Home & Garden 2010

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Home &Garden 2010

A SUPPLEMENT TO THE LEWISTON TRIBUNE


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LEWISTON TRIBUNE

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Something there is that loves a wall

lapse. For the same reason, lay flat rocks so they have a slight inward tilt. Every time you put a rock in place, its fit with its neighbors should be secure, perhaps helped along with shims of small rocks or handfuls of packed soil or fine gravel. For both appearance and strength, avoid lining up a joint in one course with a joint in the course immediately above or below it.

A stone wall can provide beauty — and exercise By LEE REICH

FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

If you feel like getting your blood moving — and with longer lasting effect than lifting dumbbells — go outside and lift stones. Make a dry stone wall — that is, one laid without mortar. A well-constructed stone wall can last centuries. Use it to create a terraced surface where a short, steep and dangerous-to-mow grassy slope once lay. On level ground, use a stone wall to better define your terrace or driveway, or to create a garden “room.” A stone wall also makes a nice backdrop against which to show off your bed of flowers or shrubbery. And the wall itself can be a thing of beauty.

Before You Begin The prospect of building a stone wall can be intimidating. Aren’t there all sorts of mystical rules for building stone walls? What about the sheer weight of stone that must be moved? Even though about a ton of stone is needed for every 30 square feet of wall face, you only have to move

With Wall Finished, What Next?

Associated Press

A well-constructed stone wall can last for centuries. Use that wall to create a terraced surface where a short, steep and dangerous-to-mow grassy slope once lay. On level ground, use a stone wall to better define your terrace or driveway. A stone wall also makes a nice backdrop against which to show off your bed of flowers or shrubbery. those stones one at a time. Or a barrowful at a time. When you purchase or gather stones, make sure to get only those that are no heavier than you can comfortably move around. Also, purchase or gather some basic tools. In this weather, you’re probably already wearing gloves, which help prevent nicked or crushed fingers when

working with stone. A metal pry bar or crow bar is useful for those final nudges a stone needs to settle it home. Occasionally, a stone might need to be cut, which you do by scoring it with a masonry chisel and hammer, then using the hammer solo to clink the far side of the cut. Wear goggles when cutting stone.

And Up It Goes The mechanics of building a stone wall can be boiled down to a half-dozen or so basic principles. Start out — most logically — from ground level, with a good foundation. Dig out the ground to a half-foot, less if drainage is good, and pour a couple of inches of gravel into the resulting trench.

This gravel-filled trench creates a solid, immobile base on which to build. Then, build on that theme of a good foundation by generally using your largest and flattest stones lowest in the wall. As you work upward, taper the wall in on both faces of a freestanding wall, or on the outside face of a retaining wall, to make the wall less inclined to col-

In addition to the space it defines, a stone wall opens up new opportunities in gardening. Alpine and rock garden plants thrive in the warmed microclimate and good drainage provided by crevices packed with bits of soil. Or use the wall as a “shelf ” on which to display potted plants. The test of your wall will be next year at this time, when you see how it stood up to the ground shifting from frost. Or other disruptions — my cat tests my walls by tiptoeing along the ledge checking for loose stones. If all rocks stay in place, your wall will get prettier with age as it cozies up in its surroundings with the embrace of plants and kisses from mosses and lichens.

Birdseed prices too high? Try growing your own By DEAN FOSDICK

spending, start with the entertainment budget: Consider the cost of keeping If you’re looking for sim- those backyard bird feedple ways to cut household ers so busy. FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Black-oiled sunflower seed retails at more than $17.50 for a 10-pound bag, while nyjer, or thistle seed, goes for around $15 per 5-pound container. Those prices are for fresh, specialty seed — the premium grades marketed for the pickiest of passers-by. You always can search the sales, comparison shop or buy birdseed in bulk to save a buck. But consider growing your own for a substantial savings. Seed, nectar, and berryrich plants and shrubs will draw wild birds year-round. Some flower varieties, such as sunflowers, cosmos and

