lunes, 8 de julio de 2013

ME ENCANTO - NUM. 8 (La serie)


Primera tienda virtual, de Korea. Todas las góndolas están en LCD, usa el screen,pantalla, para hacer tu selección del producto, tocando la pantalla, haces el pago en caja al final de comprar, y ya tienes toda tu compra empacada en bolsas.
Abajo-
Este baño azul,su lámpara,columnas,cortinas,arcos,techo y diseño total.

   La escalera,su reja a los lados,junto
al techo del salón comedor.

Abajo, el carro forrado en velvet, o sea, pana. Las uñas de material de acabado en plata o stainless still, las barbies, ahora en constitución average, más latina, más identificada con países y personas de constitución más anchas.
Un cumpleaño especial, 90 años, y familiar,junto a seres queridos, Guillermo, Abraham,Efrén y Gmo.homenajeado.


Añadir leyenda







viernes, 5 de julio de 2013

Guerra a las hormigas- 13 formas naturalmente,sin químicos


Little tiny ants have been spotted in our new home, and many people are suffering the same fate across the country. As much as I love spring, I don't like bugs — especially bugs that can infest a house. Last week I asked for some advice in how to deal with ants naturally as I hadn't time to research it myself since I moved this last weekend. I got such good advice, I had to share it with the readers here at MNN as well. 
CORTESIA DE RIMI HARRIS BLOG
Some of these measures are deterrents. That is, they deter the ants from coming in your house. This seems to work well for those with a mild problem. Others found that they needed to use a method that kills the whole colony of ants. I've compiled the comments and suggestions by category, allowing you to compare the different methods a little more easily. 
 
1. Lemon juice 
Teresa: We just spray around the openings with pure lemon juice … and it always works for us … something about the acid messes up their sense of tracking…
 
2. Cinnamon 
Shayla:We use ground cinnamon around where there are coming it. It works really well.
Peggy: We spray cinnamon essential oil all around the doors, windowsills, floors, etc. keeps them from coming in. I put the sugar water and borax OUTSIDE!
Letia: Another vote for ground cinnamon. Easy to clean up afterwards and worked great for us!!!
Jean: Cinnamon and cloves. Makes your house smell nice and the ants just hate it sprinkled right in their path.
Patricia: We also use cinnamon oil. We draw borders around everything with a Q-tip dipped in it. They won’t cross it.
 
3. Peppermint 
Heather: My mother-in-law has success with peppermint essential oil around windows and doors (any entries). Plus her house then smells awesome.
Julie: Dr. Bonner’s liquid soap in the mint aroma. Mix 1 to 1 with water in a spray bottle. Spray on the ant invasion and watch them suffer.
 
4. Borax, water and sugar 
Kristi: We use borax, sugar, water and a touch of peanut butter. It takes a couple of weeks but really works. We used it last year in our old house and are implementing it again this spring in our new house. Pesky ants! Here is the site where I found the recipe:http://naturalantkiller.blogspot.com/
Christy: I second Diana’s comment about borax and sugar. I’ve made a thin paste before with water, sugar and borax, then spread it on little pieces of thin cardboard or stiff cardstock and placed them near where it seems they are coming into the house. They’ll eat it and take it back to their colony (just like the Terro liquid you can buy). The paste will dry up in a couple days, so you’ll have to make more. But I think I only had to do it twice before they were gone.
Chookie: What worked for us was a mixture of borax and sugar in water. Several years ago, we lived in a house where there was an ants nest in the walls. Removing it would have meant virtually demolishing the entire front wall of the house (not practical!), so instead, after a year or two of having flying ants swarm into our bedroom every year we decided to go on an ant killing spree. Conventional ant killers didn’t work. Borax and powdered sugar didn’t work. But adding water to the borax and sugar mix to make a thick sugary borax-y syrup DID work…. the worker ants took it back into the nest and it positioned the queen – result = no more flying ants. OK, so borax does need to be kept away from pets and small children, but it is relatively safe beyond that as it is only toxic if you eat it. my solution was to put it somewhere where the kids and the cats would not reach it but the ants could.
BeverlyC: We live in China and had a HORRIBLE ant problem in our house. Tried cinnamon, black pepper, vinegar, etc. etc. We were concerned about the borax because we have guests in and out regularly and the little children are often, well, naughty and undisciplined. When someone suggested Terro liquid ant bait and we found it was just Borax and sugar, we asked someone to bring us some. We could pick the traps up and put them away when company came and put them back out after they left. They worked wonders!!
 
