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Every gardener needs an outdoor sink station

by Tricia

I was browsing through gardening sites earlier today trying to get ideas for our garden and I came across this fantastic Outdoor Sink Station.

I don’t know about you, but each spring and then in early summer I spend a lot of time outdoors planting seedlings that I’ve grown indoors during the late winter and early spring months, or flats of plants that I’ve purchased from a local nursery.

Planting is messy business! Heck, even weeding or spending time putting fresh soil and compost on the garden is a dirty job.

Rather than trudge inside with dirty hands (my shoes, socks and clothing are usually well dusted too!) it would be nice to have a sink outdoors.

An outdoor sink would also come in handy when it comes time to pluck radishes, carrots, potatoes and other veggies from the soil. You could easily give them a rinse before bringing them into your kitchen.

If you use your backyard and or garden for entertaining guests – sitting outdoors barbecuing on the grill and eating outdoors it might also be handy to have a sink nearby.

What I really like about this Outdoor Sink Station is that there’s also a full size hose located at the bottom of the station. So you might end up having access to a hose closer to the garden than you did in the past. Plus the outdoor sink hose reel has a water-powered engine inside which uses water power to automatically reel-in the hose!






Filed Under: Accessories, Garden Buzz, Home and Garden, Home and Lifestyle, Shopping Tagged With: adding soil, backyard, barbecue, barbecuing, compost, cooking, dirty hands, dust, entertain, entertaining, flats of plants, flowers, garden, garden house, gardening, grow, hose, indoors, kitchen, outdoor, Outdoor sink, outdoor sink station, outdoors, plant, planting, planting seedlings, seed, seedling, sink, spring, summer, veggies, wash, wash up, wash vegetables, water, water powered hose reel, weeding, window

Gardening takes it’s toll on our skin

by Tricia

Working in the garden …

Digging in the soil, planting new plants, pulling weeds, pruning and wrestling bushes into shape, and cold water dripping down your arm as you water your plants – all of these gardening related activities take their toll on our skin.

I’ve been working in the garden a little more often lately and in the evening I find that my hands just feel so dry. I also happen to wear sandals when I’m outside in the garden and I sometimes get some dirt on my feet which, even after I’ve cleaned my feet when I’m done working in the garden causes my feet to feel dry as well.

I often have scratches on my arms if I’ve been pruning my roses or if I’ve spent some time staking my roses to make them look a little nicer or to keep them from flopping onto nearby plants.

I’m sure you experience some of these issues as well.

How do you take care of your skin after a long day in the garden?

Scratches and Puncture Wounds –

Me? If I’ve been working with my roses I usually inspect my skin for thorns that are still stuck in my skin. I’ve found pieces of thorns or those tiny hair like thorny needles stuck in the tips of my fingers, under my nails and in my arms. Heck, I’ve even found thorns or thorn pieces in my legs after a really tough session with the roses. I do wear gloves while working in the garden, but some of the thorns are strong enough to penetrate the gloves.

Once I’m done getting rid of any thorns that were embedded in my skin I put some peroxide on a cotton ball and I swab my scratches and puncture wounds. Since the scratches on my skin tend to swell and get very irritated I also often put an antibiotic ointment on them. If I don’t my skin is often inflamed the next day.

I should mention that’s it’s actually important to care for wounds that you receive from your roses as there’s a fungus called Sporothrix schenckii and it’s known to be the cause of rose-pickers disease. This fungus grows on the thorns of roses and can be inoculated into the body by an innocent prick from a thorn. I looked it up on eMedicine and it’s said to not be very common in the US and I suppose it’s even less common in Canada.

Any puncture wound can become infected, whether it be from the fungus that grows on rose thorns or bacteria that’s been transmitted deep into the subcutaneous tissues of your skin. An infection might be localized where the puncture occurred or it might travel up your limb through your lymphatic system and or become systemic.

Again, these infections could be caused by any number of things. We shouldn’t be afraid to garden because we fear getting an infection, but being aware of conditions that can occur as a result of our hobby is just good sense. Take precautions. Care for any scratches or puncture wounds that you receive while working in the garden.

Tetanus

Tetanus is another type of infection that can be acquired through a puncture wound to the skin. Tetanus bacteria live in dust, soil and manure. As gardeners working in the soil we have a higher chance of becoming infected with tetanus.

Always wear gloves when working in the garden, especially when working with soil, manure or compost.

It’s also a good idea to get your booster tetanus vaccinations. It’s recommended that everyone get a tetanus booster vaccine every 10 years. However, the doctors that I work with in the emergency room have told me that I (meaning everyone who works in their garden regularly) should get a booster every five years because there’s a higher risk of getting this terrible infection which can cause lock jaw.

Skin Care

Now that you know why it’s important to try to prevent scratches and puncture wounds, and how important it is to take care of any wounds you receive in the garden on the day that they occur, lets talk about that dry skin.

This is probably the most common complaint of anyone who works outdoors whether it’s in a hobby garden or as a full time outdoor worker.