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coneflowers, develop daisy-like seed heads, which turns them into organic bird feeders. Many plants have heads so large they’re easy to harvest or “thresh” once they finish flowering and drying. Lay them face down on a flat surface, pat or compress to free the seed, and then store it in jars or redistribute it into your feeders. It’s pretty straightforward, although the approach has its critics. “Birds are going to be much better at getting the seeds for many of the plant species. Therefore, it is best to leave the plants standing over winter,” said Nigel Dunnett of the University of Sheffield, in England, and author of “Rain Gardens” (Timber Press, 2007). “Leaving the stems standing has other benefits, too. The cover prevents rain damage to exposed soil, and in climates where it doesn’t freeze up for months on end in the winter, (and) quite a lot of invertebrates will use the hollow stems of the perennials as a place for over-

wintering.” Packaged birdseed is big business. An estimated 4.6 billion pounds of wild bird feed is purchased in the United States each year at the retail level. That works out to some $1.45 billion in sales, said Susan Hays, executive director of the Wild Bird Feeding Industry at Sioux Falls, S.D. Yet backyard bird feeding isn’t always what it’s cracked up to be, many ornithologists say. “Birds are adaptable and mobile creatures, and most individuals can survive just fine without our handouts,” said David Bonter, leader of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology’s Project FeederWatch. “If the food supply dwindles in one area, the birds will go elsewhere.” Feeding birds can be good for people, however. “Watching birds at our backyard feeders is one of the most meaningful interactions that many Americans have with wildlife in modern society,” Bonter said. Landscaping for birds also can enhance the envi-

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ronment, particularly when paired with something like rain gardens, which are low places cultivated to divert storm runoff. “Because rain gardens are usually based on perennial plantings, then they can be good for seed-eating birds,” Dunnett said. Look to the Internet or reference books for local plants and shrubs attractive to wildlife. Meanwhile, here are some of the easiest varieties to grow and harvest and provide interest to your yard while nourishing foraging birds:  Sunflowers, which come in about 70 varieties.  Millet, particularly the ornamental varieties such as Purple Majesty and Purple Baron.  Corn. Plant a row or more of popcorn or Indian corn and leave it standing for the birds and other wildlife to glean.  Tickseed. More than 100 drought-tolerant species.  Common goldenrod. Careful, though. It tends to be aggressive.  Black-eyed Susan. An aster-like flower with attractive blooms and numerous seeds.  Purple coneflower. New hybrids come in a variety of colors, and birds flock to the seeds.  Cosmos. Great colors and easy-to-gather seeds.  Cup plant. Bright yellow blooms commonly found in flood plains and near streams. Some inexpensive alternatives to a birdseed diet include chopped or halved fruit, peanuts, suet or peanut butter smeared onto trees, and bread cubes.


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Tribune/Kyle Mills

John Bradbury takes in the view from the covered deck at his cabin on the Fraser Prairie between the Clearwater River and Weippe.

You can go home again Second District Judge John Bradbury has returned to the land his family homesteaded on the Fraser Prairie By ROBERT C. JOHNSON

cleared in the 1890s, Bradbury has built a log cabin for his residence when he’s RASER — On a hearing cases in Clearwacloudy, late winter ter County. It’s very much a part day, a long skein of Canadian geese V of its environment. The their way north to- lodgepole logs are from the ward home. And here thou- Grangemont area, and the sands of feet below them on Douglas fir for the flooring the Fraser Prairie, Judge and Ponderosa pine for the John Bradbury has come cabinets are from Bradbury’s own land. He and his home, too. On land his grandparents crew selected trees with

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Bradbury doesn’t think he was too popular after that. Overseeing the construction of the cabin was Bradbury’s old friend Tia Pomponio of Orofino, a retired Potlatch woods boss who knows whom to call and how to organize an operation. The project began about five years ago, Pomponio said, with him and Bradbury walking the land and looking at possible building sites. Last year, they drove stakes and work on the 40 by 42 foot cabin commenced.

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dying tops and had them milled into lumber. Since then, he’s been replanting trees. Bradbury laughs at what his grandparents must think of the goings on. They cleared the land with crosscut saws and axes to make farmland, and now he’s replanted about 200 of the 500 acres. My “grandparents must be wondering what happened to the gene pool,” he said. His family settled first in Pierce in 1868 and then moved to Fraser. His grandfather left the prairie in 1911 to become the first tax assessor for the newly created Clearwater County.

