Posts Tagged ‘improvement’

Poultry House Programs: Perfect Protection From Unsafe Elements

Tuesday, May 4th, 2010

A good chicken’s house can protect the chickens from dangerous elements such as the weather, predators and injury.

Protection from Weather

A dry and draft-free house is needed for poultry. This can be done by building a comparatively draft-free poultry house with windows and doors which can sometimes be opened for ventilation when necessary. Build the chicken house on high and well-drained areas. Through this chickens plan, prolonged wetness and water saturation of the floor within the coop and runs outside can be prevented. Let the front of the coop, the windows and the outside run face to the south also. This allows the sun to habitually warm and dry the coop. To keep the humidity level in the coop to a minimum, allow a satisfactory level of space per bird too.

Protection from Predators

The best way to protect the chickens from predators is to keep the chicken’s house absolutely confined with fence and covered runs. When arranging a poultry house, consider laying a concrete floor and secure the wall with one or two concrete blocks. This hinders predators from digging under the walls and the floors. When the coop is opened, windows and doors must be soundly covered with heavy-gauge mesh wire or screening.

Chickens House Strategies – Providing Your Birds A Home

Sunday, May 2nd, 2010

There’s nothing like raising your own chickens, you can enjoy fresh eggs and meat for a fraction of the cost of buying them in the grocery. Your chickens are likely to want a place to live that’s warm and cozy year round. A good set of poultry house plans is important to be ready to build them a safe and secure coop which will last for a few years.

Bird’s house plans come in several styles and sizes dependent on the quantity of birds you plan to have in your flock. The kind of chickens you’re planning on raising will also make a significant difference in the sort of house that you build. If you’re planning on raising hens generally for their eggs then you’ll need to have nesting boxes for them to lay their eggs in. For every 4 to 5 laying hens you have you’ll need to provide one nesting box that’s layered with wood chips or other nesting material.

Your poultry house plans should ensure that your birds have masses of places to perch. Gurus recommend that your birds have 6 to 10 inches of perch space each and that not one of the perches is far more than 4 feet off the ground. A feeding tray should be included that is no higher than the apex of your hens’ backs and can be removed for simple cleaning.

Quit the 9 – 5 with an Inexpensive Garden Office

Monday, October 19th, 2009

When they talk about garden landscapes and improvement features, constructing an office garden is becoming a popular trend. The reason is simple and apparent. For individuals who love nature, the garden is a good place to relax. These days, a lot more people are employed from their home. Rather than being cooped up in an office or a study in the home, it makes a lot of sense to construct an office in the garden where they can work in a perfect environment. In an office garden, they will find the ambience conducive to working a lot more productively. Finding it to be extremely restful, they can get things done more efficiently and effectively. For this reason, increasingly folks are installing garden offices at their homes.

The concept of building a garden office has been around for a long time. Still, not many people can afford to buy garden offices. It was quite costly to specifically design and build a garden office. These Days, contemporary construction and manufacturing techniques have made garden offices really low-priced. Anybody who has a budget may construct a garden office.

There Are Plenty Of Good Reasons To Get A Patio Awning

Saturday, July 4th, 2009

No matter where you live, you’re sure to have some changes during the different seasons of the year. Even if you live in the Deep South, you’re bound to have some fluctuations in the climate. When you install a patio awning to your home, you receive a variety of benefits, no matter what the temperature is. Those who live in colder regions may see the most benefit from using a patio awning but everyone will love them.

When the sun beats down on your home during the winter, it’s a blessing. With a patio awning, you can help keep your heating and electric costs down. Keeping the warm air in during the coldest months, your awning will cause a dramatic drop in your monthly utility bills, paying for it self almost immediately. The glare off of the ice and snow outside will also be reduced greatly when you roll your awning half way down.

Here’s how a patio awning can protect you and your home, no matter what season it is. During the frigid winter months, your patio awning, when drawn down, can keep in heat. You’ll notice an improvement in your heating costs when you install a patio awning on your home.

Adding Patio Awnings To Your Home

Wednesday, June 17th, 2009

Want to spruce up your deck or patio area? Patio awnings are one of those additions to your home you really need to put some thought into. Available styles, types, and variable costs all play an important part of that decision. Here are a few to consider.

In reality this is the simplest way to add more usable space to your home without all the huge building costs, mess, and wait times you incur in trying to build something permanently. An awning provides a covering over your existing patio creating a room with a view, no walls included. This allows your family and friends to enjoy time together in the outdoors, whether it is raining or not. Fairly inexpensive, the patio awning is becoming a standard addition to any home.

Various types of materials are used in making these coverings. The more inexpensive ones are usually made with plastic. And with extreme weather conditions can end up running you into more money with frequent replacements. Teflon and anti-mildew treatments are used on the higher quality ones, which helps to alleviate damage due to weather.

