Thursday, June 30, 2016

3 Common Electronic Door Locks for Your Home

Having an electronic door lock can be a good way to spare you the hassle of rummaging for keys in your bag or pocket, and it also adds security to your home. Here are 3 of the most common electronic door locks available on the market today.

Image Source: Flickr

Image Source: Flickr

Kwikset Kevo
The KwiksetKevo instantly transforms the owner’s smartphone into a key. Designed with Bluetooth-connectivity, this smart lock replaces a regular deadbolt on a door. To unlock the door, the user has to touch the Kevo to send an “open” signal. Users acquiring the entry-level version of this smart lock will get two eKeys, two key fobs and two traditional keys. The latter is handy if the Kevo runs out of power. The major feature is the set of eKeys, which are encrypted codes that you can with your smartphone. eKeys offer more peace of mind than traditional keys because they cannot be duplicated. Moreover, eKeys can allow a guest either scheduled or “anytime” access Source: TechTimes

Keyless
For advanced home security and convenience, keyless locks can be used to replace any standard deadbolts on exterior doors. An anti-theft rolling code feature ensures the same code is never used twice, and certain models sound an alarm after the incorrect code is entered more than three consecutive times. Additionally, some systems are compatible with select garage door openers or home security systems. Source: ASecureLife

August Smart Lock
Don’t let the name fool you – there are no keys involved. No access codes either, so a thief can’t use a key logger to copy your code and then sneak in when you’re not home. The August Smart Key lock discretely replaces most single cylinder deadbolts to provide secure access to your home via iOS or Android devices. The August Smart Key lock works independently, via a secure BlueTooth connection or over your home’s Wi-Fi. The app sends a reminder if the lock’s AA batteries are low so this lock keeps working, even if your power goes out.
Coupling the August Lock with August Connect, a smart device that allows you to access the lock from any Internet-enabled device, provides additional features. Rather than simply referring to a log of activity over the past week, you’ll receive real-time notifications of who accessed your lock and when. You’ll also be able to lock and unlock the door via any Internet-enabled device and connect your lock with other smart devices in your home. Source: SafeWise

 

Contact:
Mr. Locksmith Calgary
555 Maidstone Drive NE
Calgary, Alberta T2A 4B6
Canada
Phone: (403) 800-9185

The post 3 Common Electronic Door Locks for Your Home appeared first on Mr Locksmith Calgary.



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Gifted Funds As A Down Payment Option – Mortgages

Yes, Vancouver is the most unaffordable housing market in Canada. But determined home buyers are still trying to get their foot in the door, in order to get in before it’s too late and the lowest rung on that ladder is even further out of reach.

 

The average price for all residential properties in Vancouver is $889,100 ($1.5 million if you want a detached home). And if you want to avoid paying mortgage insurance premiums, you need to come up with 20% as a down payment. For the average consumer, it’ll cost more than 20 years to come up with a down payment, according to a report by Generation Squeeze titled “CODE RED: Rethinking Canadian Housing Policy.”

 

Can’t wait that long? You’d better find some family members who are willing to contribute to your housing fund.

 

Shaun Zipursky, a broker with City Wide mortgage services in Vancouver, says that they’re seeing many more gifted funds than they have in years past, particularly for young professionals.

 

“We’re seeing a lot of clients that are coming in with massive amounts of gifts, six-figure gifts,” Zipursky says. “So families are really trying to help out in keeping their kids in the housing market in the areas that they want to be in.”

 

Showing proof and documentation of gifted funds

 

But even if you are getting a gift in order to buy a home in Vancouver, there are some things that you need to know about a gifted down payment.

The post Gifted Funds As A Down Payment Option – Mortgages appeared first on Gary Wong Realty Vancouver, BC.



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Wednesday, June 29, 2016

S’mores Marshmallow Crispy Treats

S’mores Marshmallow Crispy Treats are a fun twist on a classic dessert. Loads of marshmallows, graham cracker crumbs, and chocolate makes them a simple and delicious dessert for any occasion.

S'mores Marshmallow Crispy Treats are a big bite of sweetness! Soft yet crunchy, they'll become your new favorite!

This is a sponsored post on behalf of Campfire® Marshmallows. All opinions are my own. Thank you for supporting the brands that continue to make My Baking Addiction possible.

If you happened to read my No Bake Frozen Cheesecake post, you know that it’s been scorching hot here in Ohio. And since being hot is one of my least favorite things in the world, I’ve been going the no bake route – a lot.

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Tuesday, June 28, 2016

Destiny of the Republic by Candice Millard

I must confess before I read Destiny of the Republic I knew nothing at all about James Garfield, the second president of the United States to be killed in office.  Shame on me.  I've decided to give myself some homework:  reading books about all of the presidents of the United States.  It's a part of American history that was glossed over in school, and wasn't part of my college education at all.  