5. Boiling water and dish soap 
Jennie: We make sure all of our food is sealed up. The honey jar is usually the biggest ant magnet, so it gets a thorough washing and then is placed on a small water-filled saucer in the cupboard. We use a spray bottle filled with water and a squirt of liquid dish soap (I use Seventh Generation) to kill any visible ants. I also look around outside to try to find their hill; pouring a kettle of boiling water on it solves the problem.
Christy:  I’ve done what Jennie mentioned too – boiling water will destroy an ant colony, or weeds popping up between sidewalk cracks or in mulch. It’s an easy, purely natural way to kill things that we don’t often think about.
 
6. Diatomaceous earth 
Karen: Yes … diatomaceous earth (DE) works well … use food-grade not swimming pool DE. It should be sprinkled around the perimeter of your new home and you can also safely sprinkle it inside where you see them. Do not wet the DE or it will not work. DE isn’t an instant kill but should resolve the problem within a week or so.
Jami: I have a pretty serious any invasion at my house too. When I moved in last April they had already made themselves at home. I did the cinnamon thing last year and worked ok, but they just kept finding new ways in. My ants weren’t attracted to sugary things, but protein, especially the dog food. This year I made some borax cookies and put them in the old fireplace where I noticed the ants returning a week ago. I also sprinkled DE around the perimeter of my kitchen and that seems to have worked better than anything so far for immediate results.
 
7. Chalk  
Natalie: Oh! And they will not cross a line drawn in chalk. I drew a line around my window where they were coming in and it kept them at bay. 
Anali: My grandparents has really good results with the line of chalk, they used powder that you can get at home improvement stores. It comes in a squeezey bottle so it’s easy to lay down a line with.
 
8. Baking soda and powdered sugar 
Jennifer: Ants carry an acidic substance with them always for protection. I do a mix of baking soda and powdered sugar in a plastic lid set in strategic places. I think a little volcanic science experiment happens inside their bodies. Over the course of several days it has made a huge difference.
 
9. Coffee grounds
Lea: I have had success with used coffee grounds, I did know where their entry was, after putting it in the cracks they never returned. I also do know it doesn’t kill them, it just makes them move homes, (we have put them on beds outside and we just see them pop up a small distance away.
 
10. Cornmeal
Jill: One more thing to add to this. I saw somewhere to use corn meal. Well, it worked out since some moths got into my cornmeal, and I felt bad wasting it. That’s when I saw the idea and tried it. I sprinkled a little bit just off the back porch. Every day I would check and every day the same trail of ants was still there. Then I forgot about it. My daughter found another ant nest further out in the yard, and it made me remember to check the last trail. It was gone, completely gone. So, I sprinkled it on the new nest, and less than a week later, it is gone. If you google it there are a ton of places where it mentions it. Here’s just one link, and if you scroll to the Tip there is still another idea using molasses. Although if cornmeal will work I think it’s cheaper, and safer around kids and pets. http://www.ehow.com/how_6395566_kill-ants-corn-meal.html
 
11. Cream of Wheat 
Rebecca: Cream of wheat! They eat it & it expands & they explode! Ha! I used it in my garden for ant problems. Kind of makes you wonder what it does to our insides when we eat it too
 
12. Vinegar 
Kristie: Vinegar! Since we switched to using a vinegar/water solution for mopping the floors and cleaning the counters, our ant problem has vanished.
Mysty: Vinegar is the one sure solution, but you need to pour it where the ants have their nest, not just to where they walk around. If you find their nest just pour about 0.5-1 L of white (cheap) vinegar. I never had ant problems but my grandparents sometimes has as they has a big farm and there is always an ant problem is some corner of the farm 
Cath: We used a mixture of vinegar, washing up liquid (ecover) and peppermint oil last year. Tracked them back to their nest and syringed it into the cracks. They never came back.
 
13. Equal 
Tea Leaf: We killed our ants by mixing Equal packets with apple juice. It is a neurotoxin to the ants. Scary that people put these in their coffee.


