I
feels strongly about our planet earth. He shares her thoughts on planet preservation with our viewers.
There are tips that each one of us can implement, and make a difference! Trash to treasures captures the spirit of conservation. Is there an issue you feel strongly about?
Everyday we hear, through newspapers, TV channels, hoardings etc about how our planet is slowly disintegrating and we all must save the earth...but no one really elaborates ...HOWHere are a few suggestions which we could follow at home and do our bit to try and save a few trees if not the whole planet.Around Diwali/Xmas/New year every one of us receives cards.We rip open the envelope and throw it in the dustbin If we take care to open the envelopes with a paper knife, we can then use a bunch of such envelopes (the blanks inside) as telephone pads/TO DO pads, in the kitchen or even to scribble reminders to husbands/sons/ ourselves.
Most envelopes are a standard size, they bunch up to make a neat pad indeed. Think of the paper you save and the trees you prevent from being chopped down. A very simple cost-saving, paper saving method.Most kids love chips and you have a variety of them in the market. What do you do once the chips are over? Crumple the packet and throw it away...stop! Turn the packet inside out, wipe clean, then use a paper punch to punch out as many 'dots' as you can.
These silver 'dots' can be used to decorate cards that the kids make. You can stencil out "Happy Birthday" on a card, brush it with fevicol and sprinkle these dots and your card is ready! All you need is imagination to design your cards and adorn them. You can even cut out various shapes from these empty wafer packets to decorate kids rooms, cards etc. Have fun and have a go at saving mother earth.What do you do with old calendars? Have you noticed how some of them have beautiful glossy clear sides which can be utilised again to cut up and make drawing sheets for junior to doodle on?Brown paper sheets that wrap your laundry can be used to wrap gifts after decorating them with motifs from cards etc.
The glossy pamphlets that come with the newspapers every morning: give them to the kids to practice origami rather than buying more paper for the same.Plastic containers that house curd, srikhand or even cheese: when empty they can be washed clean. With the help of some cotton wool and acetone you can remove the writing/print on the surface. These containers can then be painted on and turned into pencil holders/plant holders or even as 'return gift' containers filled with sweets or knick-knacks... the possibilities are ad infintum!They say when you point a finger at someone three fingers point right back at you.
When we say the government (always the scapegoat) should do something about the environment/ pollution/garbage let us focus on the three fingers pointing at us and try and do our bit for our planet Let us all at least make a conscious beginning in our own homes first. Make a habit of conserving paper and the trees will surely survive. So will the environment! With a little thoughtfulness and 'help' from each one of us, we can preserve our planet!
Trash to treasures
Tuesday, September 23, 2008
Posted by
Batista
at
3:10 AM
0
comments
Steps to stay healthy and enjoy the rains
Friday, September 19, 2008
Tips to stay healthy and enjoy the rains:
Do chlorinate wells in your houses with bleaching powder once every fortnight.Encourage a thorough de-weeding and cleaning of surroundings as a joint effort of your local civic body and the neighbourhood.Piling up of wastes should be avoided. Organise cleaning up of garbage on a daily basis.Children should be restrained from playing in rain water. Houses and premises should be kept clean.
Discarded containers, coconut shells, disposable glass, plastic cups and tyres are favoured breeding sites for the genus of mosquitoes that spread dengue fever.Stagnant water on sunshades and terraces are also habitat of the `aedes aegypti' and `aedes albopictus' mosquitoes which are carriers of dengue.Other common breeding grounds are:Saucers in flowerpots.Water tanksTrays into which water released from refrigerator flows.
These should be cleaned at least once a week. The spatiality of the dengue-spreading mosquito is that it breeds in clean water too! So make sure that all containers of water are covered and cleaned regularly.The other diseases associated with this season are gastro-enteric disorders. Fever, stomach upset, vomiting, and so on.It is best to avoid eating outside your homes or regular hygienic eating places.
If you must eat outside, do choose piping hot food. Never go for cold stored foodstuff.Keep children clean and never encourage going outdoors barefoot.Apart from the common worm related infestations, leptospirosis is a new threat that can affect a person from pet's urine, rats faeces and urine etc.Cleanliness is the key. Wash yours hands well. Keep your nails cut short. Personal hygiene, environmental hygiene and commonsense can save you from illhealth.