Candice Millard is an excellent writer; someone who makes history interesting without "dumbing" it down.  James Garfield was a brilliant man; he was a good man with an incredible intellect and natural curiosity about everything around him.  He came from poverty and was raised by his mother after the tragic death of his father when he was a few years old.  He could have given up early in life, but he didn't.  He was driven to succeed, and had a charisma about him that put him in the White House in 1881--and he was reluctant to be president.  It wasn't his plan at all, but in a time of corrupt government, and lots of people doing favors for one another to the detriment of our politics, he stood out as someone who wouldn't be corrupted.  His assassination united a country that was still fractured 20 years after the Civil war.  

This book is more than just a story about Garfield's presidency and assassination.  It is about his life, his legacy, and that hot, sultry summer he lay dying in the White House.  Garfield suffered horribly for over two months before he succumbed to the infection that ravaged his body.  The kicker is that he would have survived the bullet that struck his back; it was the utter disregard for proper medical treatment, and the arrogance of Dr. D. Bliss in not listening to anyone else, that condemned Garfield.  Toss in Alexander Graham Bell and Joseph Lister, who tried for years to convince doctors in America to practice antiseptic surgery (sterilization of instruments, washing hands) and you've got a compelling read. 

 I won't even start on Charles Guiteau, the man who became obsessed with killing Garfield.  The number of times he crossed paths with Garfield, his wife Lucretia, the Secretary of State, and even the Vice-President sent a shiver down my spine.  It forcefully reminded me of how easy it is to be dismissed by everyone as "harmless" until it's too late.  

Destiny of the Republic  was first published in 2011, so I am a bit late to the game.  But any book you haven't read is a new book.  I loved this tale of "madness, medicine, and the murder of a president".  

Rating:  9/10 for a compelling story of a president who didn't live to fulfill his potential, the dangerous games doctors played with his health, and the country that united together that terrible summer so long ago.  Fascinating stuff. 

Available in paperback, e-book, and audio.  There's also a PBS video about Garfield and the assassination.  

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Troy-Bilt’s New TB4300 Handheld Blower

What’s better than finding a great new gardening tool that saves time and effort as you make the yard and landscape look better? Well how about an entire collection of power tools that make your work go faster and easier… and do it without using gasoline or being tied to a cord and electrical outlet.

That’s the concept behind a new Troy-Bilt CORE line of gardening equipment that I was introduced to at a Saturday6 event in Austin, Texas last March. This product line consists of an assortment of “powered by CORE” equipment such as a string trimmer, handheld blower, and a hedge trimmer that are available now, plus a gasoline and cord-free lawn mower that will be released later this year.

“Powered by CORE” Means More Torque and Longer Run-time

Each CORE device runs on a powerful, interchangeable, lithium-ion batteryTroy-Bolt CORE System
and is designed with an innovative new technology that delivers more power, and a longer run-time than previous generations of battery powered equipment. The secret is not in the battery but the design of the motor itself, which replaces the ordinary copper coils with a high tech circuit board and magnetic rotors to boost performance, efficiency, and torque.

To learn the details on the CORE technology visit the Troy-Bilt website where you’ll find much more information about the design, a new intelligent controller, and the improved efficiency features. I’m going to spend the rest of the time here discussing how the CORE technology actually performed in my backyard and around the house.

Convenience of having the CORE System at Your Fingertips

I spent a few weeks using the TB4300 Handheld Blower before writing this TB4300 Handheld Blowerreview to share my first impressions of it. I selected the blower to review because I thought it would be handy to simply pick it up and start working; without the bother of locating a power outlet or fussing over a cord both before and after the job is done. Then there is the hassle of dragging a cord along as you work, and the frustration of coming to the end of your electrical line before the task is completed.

It has been freeing to use this new Troy-Bilt Blower and never have to touch a cord or a gas can before I put it to use. There’s also no limit to where I can work with it and that mobility is a huge plus if you have tasks to perform away from home, or on a large property where an electrical outlet is not always close by. The result is that I actually use this Handheld Blower around the yard a lot more often than I did with my previous corded variety because of how convenient it is to operate.

Putting the TB4300 Handheld Blower to Many Good Uses

A job that takes two minutes; really takes two minutes and you’re done, whenHandheld Blower and Battery you don’t have to spend another ten minutes looking for the cord and unwinding and rewinding. It may not sound like a big deal but you really notice and appreciate it once you cut the cord! You also won’t spend any time buying gasoline, priming, choking, or pulling a cord in attempts to get it started; just pick it up, pull the trigger, and you’re off and running every time.

