Posts Tagged ‘p’
Thursday, August 20th, 2009
by Thomas Fryd
September highlights: keeping apace of daylilies; feeding the lawn and long-season plants; experimenting with chrysanthemums.
New, glamorous day-lilies are being introduced in such rapid succession that one is kept pretty well out of breath trying to keep apace of them.
Feeding the lawn and long-season plants – One of the leading manufacturers of lawn fertilizers, after reporting that under certain treatments lawns had been improved 80 per cent, commented: “That’s quite an improvement, but with supplemental feeding it’s possible to improve a lawn 180 per cent.” The secret is revealed in the practices of the golf-course superintendent: he feeds the greens regularly all summer long. What home gardeners should do is feed the lawn at the rate of 1-1/2 to 2 pounds of good plant food per 100 square feet in June and again in August or early September. Also, the clippings shouldn’t be removed unless they are unusually heavy and will mat and encourage the growth of fungus diseases.
According to the manufacturer’s report, greens that were fertilized regularly but not mulched with clippings made a 97 per cent increase in growth, whereas those given the same treatment but also mulched with clippings gave 180 per cent increase.
Tags: a, g, garden, gardening, h, home & family, home-improvement, home;improvement, l, lawn, p, plants
Posted in gardening, plant care | No Comments »
Tuesday, August 4th, 2009
by Pamela Smith
The sizes of your fireplace accessories must coordinate with the size of your mantle or else these decors will not be given any due notice. There must be sense of balance in placing your hearth accents and try arranging them in groups to be noticeable. These things can be used as functional tools and accents. What is important it to keep things like these properly organized to avoid visual confusion.
The use of beautiful hanging frames like wall painting can always provide a good visual influence. Using appropriate fireplace accessories can transform an average brick hearth into an awesome focal point in your home. The wood-burning furnace is known to be the coziest part of your home and considered as the center of attraction.
Colors are influential factors for room makeovers and give soothing effects to the eyes of the people near the heart. You can give the space a homey atmosphere with some colors that coordinates equally well with the cover of your sofas and other fireplace accessories that are already in existent to decorate the room. They can play an important role in beautifying any space of your house and they can always change the appearance of any unattractive place into a bright lively room.
Tags: c, climate control, f, fireplace accessories, fireplaces, fireplaces and stoves, gardening, h, home & family, home-and-garden, home-improvement, home;improvement, i, l, o, p, shopping
Posted in accessories, gardening, Product Reviews | No Comments »
Friday, July 17th, 2009
by Kent Higgins
May is when the grass starts growing and so do their buddies the weeds. Spraying of broad-leaved lawn weeds such as dandelion and plantain with a herbicide can begin as soon as the air temperature can be depended upon to stay 70 for several hours.
Creeping Charley (Nepeta hederacea) is called by so many names (such as gill-over-the-ground and ground ivy) that a description might be in order. This weed creeps along the ground, its thin wiry stems rooting as they lengthen. Its leaves are scalloped and round; its flowers are tiny spikes of typical catnip form. Creeping Charley thrives in shade. It can be killed with sprays containing material developed for it’s control. This material, marketed under several trade names, is widely available. Begin an insect-control program for your rose bushes as soon as the leaves on the canes are full-size. Remember that black spot, the most serious rose disease in the Middle West, can never be cured; it can only be prevented. Keep the leaves covered at all times with a combination dust. My pet combination is malathion and captan. This “combo” has worked well for me over the years.
Questions for The May Landscape
Tags: a, g, garden, gardening, h, home & family, home-improvement, home;improvement, l, landscape, Landscaping, lawn, p, plants
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Thursday, July 9th, 2009
by Andrew Caxton
No matter if this is your first home or not, you likely can benefit from a bit of lawn care training. What do you need to do to this lawn to get it to the point where you will be happy with it? There are many resources that can help you to get it the way that you want to. During the first months and even years of owning your property, you will be able to fine tune your abilities with fertilizing and caring for your lawn in general. When you pay attention to it, your lawn will do well under your guidance.
Getting Help
You may want to talk to your neighbor that has a great looking yard for some advice. They will have the same soil and other factors as you do, therefore giving you a great starting point. You may also want to look for lawn care training from your local gardening shop or home improvement store. Ask about the types of plants that do well in your area and be sure to ask about all of the tips they can give you with maintaining your yard. Your local extension office can also provide you with the tools you need to maintain a healthy and productive yard. Some offer websites that can be helpful to you as well.
Tags: a, g, gardening, h, home, home & family, home-improvement, home;improvement, home;repair, l, Landscaping, lawn care training, o, p, plant new grass, yard
Posted in gardening, grass, outdoor decorating | No Comments »
Wednesday, June 10th, 2009
by Ahmad Hassam
The best method to generate free traffic is to get your website ranked high on the SERP of major search engines, Google, Yahoo and MSN. How do you do that?
By building quality one way back links to your website. There are many methods to build quality back links to your webpages.
There are many link exchanges. Dont use them, avoid them. Reciprocal links dont have much value with the search engines. Only one way backlinks count with Google.
Some webmasters try to use software that can bookmark their webpages on the social bookmarking sites like propeller, spurl, mixx, digg etc. These social bookmarking sites have high Page Rank (PR) of 6, 7 and 8. So these backlinks may have some value with the search engines.
The only problem with these bookmarking links in that it falls into the area of black hat SEO. Try to avoid it. Your site may get banned on Google and other search engines.
The best method to build backlinks is to write articles. Article marketing has been the consistent and time tested method used by SEO experts to build one way quality back links to their sites.