Little tiny ants have been spotted in our new home, and many people are suffering the same fate across the country. As much as I love spring, I don't like bugs — especially bugs that can infest a house. Last week I asked for some advice in how to deal with ants naturally as I hadn't time to research it myself since I moved this last weekend. I got such good advice, I had to share it with the readers here at MNN as well. 
Some of these measures are deterrents. That is, they deter the ants from coming in your house. This seems to work well for those with a mild problem. Others found that they needed to use a method that kills the whole colony of ants. I've compiled the comments and suggestions by category, allowing you to compare the different methods a little more easily. 
1. Lemon juice 
Teresa: We just spray around the openings with pure lemon juice … and it always works for us … something about the acid messes up their sense of tracking…
2. Cinnamon 
Shayla:We use ground cinnamon around where there are coming it. It works really well.
Peggy: We spray cinnamon essential oil all around the doors, windowsills, floors, etc. keeps them from coming in. I put the sugar water and borax OUTSIDE!
Letia: Another vote for ground cinnamon. Easy to clean up afterwards and worked great for us!!!
Jean: Cinnamon and cloves. Makes your house smell nice and the ants just hate it sprinkled right in their path.
Patricia: We also use cinnamon oil. We draw borders around everything with a Q-tip dipped in it. They won’t cross it.
3. Peppermint 
Heather: My mother-in-law has success with peppermint essential oil around windows and doors (any entries). Plus her house then smells awesome.
Julie: Dr. Bonner’s liquid soap in the mint aroma. Mix 1 to 1 with water in a spray bottle. Spray on the ant invasion and watch them suffer.
4. Borax, water and sugar 
Kristi: We use borax, sugar, water and a touch of peanut butter. It takes a couple of weeks but really works. We used it last year in our old house and are implementing it again this spring in our new house. Pesky ants! Here is the site where I found the recipe:http://naturalantkiller.blogspot.com/
Christy: I second Diana’s comment about borax and sugar. I’ve made a thin paste before with water, sugar and borax, then spread it on little pieces of thin cardboard or stiff cardstock and placed them near where it seems they are coming into the house. They’ll eat it and take it back to their colony (just like the Terro liquid you can buy). The paste will dry up in a couple days, so you’ll have to make more. But I think I only had to do it twice before they were gone.
Chookie: What worked for us was a mixture of borax and sugar in water. Several years ago, we lived in a house where there was an ants nest in the walls. Removing it would have meant virtually demolishing the entire front wall of the house (not practical!), so instead, after a year or two of having flying ants swarm into our bedroom every year we decided to go on an ant killing spree. Conventional ant killers didn’t work. Borax and powdered sugar didn’t work. But adding water to the borax and sugar mix to make a thick sugary borax-y syrup DID work…. the worker ants took it back into the nest and it positioned the queen – result = no more flying ants. OK, so borax does need to be kept away from pets and small children, but it is relatively safe beyond that as it is only toxic if you eat it. my solution was to put it somewhere where the kids and the cats would not reach it but the ants could.
BeverlyC: We live in China and had a HORRIBLE ant problem in our house. Tried cinnamon, black pepper, vinegar, etc. etc. We were concerned about the borax because we have guests in and out regularly and the little children are often, well, naughty and undisciplined. When someone suggested Terro liquid ant bait and we found it was just Borax and sugar, we asked someone to bring us some. We could pick the traps up and put them away when company came and put them back out after they left. They worked wonders!!
5. Boiling water and dish soap 
