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Posts Tagged ‘relaxation’

Dog Friendly Rentals

July 9th, 2011

The majority of people really love their pets, to the point where they become part of the family. Some pet owners cannot stand to be parted from their pets for more than a day or so and for these people, going on vacation can be a problem, because they do not want to leave their friends behind. Obviously the answer is to take your cat or dog with you. Dogs are easier to take away than cats, because they are more well-trained

If you are only going for a few days, say on business, finding a hotel near to the location of your meeting should not be too much of a problem, unless you want to stay at one of the big names in the city centre. It is often the smaller, family-run hotels or guest houses that consent to pets, although some want you to keep your dog in a kennel on the premises overnight. larger hotels tend not to be very pet-friendly.

If you propose taking your pet with you, it is better if you make this clear when you make your booking as more hotels do not permit pets than do allow them. Normally there is no extra charge for a pet, but you are liable for any extra cleaning costs, should your pet get caught short.

If you are going away on holiday or for a longer period of time, it is usually a lot easier to find a holiday rental that will allow you to take your cat or dog with you. Again, it is wisest to make it obvious at booking that you want to take your dog with you. Luckily, there are about fifty percent of rentals or more that will permit this, although once again, you will be held responsible for any damage or mess caused by your dog.

A tip: if on arrival, you see that previous pets have caused some damage or stains, take photographs on your first day and have them dated. Modern cameras frequently have the facility to date stamp photos or you can use a newspaper. Otherwise, point out the damage to your host.

When you travel with your dog, it is best to put the animal in some sort of a cage particularly when driving. A loving dog can be a distraction in a car. If it wants attention just when you are trying to perform a complicated manouevre, it can result in an accident. Some dogs get very frightened in cars and want to sit on their owner's lap, this is also not a good idea and could lead to a charge of dangerous driving. Additionally, if your dog is not caged and you have an accident, it could be thrown through the windscreen. If you are travelling by air, then the airline will insist on a cage, but they normally have their own.

Once you arrive at your pet-friendly rental, give your dog some of his normal food to eat, lay out his blanket from home, and put out one of his favourite toys, just to help make him feel at home. After all, everything will be alien to him and he might be able to smell the previous furry tenant. If cleaning staff will be entering your rental during your holiday, make sure that you are there at least for the first few times they visit.

Owen Jones, the author of this article, writes on many topics, but is currently concerned with Poconos rentals. If you are interested in a rental in the Poconos Mountains, please go to our website at Poconos Vacations

How To Go About Choosing Your Garden Furniture

July 8th, 2011

If you are going to take your garden seriously, there are a couple items that you have to do. This first thing to do is work out a plan of how you want your garden to look like. This is easily done using graph paper or the more artistic might select to draw it. Then you need to landscape your garden according to your plan, although you can adjust your plan as you go. After all, you are the boss. Put in any electric cables and water pipes that you might need. Erect your shed and greenhouse, if required then you can begin planting and start to choose your garden furniture.

The point of this article is to help you select your garden furniture. There is so much diversity of garden furniture that it can be quite difficult to make up your mind. Do you go for hardwood, softwood, metal or plastic?

Which colour and which style? Some of your choice will be restricted, if you are on a budget, but in reality, over the long term of twenty or thirty years, hardwood is the cheapest alternative and plastic the most expensive. Over the short term, two to five years, the opposite is true.

Whether you want armchairs or recliners is really up to you and so outside the remit of this article, so is the style that you prefer, although I will say that the most successful choice of garden furniture should blend in with the garden rather than stick out like a sore thumb. Plastic tends to look OK on a patio or deck, but rarely goes well with a garden full of pretty plants and bushes, whereas hardwood garden furniture tends to fit in well anywhere. You have to be a bit careful with softwood and metal.

In a way, it is a good idea to tackle choosing your garden furniture in the your same way that you would select the furniture for inside your home. It has to blend in with your overall style.

Therefore, you might want to put off buying your garden furniture until you get your first crop of flowers up, unless you can imagine it in your mind. The only problem with waiting for Spring is that that is when garden furniture is at its most expensive.