Posted by
Batista
at
10:33 PM
0
comments
Environment Friendly
Monday, September 15, 2008
Posted by
Batista
at
12:56 AM
0
comments
Casual arrangements
Saturday, September 13, 2008
A flower arrangement enthusiast who saw the plant exclaimed: ``What a beautiful arrangement!'' It was only then that I realised that placing the plant in a pot had enhanced its beauty.
While walking on the beach near Injambakkam (on the outskirts of Chennai), I picked up a dry inflorescence of the sandbinder known in Tamil as Ravanan Meesai (botanists know it as Spinifex squarrosus). The spiky globus head was rolling about in the sand like tumbleweed in the American deserts.
The flowering head set in a piece of bamboo with a dried branch of Rhododendron nilagiricum collected from Kodaikanal along with some dried Bullrushes Typha angustata from a marsh near Chennai became an intriguing dry arrangement. Many of the common roadside plants when collected and dried make excellent material for dry arrangements.
The long flower branches of the square-stemmed plant Leonotis nepetifolia, known to the gardener as ``Lion's Ear'', are also good for arrangements.
The tropical African plant arrived in our country as an ornamental and is now seen as a garden escape with its orange-red flowers standing sentinel by our roads in dry areas. After sketching, I kept a bunch of the flowering branches in a container and thus an arrangement was unintentionally created. There is abundant and beautiful material for arrangements all around us. What was the secret of forgotten plants looking so attractive when arranged?
Plants, especially the natural ones (as opposed to those artificially made) have a vibrancy of their own. They only need our help to bring out the beauty in them. Even the weed growing unnoticed in the thicket is strikingly beautiful.
Plant them, sketch them and arrange them and they become pieces of fine art. Art, whatever man may claim it to be, is nothing but his sincere effort to imitate the unattainable perfection that is Nature
Posted by
Batista
at
9:08 PM
0
comments
Rose Health
Thursday, September 11, 2008
Posted by
Batista
at
6:36 PM
0
comments
look into outlook
Tuesday, September 9, 2008
Here's a quick and simple guide to a couple of really handy features in your Outlook Express (OE):
1. A default signature: I'm continually surprised by the number of people who ask me about how to add a signature to any email you send out. It's quite easy to do, actually. First, click on 'Tools' in the menu bar, and select 'Options'. There's a tab for 'Signatures', so click on that. Click on 'New', and then 'Edit signature'. Simply type in whatever you want to go out. The normal format is your name, organisation name's, address, and telephone number. Click OK when you're done. That's all there is to it! Try sending a blank mail to yourself or to a friend, just to see whether it's working right.
2. Direct images: You want to send the snaps you clicked at your party to a friend, and so you're busy attaching each and every one of them. Once you do send the mail, your friend will have to open each one separately through the attachment links as well. Why the long-drawn procedure? When you're composing the email, just click on any empty space in the main text box to bring your cursor there. Then, on your toolbar, click on the 'Insert picture' button – it's the one that looks like a box with mountains on it. From then, it's just like attaching any photo. Browse to wherever you have saved the pics, select them one at a time, and click OK. No need of attaching!
3. Backing up your address book: So you have a ton of email addresses in your Outlook address book at work, but you want to take it all home? Don't worry, it's easy. First, you're going to have to locate where your address book file is kept. In your OE, select 'Tools', and then 'Address Book'. Now, in your address book window, click on 'Help' and then 'About Address Book'. You should get a window which displays a path name like 'C:\Documents and Settings\Default_User\Application Data\Microsoft\Address Book\default_user.wab' (Note: I'm just using 'Default User' as an example). Copy this line without the last default_user.wab. Now, click on your 'Start' button in Windows, and select 'Run'. Paste the line you just copied, which should read something like this: 'C:\Documents and Settings\user_name\Application Data\Microsoft\Address Book\'. That should have opened up a new folder with your address book file staring at you. Now, simply copy this address book file, and paste it onto your desktop. Remember, do not cut and paste! This is your backup.If you want to take this address book for your home PC, then copy it and take it home with you – be it on a pen drive or a CD – and load it on to your PC. Open your OE, click on 'Tools', then 'Address Book'. In your menu bar, select 'File', then 'Import', followed by 'Address Book' again. Now just browse to where you loaded the backup copy of your office address book onto your PC, and select it. You're done!
