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5 Must-Haves In A Home Office

Working from home maybe come the new normal, these essentials will keep you comfortable and productive.


When working from home you have probably realized that a desk area on a kitchen counter or the dining table isn’t the best setup. Once you’ve chosen a room or area for your office, here are five must-haves to include.


Comfortable Chair


Make sure you have the right chair for the job. This is especially important if you work at a computer. Look for a chair that supports your back and encourages good posture. Features to look for include adjustable seat, arms and back, as well as legs on rollers and a seat that swivels so you can easily get in and out of the chair and reach for things without straining.


No matter the type of chair you choose, be sure to take stretch breaks and move around throughout the day. And go to the sofa or armchair for relaxing or reading.


Work Surface That Fits Your Needs


The size of your desk or work surface will depend on the size of your office and budget. Consider different desk types and even creative repurposing of other furniture pieces. Think about how you’ll be working and the items you’ll want to have close at hand. To help keep your work surface neat, invest in attractive desk organizers and plan for at least a few shelves or drawers for things you use or reference less frequently.


A Place for Everything


Most of us haven’t reached the point of having a paperless office, and keeping paper organized is easier with the right mix of drawers, and shelves. If you don’t have a lot of papers to file or objects to display, a simple cabinet on wheels or shelf might offer enough storage. 


Good Task Lighting


A standard ceiling light provides overall light but you may also want to include task lighting for reading and other close work. A desk lamp, wall sconces and natural light from windows can help increase your lighting.


Electrical Outlets for Equipment


If you live in an older home, electrical outlets may be limited. Be sure you have enough for your electrical equipment. Keeping cords and wiring out of sight is easiest with storage areas that are flush against the wall. But if you’re planning a floating or freestanding desk, you can use cord covers to keep wiring neat and safe.


And don’t forget to include something that makes you happy or inspires you, whether it’s a sunny window, a treasured artwork or a furry companion to keep you company.

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6 Ways To Keep Cool Without A/C

Having an air conditioner is a must in many climates where long heat waves are a summer’s norm and with that, comes a high energy bill. Even in areas like ours, on the west coast, we can still experience enough hot days in a row to feel it. There are some ways of cooling your home which are cheaper and kinder to the planet than running A/C.


Staying cool doesn’t have to be hard. Whether you want to save money by using your A/C less or brave the heat without one, here are six ways that will help you, your family and your pets stay cool.


Block the Sun From Reaching Your Windows


The best way to beat the heat is to block the sunlight before it reaches your house. Whether you do that by hanging shades, installing awnings or even planting trees, the most effective use of the funds in your home-cooling budget is this.


It’s a simple concept, we do it with beach umbrellas to protect our skin and carports to shade our cars. Yet when it comes to houses, we tend to believe that interior drapes are as effective as exterior shading. But this is simply not true.


The more shading you can include on the outside, the better. If you can’t afford a new matching set of shutters, consider a simple overhang made with brackets and timber slats to block your windows from the intense summer sun.


Solar-control window films can offer UV protection and reduce the amount of heat gained from solar radiation. Compared with some elaborate shading systems, these could be a less expensive alternative.


Even simple and very inexpensive bamboo blinds can block a good amount of sunlight without sacrificing daylight.


If you’re planting trees for shade or installing any kind of shading, think about the sun’s path through the sky and how it’s rays hit your house.


Energy-efficient houses depend on well-designed shading systems, because the best way to avoid summer heat is by blocking the sun’s rays from ever reaching the windows.


Add Interior Drapes, Blinds or Shades


Once the heat from the sun passes through the glass, that heat will need to be ventilated to escape. To keep your floors and walls from soaking up heat from direct rays and emitting it throughout the day, it can help to add another layer of protection between the window and the main thermal mass of your home.


Sheer window treatments are a nice way to mitigate direct sun rays but maintain soft, natural daylight. Plus, white reflects sunlight better than colors.


There are a couple of tricks that you can use with sheer drapes that you can’t with interior blinds or shades. 


Throw sheer drapes in the laundry the night before a really hot day or just dunk them in a bucket of water and ring them out. If you want add 4 or 5 drops of an essential oil, a scent you like. In the morning, take the damp drapes directly from the washer or the bucket and clip them to the rod. The open windows let the morning breeze pass through the drapes, cooling the air and filling your room with a fresh smell if you add the essential oil. By the time the drapes have dried, it’s probably about time to shut the windows, before the intense heat of the day starts. You could do the same in the evening.


Get the Air Circulating


Air will flow only if it is forced through a fan of some sort or if there is a large temperature difference with a neighboring body of air.


Night cooling is a great way to naturally decrease the temperature in your house and exchange hot interior air for cooler outdoor air. Have your windows open only in the early morning, at night or late in the evening when it is cooler outside than your ideal temperature indoors.