Ask yourself what you intend doing in the area where you are planning having your furniture. Are you and the family just going to flop there after work and on weekends or are you going to hold more formal garden parties there? If you are going to have guests, it should be large enough for the number you expect and the furniture should be robust enough so that it will not collapse under some of the heavier guests. If it is just for the family at least you are dealing with known information: how big they are and how many of them there are.

Another aspect to keep in mind is maintenance. Plastic does not have to be taken care of, but it will perish - become brittle - after a few hot summers and cold winters. You can lengthen the life of your plastic garden furniture by storing it in a shed when not in use. Metal garden furniture might need anti-rust treatment from time to time and if the seat is made of fabric, you should also check for signs of rot, which could lead to someone falling through the chair.

Softwood has to be treated with preservative, paint, varnish or oil fairly often and you should check for signs of rot or splitting, which can still come about no matter how much you take care of it. Hardwood garden furniture has to be treated once a year too, but it is by far the most robust material used for constructing garden furniture.

Plastic and metal furniture are available in many colours; softwood can be painted or stained any colour you like and hardwood comes in all shades of brown from light oak to rich dark mahogany, but it should never be painted only oiled and stained, if you want to.

If you select hardwood, it can be a bit hard on the backside after a couple hours, so buy a couple of cushions that match the colour and style of your garden furniture too. These can be stored inside when not in use or they will become unbelievably grimy and if they get wet it can take days for them to dry, during which time they might start to rot and smell. Removable cushion covers are a good idea.

Owen Jones, the author of this piece, writes on a variety of topics, but is now involved with large dining tables. If you would like to know more, please go to our website at Solid Oak Dining Tables.

Garden Patio Deck Layout

July 8th, 2011

After you have finished buying in your garden patio furniture and you have set it out as you like, it is time to park yourself in one of your new patio chairs with one of your favourite drinks and maybe a pen and paper, and take stock of the state of affairs.

Is your garden patio a little congested or do you have loads of room? Are there other things you would like to have out there? How about plants? Do you have enough plants and bushes - eye candy? Will you be using it only in the daytime or in the evening or even at night too? Will you need lighting, for instance?

This is where your own personal stylishness can be added to your shop bought furniture to make the patio truly your patio. So, if you live in a house that only has a small garden, you might want to think about things that hang rather than things that must be sited on the ground, which will take up walking space.

If you do not have much room, but you want to grow plants with edible fruit such as strawberries or tomatoes, you could get some hanging baskets. You can hang them from bushes or standard lamps or fix them to a boring wall. Similarly, you could grow herbs or other small flowers in a window box which has been fixed to a wall or placed on top of it. Or put shelving up and put boxes and pots on that.

If your patio is too bright, you could grow sunflowers or put up a trellis or an arbour and grow vines or clematis up it. Bamboo grows quickly too. If it is too shaded, plant plenty of bright yellow and white flowers and maybe paint the walls white or pink, if you are not keen on glare.

If your garden patio is a much bigger, you could add garden accessories in order to further your enjoyment. For instance, you could build a barbecue area out of stone slabs or bricks. You could add a fountain too. A fountain makes the very soothing sound of running and splashing water and fish are a delight to look at.

For the colder months, you could construct a fireplace, if local bylaws permit or get a patio heater. They are very efficient and can keep a fair radius warm, depending on the ambient temperature.

You will probably need some type of lighting as well, if you reckon on spending some evenings on your patio. I suggest a few spotlights to highlight your favourite flowers and the fountain and a broader beam light that you can read by. Do not put these lights near where you mean to sit because they will attract flying insects. However, they make a good distraction from you and will keep all but the blood sucking insects away.

For parasites such as mosquitoes, you should get some form of mosquito trap. Some are very good and promise to keep a quarter or even half an acre clear of mosquitoes and other such nuisances.

For all these extra accessories you will need power points. Therefore, if you plan your garden with pen and paper like I mentioned at the beginning of this article, then you will be able to show the electrician where you want the points and what-not in your new garden patio layout.

Owen Jones, the writer of this piece, writes on many subjects, but is currently involved with commercial patio heaters. If you are interested in patio heaters too, please click through to Residential Patio Heaters.

