Sunday, January 21, 2007

Packing for that Move to a New Place

Unless you work for a moving company, the idea of moving probably elicits groans. It can be less painful, however, if you pack right for the relocation.

Packing for that Move to a New Place

The best way to take the stress out of moving is to have a solid plan for executing your move. Before you even start to pack boxes or plan for moving trucks to arrive at your home, it's a good idea to do some research. Often, by making a few simple, you can have a great plan for your move that's easily set in motion. Here are some packing suggestions that are sure to help out anyone who wants to achieve a less difficult move.

One of the first things that any one who has moved will tell you is that you need plenty of boxes. This seems like the simplest of things, but it is actually much more important than it seems at first. Whether you decide to purchase boxes from a moving company or go to your local liquor store (they tend to have the sturdiest boxes, and will gladly give them to you for free), get more boxes than you think you will need. If you assume that 10 boxes will be enough to pack all of your belongings be sure to get 15. When you add in the necessary padding and packaging materials needed to keep items from breaking, your household goods will take up more room than you expect. Nothing is worse than discovering you need more boxes at 10 in the evening!

When packing furniture for a move, disassemble it as much as possible. For example, remove feet from couches and take apart bed frames. This way, you can fit your furniture into the most compact spot possible, which can save you money as you may not need to rent as large a truck for your move this way. The same goes for electronic items – if you break them apart into components, it is much easier to pack them into smaller spaces. Be sure to wrap any furniture or large electronics with moving blankets or padding, so that you can keep them safe from breakage or scratches.

Finally, one of the most important things to consider is what to pack first and last. Keep essentials such as clothing, medications, toiletries and food items with you for as long as possible. You never know when you might need one of these items, and generally they are easy to pack up at the last minute. Clothing and other personal supplies that are not needed at the time of your move (such as winter clothing during a summertime move) can be packed up ahead of time to make this task easier.

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Getting Rid of Your Junk Before Moving

I call it an heirloom, you call it junk. I call it a collectable, you call it junk. If you are going to be moving, this debate needs to be resolved.

Getting Rid of Your Junk Before Moving

It is no secret that moving is one of the least enjoyable tasks a human will ever face. Yes, it is exciting to move into a new area, but packing and getting there can be nightmarish. In a wicked twist of fate, however, statistics show that more and more people are moving multiple times in their life. The reasons range from employment changes to simply wanting to try somewhere new. Regardless, each move requires you to pack up everything and go. Or does it?

If you live in a location for any appreciable amount of time, you start accumulating all kinds of things. George Carlin, of course, referred to these things as your “stuff.” The question, however, is how much of that stuff do you really need and how much is really valuable to you? If you can put your emotions aside, you may be surprised to realize that a lot of your stuff is junk that should be pitched.

Moving can be stressful. Moving is really about changing your environment. Being in a new environment is uncomfortable at first because it is…well, new. One way to blow your stress level through the stratosphere is to start unpacking and realize one of two things. First, you packed and hauled a bunch of items that you should have thrown out. Second, that you packed and hauled a bunch of stuff that doesn’t fit into your new residence. As you back aches, you will undoubtedly be in a very sour mood.

One of the keys to minimizing the misery of moving is to take stock of all your things before you start packing. Do you really need that exotic lamp that has been sitting in the closet for the last five years? How about the stair climber that has not been used in two years? If you haven’t used it in two years, you are kidding yourself if you make any new resolutions to do so! Get rid of this junk!

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Easy, Long Lost Ways to Create Family Unity and Fun

Are you sick and tired of TV being your first (and maybe only) form of entertainment for your family? Wouldn’t it be great to have fun and interact instead of just staring at a box? Fortunately you’ve come to the right place for 8 long lost, easy and fun, suggestions for family activity that can be done virtually anywhere in the world.

So get up off the couch and do these things on a regular basis:

1. On the boardwalk

No matter where you are, or where you live, there is somewhere you can take a walk or a hike. Get out of the house and see your neighborhood, your town, the fields or mountains around you. Walking, talking, and seeing together is a great way to have fun and get some fresh air.

2. Water world

Most kids love water, and frankly, parents probably ought to get back in touch with it. Grab your swimming suits and go to the city pool, the YMCA, the river, the lake, or an open downtown fountain. For fun right at home, turn on the sprinklers in the yard or grab the hose and have a good old-fashioned water fight.

