08/20/2008

Trio dominates demolition derby

DOWAGIAC - David Helmke, his cousin Jay White III and Jay's wife Brooke captured three of the top four places in the Unique Motor Sports Demolition Derby Saturday night at the Berrien County Youth Fair in Berrien Springs, which is why there were three demolished cars - two Lincoln Town Cars and Jay's "Tony Stewart orange" Ford Mercury Grand Marquis, all with Chevy engines - beside Clinton Street Monday.
Helmke, a former football player who won a total of $650, said, "I'm still smashing stuff up. Before I was smashing heads, now I'm smashing cars." "There were probably 50 cars that showed up," Jay said. "It's one of the bigger derbies in Michigan" with five qualifying heats leading to the feature. The Whites finished third and fourth to an Indiana man. Brooke "put a couple of good hits on me. I was trying to leave her alone," Jay said.

"This was the first time we ran against each other" since the 12-year, third-generation driver introduced her to demolition derbies four years ago. "Her driver's side back tire was literally in the middle of another guy's car, right over the top. The audience went nuts" for the silver car with the air cleaner painted pink. "She's got just as many wins as I do" in eight fewer years. It takes about 200 hours to build a "competitive car," White said.

Helmke's Town Car was painted with a military motif "to support the troops," which didn't keep him from getting booed like a villain when he went after "the Perfect 10" in her pink Cadillac on the 31st anniversary of Elvis Presley's death.
Their sponsors include FCI Construction, Benny's Barber Shop, Dave Jerz and Keith Fenech of First Choice Auto.
From http://www.chinatopsupplier.com/ chinatopsupplier

04:56 Posted in Blog | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this

08/19/2008

Green tea can make handy cold compress

Hamburg - Green tea is not just for drinking: The refreshing beverage can also be used as a cold compress.
On its tea-up-your-day. de website, the German Tea Association recommends taking brewed tea, cooling it, and then freezing it in ice cube trays. When your concentration flags or your head gets heavy, wrap one of the ice cubes in a paper towel, spend five minutes pressing it alternately on your temples, neck and forehead for 15 seconds at a time.
The compresses are also good for puffy eyes. Give your skin a treat by pressing an unwrapped cube against your eyelids or cheeks for up to 10 seconds.
From http://www.agriculture-supplier.com/ agriculture-supplier

04:33 Posted in Blog | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this

Using organic fertilizers the right way

Organic fertilizers are all the rage these days, and with good reason. They can provide plants with a long, slow feed, and their manufacture reuses waste products while putting less demand on natural resources.ardeners, though, make the mistake of approaching the use of organic fertilizers in the same way as they might use a chemical fertilizer.For instance, the other day a gardening expert on the radio was touting the benefits of guano, or bat droppings. He was right about guano being rich in nutrients. It has almost 20 percent nitrogen in a form that can be taken up quickly by plants. And guano surely is natural: It's merely scooped out of caves where bats hang out, then bagged up for sale.The problem is that guano is not much different in its effects on plants and soil from any quick-acting, chemical fertilizer. The same could be said for blood meal, poultry manure and other concentrated, quick-acting — albeit organic — fertilizers.The thing missing from all chemical fertilizers and from concentrated organic fertilizers is bulky organic matter. Yes, plants benefit from bulk in their diet, just as we do.Like the bulk in our diet, bulk's benefits to plants are indirect. These benefits include getting soils to hold more air and water, making nutrients already in the soil more available to plants and helping plants fight Bulky organic material that is good for plants is familiar stuff. Raw organic materials include straw, autumn leaves, sawdust, hay and manures. When these raw, organic materials decompose, they become such things as compost, leaf mold, old manure and humus — all of them somewhat richer in plant nutrients than the original organic materials that went into them.Note that most of the bulk associated with manures comes from the sawdust, straw, or whatever other material was used for bedding for the animal. What comes out a chicken, for example, has little organic material, and much of its benefit to plants comes from the wood shavings or straw that is scooped up along with the poop from the floor of the chicken house.This is not to say that plant growth cannot suffer from the opposite extreme, that of applying too much raw bulk and not enough actual nutrients. Raw organic materials low in nutrients, such as sawdust and straw, can cause temporary nutrient deficiencies if mixed into the soil.More concentrated fertilizers do have their uses — with houseplants, for example, which have no room in or on their pots for bulky organic materials. And quick-acting, concentrated fertilizers are needed for emergency feeding of neglected plants.The lesson here is: Generally, don't seek out the most concentrated — the "richest" — organic fertilizer. If you do use concentrated fertilizers, also regularly enrich your soil with plenty of organic materials, either digging them into or just laying them on top of the ground.An alternative to hauling all that bulky material into your garden is to grow it in place. Set aside a different part of your garden each season, or part of a season, in which to grow so-called "cover crops." These are plants such as oats, rye or buckwheat that you grow specifically to enrich the soil with organic matter.A third alternative is to avoid any concentrated fertilizer and annually give your soil all the food and bulk needed at the same time by spreading on top of the ground an inch depth of compost or rotted manure.


From http://www.chemical-suppliers-china.com/ chemical-suppliers

04:32 Posted in Blog | Permalink | Comments (0) | Email this