Sometimes the gift of feeding is all we have. It’s most necessary.
I heard second hand of a woman with a generator who collected all the
slow cooker pots in a neighborhood that lost power after Harvey. She
then collected food from their freezers and kept those neighbors fed as
they cleaned their homes.
One tip on “how to help” to help those cleaning their flooded homes is
to offer to bring cooked food to a home at a specified time. Bring paper
plates, etc. and serve it to the exhausted family. Then leave the
leftovers or pick it all up so everyone can rest, or get back to work.
One Egg
A
single egg meal has been another thing appreciated of late. Recently,
the floods made finding even the most basic of foods difficult.
My one egg breakfast is often augmented by festive “leftovers.” We’ve
whipped up an egg each for my husband and me and folded in the likes of
guacamole, queso, and fruity cream cheese spreads. Leftovers are never
wasted around my house. May this idea inspire you for all the rest of
the mornings of 2017.
Version:
Pesky
Pesky pests
H
Harvey waters have made us prep for insects, even as concerns regarding West Nile
already caught our attention. Some
southeast Texans may be in need of DynaTrap offering
a green, pesticide-free solution to pest relief as we rebuild. We’ve all been
outdoors a lot. IInterested? Here’s what the makers say: “DynaTrap is a
technology-driven indoor/outdoor insect trap that protections against
mosquitoes, biting flies, moths, wasps, and more. DynaTrap relies on UV light
and CO2 to mimic human
beings and maximize predatory insect attraction, rather than pesticides or
harmful sprays. Its strong yet silent fan then vacuums the insects into a
retaining cage. Safe and simple, just plug-and-hang the DynaTrap 24/7 to stop
the mosquito life-cycle. With no pesticides, chemicals, odors, noise, or
hassle; it’s perfect for your backyard.” darraghcastillo@icloud.com
No comments:
Post a Comment