3. Yards of fun

If the weather is nice, yard games are a great way to play together, have fun, and even develop new skills. Croquet, badminton, bocci, soccer, volleyball, or lawn bowling are great ways to bring back some “good old days” to your family. Try playing the outdoor games you loved as kid and see that your kids will love them too. Try Kick-the-can, Red Light Green Light, Mother May I, Statues, etc. (For rules for these, and other, games ask for them through the contact page at marylougames.com)

4. Reading Team

One of our family’s favorite things to do over the years has been to read aloud together. It’s so fun to get a book that everyone will enjoy and just sit down and listen together. Pick someone who enjoys reading and can give expression and voice to the people in the book. We’ve read both fiction and non-fiction. We read in the car while traveling, in the evening at bedtime, on Sunday afternoons. Usually none of us want to put the book down, and the kids beg for one more chapter. If you’ve never done this before just pick a good book and start with just one chapter. Here’s a hint: Always stop when you’re in the middle of the excitement so they keep wanting more.

5. Project fun

How about starting a project that the whole family can help work on? When I was a kid my dad decided we were going to build a canoe. He got plans at the library and most evenings we were out in the garage working on it together. We used it for years on the lakes near our home. A lot of wonderful memories are tied to that canoe.

Think of something the whole family can pitch in on and do together and then enjoy together later on. If building would not be interesting to your family try other options--design clothes, start a business, write books, make scrapbooks, cook together, paint, plant a garden, build model airplanes, do puzzles, etc.

6. School’s out

Even when school is out, learning is in. Have each member of the family write down some things they would like to learn to do. Compare lists and find something that everyone would be willing to learn. Then search out resources in your community to learn what you‘ve decided. How about learning to dance, to sculpt, to play musical instruments, etc. Learning is fun.

7. Meeting of the board

Board games and card games are so readily available and really are fun in a box. There are so many to choose from that you can find one or two that your family can enjoy together. We play games frequently on Sunday evenings, and during the summer, board games are a regular part of the fun. Board games also teach following the rules, cooperation, compassion, and creative thinking.

8. Friends and family

Consider the old practice of visiting friends and family members. If your kids groan at this suggestion start with a visit to a friend or relative that also includes a barbecue, a movie night, or treats. Make the visits fun and over time the idea of visiting people won’t seem so strange to the kids. Make sure that (eventually) you are visiting people of many ages. Kids can actually find older people to be very interesting. But start with what is familiar and fun until they are visiting pros.
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Cold Hardy Palm Trees for Northern Garden Planting

Palm trees were once thought to be suitable for planting only in tropical landscapes, however, several cold hardy palm trees occur naturally, growing in America, where snows fall during winter. The windmill palm tree, Trachycarpus fortunei; the Dwarf Palmetto palm tree, Sabal minor; the Saw palmetto, Serenoa repens; and the Sabal Palm, sabal palmetto; and the Needle Palm, Rhapidophyllun hystrix; Much of the information that is published in book from, magazine articles and Internet websites is extremely conservative, perhaps because the testing for national cold hardiness is of a recent origin; and also temperature fluctuations caused by global warming increases the survival rate of palm tree plantings in recent years. Try buying a few palm trees in your garden to plant and grow. Very large specimen palm trees can be purchased for semi-truck fast delivery at a few Internet nursery websites.

The Windmill palm tree, Trachycarpus fortunei, also is called a Chusan palm and a Chinese Windmill palm tree, was imported from Japan, perhaps first, into the United States, but most botanists believe that this palm tree originated in China, where many seed and specimen trees were purchased to import into the US. Windmill palm trees are a common landscape sight throughout Europe, the United States, and Canada. These Windmill palm trees are very cold hardy, and can be see flourishing along the city streets of Lake Lucerne, Switzerland, where the palms grow up to 40ft in height. The slender, graceful trunks are covered with brown-black fibers that appear as hair from a distance, and with aging, the fibers turn gray, and on large old trees the fibers fall off to reveal a slick beautiful trunk. The waxy leaves are bright green above and silver-green below; growing 2 feet long and 2 feet wide, smaller than most other palm trees. Windmill palm trees grow a flower stalk 2 feet long, with yellow, pleasantly aromatic flowers developing into ½” long blue fruits.