Troy-Bilt named this tool a ‘handheld blower” rather than a leaf blower and my experience has proved that to be a thoughtful distinction. I have yet to blow a pile of leaves, but I have found plenty of uses for this handheld blower this spring and summer. Blowing debris off of the deck and patio, sweeping the garage floor, cleaning grass clippings off of the driveway after mowing, and brushing off power equipment before storing, are just a few of the tasks that the TB4300 has sped through around the house. Using it is simple as grabbing a broom, and the work goes by quickly and easily as you’d expect with powered equipment.

Cutting the Cord and Eliminating Gasoline without a Compromise

With all of the uses that you can find for the CORE Handheld Blower you might be wondering if keeping it charged will be a challenge. Well don’t worry; I haven’t had a problem with the battery life at all! In three weeks of moderate use I have charged it twice and did not encounter any tasks that Charger and Batterydepleted the battery charge before the job was completed. There is a lighted indicator that shows you exactly how much battery power is left to work with.

The power of the blower has been more than adequate for me and I have not even needed to engage the power boost mode that is available to increase the air flow. There are many other nice touches and features that I have not seen on previous leaf blowers that I have owned. For example, the power is variable based on how firmly you squeeze the trigger, which gives you more control to deliver a range of light to strong blast of air as required for the job at hand.

Included with the TB4300 Handheld Blower you’ll receive the 40V lithium-ion battery and a 40V Rapid Charger. And since the battery is interchangeable, once you own one tool in the CORE system you can purchase additional bare tools, without the battery and save money. Overall I’m very happy with the new CORE Handheld Blower and wouldn’t hesitate to recommend it or the Troy-Bilt powered by CORE System to my friends.

Disclosure: I am a member of Troy-Bilt’s Saturday6 Program which provides compensation to me, and in the case of product reviews, tools or equipment are provided to me at no cost for the purpose of providing an evaluation and sharing my honest opinions.



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Monday, June 27, 2016

Brookmere by Onni

The Brookmere by Onni, offers a 28 story tower that will rise above West Coquitlam.  Located at 535 North Road, Coquitlam, right in the heart of the new Burquitlam city centre. Brookmere blends Burnaby’s urban vive with the Coquitlam’s neighbourhood spirit.

Brookmere offers several amenities as well including a media room, yoga space, meeting room and 3rd floor outdoor terrace with several garden plots. The media room is a great place to watch movies or the season finale of Game of Thrones.   On the other hand, the yoga space is a great place to exercise in. You can go to the yoga room and carry out yoga to stay fit or you can simply just go there and exercise however you want to.

Another offering of Brookmere is the party room. The party room comes equipped with full kitchen and dining. The full kitchen and dining is offers you an all exclusive access to kitchen appliances. You can easily cook your favorite meals there. On the other hand, the dining is also a great place to go and sit in and have food in. Aside from these amenities, another great offering at the Brookmere is the professional equipped gym. The professional equipped gym allows you to work out the best free of charge. It lets you exercise and keep your health intact.

Brookmere starts at $269,000 and it has a total of 216 units.

brookemere4 brookemere brookemere2 brookermeretower

 

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Sunday, June 26, 2016

Enchanted August Giveaway--Enter to Win!


Here's your chance to win a copy of Enchanted August by Brenda Bowen, for sale the week of July 5th.  I'm 100 pages in and loving it.  Four lost souls spend the month of August at Hopewell Cottage, a lovely summer home on Little Lost Island off the coast of Maine.  Away from their busy lives and problems, each of the four have a chance to reexamine their lives while breathing in the fresh salt air, wandering the island, and finding the magic that lives in Hopewell Cottage.

Contest runs Monday, June 27th through Thursday, June 30th at midnight.  Winner and a review of the book will be posted on Friday, July 1st.

To enter, click below (US residents only, please)
a Rafflecopter giveaway






To wet your appetite, here's an interview with the author, Brenda Bowen:

About the Book: 

It’s an unusually rainy summer in Park Slope, Brooklyn, when Lottie Wilkinson and Rose Arbuthnot spot a battered index card on their children’s preschool bulletin board:

Hopewell Cottage
Little Lost Island, Maine.
Old pretty cottage to rent on a small Maine island.
Springwater, blueberries, sea glass.
August.

Neither of them can afford to take a month away from their spouses and kids, but one look at Hopewell Cottage online and they are smitten. To share expenses, they find two unlikely companions to join them: Caroline Dester, the damaged, beautiful darling of the independent movie scene, and Beverly Fisher, a retiree recovering from a heartbreaking loss. Though they get off to a rocky start, soon the four begin to relax into island life. And, as the sea breeze works its magic, they rediscover the best versions of themselves, and find, to their surprise, that they can indeed be happy, and with the people they least expect.

About the Author: 
Brenda Bowen is a literary agent. She lives in New York, and spends as much of her summer as she can on an island much like Little Lost Island in Maine. ENCHANTED AUGUST is her adult debut.