Hot Tub Improvements Over The Years

June 4th, 2011

Hut tubs have been commercially available for about 50 years, so you can imagine that the technology has come a long way. In the early days, hot tubs were normally only a small round wooden tub that was bursting at the seams with over two individuals in it. They were invariably round in shape and there was very little variety.

The first hot tubs to appear in the States were seen in the 1940's, but they were usually little more that than wooden barrels filled with hot water intended to give a long deep soak. In the 1950's, the idea grew and families started to create or buy hot tubs in order to relax and to alleviate the indications of arthritis. By the mid 1960's, individuals were adding home-manufactured heaters and pumps and very crude versions of the contemporary wooden hot tub were being born.

One early innovator was Roy Jacuzzi who developed and marketed the first hot tub that incorporated swirling water and jets. This whirlpool bath literally began the whole industry in 1968. In the early 1970's, manufacturers started to incorporate more powerful jets into their hot tubs and some manufacturers began making more comfortable designs out of fibreglass and acrylic. The business was taking off big time.

Jacuzzi started to produce larger models so that friends or a family could all take pleasure in the experience together. Most of the modernizations since the late 1970's have been technological, but these technical improvements have been quite serious.

The filters are more readily accessible nowadays which means that they are more likely to be cleaned as regularly as they ought to be in order to avoid the build up of bacteria from decomposing vegetation and hair. This will pollute the water and could create a health hazard. Not just that, but blocked filters means that the pump has to work harder to circulate the water which means more wear and tear and eventually, more money.

There is a greater choice of materials and colours these days. Before, the option was: what sort of timber do you want? Now you can still have that choice, plus the choice of any colour acrylic you would like as well. Or you can have an acrylic tub inside a wooden (or synthetic timber) exterior or skirt.

The benefits of the synthetic materials are that they last longer, are easier to clean and can be impregnated with a product that kills or wards off bacteria and mould.

The seating arrangement can be custom-made in modern spas to suit individual bathers. Every chair may have one or more directable jets and the chair itself might be manufactured to a precise height for a specific person or for a certain injury or condition.

The water heating arrangements are a great deal more adaptable as well. Nowadays, the water can be warmed by gas, electricity, your homes central heating system or by solar power, which is a huge improvement if you live in a country that enjoys a great deal of sun.

To top it all off, you can add aromatherapy oils and spa salt crystals to the water by placing them in a draw like in a washing machine and have them circulated in the water evenly.

Owen Jones, the author of this article, writes on a variety of topics, but is now concerned with Hot Springs hot tubs. If you would like to know more, please visit our web site at Hot Springs Spa Parts

Well-liked Water Activities For The Backyard

May 19th, 2011

When it becomes hot, most people head out the door. A lot go to a public pool, a river, lake or the beach, but others would prefer to remain in their own backyard. Some individuals are lucky enough to have a pool in their back yard, but not everyone has the space or the money. However, the majority of individuals like being wet in order to cool down.

In this piece, we will look at a few of the things that you do can in the garden involving water to help you stay cool. The first one is the one we have already touched on and the one home improvement that almost everyone would have if they could. A pool. People love the idea of having a backyard pool.

If your budget cannot stretch to a substantial in ground pool, you could get a smaller above-ground pool. These above-ground pools are a great deal cheaper, and while not large enough to swim in, they can certainly become thought of as large plunge pools. Half a dozen individuals can have a lot of enjoyment in one of these pools.

If this is not possible, what about a Jacuzzi or a hot tub? There is a lot of flexibility in hot tubs nowadays. You can have them built into all kinds of nooks and crannies in the garden.

You can also buy a hot tub of any size you want: two, foru, six, eight people and each person with a moulded chair with its own hydrotherapeutic directional water jets, so that you can play the jets on any areas of your body that you want.

If this is out of the question as well, what about a couple of garden water sprinklers? You could have plastic waterproof garden furniture and sit under the sprinklers simulating rain. This is an simple and very cheap way of cooling off when it is very hot.

You could hand everyone in your garden a water pistol to squirt each other with. This may sound a little juvenile but kids and a lot of adults actually enjoy it. Similar to this, you could fill a couple of dozen balloons up with water and use them for throwing at each other like having your own paint ball competition without getting dirty.

