The vegetable I'm most likely to forget to plant each year is garlic (stinking rose). Although it's planted at the end of the season along with lettuce, endive and radish, garlic isn't harvested with those other vegetables, which ripen in the cool moistness of autumn. Garlic ripens almost a year hence, in the heat of summer. Nonetheless, now is the time to plant it. True, many gardeners plant garlic in early spring and still reap ...
Hi Robert, We are having an addition put on to my house. Where the house transitions into a block wall, the contractor is gluing the stucco paper to the last stud and stapling it down. I'm a nurse not a contractor, so this is not my specialty but it just doesn't seem right to me. Wouldn't you need more than glue and staples? If this is the way things are done then I'm sorry for ...
What if you could soothe a sore throat or a headache with the snip of a scissors? Plant some herbs indoors now, before fall sets in, and you could have a winter's worth of folksy remedies.
Mid- to late summer is prime time for gardeners - a last chance to grow a second batch of fresh vegetables before the plant-killing frosts arrive. Add a few protective enclosures, such as cold frames, overhead sheets and hoops, and the harvest can be extended until Thanksgiving and beyond.
The warm weather and long days of summer can give us a free and easy feeling - that is, until it's time to pay the utility bill.
I recently moved into a new community and I am in the process of working with landscape architects to redo my front yard.
Hello Robert, I got a question for you. I don't know if you have touched on this in the past, but I'm a single female and live alone. I'm concerned about my safety especially after somebody broke into my neighbor's garage. I know they say dogs are the best alarm but I have a very small yard and don't have the time or patience to take care of an animal, so that would ...
Nobody likes a pest, especially the creepy, crawly kind. But they exist, and, unfortunately, too many of us make it easy for pests to take up residence right alongside the family. To help you remember the most effective way to deal with pests, use this acronym - INSPECT. It stands for: Investigate. Take a serious, strategic approach to discovering potential pest problems in and around your home. Study. After identifying potential problems, study the potential ...
Robert, Can you advise us on this topic? The sun shines directly on two glass doors in our den. Will some type of screen doors solve the heat problem? We have only one screen, on the non-sliding window. Thank you for a response and any suggestion you may have. Dan H. Hi Dan, Solar screens prevent up to 90 percent of the sun's radiant heat from entering your home. This not only translates into energy ...
Maybe you find yourself with some free time, as we move toward the end of summer. Maybe you've come into a small sum of cash. Or maybe your wife has decided she can no longer live in a home where the exterior walls are peeling and the interior walls have huge, off-color rectangles where your "Rocky III" posters used to hang. Whatever your motivation, if you can't quite bring yourself to hire painters, then you've ...
There is obviously very little I can do about the recession and depreciating home values, but are there things that I could be doing, or our neighborhood can do to increase the value or appeal of our community? How can we set ourselves apart from all of the other communities through the valley?
Editor's note: This is the 260th column from Robert Lamoureux and Your Home Improvements. That's a total of five years of helpful advice dispensed to Santa Clarita Valley homeowners. "We look forward to more questions and working with our readers in the future," said Lamoureux.
Hello Robert, I just finished reading your column and it reminded me of a project of mine. I don't know if you have been asked this before but we have a slatted patio cover that extends out 9 feet and is 9 feet wide. We were thinking about putting some plywood down and use it as a sun deck. What size thickness of plywood would you recommend for an 81 square foot ...
When it comes time to select trees for their landscaping, many SCV homeowners overlook one of the best choices: the palm. According to Richard Green of Green Landscape Nursery in Saugus, in general, palms are slow growing, drought tolerant and low maintenance, and they have a root "ball" that usually doesn't cause problems with sidewalks and retaining walls and such.
Robert, We have a block wall in our backyard that helps stop the noise coming from the street. It is still louder than what we would want at times. Is there a problem with adding blocks to the top of the wall to help prevent some of the street noise? I know I can't prevent everything but I just want to make it as quiet as possible. I enjoy your column very much. Thank you, ...
When a home smells good, it makes a favorable impression on visitors. This is exactly what home sellers want when they put their house on the market.
Key indicators point to conditions for a seller's real estate market this spring.
Spring home improvement season is on the way, and if you're like most homeowners you have a list of jobs you want to accomplish.
It's time to think spring, which means fresh home updates. Spring home improvement projects will help you update your home, add comfort and save more of your hard-earned paycheck.
It's cold out there. In much of the country, now's the time when home serves as a cozy refuge from the ice and snow. We light our fireplaces and wish for springtime.
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