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    Fortune Brands Home & Security Q3 Adj. Profit Misses View; Lowers 2014 Outlook - October 30, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Fortune Brands Home & Security, Inc. (FBHS: Quote) Wednesday reported third-quarter net loss of $21.1 million, compared to net income of $64.2 million in the year-ago period. Earnings per share from continuing operations were $0.54, up from $0.37 per share in the year-ago period.

    Earnings before charges/gains for the quarter, or adjusted earnings, were $0.55 per share compared to $0.46 per share in the year-ago period. On average, 13 analysts polled by Thomson Reuters expected the company to earn $0.56 per share for the quarter. Analysts' estimates typically exclude special items.

    Net sales for the quarter grew 5 percent to $1.10 billion from $1.05 billion in the year-ago period. Analysts expected revenues of $1.17 billion for the quarter.

    Looking ahead to the fiscal 2014, the company now projects adjusted earnings in a range of $1.84 to $1.86 per share, down from the prior range of $1.88 to $1.96 per share. This compares to adjusted earnings of $1.50 per share in the prior year.

    The company noted that the 2014 annual earnings outlook is based on a slower U.S. home products market growth assumption of 4 to 5 percent for the fourth quarter.

    The company forecasts net sales for the year to increase approximately 8 percent, down from the prior range for net sales growth of 9 to 11 percent.

    Analysts currently expect full-year earnings of $1.89 per share for the year on 6.5 percent growth in revenues to $4.43 billion.

    by RTT Staff Writer

    For comments and feedback: editorial@rttnews.com

    Business News

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    Fortune Brands Home & Security Q3 Adj. Profit Misses View; Lowers 2014 Outlook

    Happy to Fix It Handyman – Handyman Service in Foster City, CA – Video - October 30, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder


    Happy to Fix It Handyman - Handyman Service in Foster City, CA
    Happy to Fix It Handyman - Handyman Service in Foster City, CA You need a Handyman who is fast, friendly, clean, on-time, and trustworthy. Call me today at 650-533-9797Happy To Fix It Handyman...

    By: All Business Media

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    Happy to Fix It Handyman - Handyman Service in Foster City, CA - Video

    Low Cost Roof Cleaning West Palm Beach Florida 954 702 3822 – Video - October 30, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder


    Low Cost Roof Cleaning West Palm Beach Florida 954 702 3822
    https://www.hydrosolutionspressurecleaning.com Low Cost Roof Cleaning West Palm Beach Florida 954 702 3822 We are a locally owned and operated business, licensed and insured, specializing...

    By: Hydro Solutions Pressure Cleaning LLC

    Originally posted here:
    Low Cost Roof Cleaning West Palm Beach Florida 954 702 3822 - Video

    iRobot Looj 330 Robotic Gutter Cleaner - October 30, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Fellow humans, pay heed: We are nearing the Singularity long promised by futurist Ray Kurzweilthe day when technology exceeds human capability and elevates existence to a hyper-efficient state that may or may not have room for mere mortals.

    Witness: the iRobot Looj 330 Robotic Gutter Cleaner.

    Set on two wee tank treads and sporting a rotating set of blades and brushes, the Looj is a simple contraption. Set it in your gutter, turn it on, and it will churn through all those dead leaves, gunk and squirrel droppings that humans, in more barbaric times, would have been expected to dig out with theirgasphands. Granted, you still have to climb up a ladder and point a remote control at it, but now you can hold a cup of coffee or stare into space while doing so.

    According to the Home Depot websitethe Looj is an online-only productthis innovation is either a stunning leap forward, or a complete let-down. From the reviews: It was great! Ive long been a fan of robotics, and this task is great for one!; I knew going in that it was a gamble on whether or not it would work..and it didnt. Not even close.

    Like the future, the Looj is uncertainand at $300, it is a gamble indeed. But we wont get to the Singularity without lazy people willing to shell out hard-earned cash to facilitate further laziness. Ask yourself: What would Ray Kurzweil do?

    homedepot.com $299.99

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    iRobot Looj 330 Robotic Gutter Cleaner