Tags: a, advertising, b, blogging, business;finance, d, e, f, fashion, food, g, gambling, gardening, government, h, health, i, Internet Business, m, marketing, n, o, p, poker, retirement, s, sports, travel, u
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Wednesday, May 27th, 2009
by Samson Rhubarb
Central heating is very much thought of as a modern-day convenience. However it has been dated back to the ancient Greeks. A system of central heating provides heat to the interior of (or a portion of) a house or factory etc.
It is believed that in around 350 BC the homes of the wealthy and the Great Temples in the ancient times of Greece were heated by warm air that was circulated through flue systems in the floor. Today, because we have electricity to power blowers, forced-air systems warm billions of homes all around the world.
These forced air systems draw air into their pipes through to a furnace where the air is warmed and sent back into the room. There are different sizes of each model system so as to provide for every size room.
These systems are sometimes used with an air filter, an AC (air conditioning) unit, and a humidifier. The pipes in the system are usually made from a hard-warring metal like copper surrounded in insulation for optimum heating.
Tags: a, appliances, c, central heating, consumer electronics, e, electonics, electrics, gardening, h, heaters, heating, home, home-and-garden, home;accessory, home;improvement, house, house and home, household, household appliances, p
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Saturday, May 2nd, 2009
by Hass67
The intra day forex market is full of noise that it becomes difficult for new traders to understand where to put the stop loss. There is so much noise in the forex markets in the short run that prices tend to jump 10-20 pips for no apparent reason.
This becomes frustrating for many new day traders. Most constantly find their stop losses being tripped due to noise even when the rates are going in the anticipated direction.
A static 10-20 pip stop loss is an arbitrary choice many traders make. Many new traders also use Trailing Stop Loss. Place your trailing stop loss too close and you will find your stop hit too early. Place it too far and you will have to forgo potential profits if the price retraces.
Many professional forex traders do use stop loss but mostly place it on their computers hiding them from their brokers. Best way to place a stop loss is using a dynamic level.
Because if brokers find many stop losses at a particular price level they can easily trip them using a momentary blip in their price feeds. You cant do anything. It was a momentary spike during to a sudden large transaction in the market. This is known as Stop Hunting.
Tags: a, b, blogs, business, c, casinos, d, e, ecommerce, education, Entrepreneurs, f, family, fashion, fitness, food, g, gardening, government, h, hobbies, l, m, men, o, p, r, recreation, s, sports, u, v, vehicles, women
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Tuesday, April 21st, 2009
by Paul J. Easton
History reveals that the Hanging Gardens of Babylon is a big evidence of a hydroponic garden. Moreover, the Aztec Indians in the now Mexico had a system of growing crops on rafts. These rafts are in shallow lakes that you can still see in floating gardens near Mexico City. Therefore, history shows the great significance of hydroponic system of growing plants even in ancient times.
Developments with hydroponics did not however take place in Europe until 1699 when Woodward discovered it. He found out that he can grow plants in a solution of water to which soil had been added.
On the other hand, Liebig, a German scientist, originated using nutrient solutions to study the nutritional requirements of plants in the 1850′s. It was then followed by Sachs in 1860. Knop also did some studies of nutrient elements in water solutions in 1861. They grew plants in nutrients-rich solutions with mineral salts. This does away with the soil as a main requirement for growing crops.
Many researches on the nutritional requirements of plants extended through even until the 1870′s. By 1925, practical applications of hydroponics were being introduced for the vast development in the greenhouse industry.
Tags: environmental, g, gardening, grow hydroponic, h, hobby, hydroponic, hydroponic system, hydroponic systems, p, ph meter, ph probe, ph test meter, ph tester, portable handheld, probe ph, r, w, women, y
Posted in agriculture, gardening, hydroponic gardening, hydroponics | No Comments »
Monday, August 11th, 2008
by Adam Dogwood
One adaption in orchids can be found among the epidendrums. The species E. falcatum retains all its weight in the thick, heavy leaves. The root system is not numerous, but s-ong enough to hold a heavy plant firmly in its place on a tree. The pseudobulbs are merely short stems which support the long, spears-lriaped leaves which, rough and hard, will withstand a harsh environment. They are the main source of food supply for the plant.
The life span of a root can be one season only in orchids whose pseudobulhs arc of annual duration or the roots may live for several years, their life span related to the state of the pseudobulbs they are supporting. When leaves are eventually shed, that pseudobulb has no further use for roots, and they will die naturally.
Nevertheless their culture remains specialised, and their roots are all important to them. They do not take kindly to pot culture and should be accommodated on hark. Pieces of rough bark are ideal, as their extensive fine root system will take advantage of every crevice, the roots hugging the bark as well as growing freely in the air.
Tags: e, f, family, flowers, g, gardening, general, h, hobbies, home, home & family, i, internet, k, l, n, news, o, outdoors, p, plants, recreation, s, skateboards, u, w, web
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Saturday, August 9th, 2008
by Elijah Jordan
There are various grades of polythene sheeting for fixing to the glazing bars with drawings pins or a stapler. For an aluminium house there are specially-designed clips. A totally sealed greenhouse will give the grower a fresh crop of problems. Condensation will build up on the polythene and reduce the light drastically in the winter when every bit of light is of benefit.
It should be placed near the floor, below the plants, to allow the cool vapour to reach the plants standing above. Within a few weeks of introducing a humidifex into the greenhouse or home you should see a noticeable increase in aerial root activity on your orchids.
This material can be fixed in the same way as polythene, but because it is full of minute holes it is able to breathe which prevents condensation and drip. Neither does it cut too much light from the plants. The netting is easily obtainable from garden centres. It can be taken down in summer and stored for the following winter. As it does not tear easily, it should last for several seasons.
Tags: a, e, f, family, flowers, g, gardening, general, h, hobbies, home, home & family, i, internet, l, n, news, o, outdoors, p, plants, recreation, s, skateboards, u, w, web
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