Windmill palm trees, Trachycarpus fortunei, are so cold hardy that semi-truck loads of large specimen sized trees have been nursery distributed for customers in Canada who wish to buy a palm to place in a tropical landscape design. The famous Cloister Hotel at Sea Island, Georgia plants grouping of large Windmill palms, some 20-30 feet for planting near entrances and landscape positions close to buildings. Windmill palms are tolerant of salt water spray and are very adaptable for planting and growing in most areas of the United States.

The Dwarf Palmetto palm tree, Sabal minor, is not a fast growing plant, and gorws abundantly in pine tree forests, and in poorly drained lowlands. Innumerable colonies of dwarf palmetto palm grow next to the highway between Albany, Georgia and Blakely, Georgia on swampland, that is under water periodically, and the dwarf palmetto palms grow in very heavy shade. Native to the Southeastern US, this palm grows small trunks that remain hidden behind the leaves. The flower stalk grows four to six feet, and white flowers grow into one-half inch, black fruit. This extremely adaptable palm tree is drought tolerant, and popularly is grown as a native, landscape specimen shrub or in rows as a privacy screen. This dwarf palmetto grows beautiful, pest resistant leaves, and can be seen growing as a salt water resistant plant in large landscape borders of Sea Island, Georgia, where land purchasers value the natural appearance and incorporate the plant into landscape designs.

Saw palmetto, Serenoa repens, is one of the native Southeastern plants that has become the rage for planting as a cold hardy palm in Northern States, where it can survive temperatures of -10 F. The beautiful blue or green colored leaves are shiny and waxy, growing about five feet long. The flower stalk grows 3 feet long and appears in the heat of the summer, covered with white flowers that form blue fruit one inch in diameter. The saw palmetto palm tree is very adaptable for cold hardy growing in Northerne states, where temperature extremes damage most other palms. These palm trees are grown mostly as clumping shrubs in naturalistic landscapes. You should buy large Saw palmetto palms, as they do not transplant well and should be planted and grown from a container plant nursery. Very exotic trunks form on century old Saw palmetto palms, that can be seen growing on the sand dunes next to salt water waves spraying the leaves at Sea Island, Georgia. Trunks on these trees had the lower leaves removed to reveal trunks 4ft long that can grow parallel to the ground or at right angels or twisted. All palm tree trunks obviously shaped by storms or hurricanes, that may have blown over the plants rooted in the sand, only to regrow at a different angle. These palm trees must be seen to appreciate a dune of sand landscaped properly.

The Cabbage palm tree (Sabal palmetto) is also called the Sabal Palm, and is believed to be the most commonly planted palm tree in the Southern US. This palm tree is native to that area, and grows in forests throughout Florida and coastal Georgia. The Cabbage palm tree can grow to 40 feet, but only grows about one foot per year. Upon aging, the lower leaf stem remains (petioles) attached for many years, giving the trunk a bazaar, forbidding appearance. After many years, the leaf remains can be removed artificially, or naturally, giving the trunk a slick, desirable look in the landscape. During hot weather, white flowers grow fast, to 6 feet long, to produce one-half inch black fruit that fall to the ground. Sabal palm trees grow as far North as coastal Virginia, and Carolina landscapes, and are cold hardy to below zero temperatures. This Cabbage palm is drought resistant, requires little care or growth maintenance when planted in the landscape, and is so salt water tolerant, it can be found growing along the sea coast, sometimes falling into the ocean with sea erosion.

Sabal palm trees are considered as the State tree in Florida and South Carolina. Because Sable palm tree roots do not branch like other palms, transplanting the tree can be difficult unless the leaves are all removed before transplanting into home landscapes, and since they are not fast growing, it is not unusual for the palm tree to require 3 to 4 years to regrow the canopy leaves to normal size. The cabbage palm is also susceptible to hurricane damage, because its roots are not largely branched like other palm trees to anchor the trunk into the earth.

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How to Get Rid of Noisy Neighbors

In three religions Judaism, Christianity and Islam, we are asked to respect our neighbors, but what happens when your new neighbor turns out to be the biggest nuisance to arrive in your neighborhood? Parties till late every night, music on full, when your trying to have a nap after a hard days work and unbearable shouting and screaming coming from the house next door. Do you break the rules and turn against your neighbor? Or do you ask your neighbor nicely to quit all the noise they make?