Jennie: We make sure all of our food is sealed up. The honey jar is usually the biggest ant magnet, so it gets a thorough washing and then is placed on a small water-filled saucer in the cupboard. We use a spray bottle filled with water and a squirt of liquid dish soap (I use Seventh Generation) to kill any visible ants. I also look around outside to try to find their hill; pouring a kettle of boiling water on it solves the problem.
Christy:  I’ve done what Jennie mentioned too – boiling water will destroy an ant colony, or weeds popping up between sidewalk cracks or in mulch. It’s an easy, purely natural way to kill things that we don’t often think about.
6. Diatomaceous earth 
Karen: Yes … diatomaceous earth (DE) works well … use food-grade not swimming pool DE. It should be sprinkled around the perimeter of your new home and you can also safely sprinkle it inside where you see them. Do not wet the DE or it will not work. DE isn’t an instant kill but should resolve the problem within a week or so.
Jami: I have a pretty serious any invasion at my house too. When I moved in last April they had already made themselves at home. I did the cinnamon thing last year and worked ok, but they just kept finding new ways in. My ants weren’t attracted to sugary things, but protein, especially the dog food. This year I made some borax cookies and put them in the old fireplace where I noticed the ants returning a week ago. I also sprinkled DE around the perimeter of my kitchen and that seems to have worked better than anything so far for immediate results.
7. Chalk  
Natalie: Oh! And they will not cross a line drawn in chalk. I drew a line around my window where they were coming in and it kept them at bay. 
Anali: My grandparents has really good results with the line of chalk, they used powder that you can get at home improvement stores. It comes in a squeezey bottle so it’s easy to lay down a line with.
8. Baking soda and powdered sugar 
Jennifer: Ants carry an acidic substance with them always for protection. I do a mix of baking soda and powdered sugar in a plastic lid set in strategic places. I think a little volcanic science experiment happens inside their bodies. Over the course of several days it has made a huge difference.
9. Coffee grounds
Lea: I have had success with used coffee grounds, I did know where their entry was, after putting it in the cracks they never returned. I also do know it doesn’t kill them, it just makes them move homes, (we have put them on beds outside and we just see them pop up a small distance away.
10. Cornmeal
Jill: One more thing to add to this. I saw somewhere to use corn meal. Well, it worked out since some moths got into my cornmeal, and I felt bad wasting it. That’s when I saw the idea and tried it. I sprinkled a little bit just off the back porch. Every day I would check and every day the same trail of ants was still there. Then I forgot about it. My daughter found another ant nest further out in the yard, and it made me remember to check the last trail. It was gone, completely gone. So, I sprinkled it on the new nest, and less than a week later, it is gone. If you google it there are a ton of places where it mentions it. Here’s just one link, and if you scroll to the Tip there is still another idea using molasses. Although if cornmeal will work I think it’s cheaper, and safer around kids and pets. http://www.ehow.com/how_6395566_kill-ants-corn-meal.html
11. Cream of Wheat 
Rebecca: Cream of wheat! They eat it & it expands & they explode! Ha! I used it in my garden for ant problems. Kind of makes you wonder what it does to our insides when we eat it too
12. Vinegar 
Kristie: Vinegar! Since we switched to using a vinegar/water solution for mopping the floors and cleaning the counters, our ant problem has vanished.
Mysty: Vinegar is the one sure solution, but you need to pour it where the ants have their nest, not just to where they walk around. If you find their nest just pour about 0.5-1 L of white (cheap) vinegar. I never had ant problems but my grandparents sometimes has as they has a big farm and there is always an ant problem is some corner of the farm 
Cath: We used a mixture of vinegar, washing up liquid (ecover) and peppermint oil last year. Tracked them back to their nest and syringed it into the cracks. They never came back.
13. Equal 
Tea Leaf: We killed our ants by mixing Equal packets with apple juice. It is a neurotoxin to the ants. Scary that people put these in their coffee.