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Living walls may be the ultimate raised-bed garden By DEAN FOSDICK

FOR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Things are looking up for gardeners who are short on space but long on imagination. It’s increasingly easy to build vertical gardens, structures that enable plants to grow upward if there is no room for growing them laterally. These living walls can make great backdrops for mixing color with cuisine; use them to frame patios and decks with tapestries

of miniature tomatoes and spaghetti squash. Or make privacy screens by draping morning glories, clematis and sweet peas over netting or latticework. “Vertical gardening makes it easier to have your ornaments and eat them too,” said Leonard Perry, an extension professor of horticulture at the University of Vermont. “Grab a tomato or two as you walk by, which is an easy thing to do when they’re hanging at different levels.” Living walls entail gardening on the edge, how-

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ever. While great for saving space, they are more challenging when fertilizing and watering. “Holding water on a flat roof isn’t difficult, but turning it 90 degrees on a wall is tremendously tricky,” said Edmund Snodgrass of Street, Md., an author and operator of a nursery dedicated to producing green roof plants. “You have to decide early on what it is you want to accomplish with this. Understand what level of effort you want to put into it as a homeowner.” Living walls vary greatly in size and sophistication, from commercial designs with complicated plumbing and roots attached to walls, to plant pockets connected to webbing, to flowering vines planted in the ground and trained to climb homemade supports. Each needs a sturdy framework, waterproofing material to protect the walls, and plant containers. “Walls with pockets are nice for urban areas or properties with elevation changes,” Snodgrass said. “They’re also easy for backyard gardeners to use because they don’t need complex irrigation systems. All have their merits.” More benefits of vertical gardens:  Erected against warm walls, they can become microclimates resistant to killing frosts. “That can mean starting your garden earlier in the spring and continuing with it later into the fall,” said Derek Fell, a horticulturist from Pipersville, Pa., who has developed a backyard device he calls the “Skyscraper Gar-

Associated Press

This photo shows a Skyscraper Garden, featuring climbing vegetables (from left to right) climbing Trombone zucchini, Early Cascade tomatoes, and Orient Express climbing cucumbers. den.” “Climbing plants like spinach or pole snap beans will bear all summer, giving you up to 10 times the yields of similar bush varieties.”  Plants grown in vertical gardens are less disease-prone. “Having them grow upright gets more air circulating around them,” Perry said. “Less accumulated moisture means less disease.”  Little or no stooping is required. “Forget all that bending over as you plant

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eggplant for example,” Fell said. “But they can be used as an edging below the vining plants. “By extending your (planting) bed away from a wall like an apron, you can have the best of both worlds — climbing vegetables at the back and compact, low-growing vegetables at the front.”  University of Vermont fact sheet: http://www. uvm.edu/pss/ppp/articles/ vertgard.html.

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or prune,” Perry said. “Everything is conveniently in front of you.” The weight of a maturing vertical garden can fracture or rot buildings if it’s not installed properly, however. Using lightweight potting soil rather than saturated topsoil will help reduce the load. “I cannot think of any downside to vertical gardening except not all vegetables are suitable for growing tall up supports — lettuce, cabbage peppers,

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had gone online to find blueprints for an owl house (find them at http://www. dnr.state.md.us/wildlife/ wabarrowlplan.html). Then he went to Home Depot and bought everything he needed to build one (which cost $70 compared to $126 to buy one at coveside.com). He and my two young sons spent the entire day cutting boards, staining them and nailing them together to build a 2-foot-tall house with a hinged door big enough for my 3-year-old to fit in. Next, came mounting it to a tree in our yard. We waited until my parents came up from Cape Girardeau so that my dad could help out. My 60-yearold dad climbed the ladder 12 feet up, hoisted the box and mounted it to a tree. Then came the waiting. We didn’t hear the owl anymore. Didn’t he (or she) know we had a nice home waiting? One day, just before Christmas, I saw movement in the box. Some dried leaves and twigs peeked from the hole. We had an owl; I was sure of it. Alas, a couple of squirrels poked their heads out. My husband assures me that if an owl wants the box, he’ll just kick the squirrels out (and possibly eat them). For now, I am still hoping, waiting, for my little barred owl to return.