How to Choose Patio Awnings

Monday, May 25th, 2009

It’s cozy to be inside much of the time, but there are certainly times when you’d rather be enjoying the outdoors. Outside, you can feel the gentle breeze, enjoy a garden, hear birdsong, and see butterflies flutter. Still, you need to take precautions to protect yourself from the weather when you are outdoors. An excess of sun can cause a number of problems, and sitting in the rain isn’t most people’s idea of enjoyment. To keep yourself safe from the sun and inclement weather and to add a bit of flair to your backyard, patio awnings are a great choice.

There are a number of advantages to patio awnings. You can turn your yard into a large outdoor living area, similar to your living room indoors. This can become a wonderful place to relax and unwind after a long day, or converse during an evening barbeque. Whether it’s sunny or raining, you’ll be able to enjoy a cup of tea and a good chat with friends.

Fruit Tree Suckering Iron

Wednesday, February 25th, 2009

I will never forget the face of the ironmonger in Exeter when I went in many years ago to ask for a suckering iron. I had never heard of such a tool, and yet at that time it was possible to buy them from ironmongers in Maidstone, Kent, without any difficulty at all.

There are occasions, however, when it is impossible to get the bow in between the branches, and then it is preferable to use the Grecian pruning saw with its curved blade. Once again, it can be bought in three sizes: the 12 inch, 14 inch and 16 inch-the 14 inch being the most popular.

If suckering irons are impossible to obtain, the best thing to do is to use a well-worn shiny spade and sharpen its edge.

The curved end is then hooked over the branch with the knife-blade full open and the handle up. The handle is then pulled down, the knife-blade passed through the branch, cutting it sharply and ends up in the slot provided for it in the hook. The branch thus falls to the ground, having been cut off neatly at the desired spot.

Tips on Cauliflower

Monday, February 23rd, 2009

Common names are Cauliflower, Broccoli (Eng.); Chou-fleur (Fr.); Coliflor (Sp.); Blumenkohl (Ger.); Bloemkook (Neth.).

The common names are Leaf Mustard, Indian Mustard, Leaf Mustard Cabbage, Mustard Greens, Chinese Mustard, White Mustard (Eng.); Moutarde de Chine (Fr.); Mostaza de la Tierra (Sp.); Kai Choy, Kaai Ts’oi (Mal.); Sesawi (Indon.); Sarson Kaag

Local forms have been selected for specific areas. Synonyms are B. juncea var. rugosa (Roxb.) Tsen and Lee, B. lanceolata Lange, B. cernua Forbes & Hemsley,Synapis juncea L., S. ramosa Roxb.

Local forms have been selected for specific areas. Probably of Mediterranean origin, now distributed throughout many subtropical and tropical regions.

Extensively cultivated in eastern Europe, Malaysia, India, Indonesia, China and Africa (Sierra Leone and Guinea). An important oil-seed crop in India. One of the most pungent of the cultivated mustards, the seeds containing 35% of edible oil. The leaves, which are used as a vegetable, contain a glucoside, sinigrin. An erect, branched, annual up to 75 cm in height. Basal leaves: bright green, stalked, wrinkled, with well-defined veins, spreading, up to 20 cm in length with large, ovate, terminal segment and broad main vein Flowers: inflorescence elongated; petals pale yellow, 7-9 cm long, self-fertile. Fruits: 3-5 cm long, usually 4-angled. Seeds: round; weight of 1000 seeds = 2 g.

Dish gardens and arrangements

Sunday, February 22nd, 2009

There are certain virtues in either method and which is chosen will depend to some extent on the plants selected and the position in which they are to live, and the personal tastes, inclinations and talents of the gardener. But neither process is by any means difficult, even for the least experienced indoor gardener.

Then again, because the entire area of soil will be kept uniformly moist, it is essential that compatible plants be used together.

They are perfectly happy, have made great growth and one of them sent out a six-inch flower spike complete with golden inflorescence during the summer.

Again, plants are of benefit to each other if placed in close proximity, for the moist air transpired from the leaves tends to be wafted in the air over neighbouring plants, to their benefit. Still another benefit is in the saving of time, for where several plants are placed together they can be tended so much more quickly.

Fruit Trees Tips and Advice

Friday, February 20th, 2009

It is most important to see that the bulk of the fruit is planted in one part of the garden on its own. It is a great mistake to try and grow apples, pears and plums in a vegetable garden. Or, to put it another way-please don’t plant vegetables and salads in between fruit trees.

Furthermore, a wall will shelter the soil for a foot or two at the base of it, from rain, and thus it is necessary to adopt some system to ensure that the roots of trees growing against walls get the moisture they need. Some people for this reason bury 3-inch agricultural drainpipes upright in the soil, 3 feet apart and a foot away from the wall, and then water can be poured into these sometimes so as to wet the soil below.

Much can also be done, of course, by mulching the surface of the ground with well-rotted compost or sedge peat.

I know a garden whose owner insisted on having apples on each wall; and this meant planting on the south wall James Grieve, Lax- ton’s Superb and Cox’s Orange Pippin; on the north wall Beauty of Bath and Tydeman’s Early Worcester; on the east wall Ellison’s Orange, Sunset, and Tydeman’s Late Cox, and on the west wall Fortune, Winston, Pearl and Cox’s Orange Pippin.