, I've re-wired about 75% of my house. That one book has probably saved me thousands of dollars.

u/jst3w · 1 pointr/baltimore

No. But I've played this game before and it's like D&D Lite. http://www.amazon.com/Dungeons-Dragons-Castle-Ravenloft-Board/dp/0786955570

I was skeptical at first but it ended up being pretty fun.

But $54 seems a bit much.

u/baltimorosity · 2 pointsr/baltimore

These could be false morels, though I hope they aren't and you can eat a yummy meal. I would check them out on multiple sites and make a shroomery account. Also, if you plan to hunt often, Mushrooms Demystified and the Audubon Society's Mushroom Field Guide are both very necessary guides.

u/petitepixel · 3 pointsr/baltimore

You would probably love the older editions of A Guide to Baltimore Architecture. The edition I have mentions this construction occurring in the future.

u/z3mcs · 6 pointsr/baltimore

We don't really need to speculate endlessly, there are entire books written about how the disparities in our community came about. We need to continue using the data and scholarship we have, including publications from professors at local universities and longstanding members of the community. It isn't simple and it is complex, for sure. But it's not a situation where we just throw our hands up and say "oh well, just send in people with guns, it's too hard to think through this situation."

u/CaptainStudly · 8 pointsr/baltimore

Kathryn Edin wrote a book about this. The tl;dr I got from it is that in general, the women she interviewed wanted to have kids, that they thought having kids would be a motivation to adapt to the responsibility, and that many thought their fathers could and would straighten out.

https://www.amazon.com/Promises-Can-Keep-Motherhood-Marriage/dp/0520241134

u/djazzie · 5 pointsr/baltimore

More Maryland than Baltimore, but check out The Sot Weed Factor. Historical fiction set in 17th century Maryland.

http://www.amazon.com/Sot-Weed-Factor-John-Barth/dp/0385240880

u/Bluedevil1945 · 8 pointsr/baltimore

It has already been analyzed, tho. There is literally an entire book on it: https://www.amazon.com/Myth-Voter-Fraud-Lorraine-Minnite/dp/0801448484

u/Noumenon72 · 3 pointsr/baltimore

/u/rhymes_with_pail is correct. "The Black Arts" is a synonym for practicing witchcraft and demonology. I'm sorry if the sub where I posted it made you suspect a racist joke instead of the joke I meant.

u/Maaaaadvillian · 9 pointsr/baltimore

There are plenty of resources: One that I consistently return to is Not In My Neighborhood. There are others that are more general and deal with the post war north as a whole. As a geographer, I am partial to this one, because of the maps and detailed analysis. Its called Mapping the Decline and it primarily focuses on St. Louis.

u/nastylep · 4 pointsr/baltimore

Here's Walters' book, Boom Towns: https://www.amazon.com/Boom-Towns-Restoring-Urban-American/dp/080478163X

> One need only to look at the ruins of Detroit to see how far some once-great cities have fallen, or at Boston and San Francisco for evidence that such decline is reversible. In Boom Towns, Stephen J.K. Walters diagnoses the root causes of urban decline in order to prescribe remedies that will enable cities to thrive once again.
Arguing that commonplace explanations for urban decay misunderstand the nature of our towns, Walters reconceives of cities as dense accumulations of capital in all of its forms—places that attract people by making their labor more productive and their leisure more pleasurable. Policymakers, therefore, must properly define and enforce property rights in order to prevent the flight of capital and the resulting demise of urban centers. Using vivid evocations of iconic towns and the people who crucially affected their destinies, Walters shows how public policy measures which aim to revitalize often do more harm than good. He then outlines a more promising set of policies to remedy the capital shortage that continues to afflict many cities and needlessly limit their residents' opportunities.

u/killwhitney · 1 pointr/baltimore

I don't particularly care about bike lanes (but here's a good read for those that are into them: https://www.amazon.com/Bike-Lanes-Are-White-Advocacy/dp/0803276788#productDescription_secondary_view_div_1495686699050 ) but anything that pisses cantonites off brightens my day. If you want to live in the suburbs, please get out of the city. Stop importing your little slice of upper middle class hell into baltimore.