You may need to do some testing to see what works best for you, depending on your climate and the orientation of your house toward the sun. For this to work, there needs to be a substantial difference in temperature between the inside of your house and the outside. Once the outdoor air starts to heat up, close your windows to try and keep as much of that heat out as possible.


Ceiling fans and standing fans placed near windows at night can help force the air movement when there is no breeze and a small temperature difference. During the day the added air movement from fans can help the perception of heat, which is tied to humidity.


The reason everyone loves misters in the summer is for the evaporative cooling effect of water being lifted off the skin. Keep keep a couple of misters around the house, hidden near the fans, for a quick spritz as you pass by, animals will love it too.


Another evaporative cooling tip, borrowed from history, is to set a big chunk of ice (or ice packs) in front of a fan with a tray underneath to catch the water as it melts. It makes for a cheap and effective DIY air conditioner for small rooms. Close off the space as much as possible, so you don’t lose that great cool air.


Turn Off Major Appliances During the Day


To help maintain cooler temperatures during the day, reduce anything that generates heat in your house or apartment. For example, don’t use the dryer or oven and try not to open the fridge too often. The more you open it, the more the motor has to work to cool it down again, and the heat generated from that work will be released back into your apartment.


Try fresh summer salads or BBQ to avoid using your oven and stovetop.



Transition Your Bed Into Summer Mode


Many of us feel summer heat the most when trying to sleep. Reduce the amount of bedding you have and stick to natural fabrics like linen or 100 percent cotton. Synthetic blends don’t breathe enough to release all the heat we generate during the night.


Sleep on the porch or balcony. “Outdoor sleeping has come to stay, so let us recognize the fact and build our houses accordingly.” This declaration appeared in the magazine Decorative Homes of Moderate Costs in 1921, responding to the widespread fad of sleeping on screened porches. For many years, sleeping porches were an integral part of home designs.


Depending on your home or apartment and security concerns, you may have a little exterior screened-in space that can be used like a sleeping porch. You could have a little daybed with light bedding for nights when it’s comfortable enough to sleep in open air.


Or, forgo the bed altogether and sleep in a hammock for the summer!


Stay Hydrated


Everyone knows that staying hydrated in summer is extremely important. But did you know that drinking water also helps regulate your body temperature?


Enjoy the summer and its heat!

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Household Items that Need to Be Looked at In a Timely Manner

A Leaking Water Heater is a Time Bomb


Water heaters sometimes leak from the drain valve or relief valve. Those valves are easy to replace. But if a leak is coming from the tank, then you have a serious problem. A water tank is lined with a thin coat of glass. Eventually, that glass begins to crack, the steel begins to rust away and a puddle appears. Left alone, the tank will rupture, causing an instant flood. It may take months for a leak to become a flood, or it may take days. But it will happen. Don’t gamble. Replace that leaky water heater now.



Deal with Drainage


Water has the potential to cause problems in any home, and the skills to deal with drainage issues can be a huge money saver in the long run. Extending downspouts is an easy fix, but knowing how to make a drainage plan is going to provide long-term results for minimal effort.



Clean Dryer Vents


A plugged dryer vent will cause your dryer to run inefficiently, and could also cause a house fire. Dryers that are centrally located in houses are most prone to plugging because of the longer ducts. Excess lint is only one reason ducts get clogged; nesting pests and stuck exhaust hood flappers can also cause backups. Stronger odors and longer dry times are two signs your vent is plugged.


You’ll have to remove the vent from the back of the dryer to clean it. Suck debris from the ducts with a wet/dry vac. If your ducts need replacing, get smooth metal ducts, they stay cleaner longer than the rough corrugated surface of flexible ducts.


Test and Replace Batteries in Smoke Detectors


Smoke detectors should be tested monthly, and the batteries should be replaced every year, so make this part of your regular spring maintenance routine. Test the batteries by simply pressing the ‘test’ button and making sure the unit chirps. Even if it works, replace the battery (or back-up battery, if your is a hardwired model) and re-test it. If the alarm does not pass the test, replace it immediately.


Smoke detectors have a lifespan of 10 years, so look for a ‘replace by’ sticker or date embossed on the inside of the unit to see if it needs to be replaced, even if it passes the chirp test. If you can’t find a date, replace it anyway immediately. On new detectors, make sure to write the ‘installed’ date on the inside cover on a piece of masking tape.

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Healthy Indoor Plants
All too often we either love our houseplants or neglect them. But with a little common sense, and a little love, your indoor plants can live and thrive throughout the year. Here are some things to keep in mind.

Placement
When placing plants in your home, make sure they have good ventilation and natural light. Keep them out of direct sunlight, which will reduce stress and water loss.

Be Water Wise
Knowing how much and how often to water is the key to not only keeping plants alive but helping them be healthy. A great indicator that a plant needs watering is when its leaves start to droop. Ironically, this is also an indication that a plant has been overwatered. Once a plant has root rot from overwatering, it can be very difficult for it to recover. For most plants, the soil should be kept moist but not saturated — use your finger as a guide; if it feels dry an inch or so down, give it a drink.