Water games are immense fun and a decent manner of staying cool whilst the sun is beating down in the summer. Only one word of warning - sunburn. Water will cool you down and you might not notice that you are burning. Make certain that everybody applies waterproof suntan lotion of a factor that is applicable to the degree of sunshine in your area.

Owen Jones, the writer of this piece, writes on a variety of subjects, but is now concerned with Sundance hot tubs. If you would like to know more, please visit our site at Hot Springs Spa Parts

How To Buy Home Office Furniture

May 13th, 2011

Do you work from home? Or do you surf the Internet or buy or sell on eBay? Do you send and receive email? Obviously you do, because you are reading this article. So let me ask you, how much attention do you pay to the equipment you use to accomplish these tasks?

You might make certain that you have the latest and fastest computer, you may make sure that you use the provider of the fastest broadband connection available in your district, but how much attention do you pay to your computer table and seat?

If you do not pay attention to these details too, you are surfing at top speed but you could be heading for a bad back and other physical complaints at break-neck speed as well. If you work for a company, these details are taken care of for you, or should be and if your boss does not take care of your posture, then the company could be liable for compensation. If you do not have a supervisor and work from home, it only makes sense that you take care of these details yourself.

If you take part in any of the activities listed in the first paragraph, you certainly should be taking an active interest in ergonomics, which is the study of the correct way to sit and how to use the right equipment to help you to achieve the correct posture so that you do not subject your body to undue stress when you are working.

So, how do you go about acquiring the right table or desk and the right seat for you to do your work safely? Well, it is probably easiest to start with the seat. The correct seat for you will allow you to place your feet flat on the floor with your thighs parallel to the floor. You should be able to accomplish this position without teetering on the edge of your seat. If you need a foot stool to achieve this state, that is proper. The chair should have a back too. Some say there should be arm rests too.

The table or desk should be of the height that will allow you to sit on your chair and put your elbows on the desk comfortably with a straight back. The height of the table must not encourage you to stretch or slouch.

Once you know how high your table and chair need to be, you can consider size. In general, the larger the table or desk the better. However, you know what you are like. Are you the type of person who clears the desk at the end of every day, or are you the sort that works until you cannot work any more and likes to leave books and papers open for a quick start the next day?

If you are the latter type, then you require as large a desk as you can get, but you might just want a big desk because they are imposing. Whatever. It does not matter. A bigger desk is better anyway. The bigger the better, but it must be at the height that allows you to sit at it on a seat that suits the length of your calfs and the length of your abdomen.

Owen Jones, the author of this piece, writes on a variety of topics, but is now involved with large dining tables. If you would like to know more, please visit our website at Solid Oak Dining Tables.

Buying And Maintaining Farmhouse Garden Furniture

April 13th, 2011

Farmhouse garden furniture is otherwise known as rustic garden furniture and goes back to the olden days of farms and country living. It has a style all of its own and is quite distinctive. Generally, farmhouse garden furniture is coarse, massive and heavy. Occasionally it is roughly hewn, but that is not always the case although it is seldom carved in great detail. Farmhouse garden furniture is made to last.

Farmhouse garden furniture encompasses the whole assortment of garden furniture such as tables, chairs, benches, gazebos and arbours. Farmhouse garden furniture is customarily made of local timber, but can also be made of iron.

To compliment the garden furniture, there is also indoor furniture in the farmhouse style although this might be a bit finer, a bit less heavy so that it can be moved around for cleaning purposes.

Farmhouse garden furniture is usually manufactured from local hardwood such as oak, cherry, maple, mahogany, teak or beech, but in fact anything that is to hand. Softwood, such as pine, is cheaper, but it does not usually last as long as hardwood even if it is maintained regularly and as it should be.

Hardwood furniture can be stained, oiled or varnished, although it is usually best to just rub linseed oil into the natural wood. A little staining may help bring out the beautiful natural graining in the timber.

Softwood garden furniture is usually full of knots which many people find unsightly. If this is how you feel, then you can give the furniture three coats of paint in order to protect it.

