Posts Tagged ‘leisure’

Healing Yourself With Herbal Gardening

Sunday, May 30th, 2010

Organic herbal gardening is a topic that had been gaining prominence, especially on the context of growing your own plant-based and natural medicines. A growing number of people are considering alternatives to a health system that is completely based on chemically derived pharmaceuticals.

Herbal remedies are plant-derived concoctions that have been prepared (either in the home, or professionally) to have a therapeutic effect. The practice of using herbs by professionals is sometimes called herbalism or herbal medicine. This tradition has a long history stretching back hundreds of years in Europe.

The viewpoint of herbal medicine is one of considering the whole organism and not just the symptoms. As a result two people who visit a practitioner and have similar symptoms, may be suggested to take quite different remedies.

Overall, while herbal remedies have their critics, they provide a valuable complement to modern medicine for many ailments and its emphasis on prevention and balancing is liked with many who are striving for a more harmonic way of life.

Whether you are an experienced organic gardener or just starting out with natural medicinal herbs, you will probably share the wish to control the origin of foodstuffs and other bodily intakes with people with the same interest.

Chicken Coops Plans – The Top 4 Things To Take Into Account

Friday, May 21st, 2010

Do you want to raise chickens? Are you looking to find the right way to give them a comfortable home? Good! Before actually obtaining your livestock, you should ensure that you get them the perfect place to live – which is where chicken coops plans can help you!

Some people find that going into a store and paying over $1,000 is the easiest way to get a home for their poultry. In reality it is, but you can save tonnes of money by building it yourself!

Here are 4 tips to help you get the job done!

Tip #1 – Adequate space

A lot of people that raise animals do not take into account the space that they require. This is a fundamental error, as cramping chickens into a small space will lead them to be uncomfortable and they are likely to attack or even kill each other.

Here is a top tip for you; try and ensure that each chicken has around 5 square foot of space each. Chicken coops plans will essentially suggest the same thing.

Tip #2 – Easy maintenance

Herbal And Organic Gardening: Useful Tips For Beginners

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

Setting out to work on an organic veggie and herb garden is quite an enterprise, but can be one of the most satisfying ways to go green that there is. The definition of organic is grown without the use of pesticides or other chemicals, but naturally.

Organically grown vegetables and herbs are safer, healthier and also taste better than those grown with the help of chemical products, plus you can save get for free what would cost you at the grocer’s.

Te first thing that you should do, as it will take a little while for this to be ready, is to separate your kitchen waste from the rest and build a compost heap. This can also be done indoors. Compost will prove a great boon as it is the best natural fertilizer for an organic garden and its vegetables and herbs.

In fact compost will also help your garden to retain moisture, so you won’t have to water much compared to non-organic gardens. Most of your food waste can be composted as well as some animal waste, but for your first compost heap be sure not to add human or pet (cat or dog) manure to your compost as these need special treatment to eliminate some potentially nasty bacteria that you won’t want near your edible plants.

Birdwatching Tips: The Best Wild Bird Feeders for Your Backyard

Sunday, January 31st, 2010

Millions of wildlife lovers are lured by the beauty of birds, and many wonder how to choose the correct wild bird feeders and begin setting up their backyard aviaries. To maximize your birdwatching opportunities, the key to start is to envision what you really want to see and hear in your own backyard.

Develop an understanding of the types of birds you want to attract (and the ones you don’t want). If you’re a complete novice, you may want to ask neighbors and friends which types of birds they’ve managed to attract. Knowing you want to attract cardinals or finches, for example, will help you in choosing the right wild bird feeders, food and locations.

Wild bird feeders come in several structural types including tube, thistle, wood, platform, suet and ground varieties. Highly desirable species, such as the hummingbird, even have special types of feeders that have been crafted for them. Knowledge of the pros and cons of each type will bolster success and increase desired results.

Enjoy Your Birthday Party, Rain Or Shine

Friday, October 2nd, 2009

When it comes time to sit down and enjoy a nice long meal with your family, some people are forced to wait longer than others. While your family may all be centrally located in one common place, other people live and work miles and miles away from their closest relatives. As a result, coming together as a family and catching up with each other might be easy for some, but is extremely difficult (and consequently, rare) for others. That being said, many people who are unable to be with their family as often as they might like, are able to see everybody every year at the annual family reunion.

Even better, you can have the event outside. With new options for instant outdoor shelters popping up every day, the weather is no longer the scary beast that it once was. These durable tents (assuming you buy a high-quality design) will keep you high and dry for the duration of the get-together.