Aplicaciones móviles, meditar,enfocarse,autoayuda, enlaces activados

Cuatro aplicaciones de computadora para meditar, enfocarse, autoayuda,
con los enlaces activados


Conscious computing: 4 apps to fight distraction and to focus your mind
It's time to quit multitasking. Plug in and sharpen your attention with these meditative programs.
Wed, Jul 03 2013 at 1:44 PM Cortesía de Sami Grover
Photo: ReWire
I’ve never been one to meditate.
 
It’s not that I don’t believe in the power of mental practice to focus your mind or expand your awareness. I’ve just always found the aesthetic and language surrounding most meditation practices somewhat alienating. So I was struck by an article in the UK’s Guardian newspaper looking at a new movement in the tech world known as “conscious computing.”
 
Drawing on both recent research in neuroscience and ancient traditions of meditation and mindfulness, advocates of conscious computing have developed programs and mobile apps which encourage us to abandon multitasking in favor of singular focus on the task at hand.
 
As someone who works from home as both a freelance writer and running my own branding agency, I thought I’d take a few of these apps for a test ride.
 
Here are some of my favorites so far.
 
OmmWriter: A writing program for actually writing
It’s a strange thing, but as someone who has developed his writing skills in the age of computers, I’m much more at home composing on screen than I am writing on paper.
 
Yet most word processing programs have too many options, and an interface that’s ugly as sin.
 
OmmWriter is different.
 
The screen is populated by calming grays, or a wintery backdrop. You have a choice of four typefaces and four font sizes. (The paid version features more options, as seen in the video above.) And you can plug your headphones in and immerse yourself in a selection of rhythmical, non-obtrusive soundtracks and keystroke tones. (The settings I chose created an experience a little like sitting on a slow moving freight train, staring out at frozen tundra, and typing on an old typewriter.) Best of all, once you’ve selected your settings, they automatically fade from view and you are left with nothing to focus on but your words.
 
Coincidence or not, but since I’ve started using OmmWriter, I’ve found my writing time more than cut in half, and I’ve been much less likely to multitask. In short, I’m hooked. And I’ve bored more than a few colleagues trying to convince them to give OmmWriter a go.
 
ReWire: Train your mind to your own tunes
ReWireReWire is a classic example of the way that conscious computing is taking ancient traditions and updating them for a new generation.
 
Based on the meditative technique of observing transitions, ReWire creates a game-like meditation experience using either tunes from your iTunes library, or you can purchase “brain entrainment” tracks designed for meditation. Once you pick some music, select your session length and difficulty level, you are then asked to do nothing but sit with your eyes closed, focus on the sounds in the foreground of your mind and tap the screen any time the music stops.
 
You can track your progress. You can set reminders. And you can interact with others by sharing your performance. ReWire suggests using the app both as a means to train your focus over time, and also just before meetings or other tasks requiring concentration.
 
I’ve been testing out ReWire for a few days. I started with one of ReWire’s own tracks, and began using the app each time I turned on my computer to work. While the cracking thunder and wavy synth sounds of the “brainwave entrainment” did tweak my inner cynic a bit, I must admit that I left each session with a deeper sense of clarity, allowing me to focus on the tasks in front of me.
 
I’ve also tried a session with my own music - Primal Scream’s acid house/rock classic Screamadelica, to be precise. It’s an interesting experience, trying to meditate to music more suited to an illegal warehouse rave. In some ways, I actually found the session more effective. Because my own music was so familiar, and so engaging to me, I had to focus twice as hard to not get lost in the music and forget about the practice.
 
Buddhify: Meditation tapes for wherever you are
BuddhifyLike ReWire, Buddhify takes its cues from traditional meditation and is much more like what I’d imagine a traditional meditation session to be. Besides its fun, laid-back design and language, Buddhify also differentiates itself by offering bite-size and longer meditation practices for various different locations or activities (walking, gym, traveling and home).
 
You can select one of four “flavors” that you wish to hone - clarity, connection, stability and embodiment. The practices then each focus on one simple task - whether it’s breath counting, body awareness exercises, or focusing your attention on the sensation of walking - and they casually guide you through that practice.
 
As the makers acknowledge, intense meditation practice is usually best pursued away from distractions. But given the pace of our modern lives, finding ways to still apply these techniques as we go about our business can both increase our practice time and hone our ability to apply mindfulness and focus in the busiest situations.
 
I’ve been working with Buddhify over the past week, using both home practices and walking practices, and have certainly learned techniques which I find helpful. In fact, it appears to be somewhat of a gateway drug for mindfulness and meditation in general. I now find myself now applying those techniques (breath counting in particular) without the need to fire up the app.
 
Coffitivity: Sounds for creativity
CoffivityCoffitivity is based on the notion that it is really hard to be creative in either an entirely quiet space, or a particularly loud one.
 
The Coffitivity premise is that the ambient noise of a coffee shop is perfect for nurturing creativity. (Yes, they do point to some peer-reviewed research to back up their claims.) So Coffitivity plays you those sounds, and allows you to mix in your own music in the background.
 
