Archive for May, 2009

Planning a flower garden using native plants has its benefits and beauty

In our last essay we talked about tips, tricks and ideas for a flower garden. Gardens based on a flower only design are nice and work well for most of our interested readers but the are not the only way to achieve ones desired attraction for “flower gardening.”

native-plantNative plants make for a nice sustainable garden and a native garden guide should be considered as it will make it easy to design a lovely garden of this type.

climate-changesClimate changes affect almost everyone in the world. Water shortages are common and in some regions, your water usage may even be restricted.

It’s becoming more difficult to have that lush tropical garden in drought areas. There are many excellent and comprehensive plant guides which include most plants, but which may not readily survive in your garden.

Maybe it’s time to rethink your garden plans, with an eye to beautiful beds filled with native plants. Regional native plant guides are limited to flowers, grasses and other ornamentals and wildflowers which are adapted to your garden’s environment and seasonal changes.

Find a Native plant guides that offers many entries from which you may choose to create a new display of flowers which will thrive and hang tough in harsh conditions you may experience in your area on a yearly basis.

Not only these native plants thrive, but they’ll require less maintenance. After all, native plants flourished in the area before there were any gardeners to water them!

While native plants will survive even when neglected, a little pruning, trimming and dead-heading in your flower beds will keep your garden looking like the ones in the garden magazines.

Another advantage in using native plants to design your landscaping is that, while a more exotic species may fall prey to a local pest, native plants are typically more resistant, which reduces your workload considerably and results in a more beautiful garden.

Native plant guides give you the full particulars of the plant’s physical characteristics, growing and soil conditions and every other detail you may need to know.

Look for plant guides which include photos. This makes it easy to find plants which catch your eye, appeal to your taste and help you to coordinate desirable color themes.

As you discover those perfect native plant candidates which will fit beautifully in a certain location, consult your local nursery for any comments and advice they might have concerning specific varieties which may do best in your garden.

Search around on the net for regional nurseries which stock less common native plants.

Here’s some popular examples:

prickly-pear-cactusPrickly pear cactus it bears large, beautiful pink flowers in spring, may not be available at your neighborhood nursery, but you’ll be able to find sources online. This plant can make a spectacular center piece. Make sure to use sandy soil.

No matter what area of the country you live in, you can find a native plant guide, just chock full of choices to suit your purposes.

As you can see, with a little imagination you can create that dream flower garden in any location with any conditions.

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Tips, tricks and ideas to help make your Flower Garden a delightful reality.

It’s never to soon to start thinking about your flower garden plans. In most areas it’s not even to late.

flower-gardenFlower garden ideas can be a real balancing act. On the one hand, you want your flower garden to be bright and colorful. You don’t want the same bed of flowers, trees, and small fountain that your neighbor has.

If you’re like us, you want something different that will show that you are unique, creative and quite the home gardener. Something that expresses your individuality. After all, why else would you be here looking for ideas. Why would you spend so much time thinking about and figuring out ways to really enjoy your garden areas?

You know you think big…we all do but you and I both know that your flower garden ideas can’t become too outlandish. outlandish-gardenIt’s a known fact with us gardeners– the most innovative, adventurous flower garden ideas tend to never get realized.

They are either way too expensive or too much work to finish in one planting season. Or they end up being way too exotic to meet the approval of every one involved with the decision.

It’s o.k. to dream, but once you start up on a project you should be reasonably certain that you can actually follow through with it successfully.

That is why, when it comes to flower garden design ideas, less is more. Don’t get me wrong – after you have been doing it for a few years, you will have a better grasp of what you can and can’t accomplish in the planting season.

Still, when you’re first starting off, you should keep your flower garden idea pretty small and compact.

Here’s a tip… try using a sparse design. Don’t plant huge banks of flowers – plant a few flowers here and there, combined with some ornamental pieces. This way you’ll create small easy to care for eye catching areas of elegance that can always be added too.

Most professional gardeners will agree that new gardeners should consider a simple rule of thumb for flower planting ideas:

“figure out how much time you have, then, come up with a plan that should take about half that long.”

Everything always takes longer than you think it would – particularly if you are new to something.

Once you have accomplished small garden areas you can add on some more flower garden ideas along the way.

Keep in mind, you don’t have to plan it all out at once. You will find that what you do even as simple as two or three small flower garden beds will be very appealing, soothing to the eye and inspiring to you and all who see what you’ve done through proper planning.

For more garden planning information check out our related posts:

The Gardeners Handbook
Gardening Secrets For Spring Garden Preparation

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Nothing could be more important to learn at home than How to Do First Aid.

Especially on a child, yours or someones elses.  When having guest over to enjoy your home and garden and back yard BBQ’s always keep the fact that people and children due get chocked on a farily regular basis.

Have fun at your home and garden events and rest assurd that knowing the following helpful tips.