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LEWISTON TRIBUNE

Succulent collections go chic Container gardening and online marketing are increasing the popularity of succulents, transforming the likes of hens and chicks to collectible chic. It wasn’t long ago that the eye-catching perennials grew primarily in sun-seared settings. Now they’re the playthings of people living in temperate zones. “There are so many succulents available now (that) we weren’t even aware of 10 or 20 years ago. The Internet makes it possible to purchase these plants,” said Debra Lee Baldwin, author of “Succulent Container Gardens” (Timber Press, 2010). Many of the most attractive succulents are native to Madagascar, South Africa and the Caribbean, meaning they’re frost tender and do well outdoors only in USDA Zones 9 and 10, Baldwin said. “Container culture offers an ideal solution; anyone, anywhere can grow succulents in pots, which can be sheltered indoors,” she said. More than 10,000 plant species are classified as succulents, including those of the sizable cacti family. Some are tall and irregularly shaped, resembling

This photo released by Debra Lee Baldwin shows a round pot which emphasizes the cylindrical shape of Euphorbia flanaganii. yellow flowers contrast with the pot’s bright blue glaze. Associated Press

living sculptures. Others are small and develop laterally, making an effective ground cover. Many bloom. Most are survivors, durable once established. “They’ll store water in their fleshy leaves in times of drought, which can be interpreted as owners forgetting to water them,” Baldwin said. “They can so easily be loved to death — by that I mean by overwatering, making the roots rot. Succulents really prefer neglect.” Planting succulents in containers not only makes over-wintering them easier but also makes growing them more rewarding. “It’s gardening in miniature, ideal for space-constrained, time-challenged gardeners who like mating plants with pots,” Baldwin said. “It’s a lifestyle enhancement kind of thing. You want to display them in sitting areas or entryways where they can be enjoyed close up.” Succulents need good

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drainage, particularly when planted in containers. “They’re a ‘special needs’ plant,” said David Salman, founder and chief horticulturist at High Country Gardens, in Santa Fe, N.M. “Succulents appreciate fast-draining soil. A rich loam won’t work. It gets too wet and stays too fertile. It’s better to blend coarse sand and gravel with a soilless potting mix.” As for containers:  Use terra cotta or ceramic rather than plastic, Salman said. “Succulents can live for a great many years, often outlasting containers. Repotting is difficult for plants, particularly for some of the larger succulents.”  Layer an attractive

stone or gravel top-dressing around containerized succulents. Coarse aquarium gravel is good. “It keeps the plants looking cleaner so they don’t get any dirt splashed up into the foliage,” he said. “If you like to hike, gather some rocks or gnarled wood during the course of your adventures. They will provide a little interior decoration with your potted plants, making them rock gardens in miniature.”  Many succulents are small enough to make great windowsill plants. “They’ll bloom (indoors) in winter and early spring, giving you some great offseason color,” Salman said.  Bring along your plant when choosing a pot, or

your pot when choosing a plant. “That makes a better design statement,” Baldwin said.  Arrange succulentfilled containers into groups. Elevate several. Choose themes or colors to add cohesiveness to your garden. “A pot never

detracts from the plant; it showcases the plant,” Baldwin said. Planting succulents in containers opens the way for a hobby within a hobby. You can use potted succulents for creating bonsai, shaping topiary or carving out miniature landscapes.

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Tribune/Kyle Mills

Sitting on 500 acres, Bradbury’s cabin incorporates wood from the site and surrounding area. The orginal house on the property homesteaded by the Bradbury family in the 1800s. The home was built from trees cleared from the land that were then milled on site. Bradury’s great-grandfather was a master carpenter who built many of the homes in the Fraser area. Photo courtesy John Bradbury

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Once the logs for the cabin walls were harvested, they were hauled to New Pioneer Log Homes in Weippe, where owners Art and Barb Cochrell sat down with Bradbury and developed the plans. The Cochrells were quick to accommodate any changes in the plans, such as modifying the size of the windows. They did superb work, Pomponio said. The local involvement didn’t end there. Everyone who worked on the house was from the area, in some cases almost next door. Pete Kingon borrowed a backhoe and did the excavation work. Jason Bereth of Hard Rock Gravel in