Think Small
While a large, striking feature pot looks outstanding, don’t forget smaller pots. Smaller containers can be easily changed, taken outside in good weather or moved around the house. A collection of plants is a low-maintenance but high-impact way to use plants inside.

Give Them Room to Grow
If you do have the room for a large feature plant, then you need to have a regular maintenance plan. Large plants are an investment and need good care. Make sure the pot you choose allows room for the plant to grow over the years.

Keep Them Clean
Plants rely on their leaves to make their food. Outside, the leaves get washed clean with rain; indoors, leaves can get clogged with dust, a gentle wiping with a clean, damp cloth once a month will keep the leaves looking shiny and healthy.

For plants with more intricate leaves, taking them outside and hosing them off will do wonders. Better yet, leave them out on a rainy day.

Feed Them
All plants benefit from a little extra fertilizer, but for potted plants it is even more important. Always choose the best potting mix you can find. If you are potting a specific species, like orchids, cactuses or citrus, or in a terra-cotta pot, get a mix specifically designed for these plants and conditions.

You should repot your plants every year or two. Most slow-release fertilizers only last a while, so remember to top it up once in a while. You could also add a liquid fertilizer to your watering can once or twice a month.

Give Them Some R&R
Indoor plants benefit from being outside once in a while. For small to medium-size pots, it is a good idea to have a rotation system. By leaving plants in black plastic pots, you can put them into your more decorative pots and change them as often as you like. Make sure the outdoor location is similar to the indoor one. Or the plant can be stressed and die.

Choose the Right Pot
Of course, a plant is nothing without the pot, so it is important to get it right. Some pots can be very heavy even before you fill them with soil and plants. By keeping plants in their plastic pots and adding them to feature pots, you will reduce the risk of overwatering and make repotting, much easier.

Having a pot within a pot also allows you to have a tray underneath to catch excess water. Self-watering pots are also great, as they give an even, consistent water supply to the plant.

Whatever your environment or lifestyle there is an indoor plant right for you.
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Time To Declutter
It’s a new year, time to set goals, change habits and reorganize our homes. But it’s often hard to know where to begin. Warm up by doing something easy and satisfying: get rid of things you don’t need or want. Pick a few from this list or all of them. It won’t take a lot of time or effort but the sense of accomplishment you feel, might just help you get motivated for more and create new habits.

Coffee Mugs
If you took all your mugs out of your cupboards, you may find that they are not cohesive or attractive. That’s fine, but most of us are wasting valuable cabinet space on mugs in sizes and motifs that we never use. Assess how many mugs you really need and take the rest to be donated. Someone’s trash is someone else’s treasure.

The Kitchen Sponge
For those of you who are vigilant about making sure you get rid of your sponges on a regular basis or you never use them, please ignore this. For the rest of you, get rid of those babies right now.

Instead of filling landfills with them, consider alternatives like reusable dishrags, which can be washed regularly or eco-friendly sponges made of biodegradable cellulose. If you come up with a good use for reusing your old sponges, please post it on Pinterest.

Unwanted Books
For most of us it is hard to give up our books, but the likelihood of them just collecting dust on your shelves is hard to deny. Those volumes could be bringing joy to others. Ask yourself this when trying to whittle down your book collection:
  • Will I read or use this again?
  • Does it have sentimental meaning to make it worth keeping?
  • Do I want it here so visitors can enjoy it?
  • Do I know someone who would like/could use it?
Based on these answers, decide what to keep and what you are willing to let go of. Give them to friends, donate to a book bin or take to your local school or library.

Old Magazines
If you haven’t read the magazine in the last year, let’s be honest, your not going to read it in 2020. Don’t feel like you might one day need that recipe, the How to, or the information. You can always look it up on the internet.

Magazines are easily recycled and if you would rather they be enjoyed by someone else first, take them to a book bin, the library or give them to a school. They can always be used to make collages and vision boards.

Equipment Manuals
If you are like my husband, you keep every manual, for every item you have ever owned, maybe the boxes too. If they are still sealed in the plastic they came in and you never registered the product anyway; get rid of it. Chances are most of the information contained in those manuals is available online. If your not sure they are available digitally, check first before recycling. Recycle the boxes too, they just take up too much space!

Your Toothbrush
Toothbrushes are often a hard item for people to throw out. If the bristles are bent, broken or frayed, it’s time to get a new one. The Canadian Dental Association recommends changing your toothbrush every 3 to 4 months. If you already have a collection of “cleaning toothbrushes” recycle and rotate them. There are new eco-friendly options or those with replaceable heads.

Expired Food
Go through your fridge and pantry, make 2 piles: expired items and items you won’t use. Toss or compost the expired items (recycle boxes, plastic containers, metal cans etc) and donate the still good items you won’t use, to your local food bank or charity.

 
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