We both can agree on one thing, noisy neighbors are a nuisance. They could turn out to be your worst nightmare and biggest pain if unchallenged. You will have night after night of no sleep. So leaving your noisy neighbors alone is not an option. You have got to become proactive to prevent your health and life from going down the tube, because of someone else.

Your first task as a neighbor with good manners is to simply go over to your noisy neighbor’s house and ask politely if they can bring down the level of noise, and explain that they are disturbing the neighborhood. If your neighbor is polite enough they will comply with your request, but if the noise level remains unchanged and or increases, then you have a really irritating neighbor who enjoys doing just that, annoying you and the neighborhood with their ignorance.

If the above didn’t work, then you are going to have to call the landlord of your neighbors house and, inform them about the behavior of the current occupants. Your landlord may be hesitant to react, so collecting evidence before hand would be a great idea. Keep your video camera ready in this case, and make sure the time and date is on display. This is to show the landlord at what times your neighbor becomes a noisy nuisance.

If your landlord does not do much but just talk to your neighbors, which is most often the case, then get a letter prepared for evicting your neighbor. This letter works best when signed by many other neighbors in your neighborhood who also can’t put up with the disturbance. Send the letter to the landlord and to your troublesome neighbor. This letter has a very strong effect and works almost every time. However if for some reason it doesn’t and the disturbance continues, then as a final resort call in the police while the noise coming from your neighbor is at its peak.

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A Gift For Dad

Lately, I've been thinking about my dad a lot. His birthday is coming up and there on the horizon, of course, is the great monolith that is Christmas...looming. Why are parents, dads in particular, so hard to shop for?

So I've been thinking about my dad and wondering what keen little tidbits have been grabbing his attention lately -- hoping that a gift idea will not just grab me, but knock me over. And one did.

Just last night my dad dropped the idea right on me, and he didn't even know it. Bear with me...let me tell you a little about my dad first.

Dad is a member of the NRA. He's never owned a gun in his life -- the antique rifle, a hand-me down that belonged to some great-grandfather, which resides in the back of his closet doesn't count. My dad just believes in the Constitution and most definitely in the Second Amendment.

So being who and what he is, he reads his monthly NRA magazine Freedom, every page. But my dad has never been one to just accept things; he questions everything, perhaps looking for a better way. And this is the crux of the conversation that inevitably brought me the gift solution.

While dicing up onions for our weekly chalupas, my dad began to tell me about the latest edition of Freedom in which six life-threatening experiences were discussed -- four involved attempted home invasions, one attempted burglary of a small business, and one attempted car theft. Out of these six incidents, four of the criminals were killed and two wounded -- and miraculously, only one victim was hurt.

Dad and I always like to hear about the good guys coming out on top, yet something was bothering my dad this time.

Hmm, a little strange. Dad isn't soft on crime, so what could be bothering him?

"Simple," he says. "People shouldn't die for dumb mistakes."

Okay. That's true.

"But Dad, those people died committing a crime, and what about the victims? Don't they have a right to protect themselves and their property?" I asked.

"Well, of course. But there has to be a better way. I just know that if it was me that had killed some sneaky, lowlife burglar, I would feel bad about it...,"Dad said letting his answer just kind of drift off like his thoughts.

Maybe Dad was finished with the subject, but I was just getting started. My brain was lit up like a Christmas tree -- I had an idea, finally. I had my gift solution.

What do you give a guy, your dad, who already has almost everything, who's a member of the NRA -- but doesn't own a gun? Oh, man. It was so crystal clear to me, almost blinding with the sparkles...a Taser!

What? Yeah, really. A Taser. It is perfect. A Taser is non-lethal and more effective than a 9mm handgun, that is, it knocks down that pesky criminal faster, harder, and more completely than a 9mm handgun.

And the best part? That pesky criminal won't be getting up again any time soon thanks to Electro-Muscular Disruption Technology (sounds a little Star Trek-ish, doesn't it?); a Taser actually over-rides your target's central nervous system. (I can almost hear Capt. Kirk now "Phasers on stun.")

But the absolute, best part...my dad would be able to defend his home and himself and still have a clear conscience.

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