Tribune/Kyle Mills

A wash basin accents the facilities off of the mudroom. Weippe supplied the materials for the driveway. Beaver’s Cement of Orofino poured the footings for the garage and outbuildings. Nolan Cochrell, the electrician, grew up just a quarter mile away. He ran speaker wire in the ceiling of every room, and thus avoided

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LEWISTON TRIBUNE

Tribune/Kyle Mills

Tribune/Kyle Mills

ABOVE: The large stone fireplace is a highlight of the living room. BELOW: Ponderosa pine, cut from trees on the property, make stunning cabinets for the master bath.

With the open floor plan, the dining area flows into the living room, which boast a large stone fireplace and panoramic windows.

ABOVE: The logs were sealed together with liquid nails and screwed together for an airtight, insulated wall. LEFT: The kitchen keeps the rustic feel of the outdoors with pine cabinets, harvested on site and then milled and built by local craftsmen. Tribune/Kyle Mills

From page 6F

through the house. The deck looks out across the Lolo Creek Canyon and across the Clearwater River to the Camas Prairie. Nuthatches and flickers make their distinctive calls, and the sun warms the land. It is home.

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2 6 1 9 8 4 C Y- 1 0

laying the wood floor. The junction of the log walls and the cedar lumber is perfect. They are craftsmen, Pomponio said. They plumbed the house as well and built the fireplace and hearth in the main room. The roofing materials, insulation and windows came from Jacobs Lumber Co. in Kamiah. Guardian Heating and Air Conditioning of Lewiston installed an electric furnace and a Monarch hot water heater that incorporates a circulating pump that means instant hot water; there is no wasting water by having to let it run to get hot. Every part came together, Pomponio said. No one had to wait for someone else to finish before another aspect of the building could begin. Wes Lineberry, owner of a specialty mill in Pierce, quarter sawed the fir for the flooring and for the cabinets. Hills Floor Covering of Orofino took care of the tiles for the bathroom floors and the border between the front door and the main room. “He’s an artist,” Pomponio said of the work he had done on his own house. Dave and Peggy Vaughn of Mountain Treasures Cabinetry and Woodworking of Weippe worked magic with the cabinets and countertops. They also built the entertainment center in the main room and handled the painting and staining. The fit and finish of their work couldn’t be better. The pine will darken and marble as it ages, Dave Vaughn said. The pine shows not only its grain, of course, but like all pine it

room has a sliding glass door that opens onto a deck that runs the width of the cabin. The cabin sits at the head of a small draw, and during the summer, with the windows open, a breeze from the west blows constantly

262475CY-10

HOME

has a distinctive blue stain in some of the rings, making it especially eye-catching. The Vaughns cut out space at the top of each door for a handle; there are no pulls sticking out to detract from the beauty of the wood. The deep cabinets beneath the kitchen counters have shelves that slide and then pull out. There is no wasted space. Where two counters meet, underneath is a lazy susan. Beneath the island that separates the kitchen from the main room, the Vaughns built a cutting board of black walnut and cherry wood that slides out from behind a panel. Sherry Slater, who owns Sherry’s Cakes & Bouquets, and Peggy Vaughn helped with the decorating. All this adds up to a smallish cabin of about 1,600 square feet. It’s not rustic, but neither is it elaborate. It has a mudroom and two bedrooms. The small master bed-

261730CY_10

Closed Sunday

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8F

LEWISTON TRIBUNE

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cleaner, Consumer Reports advised. Clean the window coverings, too. For curtains and drapes, use a soft brush or dusting attachment to a vacuum cleaner. “Set on reduced suction to prevent fabric from being drawn into the nozzle,” the magazine said. Screens also should be cleaned. And consider choosing one of the newer screening materials that might give a clearer view.

