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    philstar.com video: Feng shui expert Joy Lim on how to increase your luck this 2013 – Video - January 31, 2013 by Mr HomeBuilder


    philstar.com video: Feng shui expert Joy Lim on how to increase your luck this 2013

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    philstar.com video: Feng shui expert Joy Lim on how to increase your luck this 2013 - Video

    Feng Shui consultant, Mississauga, Madame Feng Shui, Helen Peacock – Video - January 31, 2013 by Mr HomeBuilder


    Feng Shui consultant, Mississauga, Madame Feng Shui, Helen Peacock
    Helen is a brilliant Feng Shui Consultant in Mississauga, ON,Canada. Bringing balance to your life is Helen #39;s quest. Our western society embraces these ancient teachings developed thousands of years ago in China. We are fortunate to apply this wealth of knowledge to our everyday lives. Build a successful life with Madame Feng Shui--Helen Peacock

    By: Randy Callaway

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    Feng Shui consultant, Mississauga, Madame Feng Shui, Helen Peacock - Video

    Amore with Allie: Crystal Feng Shui for Love and Jasmine Oil – Video - January 31, 2013 by Mr HomeBuilder


    Amore with Allie: Crystal Feng Shui for Love and Jasmine Oil
    Welcome to "Amore With Allie," your place for love relationship advice with a metaphysical twist! In this fourteenth episode, Allie introduces herself to the Ageless Knowledge audience. She explains how to use stones and crystals to feng shui your space for love. Allie answers two questions from viewers on what will happen to her marriage while her husband is in prison and do deceased spouses visit the living partner. Allie talks about how to use Jasmine oil for love and sexual arousal in "Magical Item Of The Week." Stay tuned for the affirmation at the end! http://www.AllieTheiss.com.

    By: Allie Theiss

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    Amore with Allie: Crystal Feng Shui for Love and Jasmine Oil - Video

    Feng shui and what to do for good luck this Chinese New Year 2013 - January 31, 2013 by Mr HomeBuilder

    The other day, in Manila living a Travelife, I had lunch at the Mandarin Oriental Manila with the feng shui master himself, Master Joseph Chau.

    Of course, I peppered him with questions about what people should do for better luck in business, health, wealth, love and other things.

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    THE FAMOUS MASTER CHAU

    So for those who aren't attending the fabulous Chinese New Year's dinner at the Mandarin Oriental ballroom on February 10, I'm posting some guidelines.

    I'm going to be one those absent for this auspicious event, by the way, as I'll be sitting on a golden beach in Colombo at exactly this time, waiting for my flight back to Manila.

    Living a Travelife and having a wonderful time, of course, but missing a great event all the same.

    2013 is the year of the YIN WATER SNAKE

    Official start

    February 10, 2013 at 00:01 hrs

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    Feng shui and what to do for good luck this Chinese New Year 2013

    Feng shui expert cites 'luckier' bets in 2013 - January 31, 2013 by Mr HomeBuilder

    MANILA, Philippines -- On February 10, the Chinese community will usher in the Lunar New Year and the "Year of the Water Snake."

    Feng shui expert Master Joseph Chau said 2013 is a year of challenges and conflicts. Tensions may also escalate as election day draws near.

    But candidates in the May 13 elections who are under the zodiac animal signs dragon, dog, rabbit, monkey, and snake are luckier.

    Couples planning a wedding this year may want to postpone the date to next year. Chau said 2013 is a blind year because spring will come earlier on February 4 than the Chinese New Year. In the Chinese tradition, this is bad luck for weddings.

    But, Chau added, money will be easier to earn this year.

    Some good business opportunities are in the tourism sector, hotel and restaurant, transportation and even the stock market.

    According to the 2013 feng shui chart, there are areas in the house or office that are luckier, such as the northeast where the wealth star is located, and south, for the prosperity star.

    To start the year right, place five kinds of fruits like pineapple, apple, banana and orange at the dining table on the eve of New Year's day.

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    Feng shui expert cites 'luckier' bets in 2013

    Feng Shui Art: good fortune and good taste - January 31, 2013 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Arts & Leisure

    Posted on January 29, 2013 09:32:45 PM

    By Jasmine T. Cruz

    One of the results of these stolen hours is a mixed-media piece called Empress II. The empresss ears are made of jade circles from an antique shop. Bronze with hints of sky blue is draped over her shoulders and is decorated with swirling auspicious Chinese patterns. The jade tones are complemented by a blazing red textured background, the lucky color for the Chinese.

    FENG SHUI ART PROCESS If there are artists who only paint in the morning or paint at night, Ms. Uychaco only paints when the Chinese calendar deems it a good day. Its a symbolic start, she said.

    Her layering of colors is guided by feng shuis five elements. Its like a cycle, a production cycle, Ms. Uychaco said. Water is good for wood because wood will not grow without water. Wood is good for fire because it feeds the fire. The fire turns to ashes which is earth. In the earth, you have metals.

    Thus, she paints wooden brown tones over blue tones, which in turn can be covered by red tones, then earthen tones, and then metal tones.

    Through this method, a rich texture emerges.

    Another way to infuse the elements is to use different palettes. I have a palette made of clay for earth. I also have a glass palette for water. I also have a jade palette. She mixes her paints on these palettes, and I transfer their (the palettes) energy to the canvas.

    COIN OF GOOD HEALTH Ms. Uychaco said she is not a feng shui expert, but simply an enthusiast.

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    Feng Shui Art: good fortune and good taste

    Feng Shui Time at Mandarin - January 31, 2013 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Ten days to go before the Year of the Water Snake comes crawling in, and feng shui master Joseph Chau is gung ho! He sees the economy doing "better than Hong Kong," kung hei fat choi! "Money comes from everywhere!"