A Conversation with Brenda Bowen,
author of ENCHANTED AUGUST
(Penguin Books; on-sale July 5, 2016; $16; 9780143108078)

Q:  How did the idea for ENCHANTED AUGUST develop?

In 1991, I saw the movie Enchanted April, which transported me to Italy, a place I love, and made me feel as if life could be very magical indeed, if only for a short while. It wasn’t till the credits rolled on the movie that I realized it had been based on a book, THE ENCHANTED APRIL, by Elizabeth von Arnim. I read the book, fell in love with it; saw the movie again (and again), and loved it more each time. And every time I saw the film or read the story, I felt: “This could be happening now.”

For many years as an editor and publisher and agent, I’ve given authors and artists ideas for books. Usually the ideas are very vague, and the author then takes the idea and makes it into a bona fide story. I was thinking about giving the idea of an updated ENCHANTED APRIL to an author, so I started roughing out a story to see if it could work. Then I kept going. And gong. And now…it’s a book under my own name, which is thrilling indeed.

Q: Your book is based on a 90-year-old novel, which was made into an Oscar-nominated film. Did you feel apprehensive taking on such a well-loved work? What are the differences between your novel and the original ENCHANTED APRIL? Why did you move the story to Maine, and to August?

I didn’t actually feel apprehensive, though in retrospect I should have. THE ENCHANTED APRIL is a bit of a well-kept secret: those who know it tend to adore it; but many do not know it at all. The story seemed to be crying out to be replayed by women (and men) who move in the modern world.

When I started the book, it was called APRIL, ENCHANTED, and it took four bedraggled New Yorkers to an island based on St. Lucia over spring break. I loved the idea of setting the new book in the Caribbean because the colors and fragrances are so strong, as they are in the von Arnim original. But I didn’t really know the place, in my bones, so the manuscript didn’t work at all. Plus, I couldn’t imagine a month-long spring break. I talked to my agent, the wonderful Faith Hamlin, about my dilemma, and proposed to her that I take the characters to Maine, where I’ve spent summers for many years. She said, “Yes, get them up to Maine and leave them there a month, and then send me the manuscript.” So I did.

Q: You seem to have a great affection for Maine. Have you spent a lot of time there? Do you have your own “Hopewell Cottage?”

I do love Maine. I went to Colby College, in Waterville, where I learned to tough it out in wintery, inland Maine. I never even visited the coast of Maine till my last week at Colby, and then, like everyone else, I fell in love with it. A friend of mine has a family cottage on one of Maine’s thousands of islands, and I spent many summers with her there in my twenties and thirties. Then I had a family, and we started renting a cottage of our own. I have my own Hopewell, the place we go year after year, though, like the characters in ENCHANTED AUGUST, it’s only mine to rent. But that’s enough. “My” Hopewell doesn’t have two turrets, but in every other respect it’s as charming, peaceful, evocative, and breathtaking as the cottage in ENCHANTED AUGUST.

Q: Besides THE ENCHANTED APRIL, what were your literary (or non-literary) influences while writing this book?

I’m such a magpie: I steal everything. So I’m influenced by the words and actions of people around me. I just take whatever they say and put it into my stories. I love many of the 19th-century writers: Jane Austen, Charlotte Bronte, E. M. Forster, Henry James, J. M. Barrie.  I’m not crazy about Dickens and I can’t read Trollope (I’ve tried!). I love Philip Roth’s books: they are so different from what I like to write but they are just what I like to read. I am very influenced by movies – screwball comedies in particular. Mistaken identities, mixed signals, tiny lies that turn into big trouble – those are the stories I most adore. I go to the theater as much as I can. I like to hear the sound of stage dialogue: like real life, but heightened. When I get stuck, I read Mary Wesley. 

Q: Could you talk about your writing process? How did you get in the “Little Lost” mindset?

I spent three years writing the first third of ENCHANTED AUGUST, and then – once I had a publisher and a deadline -- six months writing the second two thirds. I do a lot of my writing at the Hungarian Pastry Shop in New York City, where there is no wi-fi and there are no electrical outlets. You can’t go online, and you can only use your computer for as long as it keeps a charge. The computer I wrote the book on only kept a two-hour charge, so I’d write for two hours and then stop, wherever I was. 

When I had to step things up to meet the deadline, I’d do two writing sessions of 40 minutes each in the very early morning before I went to work at 8:30AM. Then I’d write for a half-day on Friday and as much time as I could on Saturday and Sunday. I also spent most of August of last year finishing the novel on my own Little Lost Island.

I generally put on headphones to write. I play birdsong or sounds of the forest or the ocean as my writing soundtrack. When I write a rainy scene, I play a rainstorm on the headphones. I’m always shocked I’m not drenched to the skin when the scene is done. 