If however, the knots do not bother you, you can stain and varnish it instead. In either state of affairs, all farmhouse garden furniture should be maintained every year in the autumn; that is whilst the sun is no longer at its hottest and before the rain and cold weather set in. The trouble with anything made of any timber is rot.

Hardwood contains more natural oils than softwood so it is better able to protect itself, but all wood stops producing these oils when you kill it by chopping it down. The oil on the surface is dried out by the sun and these dry patches then draw some oil up from deeper inside itself, but the further inside it has to suck the oil from the less it can draw, which means that eventually the outside becomes dry and then it will take in water.

When that occurs, rot has set in. Hardwood can last a couple of years before it gets to this sorry state, but softwood will perhaps last less than a year. This is why you have to seal the oil in and the water out with paint or varnish in the instance of softwood or replenish the oil by rubbing in linseed oil in the instance of hardwood.

You could paint hardwood as well if you want to, but most people purchase hardwood farmhouse garden furniture because it has a beautiful grain and paint would only cover up that grain. Decent farmhouse garden furniture is not cheap, but it is beautiful, a problem to steal and will last a lifetime if well looked after by a few hours maintenance once a year.

Owen Jones, the author of this piece, writes on a variety of subjects, but is now involved with farmhouse dining tables. If you would like to know more, please visit our website at Solid Oak Dining Tables.

How To Buy Or Make Cushions For Garden Furniture

November 8th, 2010

People who have garden furniture prefer to spend as much of the summer sitting in their garden as they can. For these people, the summer months are too short and so they spend every spare minute of fine weather enjoying the flowers in their garden and the good weather.

Some people eat in the garden too and it is also widespread practice to read the paper in the morning over a cup of coffee and a book or magazine in the evening with a drink on the patio as well. Depending on the type of furniture that you have, this can be pretty tiring for the backside, so it is a good idea to get a couple cushions to make your life easier.

If you do not have any garden furniture yet, you have the choice of plastic, metal or wood. Plastic garden furniture is cheap to buy, but it does not last a long time. Plastic will often only last for two or three years after which time it becomes brittle and breaks due to extremes of hot and cold.

Metal furniture looks better than plastic and can be more comfortable to sit on because it frequently has a fabric seat, but it can be a bit rickety and it looks so austere. I think that metal garden furniture should be avoided. Once it starts rusting, it looks awful as well.

There are two kinds of timber garden furniture: softwood and hardwood. Some softwood chairs, such as the deck chair or beach chair have a fairly comfortable fabric seat, but most softwood and hardwood garden chairs are hard on the backside after a short while. It is for these chairs in particular that you will need cushions.

If you are buying a new garden table and chair set, you might find that it comes with matching cushions otherwise you will have to buy or make your own. This is not difficult, but there are a couple of items to bear in mind.

The cushions are likely to get caught in the rain sometimes, so it is best to have them manufactured from materials that will not rot and will not hold water. The stuffing can be that non-absorbent fibre that you frequently find in cheap cushions. It is ideal for use in the garden. The covers should be removable and washable. Cotton or man-made fibre is all right here, because you can put them through the washing machine.

Waterproof material is not recommended because if water does get inside, you want it to be able to get out, not get stuck inside where it will turn stale. If you want to dry them in a tumble dryer, be careful about using some man-made fabrics that may melt. You also do not want to use a fabric that may shrink as you will be washing them often. The colours must be fast for this reason too.

While we are talking about colours, the colour or patterns of the cushion covers should be fitting for the colours around them. Please, give this a little consideration: it makes all the difference between great, average and awful cushion covers, but it is where you can express your personal taste.

Owen Jones, the author of this piece, writes on a range of topics, but is now involved with large dining tables. If you would like to know more, please visit our website at Solid Oak Dining Tables.

Oaken Hardwood Garden Furniture

October 20th, 2010

If you are going to acquire garden furniture, it is a good idea to buy the best quality that you can afford and if you have the money then hardwood garden furniture is the best. There are many kinds of hardwood, naturally, but one of the most popular kinds of hardwood, especially in the UK and northern Europe, is oak. It will withstand any kind of weather and if it is taken care of, it will last for several decades.