4. Stationery: See the little drop-down arrow next to the icon for 'Create Mail'? Click on it, and choose any of the formats available there. You're instantly choosing stationary to customise your emails! It's actually just a background colour to go with your mails, but it adds a little zing, eh? And of course, you can always download more off the Internet.
Posted by
Batista
at
8:22 PM
0
comments
The sage flower
Monday, September 8, 2008
The plant is commonly propagated by seeds and cuttings. The seeds germinate in about 10 days after sowing.
The seedlings are transplanted when nearly six weeks old in lines at a spacing of 10 by 10 cm for the dwarf variety and 20 by 20 cm for the tall variety. For perennial plants, cuttings may be planted in situ or in a nursery and later transplanted in spring or summer. There are several varieties. The dwarf ones are "Hussara", "Hotshot", "Scarlet pygmy", "St.John's fire" and "Blaze of fire". The tall varieties are "Scarlet cream" and "Crimson king". Salvia Coceinea is commonly grown in South India.
Labels:
Environment,
green,
ment.history
Posted by
Batista
at
11:05 PM
0
comments
Tropical bloom
In California and Hawaii, over a 1,000 varieties and hybrids, popularly known as Hawaiian hibiscus, are grown. These are noted for their vibrant hues, size and shapes. Many of these are now grown in India.
The hibiscus requires watering once in three weeks. Ants and mites can spell rapid death, but they can be controlled to an extent by spraying. It is best to discard the pest affected plant, if in a pot. If in the garden, the plant develops into a hardy little tree, able to withstand pests. Cuttings and layering yield new plants.
The red jabakusum has traditionally been blended with coconut oil, with the steeped oil making for a healthy and gentle hair colourant. The single red flower is also used in hibiscus syrups, popularised by the French. It is served as a cool drink and made into tart by adding a few drops of fresh lemon juice.
Haircare products apart, the flower is used in edible sauces, and as flower salads, along with colourful nasturtiums. A single huge Hawaiian hibiscus makes for a splendid floral statement, in a glass, stone or brass bowl, as it remains fresh right through the day.
Its use in worship in India is of course, legendary.
In short, the hibiscus is a ideal symbol of warmth and life and health and vigour.
Labels:
Environment,
green,
tropical
Posted by
Batista
at
3:33 AM
0
comments
Air travel becomes paperless as e-ticketing takes off
Saturday, September 6, 2008
Judging by latest trends, airlines in India are quickly on their way to making ticketing fully electronic even before the end of the year.
Electronic ticketing, or ‘e-ticketing,’ gives travel agents as well as online travel portals direct access to an airline’s reservation database. Web ticketing also allows consumers to directly make their reservations through an airline’s website from their own homes, without the hassle of dealing with paper coupons or making a trip to the office of an airline or agent. The technology delivers both economic and logistic incentives for consumers; yet, it also brings with it areas of caution that airlines, passengers, agents and airport authorities need to be aware of.
Over the last three years, the share of electronic tickets globally has increased from 16 per cent in 2004 to as much as 84 per cent today. In India, only 47 per cent of all bookings were done electronically just 12 months ago. Now, according to IATA, the figure has risen to 80 per cent.
“India is well on the way to achieving the 100 per cent target,” says Lorne Riley, an IATA representative based in Geneva. “We have no concerns at all regarding next year’s deadline, if you look at how India is doing compared to other countries in the region” (see graphic).Sharp growth
For state-carrier Indian Airlines, the share of e-ticketing had sharply risen to around 60 per cent of their total reservations since the facility was introduced last year. For private carriers, the trend is all the more evident.
Jet Airways reports more than 80 per cent electronic reservations, while Kingfisher records close to 100 per cent electronic bookings. Indian Airlines’ figures are also slated to increase once a revamp of the current reservation system — the system will be integrated with that of Air India following the merger — is completed.
Air Deccan, the first airline in India to establish a completely web-enabled reservation system, records around 40 per cent direct online reservations through its website alone, besides through the travel agent system. According to Pratyasha Singh, an Air Deccan representative, electronic ticketing has played “a significant role” in widening the airline’s consumer base.