Q: You have spent many years in the publishing world. What’s it like being an author, rather than an agent or publisher?

This could be a really REALLY long answer, or a short one, so I’ll go with the short one: I love being an author. As Neil Gaiman says, “I get to make up stories all day and someone pays me.” That is a great thing. I am grateful for every reader, every bookstore owner, every librarian who touches my book. I know what it takes to get a book to market and I am deeply appreciative of everyone who has a hand in it.

Q: What would your perfect summer day look like? If it includes reading, what would you read?

Start on a Maine island. Get up early. Make coffee very quietly so as not to wake up the cottage. Heat up a sticky bun from the farmer’s market; vow to eat only half. Sit on the porch with coffee and sticky bun. Break vow. Watch the water. Pick up a book from the cottage bookshelves and dip in. Go inside and realize three hours have passed.

Put on some clothes, many of which are the same as clothes worn yesterday. Walk to the other side of the island in the sun. Watch the kids play tennis with the olds. Knit a little. Eat something for lunch. Read on the porch: I am very susceptible to the latest summer novel, or else I’m rereading a favorite classic like The Great Gatsby or Vilette (great book; bad title). Or my darling Mary Wesley. Notice there are no more sticky buns; bake a blueberry cake for tomorrow.

Maybe take the boat into town to get groceries. Go to a friend’s cottage to contribute to a communal feast of a dinner, usually involving fresh fish on the grill and always involving vegetables from the garden. Also involving pie. Eat. Talk. Drink. Walk home under the stars with no flashlight, if it’s not too dark. Go to bed early. Get up with the first bird and do it all over again.

Q: Will you write another book about Little Lost Island? 

A lot of readers have asked me that question! Someday I'd like to write a book about Max and Kitty, and their on-again/off-again romance. I love that they're from different worlds but they've grown up together, and the possibility for conflict (and attraction) there. But for now I'm at work on another, very different novel. More on that to come....

Q: If you could have your own Hopewell Cottage who would your ideal houseguests be? They can be living or deceased.

NOTE: Shakespeare would get a whole summer of his own.  

Fellow writers: 
Elizabeth von Arnim
Mary Wesley
Jane Austen, though I fear the journey would tire her
Mary Shelley
Charlotte Bronte
(I’d save Philip Roth for a winter retreat – too bracing for a summer cottage)

In the drinkers’ corner:
Jimmy Joyce 
Dylan Thomas
Richard Burton

So that we’d have some artists to go with the scribblers:
Henri Matisse
Toulouse Lautrec
Rogier van der Weyden
Modigliani

And some photographers to go with the artists:
EJ Bellocq
Weegee
Walker Evans
Dorothea Lange

For my husband: 
Samuel Johnson 

For me: 
Rafa Nadal

Musicians:
Dave Frishberg
George & Ira Gershwin
Fanny & Felix Mendelssohn
Ella Fitzgerald 
Louis Armstrong
João Gilberto

On the grill: Bobby Flay

At the stovetop:
Julia Child
Mrs. Beeton

More writers:
P.G. Wodehouse
Jonathan Ames
Gary Shteyngart
Maria Semple

Hollywood types: 
Billy Wilder
Preston Sturges
Emma Thompson
Richard Curtis
I. Freleng

Around the fire: 
Garrison Keillor
W. B. Years
Ira Glass

Moony poet: Johnny Keats

My New York friends
My island friends, especially the more eccentric
My beloved family

That’s it for one summer.






from Bookalicious Babe Book Reviews http://ift.tt/28Wgp5R

Saturday, June 25, 2016

3 Tips to Find Your Stolen Items after a Burglary

Being burglarized is a difficult experience and recovering your stolen goods may seem grim. Luckily, there are several simple things you can do to increase your chances of recovering your stolen property.

Image Source: Flickr

Image Source: Flickr

Below are 3 tips to find your stolen items after a burglary:

Pawn Shop
When a burglar needs to unload his latest haul, his first stop is often the pawn shop, where he can get quick, anonymous cash with no questions asked. It’s such a common move that some pawn shops already work directly with law enforcement through online databases such as Leads Online (another reason to file a police report quickly — these databases cross-reference with the reports, so if you haven’t bothered to call yours in, you’re out of luck). Just in case yours doesn’t, make a sweep as many local shops as you can, and see if they’ve got your stuff in stock. If you find it, don’t point it out — shop owners have money invested in your goods by this point, and might not react well.  Call up your buddies the police and leave it to them. Source: DumbLittleMan