Oaken hardwood garden furniture is not cheap to buy, that is true, but if you consider the joy that oak furniture will give and the fact that it will last for thirty years if you oil it or varnish it once or twice a year, it is pretty cheap certainly.

In comparison, cheap plastic garden furniture may last two or three years, but then it will need to be replaced. So you can sit on plastic chairs and have to replace them every few years or you can buy expensive oak and enjoy it for the remainder of your life.

Hardwood is heavily sought after, which leads unscrupulous traders to log it illegally. So, if you want to placate your conscience, try to make certain that you buy your hardwood garden furniture from a renewable source.

What is more, if you buy from a reputable dealer, you will be given directions on how to maintain it, which will enable you to double or even treble its lifespan.

If your oaken hardwood garden furniture is delivered stained or oiled, you should asked the merchant how you should treat the timber. I think that it is better to buy oak furniture oiled or merely stained so that you can make up your own mind how to treat it. Varnished wood has to be varnished again or rubbed down.

If you live in an region where the weather can be severe in the winter or the summer, you could consider getting covers for your furniture, particularly if you know that you are not going to use it for a couple days.

Sunlight is practically as damaging to dead wood as the cold, which is why we stain, varnish, oil and preserve it. Fortunately, this is not an onerous chore and a treatment once or twice a year will keep your oaken hardwood garden furniture in tip-top condition for numerous years.

There are numerous different types of wood treatment, so ultimately, you should abide by the directions on the tin, but I always like to apply a coat of stain without varnish first and perhaps even a second one to bring out the patterns in the wood's grain, then I apply oil, say, linseed oil until the timber is completely protected.

However, take note, this approach can go wrong. The wood can only soak up so much oil so do not put on more than it can soak up otherwise you will not be able to sit on your oaken hardwood garden furniture for a long while.

Owen Jones, the writer of this article, writes on a range of topics, but is now involved with large dining tables. If you would like to know more, please visit our website at Solid Oak Dining Tables.

Growing Herbals

July 18th, 2010

Every professional chef and every household cook recognizes the importance of fresh herbs to their culinary creations. No diner would dispute this either. However, whether you buy your herbs fresh or dried, there are problems. When you buy fresh, you usually have to buy more than you require and they are comparatively expensive, whereas, if you buy them dried, they could be old and dried herbs lose their strength over time.

Why then is it that most home cooks use fresh or dried herbs from the supermarket? Ease, probably. We lead busy lives and it is easier to get a few boxes of dried herbs at the supermarket along with your groceries than it is to grow your own.

Not that it is difficult to raise your own herbs and even spices, but you have to purchase the seeds, plant them and remember to water them. You can minimize the problem of trying to remember to water them quite easily, by growing your herbs in a window box or in trays on your patio or deck, so that you see them every time you take a break on your patio. You will also remember to bring them in if frost looks likely.

If you have children, growing herbs and spices in window boxes or trays can be a good induction to gardening for them. Herbs take very little looking after really, just needing watering every day. They are pretty tough and fertilizer is not necessary as most herbs have a fairly short life. Maybe only a month or two in some cases. Others last a lot longer.

First decide how many varieties you want to grow. How much room do you have for instance? The best way to start is look in your cupboard and see which herbs you use most frequently. Are any of them seeds? You could have a go at sowing these. Look them up in a book or on the Internet.

Sometimes it is better to soak the seeds first before sowing them, others do not require this handling. Second, which herbs have you read about that you would like to use but never seem to have in the house? Try sowing those too.

If all that does not sound like fun, then you can buy small herb plants in the garden nurseries. Most of them stock the most common herbs in Spring. Whichever way you go, read up on how to grow the herbs you have selected. I promise you, it will not be a long read, as they really do take care of themselves except for the watering. if you buy seeds rather than seedlings, all the details you need will be on the seed packet and these packets are very cheap to buy.

The benefits of having your own herb garden are manifold, but you will be teaching gardening to your kids or grandkids, you will have fresh herbs for cooking and you will have gorgeous aromas floating around your patio or deck.

Owen Jones, the writer of this piece, writes on many subjects, but is currently involved with outdoor heat lamp. If you are interested in patio heaters too, please click through to Residential Patio Heaters.