I’ve read that some people like to put a good hand cream on their skin prior to going out in the garden. This is supposed to delay drying and it also helps when cleaning your hands later as the hand cream seems to help the dirt wash off the skin easier when washing up when your finished gardening.

I’ve tried this method, and I’d do it more often if only I remember, because it does work. My hands never feel as dry after gardening if I protect them with a skin cream prior to working outdoors, and yes they do come clean so much easier.

Unfortunately, as I said, I don’t always remember to put hand cream on before I begin gardening so I do sometimes suffer from dry skin afterwords.

Skin Cream

I have two skin creams that I swear by. They are good for dry skin caused by outdoor work, and they’re good for dry chapped skin that occurs in the winter months as well.

The first skin cream is Glysomed. It’s a hand cream that contains glycerin, silicone and chamomile. The cream is made in Germany and I imagine that it’s available throughout North America and Europe although I can’t say that for a fact.

If I remember I like to use this cream before going outdoors. It’s wonderful in the winter time and I believe it also creates a nice barrier between the skin and garden dirt, and helps to make clean up after long hours in the garden a breeze.

The other skin cream that I swear by is Palmers Cocoa Butter Formula. It’s Cocoa butter enriched with Vitamin E and I find that it’s a wonderful moisturizer. It’s very soothing on dry skin.

I’m also a fan of putting cocoa butter on scars. I had part of my thyroid removed in my early 20’s (thyroid cancer) and once the wound began to heal over I applied cocoa butter to the scar daily for about six+ months. You can barely see the scar now, and in fact, by the time the scar was about 8 months old it was barely visible. Of course I also kept the scar hidden from direct sunlight for about a year too, and I’m sure that helped.

My mother had a skin cream or treatment that she swore by. Her skin would sometimes get so dry from working in the garden or due to cold dry winter air that it would crack. I can’t remember the name of the product, but it was a nipple cream for cow teats. Really. Yes it did work.

What skin care products do you like to use to sooth your garden ravaged dry skin?

Filed Under: Garden Buzz, Garden Tips, Health, Health and Fitness, Home and Lifestyle, In The Garden, Summer in the Garden Tagged With: antibiotic ointment, bacteria, bacterial infection, Canada, cold, cow teats, cracked skin, cream, digging, dry winter air, dust, embedded thorns, fungal infection, fungus, garden, garden ravaged, gardener, gardening, gloves, Glycomed, grow, infected, lymphatic infection, manure, nipple cream, North America, outdoor, outdoors, Palmers cocoa butter, peroxide, planting, prick, protect hands, protect skin, pruning, pulling weeds, puncture wounds, ravaged, rose, rose picker infection, rose thorn disease, rose thorn fungus, roses, scar, scars, scratch, skin, skin care, skin cream, skin prick, soil, Sporothrix schenckii, tetanus, tetanus booster, tetanus vaccine, thorns, thyroid, thyroid surgery, thyroid surgery scar, tips, treat wounds, wear gloves, winter, winter air, wound

Professional carpet cleaning – Southern Counties Cleaning

by Tricia

We have very few carpets in our home because both my husband and I have allergies to dust and mites. So you can imagine how important it is for the two of us that the carpets that we do have, and that the rest of the house remain as clean as possible in order to keep our allergy symptoms at bay.

That’s one of the main reasons why I decide to write this for Southern counties cleaning.co.uk. SCC specializes in carpet cleaning. They provide their carpet cleaning services to the following areas within the UK – London, Surrey, Kent and west Sussex.

You may be thinking “I vacuum regularly and we don’t have allergies, I don’t need a carpet cleaning service.” but did you know that having your carpets professionally cleaned regularly will help keep them looking good longer, and perhaps extend the life of your carpet? Carpeting a room or a whole house is an expensive undertaking. Isn’t it wise to protect your investment?

What about spots and stains? I’m sure that most people with carpeting in their homes have had a spill on the carpet that’s left a mark. Oh sure, you’ve tried to remove it with products you’ve purchased in the market, but they don’t always work well do they? That’s just one more reason to have your carpets professionally cleaned. Professionally carpet cleaners are often able to remove the spots and stains that we can’t – no matter how hard we’ve tried.

Sand, soil and grit will eventually take a toll on your carpet by damaging the fibers as they are repeatedly walked upon. Bacteria within the carpet can cause odours, and dust mites can cause or exacerbate allergies. Having your carpets professionally cleaned regularly will help control these problems, and as I said earlier extend the life of your carpet.

Have I convinced you yet as to why you should get your carpets professionally cleaned every now and then? I hope I have. In my husband and I’s case it’s a matter of maintaining our health. That’s a good enough reason for us.

SSC carpet cleaners service private homes and all types of premises. If you live in the Southern Counties of the UK consider hiring them to clean your carpets.

Filed Under: Health, Home and Lifestyle, Shopping Tagged With: carpet, carpet cleaning, dust, ground in dirt, home, House, mites, professional carpet cleaning, remove spots, remove stains, sand and grit, SCC, Southern Counties Cleaning, UK


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