Craigslist
A thief can easily sell your stolen goods online on Craigslist or Ebay, and the buyer would be none the wiser. It’s actually a successful tool for a thief and also an easy source to rake in cash off your property.
Here’s how it works:Enter the type in the make and model into the search field. The search engine crawls all of Craiglist ads to see if anyone is selling something similar to your stolen stuff. Not only does it search your local area, it searches all states and cities. Stolen911.com is an easy way to get stolen property indexed by the major search engines like Google, Yahoo and Bing.
Searching for your stolen property on Craigslist can increase your chance of recovering your stolen items. For example, this woman went on Craigslist and worked with officers to find $6,650 of property stolen from her home. Source: SimpliSafe

Specialized Store
This is more time consuming but depending on the items which were stolen, you may find them in a specialised store.
If your jewellery is missing you may consider visiting jewellery stores in your area that say they “buy gold” or second hand items. Some of these places melt down the items so time is really of the essence.
You can try approaching the shop keeper and asking if items you are missing have been sold to the store in the last 24 hours. If you can provide an accurate description or produce a photo they are more likely to take you seriously.
If you have a strong suspicion a store has bought your stolen items, you should notify the police so they can conduct an investigation. Before approaching these shops make sure to notify police of your intentions so you don’t accidentally interfere with the investigation. Source: Blog.Cammy

Contact:
Mr. Locksmith Calgary
555 Maidstone Drive NE
Calgary, Alberta T2A 4B6
Canada
Phone: (403) 800-9185

The post 3 Tips to Find Your Stolen Items after a Burglary appeared first on Mr Locksmith Calgary.



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No Bake Frozen Cheesecake

No Bake Frozen Cheesecake is the perfect way to celebrate summer. A sweet and salty crust combines with a layer of smooth cheesecake filling and fresh berries to create a delicious dessert for summer entertaining.

No Bake Frozen Cheesecake is the perfect way to celebrate summer. Top it fresh berries or chocolate sauce for one delicious dessert!

This is a sponsored post on behalf of Fisher Nuts. All opinions are my own. Thank you for continuing to support the brands that make My Baking Addiction possible.

I haven’t been baking all that much lately. We’ve just kind of been hanging out, enjoying the warm weather, and basking in the historic CAVS championship win. I mean, it’s been an entire week since the game, and we’re still all kinds of amazed.

By warm weather, I mean HOT. Like 90+ degrees hot – even with the A/C on, I have little desire to crank up the oven. But, that doesn’t mean we can’t enjoy a sweet dessert during the summer months.

If you read MBA on a regular basis, you know that I am a huge fan of no-bake desserts. They’re quick, easy, always a crowd pleaser.

(more…)

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Throwing in the Towel: DNF's for June


Struggle bus


I definitely had the front row on the struggle bus this week.  I've decided I just have to move on from two novels I've been trying to read the past few weeks.  So, The Lie Tree by Frances Hardinge 



and Finding Fraser by KC Dyer, I'm sorry.  


I've given up on you for now.  

I'm about 100 pages from the end of The Lie Tree and I just can't put any more energy into being patient and reading it.  I read reviews on this, a Costa Book of the Year Winner and every one of them was glowing.  Awesome, I thought.  This is going to be sooo good!  I may be missing something, but I just can't get into this novel about a young woman who wants to be a scientist in 1860's England, but is constantly forced to dumb herself down in a world where ladies are to be seen and not heard.  This all involves her father, a famous scientist, a scandal, and his death.  Faith is convinced her father was murdered due to a mysterious plant (the lie tree) he has in his possession.   If you tell lies, and they are believed, the plant produces a fruit that when eaten gives you the truth about whatever you want.  It can be the way to finding the true about life's greatest mysteries--and dangerous in the wrong hands. 

I was annoyed at Faith's constant dumbing down; I was not engaged in the story, and felt the storyline was vague and not compelling enough for me.  

Finding Fraser.  Sorry Jamie, you're going to have to be lost a bit longer for me.  Emma, the main character, decides to travel to Scotland to find her very own Jamie Fraser, that wonderful hero of the Outlander series by Diane Gabaldon.  I was all on board for this book, and thought I would zip through it with a big smile on my face.

Nope.  I've made it to page 109, and I'm ready to set it aside and move onto something else.  Emma is annoying to me, and incredibly naive for a young woman of 29.  I'm not patient enough right now to finish this tale, so I'll say DNF for now, but I'll pick it up again eventually and finish it.  This is not my time to find Fraser.  

So...June is ending.  I'm working on Destiny of the Republic by Candice Millard, and that review will be up next week.  Then I'll have a new batch of books coming up for review in July.  

Look for a chance to win a copy of this novel coming up this week:





Stay cool, stay hydrated, and keep reading! Give me air conditioning, a comfy couch, and a fresh new story to start.  I'm a happy gal.  