In international sectors out of India, ticketing is largely done electronically, but only through travel agents and not directly through websites. Indian consumers still prefer to go through agents while booking international tickets. For instance, for flights out of India, Singapore Airlines records close to 100 per cent electronic reservations, but only around one per cent is done outside the travel agent system, directly on the web.
The reasons are two-fold: Higher costs involved in international travel make passengers more wary of booking tickets electronically through their credit cards, and credit card limits are another limiting factor. A second reason is the increasingly complicated and long-drawn procedures for acquiring visas.
“At the moment, people have not really switched over to the web for international travel,” confirms Indumathi Venugopal, director, Pegasus Travels. “While lack of availability is a factor, it is largely due to the complications in international travel such as the process of getting visas from consulates. For instance, for Malaysia there is a need to get immigration clearance even during the process of getting a ticket.”
The increasing trend of web ticketing has however been significant enough to force travel agents to diversify their business plans.
“Travel agents are shifting more to value-added services, like visa application, tourism packages for groups and travel insurance,” Ms. Venugopal says. “Agents cannot focus on ticketing alone as they once did.” Security concerns
How will this increasing surge for electronic ticketing ultimately impact air travel for passengers? D. Sudhakara Reddy, president, Air Passengers Association of India, believes that while technology will improve access to travel as well as costs for Indian consumers, there are a number of security issues that are yet to be answered.
“It is true that fares are becoming significantly cheaper, especially when you book through the website of an airline,” Mr. Reddy says. “There are also a number of search engines like Yatra.com, Makemytrip.com and Sprice.com that list all available fares and save you the hassle of making ten different calls to agents or airlines, though they often charge three to seven per cent extra on the fare.”
Mr. Reddy however cautions that the benefits of the technology come with certain caveats. He says that there is a need for tighter security systems in Indian airports in verifying purchases of e-tickets, as they are in the West. “For e-tickets, passengers are supposed to carry their identity card with a photograph,” Mr. Reddy says. “Many people do not, and I have personally observed that airport security is not checking up on this consistently. You are allowing anybody and everybody to go in, so this is a very dangerous thing.”
Labels:
airlines,
e-tickets,
INTERNET
Posted by
Batista
at
10:05 PM
0
comments
Making Office Paperless
Those of us who work from Office and home are not protected—are at times worse, letting paper stack up in every corner. And even as technology aims for the paperless ideal, that still can only be part of the solution.
Labels:
How to,
Office,
Paper
Posted by
Batista
at
9:39 PM
0
comments
How to save Enviroment from paper
So, you have started a business and you are enjoying watching it grow. Does the cost of paper, correspondence, letterheads and postage eat into your profits? Ever considered a “paperless” office? Now is the time for home businesses and individuals to carefully seek and execute ways to reduce the use of paper and paper products. Apart from increasing profits, it is a great way of saying you are eco-friendly at heart and a socially responsible business woman!
Consumers have become increasingly concerned with the impact of buying and using disposable paper goods.
They have begun to discern between "business as usual" and companies and corporations that offer eco-friendly alternatives to products they depend on.
Businesses that are sensitive to their customer's concerns and their own social responsibility must adapt, and there's no better time for the adaptation than NOW!
Send electronic greetings, notes, updates, office correspondence, invitations and more to co-workers, business associates, clients, friends and family. Just a few clicks of the mouse and a paperless, eco-friendly, guilt-free greeting, business note or update, or other correspondence is sent.
Harnessing the energy of this socially responsible and quickly expanding trend is an excellent way to reduce the harsh impact of paper correspondence.
You should seriously consider a paperless system for business and personal correspondence.
E-cards / E mails are an eco-friendly alternative to correspondence.
Learn to value and respect your customer’s time.
Send your Invoices online
Remember, paper is a renewable resource. It is an active waste which, when deposited as waste, can produce gas, which are harmful to the environment. Planning to minimise the amount of paper used and maximise the amount that is re-used is a sensible policy for any business, big or small!
Labels:
INTERNET
Posted by
Batista
at
9:26 PM
0
comments