If you’re working from home and it’s eerily quiet, I can absolutely see the attraction of something like Coffitivity. But I’ve always found coffee shops kind of distracting. Not because I don’t like the noise, but because I am nosy and I listen in on other peoples’ conversations.
 
So the other day I walked to my local cafe, ordered a latte, fired up my noise-cancelling headphones. And I proceeded to work in the coffee shop to the piped sounds of a pretend coffee shop. Yes, I felt like a doofus Yes, this probably isn’t what advocates would consider true conscious computing. (Aren’t we supposed to be connecting more fully with the world around us?)
 
But boy did I get a lot of work done.
 

YURT, conoce otro estilo de acampar,vivir, transportarse, y beneficios




Photo: Dmitry P/Flickr
Yurts!
 
Yurts: Everything you ever wanted to know but were afraid to ask
Here's your 101 guide on the structure that helped Genghis Khan conquer Eurasia — from how they're made to where you can stay in one or where you can buy one.
 
 A yurt is a round cylindrical dwelling capped with a conic roof that's been in use for at least the past few thousand years. Originating in Central Asia (Genghis Khan and his horde used them), the yurt was valued by its native progenitors for its portability, durability and structural soundness. Yurts are easy to put up and take down (requiring just a couple hours of work) and could be transported on the backs of horses and yaks, vital requirements for nomadic pastorialists.
 
Yurts are still used by nomadic herders on the steppes of Central Asia today, and they've also worked their way into Western society. They were first introduced to the U.S. by yurt pioneer William Coperthwaite in the 1960s. In 1978, Pacific Yurts started operations and became the first modern yurt company in North America.
A mountain yurt under a dark blue night sky.
Photo: Adam Baker/Flickr
 
Today's yurts retain the same overall design principles as their East Asian ancestors, but they include modern materials like clear acrylic windows, high-strength steel cables, and UV-resistant marine quality polyester siding. Nowadays you can get a yurt with French doors, windows, gutters and skylights. Yurts can be found high up on mountains serving backcountry skiers, nestled deep in the woods housing campers and hikers, and next to rivers as the primary residence of former insurance executives.
 
 
Whether you're in the market for a yurt, looking to spend a few nights in one, or just slightly yurt-curious, the following information will help round out your understanding of this awesome structure.
 
A yurt's central window and a sunbeam
Photo: AJ/Flickr
 
The history of yurts
The yurt basically solved a problem— the need for human habitation in tough environmental conditions. Nomadic tribes needed a house that could be easily constructed and moved, built with materials they had on hand (mainly sheep's wool with a little wood), and seasonly adjusted to be warmer in the winter and cooler in the summer. A yurt satisfies all of those requirements.
 
A yurt overlooking the ocean.
Photo: Marya/Flickr
 
Traditional yurts are made with wooden slat lattice walls supporting sapling beams held together at the top by a wooden ring. The roof beams exert pressure on the lattice walls, which are held in tension by leather strapping running around the perimeter of the building. Woolen felted mats are laid over this framework and can be adjusted according to the time of year — when it's colder, add more mats while in the hot summer time you remove them.
 
A yurt housing development in Mongolia.
A community of yurts in Mongolia. (Photo: Evgeni Zotov/Flickr)
 
The exact origins of the yurt are not clear as there are two variations on the design that sprung out of Mongolia and Siberia — the Mongolian yurt or "Ger", has straight roof poles, a heavy wooden center ring that often needed additional structural support, and a heavy wooden door. The Turkik yurt, or "üy," has bent poles that curve down into the tops of the walls, a much lighter center ring that stand on its own, and a simple flap door.
 
Bunk beds in a yurt
Photo: Vastateparkstaff/Flickr
 
How the modern yurt got its groove on
The fact that you have probably at least heard of a yurt before reading this article can be attributed to one man and a math class that he was teaching back in the 1960s. Bill Coperthwaite was teaching a math class at a Quaker school in New Hampshire and was looking for a way to teach his students about the mathematics of roof design. He came across a National Geographic article by Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglass about a trip to Mongolia and was seized by Douglas's descriptions of the nomadic dwellings. In short order his class built the first yurt in the western world. As the years progressed, Coperthwaite built more yurts and refined and evolved his designs. In 1972, he established the Yurt Foundation with the goal of spreading the word about yurts to build a better world.
 