    Angie's List Report: Fall Chores You Shouldn't Ignore - October 30, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    (WDEF) Gutter cleaning isn't glamorous, but it's one of the most important jobs on any fall to-do list. Angie Hicks of Angie's List said, "Your gutters should not be ignored because leaves will gather there which will lead to mold as well as bugs, even ice damming in the winter. And if you're like some people, you might actually get a garden growing in your gutters which can be pretty embarrassing. So, taking care of them can lead to better health of your home, especially your roof." Whether you do it yourself or hire a pro, don't neglect the downspouts when cleaning. Elden Foltz works as a handyman. He said, "You also want to make sure that all of your gutters are actually nailed in properly and look at your gutter boards and make sure that they are sealed." Once your gutters are clear, turn your attention to sealing drafts around windows and doors. Walk through your home with a lit candle or stick of incense to see where cold air is seeping in. Foltz added, "You can't take caulking and put caulking over top of it because all it's going to do is peel and break off. And it's not going to provide a good seal for that house." Finally, Angie's List says you should focus on your lawn. Angie Hicks of Angie's List said, "Many people think this time of the year, 'Oh, I'm done with the lawn. I don't even want to mow anymore.' But the treatments you give your lawn, the fertilizing, this time of the year is the most important fertilizing you'll have. So, you if you're looking to have a great lawn next spring, don't skip out on the fall lawn care." If you're not comfortable fertilizing your own lawn, consider hiring a professional lawn care company. Expect to pay about $60 per application.

    Originally posted here:
    Angie's List Report: Fall Chores You Shouldn't Ignore

    National Arboretums Grass Roots: A brighter future for the lawn - October 30, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    The lawn is the Atlas of our times, bearing its keepers and their children, dogs, cats and, if mine is any measure, whole armies of squirrels and chipmunks.

    The lawn can bear this burden, with some periodic help, but it has also had to support a much tougher load that of societys conflicting expectations.

    Up and down the land, local ordinances enshrine the front yard as a place where neatly mown lawns framed with low or no fences could speak of a communal respectability, openness and uniformity. With suburbia came and remains an enforced neighborliness. There was a time when every block had at least one greensward hobbyist, usually male, in unbridled pursuit of the trophy lawn. This mania probably has dissipated now that we inhabit Screen World.

    To other eyes, the lawn is no trophy but a throwback to a time when its symbolic probity came at a cost not only to our individuality but to the health of the planet.

    For a generation at least, environmentalists have been railing against the lawn for its addiction to scarce water, to polluting fertilizers and to life-killing pesticides.

    My view? In our watery part of the world, the lawn is a welcome feature in many (though not all) gardens, but as one considered element of a landscape. Cultivated with care and knowledge, the lawn is a net environmental asset in its ability to check storm water, filter pollutants and generally cool the heat island.

    Others might not regard the turf as kindly, and the debate lingers, but the lawn itself has moved on: Better practices and improved grass varieties now enable greater success with this ubiquitous land form. That is the central message of a living exhibition, Grass Roots, that opened this month at the National Arboretum and will be around for a few years.

    Anyone with a lawn in these parts should make a point to see it for the simple reason that we live in a climatic cusp that makes turf cultivation particularly challenging.

    I asked the experts behind the exhibit, Scott Aker and Geoffrey Rinehart, to rattle off some of the most common lawn blunders. You may know them already, but theyre worth repeating:

    Mowing too short: If you mow cool-season grasses too short, youre inviting disaster. The grass will become stressed and die back, and the void will be filled with weeds. Keep your mower at its highest setting.

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    National Arboretums Grass Roots: A brighter future for the lawn

    Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve in Kansas: Immerse yourself in a vanishing landscape - October 30, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Published on October 29, 2014

    Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve in Kansas: Immerse yourself in a vanishing landscape

    STRONG CITY, Kan. - Stand here in a field of tall, windblown grass and wildflowers, and twirl around like a child. It's like being inside a prairie snow globe: You're surrounded by a sea of green, brown and yellow grass, with a blue-sky dome above.

    The Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve in Kansas is one of just a few places in the country where you can immerse yourself in this serene but vanishing landscape. Tallgrass prairie once covered 140 million acres of North America, including much of the Midwest. But only 4 per cent of that ecosystem remains, wiped out by more than 150 years of human settlement, cattle-grazing and farming.

    The Tallgrass Preserve here in the Flint Hills is one of the last tracts left, consisting of 11,000 acres mostly owned by the Nature Conservancy and managed with the National Park Service. There are miles of trails here to explore, but the Southwind Nature Trail is an easy-to-walk loop trail just under 2 miles (3.2 kilometres) that offers a sublime sense of what the landscape felt and looked like when it was covered with tallgrass and wildflowers across the region.

    The preserve is also home to a historic site a late 19th-century ranch with outbuildings, along with a one-room schoolhouse used from 1882 to 1930. A free cellphone tour provides details on each structure, including a barn bigger than the house, an icehouse, carriage house, chicken coop with a sod roof (using plants as insulation, way ahead of its time), and outhouse with three holes. (Not that three people would have used it at once, mind you: one seat was for a child, and the other two were likely rotated in use.)

    A prosperous cattleman, Stephen F. Jones, lived here on the Spring Hill/Z Bar Ranch with his wife and daughter in the 1880s. Limestone was easily quarried from the layers of rock beneath the rich prairie soil, allowing Jones to build an elegant mansion and stone fencing around his vast property.

