H ave you heard of the "E-Cigarette"? If you haven't and you're a smoker or even a non-smoker, today is your lucky day! An E-Cigarette looks like a cigarette, feels like a cigarette, taste like a cigarette, but there's something very different about it--it's a healthier way to smoke! To be good to be true? Actually no, it's not. Thousands of customers are raving about how amazing this product is. So much that they are recommending this product to everyone they know as a substitute for friends, colleagues, and loved one as a way to smoke, but in a non-harmful and healthier manner. This high-tech electronic smoking device provides the nicotine individuals crave, with none of the chemicals and tar that comes from your typical cigarette. Not only does it not harm the smoker, but there is none of the harmful second hand smoke either!
"E-Cigarette"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U81x8t2iMhw
FEEL THE WIND OF BEAUTY. EVERYTHING IN MY LITTLE WORLD IS ABOUT THE BEAUTY! BEAUTY in Nature BEAUTY in Health and Wellness BEAUTY in Our Homes and Gardens BEAUTY in Our Personal Relationships BEAUTY of being a HUMAN on Planet EART
Saturday, September 19, 2009
Monday, September 14, 2009
Make Watermelon Agua Frescas
MAKE WATERMELON AGUA FRESCAS
Process 4 cups cubed seedless watermelon, cantaloupe, or honeydew melon and 1/4cup sugar in a blender until smooth, stopping to scrape down sides as needed.Pour mixture through a fine wire-mesh stainer into a pitcher, discarding solids. Stir in 2 cups of water. Cover and chill until ready to serve.Serve over ice. Makesabout 5 cups;Prep: 10 minutes.
Sunday, September 13, 2009
QUICK SUMMER ARRANGEMENTS
Flowers are one of the simple joys of the season. If you don't haveyour owncutting garden, grab a cup of coffee and go early in the morning to your local farmers market for the best selection of bargain blooms. Summer picks include sunflowers, zinnias, cosmos, gomphrenas, phlox, celosias, liatris, tithonias, and dalias. Create easy bouquets with one type of flower or the same color of several types. Echo the season casual side by using whatever's at hand for vases. Oversize glasses, vintage graniteware pitchers, colorful tin cans, and jars all work well.
Saturday, September 12, 2009
PICTURES FROM MY SUMMER VACATION IN EUROPE
EUROPIANS KNOW HOW TO MAKE THEIR GARDENS TO LOOK LIKE A PARADISE...BEAUTIFUL, BEAUTIFUL GARDENS ALL OVER. I PROMICE MORE PICTURES NEXT TIME .
BUTTERFLIES
BUTTERFLIES
Chooseflowers thatprovide lots of nectar,such as salvias, pentas, lantanas, verbenas, and summer phlox. Addhost plantsfor caterpillarsto feed on, including parsly, dill, and milkweed.A shallow dish, filled with moist sand, offers a place for drink. Butterflies love to bask in the sun; add a few flat rocks so they can rest between flights.
Chooseflowers thatprovide lots of nectar,such as salvias, pentas, lantanas, verbenas, and summer phlox. Addhost plantsfor caterpillarsto feed on, including parsly, dill, and milkweed.A shallow dish, filled with moist sand, offers a place for drink. Butterflies love to bask in the sun; add a few flat rocks so they can rest between flights.
Thursday, September 10, 2009
GROW DAFFODILS, NATURALLY
GO WILD THIS FALL WITH DAFFODILS THAT, PLANTED NOW, WILL BLOOM NEXT SPRING AND FOR YEARS TO COME
Happy little harbingersof spring,daffodils are dollar for dollar the best buys in the bulb bins.They're generally inexpensive and adaptable to most climates;squirrels and deer usually don't eat them; and while other bulbs decline and die out, daffodils increase in number and bloom better year after year. While it's fine to plant daffodils in borders, beds, or pots, these spring-flowering bulbs, with their grassy foliage, look most at home in a more instructured settings. This is referred to as ''naturalizing'', which simply means that bulbs are planted randomly in masses and left to grow and multiply by themselves. Naturalizing bulbs like daffodils is an easy weekend project-so simple, in fact, that once you get started you might find hard to stop.
Happy little harbingersof spring,daffodils are dollar for dollar the best buys in the bulb bins.They're generally inexpensive and adaptable to most climates;squirrels and deer usually don't eat them; and while other bulbs decline and die out, daffodils increase in number and bloom better year after year. While it's fine to plant daffodils in borders, beds, or pots, these spring-flowering bulbs, with their grassy foliage, look most at home in a more instructured settings. This is referred to as ''naturalizing'', which simply means that bulbs are planted randomly in masses and left to grow and multiply by themselves. Naturalizing bulbs like daffodils is an easy weekend project-so simple, in fact, that once you get started you might find hard to stop.
LAWN SMARTS.Go green,save some green
All those clippings you mow off each time you cut your lawn are chock-full of nutrients. So why throw them away? Equip your mower with mulching blade,then leave the clippings on the lawn where they'll feed your grass all over again.over the course of a season,you can return enough nitrogen to your lawn to equal an additional fertilizer application. And since you don't have to bag clippings or pay to have them hauled off and composted ,its easy on the environment, your back, and your wallet. Work less, pay less. What more could you want?
Wednesday, September 9, 2009
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