There are a couple of ways to throw a successful daytime birthday party.

Growing Herbs Organically For The First Time

Sunday, August 30th, 2009

It can seem daunting to begin with an organic vegetable or herbal garden for the first time, but there are few better ways to be good to the planet while also being good to yourself and enjoying yourself.

If you already eat some organic herbs and vegetables, you will surely appreciate the better taste, the health benefits and also the lack of harmful residual substances. Imagine how great it would be if you had an organic garden that would furnish you wit a plentiful supply!

When starting with organic vegetable and herbal gardening, you should prepare a composting box as soon as you can. Good compost is by far the best fertilizer for your garden and also acts as natural pest control. Contrarily to popular belief, your compost heap will neither smell nor look unseemly.

Your home-made compost will also fulfill a secondary purpose: it will help your organic garden to retain moisture, and as a result you will need to water your edible plants less often. Put all your kitchen waste and also any garden cuttings you may have onto the compost heap, but avoid great quantity of fish and meat remains.

The Importance of Lawn Care

Saturday, February 7th, 2009

Many individuals are interested in the secrets behind lawn care for creating healthy. Let’s face it, we all want that thick fat, bright green grass that does not contain weeds and is the highlight of the neighborhood. However, most of us don’t know the actual lawn care that is required to do this. This can easily be achieved, but there is a little work involved. First, you must prepare the soil. The best way to start is to test the ground using a soil testing kit.

You want to be certain that the soil has the proper balance as far as PH is concerned. If the balance fails according to the testing kit, then you should consider integrating properly balanced soil as part of your lawn care over the entire surface of your yard. Using a rototiller can assist with this endeavor.

As the new land has been added, you should add a high quality fertilizer to the earth as the next phase of your lawn care. It will make sure that the conditions for growing are ideal. So, high-class grassland seed must be added. After all of this is complete, take your tiller and complete mix up all of the components mutually.

Discover What Garden Tools is

Saturday, January 10th, 2009

Yard work can be a chore, but it is well worth the effort. By making your yard beautiful and well taken care of, you will be proud to have visitors come to your door, and you and your family will enjoy spending time together in the back yard. Though accomplishing a well-kept yard is a big undertaking, you can ease your work with the proper garden tools.

There are lots of diverse garden tools out there that can help you maintain the immaculate appearance of your grass. garden tools are basically divided into two diverse categories : Hand Tools and Power Tools.

Hand tools were really improved back in the early days of mankind. That being said, these garden tools are still one of the most accepted on the market. Some of the more common tools are a spade, pitchfork, garden rake, and garden hoe.

Originally , the tools were really made of stone plus bone, but whilst our technology has risen these garden tools have developed more and more valuable. Generally hand tools are now made out of unbelievably long lasting metals.

Wall Plants

Friday, November 7th, 2008

The owners of small gardens need to utilise every scrap of space and they, therefore, must be more selective in their choice of plants. Climbers and wall plants will provide the answer to many problems for they will add both space and height to congested sites and will bring colour to every available wall. However, enthusiasm should be tempered with discreet understanding for there are climbers which love to be baked into brilliance of flower by hot sun, whereas others must be soothed by moist shade.

I always use a soft string which will not chafe even the most tender bark and, which is perhaps more important, it will rot after a year or two. When indestructible material is used I grow careless about the annual inspection to ensure the stem is not being constricted by the tie. All wall plants must be looked over at least twice a year to make certain the stems are not being chafed or strangled by the supporting media.

I could till a book with a selection of climbing and wall plants but as before will restrict the choice to those which have been proven in the crucible of the garden. There are two species especially suitable for wall culture, butoboth need different treatment.

Excessive Heat on Houseplant

Saturday, October 25th, 2008

Abide by the fertiliser manufacturer’s instructions and better results will be a little larger, and procure a properly balanced potting compost. It is seldom, if ever, that one sees good-quality plants growing in what is often referred to as garden dirt. Composts should contain peat, sand, fertiliser and all sorts of other ingredients if potted plants are to do well.

When using aerosol sprays of any description (other than those for pest control and cleaning) plants should be carefully avoided; better still to remove them from the room altogether.

Like fertilisers, all insecticides should be used as instructed, as that seemingly harmless little extra may well cause leaf scorch and other damage. Pests should be treated as soon as they are seen, as any delay will make their control just that much more difficult.

Calat heel zebrina requires warm, shady conditions – not a plant to choose for a sunny but unheated room. Though the flowers of Hibiscus rosa-sinensis are superb, like many flowering plants the hibiscus is vulnerable to greenfly attack.