Archive | Homes & Gardens

Hi


Welcome to my blog Lifestyle Spy. I’m Mollie and I write on a variety of topics that interest me such as Health, Homes and Gardens, Leisure, Lifestyle (of course) and my personal favourite..shopping.

Oh my husband says no site is complete without it’s own Business section..so it’s in…and then I had to put my daughters favourite subject in as well..Travel & Holidays.

Thanks for visiting.

Posted in Business, Health, Homes & Gardens, Leisure, Lifestyle & Fitness, Shopping, Travel & VacationsComments Off

Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

The Heart Of The Home


The kitchen is often referred to as the heart of the home; where all your meals and dinners are created. Regardless of whether you have a large or a small kitchen, there is nothing worse than working in a disorganised room where nothing is easily found. Everything should be at hand and easily accessible to make cooking fun and enjoyable. Utilising any space that is available is therefore a great way to make your kitchen a great place to be.

Making the most out of the walls is a great idea, and you can easily set up some form of holding rack for many of your tools. This way any knives or ladles would be easy to grab a hold of when you need them. If you do not have enough drawer space, then this is a great solution to keep things tidy and accessible. Brightly decorated holders for other utensils also keeps things looking neat, and will keep your kitchen organised. You will be amazed at how much more fun it is to cook when you know exactly where everything is.

If you keep a lot of recipes and clippings in the kitchen, it may be a good idea to laminate them. This will save them getting messy as you are cooking, and they are easily wiped off. Spice racks can be used for other items as well to save on space, and can look nice at the same time. Even with a small kitchen, there are always ways to keep the heart of the home tidy and clean.

Posted in Homes & GardensComments Off

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

How to Build Vegetable Garden on Concrete


This is the best gardening choice for those who have no yard space or backyard. Even if your available lawn space was weedy, packed with hard clay, full of stones, or made of concrete—your vegetable garden will still be easy to build.

The first thing to do is to find for a place. And you chose the front lawn as the future site of your vegetable garden. Just make sure that this spot receives 5 hours or more of sun every day.

Next, gather your materials. With the use of your bare hands and some extra help from the family, collect the following:

1. old cardboards, boxes, old wool carpet, jute sacks, pieces of wood or plywood;
2. broken branches, logs, old planks of wood, loose bricks or rocks; and
3. washed seaweeds, tree barks, fallen leaves, hay or alfalfa, loose straw or cut grasses.

These items have to be bought from the plant nursery or other sources:

1. vegetable seeds and black seedling bags; and
2. commercial fertilizer or organic fertilizer such as well-composted manure from chicken, horse, cow or sheep.

You can compost your own organic fertilizer from kitchen wastes. You can create your own seedling bags from old newspapers.

The whole process of laying out your vegetable garden takes only one morning, if you have all the materials on hand.

Procedure:

1. Measure the size of your plot. The length could be as long as your lawn, but the width should not be wider than one meter. Put about 10-inch or more high ‘fence’ made of logs, branches, planks, bricks or rocks. The idea is to raise the garden plot from the ground.
2. Even the ground. Remove humps or fill up gaps with sand or soil. Place the first layer, consisting of old cardboards, jutes, non-synthetic old carpet, and old plywood.
3. Spread the pre-soaked newspapers to fully cover the first layer. The pages should overlap so that no ray of sunlight can slip underneath where stray weed seeds may grow.
4. Lay a 5-inch high of straw, hay or alfalfa, grasses, leaves, barks and seaweeds (thoroughly washed to remove salt). Distribute evenly and drizzle with water until wet, not soaking wet.
5. Pour a 1-inch high of organic fertilizer all over. If no organic variety was not available, sprinkle commercial fertilizer instead.
6. Place another layer of straw or hay or leaves. You can pre-soak these materials so that you will not have to water.
7. Top-up with another inch high of compost or dust with commercial fertilizer.

Posted in Homes & GardensComments Off

Advertise Here

Our Flickr Photos - See all photos

wonderfulnaturalread their smileswatchfuldelightfulthoughtful

Information

    Soon!