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261731CY-10

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T H U R S D A Y, M A R C H 2 5 , 2 0 1 0

The days when people swapped out heavy velvet drapes for lighter, more translucent ones come spring are gone — window treatments are too expensive for many of us to have multiple sets of draperies. But there are other ways to use your windows to mark the change of season. “The obvious thing is to open the treatments and let the light shine in,” said Steven Schiff, owner of Dynamic Draperies, in Delaware. Here are some other tips:

Clean

Consider Switching To Lighter Window Treatments

Wash your windows to remove winter’s grime, said Meghan Carter, who runs the Web site AskTheDecorator.com. She prefers mild soap and water to the ammonia-based glass cleaners. Clean windows on a cloudy day or when they’re in the shade, starting from the top and using a damp squeegee blade to wipe off

Fabrics help determine the feel of a room. If you have storage space, heavy, dark drapes can be taken down for spring and summer and stored. Put them on a “nice round fat hanger,” said Oma Ford, senior deputy editor for home design at Better Homes and Gardens. While it can cost $4,000 or more to outfit a house

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Function should be the first thing to consider when picking fabrics for window treatments, said Schiff, who has been in the fabric and window treatment business for more than 35 years. Is the drapery supposed to provide privacy? Cut down on bright sunlight? “Each solution has its choice of fabrics,” said Schiff, who lives in Newark, Del. “If all you need to do is diffuse rays of sunlight, you can use almost anything.”

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with custom-made window treatments, Ford said ready-made curtain panels can be much less expensive for those who want to swap out drapes in the spring. And she suggests thinking outside the window box. “Consider using a lightweight bedspread or tablecloth,” she said. They can be attached to a rod with clip rings. “You might be able to find some fun patterns,” she said. For kitchens and bathrooms, cloth napkin squares hung on a tension rod with clip rings can create “a fun, no commitment style statement,” Ford said. Or, if you want to keep your drapes up all year, consider: Layering window treatments is one way to make them work all year. Sheers, blinds or shades layered underneath those heavy drapes will let light in yet still provide privacy. Ford likes the “tropical feel” of shades made from bamboo or woven natural material. Fabrics in lighter colors will produce a “little more springy feeling,” she said, because they reflect the light that comes into the room. Carter recommends staying away from thick heavy fabrics in dark shades. A neutral color in a mid-range fabric “gives you a little coziness while still being kind of fresh,” she said.

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T H U R S D A Y, M A R C H 2 5 , 2 0 1 0

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l e w i st o n tr i b u n e

In the digital age, paper still leads clutter list DIANA MARSZALEK

Erica Linderholm works in her apartment in New York.

For The Associated Press

Associated Press

untackled material — unread articles, unpaid bills, unanswered invitations — weigh heavily on us, making us less productive. They eat up space in the brain as well as on the kitchen counter, he said. Alaina Yoakum, a sculptor and stay-at-home mom in San Rafael, Calif., said she had been “overwhelmed by my paper problem” when she turned to “Getting Things Done” for help.

“I was overlooking bills, misplacing permission slips for my kids, forgetting about fliers for events I’d wanted to attend, and so much more,” Yoakum said. “I felt at a complete loss as to how to deal with the mass overload of papers.” “And it was becoming embarrassing,” she said. Since reading Allen, Yoakum said, she now has a system: Establish an inbox for new papers, which need to be reviewed in a

timely manner. Papers that require action — writing a check or making a phone call, for example — that can be done in two minutes or less should be dealt with then. Anything taking longer needs to be scheduled to do later, or filed away for future reference. The results, Yoakum said, are liberating. “It hasn’t been difficult to make the change,” she said, adding that having a simple inbox has given her significant

Don’t laugh; this could be your home place. Any shade of orange (hamburger, burnt, bright) was cool (NOT!). No one Need a good laugh? Check (not even me, thanks to my out butterflylister.com’s list mom) got away from this of the “Top 10 Worst Home ugly trend: wood paneling, Decorating Trends of All sixth on the list. It origiTime” and tell me what you nated in the ’50s, but somethink. (Not that I ever did how survived though the anything on this list.) ’80s, and could be seen on living-room, bedroom and bathroom walls and later in Is That Foil On cars, station wagons, vans and even boats. Wait, I Your Walls? think wood paneling is still First on the list is popcorn around, isn’t it? ceilings, which were pretty popular 40 years ago. They were used to help eliminate echoes and reflective sounds, but according to the site, often contained asbestos and were prone to dirt, grime and smoke stains. Some even had gold glitter! Second: Shag carpets (also trendy in the 1970s), which came in pale yellow, red, lime-green and even orange. Coming in third is foil wallpaper, often used in bathrooms, again in Everybody can get in the the ’70s. Makes you won"swim" of things, when you der what home decorators were thinking that decade, have your own pool. Find doesn’t it? out how easy and affordable it can be. Call now for your personalized pool bid today, All-Pink Bathrooms and start having fun in the sun!

