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But Jesus wanted us to understand that the church is not to do the weeding.
Do the weeding yes and sorting which is really going to come from our meeting.
A tasty incentive to do the weeding that comes with added health benefits?
"They just cut the grass and do the weeding.
Make sure you leave enough room between the rows of plants so we can walk through the garden to do the weeding and watering.
Working in a similar field, researchers at the University of California are developing a robot to do the weeding, but again it is years away.
I must have been doing the weeding.
Lightweight, easy to carry and made using memory foam, it makes kneeling to do the weeding a lot more comfortable.
She remembers it especially because her daughter Sarah was on the way and she had trouble bending down to do the weeding.
The mind is like a garden and if one is to grow and flourish their garden they must do the weeding.
I'm not an expert on Phain gardens, by any means, so what she probably means is that I can do the weeding without supervision.
He does the weeding and hoeing while Nina plants the plants "to make it more difficult," he jokes.
Jewel was on a Phain planet once, where she worked on a Phain garden, and she'll only be doing the weeding.
During the weeks we lead fairly separate lives, but on weekends in the country we plant seeds, cut the grass, do the weeding, tidy up the beds.
Perhaps you already have a standing agreement in place along the lines of "I'll cut the grass if you do the weeding," but partnership working can include plants too.
On the first day of spring the whole school got into groups to do different jobs and I had to do the weeding along with the rest of my group.
Uncle Albert told her that when he did the weeding, he always imagined himself as some great monster uprooting trees and scaring the tiny people hiding under the stones.
She is certainly eccentric, and tells visitors to the house about the gardener "John," who did the weeding 500 years ago and still potters around the grounds, planting and pruning.
Concerned about the possible shortage of field labor, Dorothy B. Butcher, a state representative from Pueblo and a supporter of the program, said, "The workers on these farms do the weeding, the harvesting, the storing, everything that comes with growing crops for the market."