A yurt in the snow
Photo: Laurel F/Flickr
 
And spread the word he did. His students moved all over the country and started building yurts. In 1978, Pacific Yurts was founded and offered the first commercially available yurt in the United States. Since then thousands of "modern" yurts have been built all around America and the the broader world. Pacific Yurts has been joined by companies like the Colorado Yurt Company, Rainier Yurts and Spirit Mountain Yurts. You can find a full list of all the companies selling yurts lower in this article.
Yurts on the steppes
Yurts on the steppe. (Photo: Foto's van felix/Flickr)
 
Modern yurts
In the 35 years since Pacific Yurts offered its first model, yurt design has been pushed far beyond felted wool mats and sapling roof struts. The modern yurt can be decked out with high-efficiency curved glass windows, space-age insulation, and clear translucent vinyl skylights. Marine-quality sail cloth and polyester has replaced the felted wool of traditional designs. Modern yurts can be built to withstand heavy snow fall or optimized to handle hot tropical climates.
 
A yurt under construction in the desert
Photo: Diamond Moutain/Flickr
 
With the right mix of features and add ons, it's entirely possible to build a yurt in any climate that is as comfortable and protective as a traditional stick-built home.
 
A diagram of a yurt
 
How to sleep in a yurt
A kid and her yurt
Kids love yurts. (Photo: Phil Whitehouse/Flickr)
 
Short of buying your own yurt, the easiest way to experience the magic of sleeping in one is to visit one of the many yurt rental or camp sites around the world. You should do some Internet searching to see what's available in your area or destination, but here are some good options to get you started:
Click over to YurtLodging.com, Yurts.com or OddIns.com, to see lengthier lists of yurt rentals.
 
Inside a very cool yurt
Photo: Louiscrusoe/Flickr
 
How to buy a yurt
If you are ready to make the next step and actually buy your own yurt, you are in luck. There are a lot of great companies out there selling them. Here is a list of the top manufacturers for you to research your purchase. You want to find a quality product with the right mix of features at the right price. Happy hunting!
A red traditional yurt interior
Photo: Pieter Schepens/Flickr
 
Are you on TwitterFollow me (@sheagunther) there, I give good tweets. And if you really like my writing, you can join my Facebook page and visit my homepage.
 
CORTESIA DE 
Yurts: Everything you ever wanted to know but were afraid to ask
Here's your 101 guide on the structure that helped Genghis Khan conquer Eurasia — from how they're made to where you can stay in one or where you can buy one.
 

viernes, 28 de junio de 2013

S.D.P., Sabemos Descansas en Paz, Yiye Ávila


Profeta de nuestro tiempo, quién? no escuchó a Yiye,el evangelista, celosamente instruirnos de cuál era, a su enterder bíblico, la forma de vivir para ir al cielo. Disciplina que había adquirido en su adiestramiento para competir y ganar dos campeonatos en fisiculturismo, y con el amor de representar a su Tierra, un día decide tomar un ministerio tan comprometedor, que requiere tanto desprendimiento de sí, dándose de entero a la fe y convicción cristiana. Yiye tomó sobre sí el compromiso
de servir a  todo Puerto Rico, con su lema "Cristo Viene". El ex-profesor escolar, de mediana estatura, no cesaba de hacer conversos a los que desconocían cómo comenzar a vivir una experiencia cristiana.
Al principio de su ministerio,y con su estilo peculiar, Yiye quería que todos entraran en una santidad, que se nos hacía un poco difícil comprender. Luego, entendió que Jesús fue algo más flexible en su paciencia con el hombre, y su mensaje. Entonces, el evangelista Yiye, aunque con el mismo celo cristiano, tuvo una variante, que no incluyeron doblez alguna, sino, un grado más amplio de paciencia. Yiye Ávila, sufrió pruebas, y las superó con la fortaleza que Dios le dió. Hacía unos ayunos de 40 días, e instaba a todos a balancear nuestras vidas, añadiendo a nuestro programa diario, la búsqueda sincera al encuentro espiritual. Y vimos sus frutos del Espíritu Santo, como decía su prédica, por eso convencidos decimos:
Hijos espirituales, familia, amigos, conocidos todos, sabemos que Yiye, descansa en paz.