    But once you're on the Southwind Nature Trail, away from the ranch, you can almost suspend your disbelief and pretend you're experiencing this extraordinary landscape before settlers arrived, when the only destruction faced by the tallgrass was from a natural cycle of lightning-sparked fire, rainfall and grazing bison.

    The park is open daily, year-round, and each season offers a different experience of weather, colours, flora and fauna. On a visit in early autumn, the trail was lined with fields of tall yellow flowers dancing in the breeze, punctuated by bursts of other purple, red and white wildflowers amid the grasses. Tiny lizards, a snake and grasshoppers darted across the path. Rabbits, prairie chickens and other birds and other creatures live here, too. The trail meanders gently into higher ground and over a brook, then finally to the school, still furnished with a woodstove, wooden desks and benches, along with portraits of George Washington and Abe Lincoln.

    As you walk back toward the ranch house to the parking lot, you travel a path parallel to a road where the occasional car zips by. It's a good reminder of the human factor that led to the prairie's demise.

    Continued here:
    Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve in Kansas: Immerse yourself in a vanishing landscape

    Gazebos, Faux Lead Roofs | The Traditional Verandah Company - October 30, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    This hexagonal gazebo/smoking shelter blends well with the garden. 9.3K+

    An outdoor dining Gazebo at an hotel, under a bespoke slate roof, with side fence panels, all in a delightful shade of cream. 19K+

    A faux-lead roofed Smoking Gazebo, including internal ceiling, at an exclusive Club in Pall Mall, London. 13K+

    Our display Gazebo at the RHS Tatton Park Flower Show a few seasons ago. It has a faux-lead roof above the lattice columns and side panels. 13K+

    One of our standard faux-lead Gazebos, elegantly standing in acres of parkland in Suffolk. 10.5K+

    Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua.

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    A delightful bespoke Veranda addition to a very lovely home. Glass roof, 6 pillar with lattice style detailing.

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    Gazebos, Faux Lead Roofs | The Traditional Verandah Company

    Age Friendly Park opens in Clarenville - October 30, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Published on October 29, 2014

    An age-friendly park, complete with walking trails, benches, green spaces, gazebos, a tobogganing hill, and a community garden was officially opened in Clarenville today.

    Kevin Curley

    Ribbon cutting at the official opening of the Clarenville Age Friendly Park

    Community leaders joined Clyde Jackman, Minister of Seniors, Wellness and Social Development, and Ross Wiseman, Minister of Finance and MHA for Trinity North, to mark the completion of a project three years in the making.

    The Clarenville Age-Friendly Park, located near Clarenville High School, was built with funding from the provincial and municipal levels of government, in cooperation with the Random Age-Friendly Community Board, and local community partners.

    Its designed to be a space where people can just sit and chat, or participate in recreational activities.

    The World Health Organization's Age-Friendly Communities Program is an international effort to address the environmental and social factors that contribute to active and healthy aging.

    The program helps communities become more supportive of older people by addressing their needs across eight dimensions: the built environment, transport, housing, social participation, respect and social inclusion, civic participation and employment, communication, and community support and health services.

    The Town of Clarenville has been onboard with the concept of building an age-friendly community since day one. We were committed to finding a space for the Clarenville Age-Friendly Park which suited the needs of all citizens, and with the location on Hibernia Drive, we have a space that is near to both Clarenville High School and a seniors' housing complex, and is easily accessible to all residents, added Mayor Frazer Russell.

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    Age Friendly Park opens in Clarenville

    Easy loop around South Bay golf course - October 30, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    By Priscilla Lister Special to the U-T1:04 p.m.Oct. 29, 2014

    Thomas Bros. Map: Page 1310, H-2.

    Before you go: Download a copy of the trail map at Chula Vistas pages on its citywide Greenbelt Trail,

    chulavistaca.gov/city_services/development_services/planning_building/Planning/documents/Greenbelt_Trail_Map.pdf.

    You can also download a trail map at the citys parks pages on Rohr Park,

    chulavistaca.gov/city_services/community_services/public_works_operations/parks/ParksInfo/rohr.asp.

    Trailhead: From Interstate 5 heading south, exit onto CA-54 East. In about 4.4 miles, exit at Briarwood Road and turn right (south) onto Briarwood. Where the road stops at Sweetwater Road, turn right (west) onto Sweetwater. Rohr Park will be on your left.

    Distance/difficulty: The entire loop is 3.3 miles; very easy.

    SOUTH BAY Heres an easy loop around a green golf course where the bonus is birds.

    Rohr Park in Chula Vista is one of the prettiest parks in that South Bay city, complete with gazebos, playgrounds, picnic areas and even a model railroad track. The park sits next to the Chula Vista Municipal Golf Course. A 3.3-mile loop trail winds around that golf course and through the park.

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    Easy loop around South Bay golf course

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