Animal Print And Vinyl Floors

Seventh place goes to bean bag chairs, which are actually making a comeback in alternative fabrics, fillings and colors. Don’t these remind you of your college years? The next spot is occupied by patterned linoleum and vinyl flooring, a cheap flooring trend of the ’60s and ’70s. Patterns were usually busy and either brown, pale yellow, orange,

Summer Fun...

Pink bathrooms (either pink tiles, pink countertops, pink walls, pink decor, or, better yet, an allpink combo) are fourth on this list. Now if we could just figure out how and why that trend came to be. Fifth place goes to orange formica, a design disaster of the 1970s often seen in kitchens, bathrooms and bar countertops all over the

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CLEARWATER POOL SERVICE 2 6 2 6 6 5 C Y- 1 0

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262495CY_10

Were The Rage

green or all of the above. Removing linoleum, by the way, was almost impossible. The velour animal print fad of the ’80s and ’90s comes in ninth. Animal print was everywhere, from couches to carpets and throw pillows to gym shorts! Closing the list is bathroom carpeting. Now this is just gross. Just think of how often the bathroom floor gets wet. Then it attracts mold and mildew, and the carpet absorbs it all. Need I say more?

263045CY-10

By Martha Phifer

Of The Orlando Sentinel

peace of mind. “Now when I’ve had to suddenly find an important paper or receipt, I knew for a fact that I could find it there. I didn’t have to go scavenging my car, my dresser, or under my bed for it,” Yoakum said. Debbie Harwin, a professional organizer in Larchmont, N.Y., said that for many people the first step in reducing paper clutter is realizing that in this electronic age, many papers — magazine articles, for instance — no longer need to be saved. Their information can be accessed online.

And managing papers that do need to be kept does not need to be messy, she said. Maintaining visible files — complete with an “action” file for papers that need attending — is key, she said. Harwin and Allen agree that throwing out papers is not always the solution; organizing them so they can be tapped as references is. “If there is not a system in place, if there is not a place for that particular piece of paper to go, it’s just going to sit in that pile,” Harwin said, “and chances are it’s going to get lost in that black hole.” Changing isn’t easy. “Every year I go through it and get rid of some,” said Linderholm, who has lived in her apartment for 26 years. “But then I come across articles that seem really interesting and never have the time to read.” She thinks the problem may run deeper than lack of time. “I think there’s an emotional component there — thinking that I need the information when in reality I don’t,” she said. In may take a transformative experience like Yoakum’s to break the cycle. “I honestly believe I feel a bit more Zen about life,” Yoakum said. “I was starting to feel so overwhelmed and scattered, and now I feel more at peace knowing that at least one aspect of my life is under control.”

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With a small Manhattan apartment, Erica Linderholm struggles with a common affliction: too much paper. Bills, mail and magazines sit in what she calls “nice stacks” on her kitchen counter and table, occasionally moved to make way for other activities, such as eating. Carefully chosen bins hold old grad school papers, waiting to be reread — or not — when time allows. Work stuff gets lugged around in a rolling bag that Linderholm purchased with the idea of tackling some of it during the 45-minute commute between home and her job as a teacher. “I just schlep it around,” she said. “It’s another vessel for stuff.” Despite our supposed growth as a paperless society, a look at many kitchens, hallways and home offices shows that we are still anything but. Amassing, stacking and losing papers is alive and well in American homes, and some organizational experts say that stunts progress. “Essentially, what most of the piles represent are incompletion,” said David Allen of Ojai, Calif., author of “Getting Things Done” (Viking, 2001). Papers cease to be problems when they are read, dealt with and filed away, he said. Instead, stacks of

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T H URS D A Y, M A R C H 2 5 , 2 0 1 0

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261990CY_ 10

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