Sue  AKA The Bookalicious Babe


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Friday, June 24, 2016

Green Building: Understanding the Carbon Footprint of a Log Home

As we learn more and more about sustainability and our impact on the environment, there is an increased focus on building homes that are the less harmful to our planet. In the building industry they determine how “green” a building is by measuring its carbon footprint. It’s important when measuring carbon footprint to take into consideration the entire lifecycle of a home not just how it operates after it’s built. This article will help explain why building log and timber homes are greener, more sustainable and have a smaller carbon footprint compared to steel .

Understanding the Carbon Footprint of a Log Home

Forests and wood products are powerful tools to help mitigate the impacts of climate change. Source USDA Blog

What is a carbon footprint?

A carbon footprint, the total amount of carbon dioxide and other carbon compounds emitted directly or indirectly. For example, when you drive a car the engine burns fuel and creates a certain amount of CO2. Each vehicle can give off a different amount of CO2 depending on the fuel consumption of the vehicle. To understand the vehicle’s total carbon footprint you need to look at how it was made, what materials it’s made of, how it was transported, the CO2 it emits while you drive it, how long it will last and what will happen after it’s operational. 

Trees Absorb Carbon

As trees grow they clean the air we breathe by absorbing CO2 from the atmosphere and releasing oxygen. One tree can absorb up to 48 pounds of CO2 per year for a total of 1 ton by the time it reaches 40 years old. When a tree is cut down the carbon will remain stored in the tree. Only when the tree is burnt or  when it starts to  decay does that stored carbon start to be released back into our atmosphere. By dry weight, wood contains approximately 50% carbon, so wood used in a building provides physical storage of carbon that would otherwise go back into the atmosphere during the decaying process, thus reducing its carbon footprint.sustainable Log home

The Carbon Footprint of a log home

Unfortunately, of the many environmental impact studies out there, only a few of them look at the entire lifecycle of a timber or log home and the way in which it results in a much smaller carbon footprint than steel and cement homes. Steel production alone accounts for around 25% of the world’s CO2 emissions.

“In a wood building, the carbon is kept out of the atmosphere for the lifetime of the structure—or longer if the wood is reclaimed and reused or manufactured into other products. Wood stores more carbon than is emitted during its harvest, production, transport, and installation—even when transported over great distances.”

Utilization of Harvested Wood by the North American Forest Products Industry, Dovetail Partners Inc., 2012

Wood is the only major building material that is renewable and sustainable over the long term, while also being superior to steel and cement in nearly every environmental impact category. As such, log and timber homes are one of the most sustainable forms of construction, lasting substantially longer than conventional homes, and using almost 4 times less fossil fuels in manufacturing than a conventionally framed home. They are among the most energy efficient homes built today.

In addition to the wood itself, there are number of other ways that building a log or timber home reduces its carbon footprint:

1. Smaller Footings

Because wood is a naturally lighter building material, log and timber frame homes don’t require as deep and extensive concrete footings as conventional brick homes, which can save up to 11.5 tonnes in CO2 emissions.

2. Less Reinforcing Steel

Smaller footings also mean less concrete, and therefore a lower use of reinforcing steel. This reduces both the foundation costs and the carbon footprint.

3. Low Thermal Conductivity

 

Timber has a much lower thermal conductivity than brick, which means that there is much less transfer of outside temperatures into your home, providing more efficient temperature regulation.

4. Energy Efficient Insulation

 

Log and timber frame walls can be easily insulated with energy efficient materials, reducing heating and cooling costs throughout the year.

5. Reduced Embodied Energy

 

The overall production and transportation of timber to your home’s location takes much less energy than producing and transporting brick and other conventional construction materials.
If minimizing your carbon footprint is a priority for you when building your home, a timber or log home may be a great option for you. Check out our Log Home Galleries and Log Home Plans to give you some different ideas and concepts, and feel free to contact us if you have any further questions.



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Thursday, June 23, 2016

3 Signs That Burglars May Be Targeting Your Home

Is your home being watched? In this short post we’ll cover some important signs that burglars might be targeting your home, including: strange vehicle on the street, stranger came to your door recently and unannounced handyman at your home.

Image Source: Flickr

Image Source: Flickr

Strange Vehicle on the Street
An unknown vehicle parked outside your home could be a warning sign. Look for vehicles that do not belong to any of your neighbors or people visiting them, or a vehicle that seems to be lingering in the area for no apparent reason. The vehicle may be parked for an extended period of time, or it may return at random times. Either could be an indication that someone is trying to learn your routine and determine the best time to strike. You should also be wary of strange vehicles with heavily tinted windows or cars parked at angles so you can’t identify the occupants. Source: Safewise

Stranger Came to your Door Recently
Imagine this: A random woman comes up to your door and says, “Excuse me, but my phone died, and I need to make a quick to call to my friend to get directions to his house. Could I use your phone?”
Seems harmless. You let her inside. She makes the call and then she’s on her way. No problems.
While this could be nothing more than it seems, it also could be a subtle tactic used by burglars to case your home.
You see, many burglars work in teams. One role in the team is to be the investigator. Their job?  To see:

  • Where valuables are located
  • Where spare keys are located
  • Where the best entry points are
  • If you have a security system (many burglars will back off after learning that you have one) Source: AckermanSecurity

Unannounced Handyman at your Home
Most times, you’ll have an appointment set in advance when a cable repairman or someone from the utility company is stopping by to fix or service your equipment. So if a handyman, workman, or anyone else comes to your home unannounced, take warning.
WHAT TO DO: Don’t let this person into your house. Tell them it’s not a good time, and that you’ll call the company to schedule another time. If the person is there legitimately to provide service, they will understand and should be able to provide you with a number to call to set up an appointment. Don’t fall for the line, “this will only take a second….” Source: AlarmRelay

If you’re concerned about this and would like to install a security system, contact us here today:

Contact:
Mr. Locksmith Calgary
555 Maidstone Drive NE
Calgary, Alberta T2A 4B6
Canada
Phone: (403) 800-9185

The post 3 Signs That Burglars May Be Targeting Your Home appeared first on Mr Locksmith Calgary.



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Chocolate Chip Cookie Ice Cream Sandwich Cake

Chocolate Chip Cookie Ice Cream Sandwich Cake is a sweet and easy crowd-pleasing dessert that will stretch easily to feed a crowd. You can use any ice cream you love, and it’s perfect for a Fourth of July cookout, or summer barbecues!

Chocolate Chip Cookie Ice Cream Sandwich Cake is a sweet ending to any meal. Drizzle with chocolate sauce just before serving.

This is a sponsored post on behalf of Karo® Syrup as a Bake a Little Extra Blog Ambassador. Thank you for continuing to support the brands that make My Baking Addiction possible.

One of my favorite summer events is coming up – the Fourth of July. The Cleveland area goes all out – parades, fireworks, barbecues and fairs in every little town surrounding the big city.

For the past couple of years, since Elle was born, we’ve taken a low key approach to the 4th. A little barbecue with the family and some fireworks are all we need for our favorite summer holiday.

(more…)

The post Chocolate Chip Cookie Ice Cream Sandwich Cake appeared first on My Baking Addiction.

        


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7 Weekly productivity Hacks

Weekly planning is an integral part of running a successful business. Creating a plan will keep you on track to meet your yearly goals, help you track [...]

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Wednesday, June 22, 2016

The Curious Charms of Arthur Pepper by Phaedra Patrick

This novel snuck up on me and once I'd checked it out of the library I had to quickly read it in between the books I've planned on reading in June.  It was an endearing tale that revolves around a charm bracelet and a man's discovery of his wife's life before they met and married.

Arthur Pepper is 69 years old; his wife Miriam has been dead for a year.  He has a routine to his days:  he wears the same clothes, eats the same breakfast (at the same time every morning), and hides in his house to avoid Bernadette, a neighbor who brings sausage rolls and pies to Arthur every week.  His children rarely call; Lucy is a teacher and lives in the same town as Arthur; his son Dan lives in Australia and was too busy to even come back for Miriam's funeral.  It's a lonely and colorless life.  

Arthur decides on the one year anniversary of Miriam's death that it's time to clear out her closet.  In her boot, he finds a charm bracelet that he's never seen before.  It is obviously of high quality gold with delicate charms:  an elephant, a ring, a flower, a book, a heart, a tiger, a gold thimble,  and a paint palette.  Why didn't Miriam ever wear this around Arthur?  What do the charms mean?  Arthur begins his quest to understand what each charm means and where they came from. He learns that the Miriam he was married to for 40 years had a colorful and eventful life before she settled down to a quiet married life and motherhood.  But was she happy with the life she chose with Arthur?  Did she have any regrets?

Arthur steps out of his comfort zone in many ways during his adventures to uncover the meaning behind the charm bracelet.  He's a deeply thoughtful person who thinks back on his behavior with Miriam over the years, and how he could have done things differently.  It is poignant when he realizes the mistakes he made and how his wife was always graceful and kind no matter what Arthur did or didn't do.  Arthur is a likable character who isn't afraid to reflect, accept blame, and change.  Anyone who is in a relationship nowadays understands the person they know had a life full of experiences, places, and people before the life they have now.  We know that, but do we really think about who they knew, where they went, what they experienced without us?  How it shaped who they are, and why they made the choices they made?  Do you share it all with your loved ones, or do you keep a bit back just for you?  

Rating:  7/10 for a delightful novel about moving on from the death of a spouse, and discovering a bit about their past that helps you embrace life after loss.  A sweetly poignant tale.  It would make a great movie. 

Available in hardcover and e-book. 

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