 

 

How to Do First Aid on a Choking Baby

from wikiHow - The How to Manual That You Can Edit

Infants are notorious for assuming they can eat anything in the world, whether it fits in their throat or not. If you suspect that a child under 12 months old is choking follow these instructions. If the child is over 1 year old read how to help choking adults and older children.

Steps

  1. Let coughing happen. If an infant or child is coughing, do not interfere – let him or her try to cough up the object. If a child can cough, he or she is getting air.
  2. Look for the following signs of choking and heed them, even if you didn't witness the child putting anything into his or her mouth.[1][2]
    • Being unable to talk or vocalize
    • Can't breathe without difficulty
    • Breathing is noisy
    • Cannot cough effectively
    • Changes in skin color: blue lips and fingernails
    • Unconsciousness - If the child does not respond to any stimulation (such as flicking the feet with your fingertips), call emergency services immediately (if you can get someone else to call while you administer first aid, that's even better).
  3. Administer needed treatment. Note that the technique differs between infants and older children. For children over 1 year old, follow the steps in How to Help a Choking Victim.[3] If the child is less than one year old, continue to the next step. If you're the only person present, don't lose precious time calling emergency services yet; proceed immediately to first aid (see Tips).
  4. Place the child on his or her back. Grab the feet of the baby with one hand, and slide your other hand along the back, until your hand is underneath the head. Scoop up the baby so its back is resting on your forearm and its head is resting on your hand.
  5. Hold the baby's jaw with your opposite hand. Don't cover the face.
  6. Turn the baby over so that the front of the body is now on the arm that is holding the jaw. Make sure the child's head and neck are well supported. Place your forearm along your leg to stabilize your arm and the child. The child's head should be away from you, and lower than his body.
  7. Administer back blows. Use the heel of your hand to give the child 5 firm back blows between the shoulder blades. Remember to keep the head lower than the body.
  8. Flip the child over. Grab the back of the head with the hand your used to give the back blows and flip the baby over onto the forearm, again making sure the head and neck are supported, and the head is lower than the body at all times. Lean that forearm on your thigh.
  9. Look to see if the obstruction has been removed. If so, sweep the child's mouth to remove it.
  10. Use chest compressions. Place two fingers at the center of the child's breast bone, oriented vertically (lined up with the baby's spine), about one finger width below the nipple line. Give 5 compressions.
  11. Check again to see if the object is removed. If not, try the back blows and chest compressions again. If you cannot dislodge the object, call for emergency services or get the child to an emergency room immediately.
  12. Begin child CPR if the child does not begin breathing normally again.

Video

On the original essay the video shows how to perform back blows and chest compressions on a choking child, and also describes how to best position the child to let gravity assist in removing the object.

Tips

  • In this situation, your first priority is to administer first aid as quickly as possible; don't spend time getting help until you've tried two sets of back blows and chest compressions.[2] If there's someone else who can call for emergency services, or if they can administer first aid while you call for help, then do so.

Related wikiHows

Sources and Citations

  • VideoJug.com Source of images and information, shared with permission.
  1. http://www.unicef.org/ffl/12/5.htm
  2. 2.0 2.1 MayoClinic.com - Choking:First Aid
  3. U.S. NASD - Basic First Aid

Article provided by wikiHow, a wiki how-to manual. Please edit this article and find author credits at the original wikiHow article on How to Do First Aid on a Choking Baby. All content on wikiHow can be shared under a Creative Commons license.

 
>>>Here’s a video we located covering CPR on an infant. Let us know if this and the above article is complete and was helpful.<<<
 

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Who would have thought Listerine would work on more than bade breath!

angry-man-swatting-mosquitoHave you ever had an outdoor party at your home or garden where the bugs seemed to be having all the fun biting everyone? 

At a recent party, I noticed a man spraying the lawn and deck floor with Listerine!

The little pesty demons disappeared! mosquito

The very next outdoor event I had I filled a small spray bottle with some cheap listerine and used it around my seat whenever I saw mosquitoes. 

It worked as well.. It even worked at a picnic where we sprayed the area around the food table, the children’s swing area, and the standing water nearby.

During the summer, I don’t leave home without it!

Feel free to try it yourself and pass this tip on.

I have been told that it repels chiggers too.

 

OUR FRIEND’S COMMENTS: 

I tried this on my deck and around all of my doors.  It works – in fact, it killed them 

instantly. I bought my bottle from Target and it cost me $1.89. It really doesn’t take much, and it is a big bottle, too; so it is not as expensive to use as the can of Bug-spray you buy that doesn’t last 30 minutes.

So, try this, please. It will last a couple of days. Don’t spray directly on a wood door (like your front door), but spray around the frame. Spray around the window frames, and even inside the dog house.

Maybe your next outdoor event won’t be ruined by naughty little un-invited pest!  

 

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