Ubuntu partition removed but Grub still boots - how to bypass this and go straight to Windows?


Hi. I used to have a Windows/Ubuntu dual boot but decided to get rid of Ubuntu due to a lack of HD space.

Quite foolishly I just deleted the relevant partitions, but now when I boot up, Grub still loads but with an error - I can get no further. Is there any way to disable Grub and boot straight into Windows with no problems? I sure hope there is.

Help, pleeeeease? Thanks.

grub has been written to your master boot record and now you have removed its configuration file which was kept in the ubuntu partition so grub has stopped working. i am providing instructions on how to rewrite your mbr so that your system looks for ntldr in your windows xp partition.

insert your win xp cd and boot from it.
press r to repair
press k to enter recovery console (refer my sources for more information)
issue the command; fixmbr
type exit to restart the machine
dont boot from the cd this time
you should be automatically booting windows and there will be no sign of grub.

you didnt do the wrong thing by deleting partitions. you were always going to have to rewrite your mbr when you decided to ditch ubuntu so youre on the right track so far.

Raised Bed Gardening


Today garden enthusiasts are looking have a myriad of choices available to them. If you’re a gardening buff, then you might have heard of the term, â??raised bed gardening’. I have to confess to being quite ignorant on the subject, but upon overhearing, quite by accident I assure you, an argument by a young couple over whether they should go for the more conventional garden, or whether they should try their hand at raised bed gardening, my interest was peaked. After all what on earth was a â??raised bed garden’?

Being the curious minded soul that I am, I was sorely tempted to push my way through a trolley of plants and enquire in all politeness what a raised bed garden really was. Fortunately for all involved, sanity prevailed at the last minute and I found myself reluctant to push my way through.

I did the next best thing and gathering my purchases hot-footed it back home where I could turn to my computer for instant gardening help. Calling upon the services of my favorite search engine, I typed in the words â??raised bed gardening’ and stumbled upon a veritable plethora of information. Information which I shall now try my best to impart to you in manner that is understandable.

So, to begin with, a raised bed garden is exactly what is sounds like. A garden upon a â??raised bed’. Mostly though you’re not raising the height of your entire garden so much as you’re raising it in little bits and pieces. To do this people tend to utilise things like large containers, or pots. Troughs are also a favorite, as they provide a longer length for the gardener to work with.

There are generally two reasons why you would go in for raised bed gardening, with the first reason being purely to do with aesthetics. Having said that, if you find it difficult to bend down continuously when gardening, then the raised bed gardening is also ideal for you. But the second and main reason you would even consider a raised bed garden has to do with soil and drainage problems that you just can’t overcome easily, in your normal, ground level garden.

Raised bed gardens are attractive, and easy to maintain, with the added benefit of being able control exactly what goes into your soil mixture, and how much water you use when watering your plants.

You also have the ability to protect your plants more easily from burrowing rodents, weeds, and unwanted feet trekking through your beds.

A more sensible method of gardening I have yet to hear of, and that wasn’t the end to the long list of benefits to be found in raised bed gardening. But the one I liked the most had to do with being able to grub around in my garden in any weather, without the actual â??grubbing’ part. No mud, see? Since the plants are in raised containers, you don’t actually have to get down on your hands and knees in the mud to do your gardening!

Trey Songz-Grub On (Full Song)

just a little something i put together hope you enjoy

Duration : 0:3:48

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Why would dogs like to eat grub worms?

Both of my dogs will search out grub worms in the grass. The golden retriever will just suck on them while the Keeshound will end up swallowing them.

Evidently, they are a tasty treat in many countries for people and animals! It's fine that your dogs eat them, but you may want to make sure that they are getting enough protien in their diet. Grub worms are high in protien and fats, so your dogs may be searching them out to supplement their diet.

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What is the period a beetle larvae(grub worm) is active before it transforms into a pupae?

I'm doing a science project, where we are given grub worms to care for and observe everyday. So, I am wondering, how long is it till the eggs hatch to the point they turn into a pupae?
It is the June Beetle larvae.

Beetle larvae are often referred to as grubs, but there are several species of beetles. The period would depend on the beetle species. Some beetle larvae can take years to develop into adults. Check out this website, and see if you can make a closer match. If not, try searching beetle larvae images or larvae sizes, and see if you can figure out the species that way– and then search the larva period using the species.

Check out…

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beetles

and

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scarabaeidae

Grub most often references the Scarab Beetles, but again, there are many species of scarab beetles. It is a good place to start, though.

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How do you create a grub boot floppy in windows?

I am installing simply mepis on a computer at school, but I can't get it to boot. So I did some research and found out about a grub boot floppy. I tried to make one but I can only find directions for how to create on in Linux and I only have access to windows computers. I am also a newbie
I want it to boot from the hard drive
I have already installed mepis. I get "loading grub stage 2" The longest I waited for it to boot was two long hours

Download a Linux Live CD from one of the Linux distributions.

You can boot into Linux from the CD and create the grub boot floppy from there.

You can also create a bootable USB flash disk, which is more convenient than floppies these days.

Once you know how to download ISOs of linux live CDs, burn them, boot them and create and configure a bootable GRUB floppy or USB key, you will be less of a newbie. Yay.

Mepis is itself a Live CD, so your challenge is to get the machine to boot from the CD rather than the disk. It may be that you can simply go into the bios and switch the boot order to put the CD before the hard disk.

>I have already installed mepis. I get "loading grub stage 2" The longest I waited for it to boot was two long hours

You don't 'install' mepis. Nor do you boot it from a hard disk. It is a bootable CD from which Linux runs, without needing to be installed on the hard disk. Some other distro is suitable for loading onto and booting from a hard disk. Debian or Fedora or Ubuntu for example.

If Grub is failing to get past stage 2, then Grub has a problem loading mepis from the CD on your machine. You may need to intervene with grub at stage one a fettle its parameters a little to help it find the second stage on the CD.

Try putting 'mepis' and the specific error text you see into google to see if there is any solution already out there.

So while creating a GRUB boot floppy might be a diversion from your goal of running mepis, I'm not one to try and stop you. So try looking here.. It has a boot floppy image with GRUB. http://home.arcor.de/mschierlm/bootdisk/

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what is the best way to get rid of grub worms without using poisons?

my marigolds are dying and I have a few grub worms.

Nemotodes (sp?) are natural parasites that feed on grubs. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nematode#Gardening
Or you get get a bunch of moles.

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Plant getting eaten by some sort of grub. Any ideas how to stop the little buggers?

I have a fairly large Sennetti in my back garden, which was up until recently flourishing.
Now the leaves are being used as home and food by some kind of small larval type of thing that eats it's way through the leaf whilst staying completely inside it. There's a lot of them on the plant and they're killing it.
The grub itself is very small, about the size of maybe a full stop of slightly bigger. They're yellowish in colour and shaped like a raindrop, pointy at one end, rounded at the other.
I have no idea what they are or how to get rid of them. There are numerous different plants and this is the only one that they are on.
Your help would be much appreciated.
Thanks in advance.

a quick and simple method to get most things off your plants is a solution of washing up liquid and water. use a small area as atester and apply liberally. failing that you can try bio remedies such as ladybirds etc to eat the bugs. and last vase scenario is chemical pesticides. try something like Quassia or an insecticidal soap

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