    But particularly for those in tourism, real estate, hotels and restaurants. "Casinos will make money, always," he proclaimed with total confidence, "and especially this year very good."

    Master Chau, Mandarin Oriental's feng shui man from Hong Kong with an international list of clients as long as his golden robes, presided over a prosperity meal at the hotel's Tin Hau restaurant and was amused at the questions thrown at him by a predominantly female crowd of journalists. They demanded instant answers to questions about the President's chances of marriage ("There's a wedding star in his horoscope, and if he forces himself to get married, of course he can do it") as well as the likelihood of a bloody or peaceful election ("It will be a struggle").

    The good news is that all the signs can increase their luck by simply turning on an electric fan and keeping it blowing 24/7 in the northeast, which is where the wealth star shines. Other lucky stars are travel (NW), romance (N), prosperity (S), and promotion (SE). West, east and center are the unfavorable directions. Dragon and Dog are the luckiest signs. At the risk of being "killed" by the Chinese who love red, Mr. Chau warned that it is not necessarily the luckiest color for now.

    Among Snakes, those born in 1977 are the luckiest, although they should be careful from September to November.

    To President Aquino Mr. Chau offers a priceless tip: Build a new building in Malacaang "and I will guarantee 100 percent good for Philippines!" The catch is, "he must follow my instructions, and mine alone."

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    Feng Shui Time at Mandarin

    GQ Schooling over fences – Video - January 31, 2013 by Mr HomeBuilder


    GQ Schooling over fences
    8 yr old TB gelding, schooling on 1/26/2013 For sale Contact ginny@goodriders.com

    By: Ginny Harrison

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    GQ Schooling over fences - Video

    Repairing flood-damaged fences a priority - January 31, 2013 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Topics: 2013 floods, flood damaged farms, oswald

    FLOOD fencing is in full swing in the Mackay hinterland as rainfall from 177mm to 400mm and more brought an end to near-drought conditions.

    Property owners with large frontages to roads have braved floodwaters to get their fences up and keep motorists and stock safe.

    It's essential to get the floodway fences fixed immediately, as cattle will find a broken wire and get out if you don't fix it.

    Throughout Queensland, property owners will be out flood fencing boundaries with roads and highways a priority.

    Flood run-off from creeks in the Nebo-Valkyrie area are joining other floodwaters to raise the height of the Fitzroy River and affect roads around Rockhampton.

    In the Valkyrie Access Rd area and properties further down the Fitzroy catchment, beef producers had to shift cattle from flood-prone country up to high ground which did not have sufficient feed due to the extended conditions.

    Rainfall varied on properties from 150mm upwards within short distances.

    "Five men went out this morning with two Toyotas and two ATVs to start repairing the Codrilla fences on the Fitzroy Development Road," Di Pullen said on Friday morning. Codrilla, 55km from Nebo, has 38km of boundary fence with the Fitzroy Development Rd and 14km with Valkyrie Access Rd.

    "It's essential to get the floodway fences fixed immediately, as cattle will find a broken wire and get out if you don't fix it," she said.

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    Repairing flood-damaged fences a priority

    The humble 'virtual chimney' fences that could reduce the impact of airport pollution - January 31, 2013 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Public release date: 31-Jan-2013 [ | E-mail | Share ]

    Contact: EPSRC Press Office pressoffice@epsrc.ac.uk 01-793-444-404 Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

    Simple 'blast' fences called baffles could deliver improvements in air quality for people living near airports, new research has found.

    Placed behind a runway, the baffles could serve as a 'virtual chimney', funnelling emissions from aircraft engines upwards where they can disperse more effectively, thereby reducing the environmental impact on people living nearby.

    Prototype baffles have been tested by a team of researchers from Manchester Metropolitan University, Cranfield University, University of Southampton and the University of Cambridge, with funding from the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC).

    After preliminary wind tunnel testing of various baffle shapes carried out by Cranfield University, an array of three rows of baffles was tested using laser scanning (Lidar, which is the optical equivalent of Radar) and chemical sensor techniques at Cranfield Airport in Bedfordshire. This demonstrated that the aircraft exhaust plume could be made to leave the ground within the airport's boundary fence, using prototype baffles of less than a man's height and constructed out of low-cost agricultural windbreak netting on lightweight frames.

    Dr Mike Bennett, who led the project, says: "Airfield surfaces are typically covered with grass, over which the wind can blow freely. An array of baffles makes the surface rough in an aerodynamic sense. This sucks the momentum out of the exhaust jet, allowing its natural buoyancy to come into play. By suitably angling the baffles, we can also give the exhaust an upwards push, encouraging it to rise away from the ground.

    "The baffles we tested were tilted at angles between 40 and 60 in order to optimise this vertical flow and to ensure the baffles didn't blow over! Although the exhaust will still disperse to the ground eventually, it will do so at a lower concentration. We might hope to see a reduction in surface concentrations of around 50 per cent at the perimeter fence behind the place where aircraft are taking off."

    Long-term ground-level nitrogen dioxide (NO2) concentrations around many major airports in Europe already exceed the legal limit enforced by the EU.

    The aim of the trial was essentially to test the baffles' aerodynamics. As the prototype installation was temporary, it was constructed very differently from how a permanent installation might be made. Each baffle must be sufficiently robust to withstand the 80-90 knot blast from a jet engine, but flimsy enough to collapse harmlessly if an aircraft were to hit it. In the trial, this was achieved by restricting the prototype baffle widths to about two metres but it would be feasible to make them much narrower in a permanent installation. For full-scale use an area of baffles in the order of a thousand square metres would need to be erected behind a runway.

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    The humble 'virtual chimney' fences that could reduce the impact of airport pollution

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