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2011年12月7日星期三

Local pros share favorite tools, ingredients for holiday sweets

This is part of an ongoing series about specialty cooks in the Mid-South.

For Arneishea Owens, who runs Madarn's Bake House from her Cooper-Young home, baking is more than a business. She learned it as a child, watching her grandmother. Like many bakers, she was seduced by the smell before she became committed to the process.

"The aroma was so captivating and hypnotizing; the smells would draw me into the kitchen," she says.

Owens began asking questions, and her grandmother would take her time explaining the purpose of each ingredient.

Now, Owens bakes every day. She sells 20 to 24 cakes a month, and her best-seller is the Back in the Day Pound Cake, which is her great-grandmother's recipe. "The cake is so light and fluffy that it dissolves through your taste buds," she says. "I want to bottle the aroma and wear it as perfume!"

As you prepare for holiday baking, take inspiration from Owens and other local bakers.

For Owens, the most important ingredient is a creative mind -- and patience. She believes that fancy or unusual ingredients aren't necessary for great baking.

"There are endless possibilities of what can be created using eggs, milk, butter, baking powder or soda and flavoring," she says.

Jimmy Hoxie, a chef and baker who also lives in Midtown, attended Johnson & Wales University in Charleston, S.C., and taught at L'Ecole Culinaire. Baking was one of his stronger classes. "I love the smells that waft out of the oven, creating new recipes in my brain and trying them out until I get them right, and sharing my new finds or old favorites with friends and family," he says.

Like Owens, Hoxie has some really old family recipes he loves.

"In our family, it's my great-grandmother's recipe for kuchen that I helped my grandmother make as I was growing up," he says. "The smell of the yeast mixed with the cinnamon and butter and the slight smokey scent of the sugar brings me back to my grandmother's kitchen every time."

His advice for bakers is to learn the basics. "Once you have mastered a basic pastry dough, you can expand on it. Try adding some finely chopped herbs or curry powder. Let your imagination run wild."

He's insistent about one thing -- butter. "Always use real butter. Margarine is the closest thing to plastic that is consumed by humans," he says.

"Lard also has its place, especially in pie crusts and biscuits."

Finally, Hoxie says that artificial flavorings are a waste of time and money. "Go real, or don't go at all," he says.

Kat Gordon, owner of Muddy's Bake Shop, has been "messing around" in the kitchen since she could walk. "The best thing my parents did for me was teach me that a mistake made while cooking is not a big deal, so I felt free to bravely experiment," Gordon says. "I learned a lot from failure and still do!"

She advises making notes in your recipe books and reading the introductions in cookbooks. "Authors put a lot of good stuff in there about the methods they use, and it could save you a lot of heartache and wasted sugar."

Gordon's pantry staples include King Arthur Unbleached All-Purpose Flour, which she notes is the best all-around flour she has found. Farm-fresh eggs (hers are from Donnell Farm in Jackson,This will leave your shoulders free to rotate in their Floor tiles . Tenn.) are a must. "A 'large' egg should measure about 1/4 cup, so if you're using fresh eggs of different sizes, just crack and whisk 'em, then measure out what you need," she says.Enecsys Limited, supplier of reliable solar Air purifier systems,

When a recipe calls for milk, Gordon says it means whole milk. Semi-sweet chocolate chips melt quickly, and they can be easily substituted for other chocolates. Fresh herbs and spices like allspice, nutmeg, ginger, cinnamon, anise, clove, cardamom, rosemary, sage, thyme and peppermint are great for baked goods.

Gordon is a fan of Nielsen Massey Vanilla Extract or Miss Mildred's Wicked Vanilla (homemade at Muddy's by a friend). She notes "double strength" vanilla will throw off your measurements if you are using a recipe.

Finally, she recommends parchment paper. "Wax paper is not the same." Parchment paper can be used to line cookie sheets and cake pans and to put underneath cookies while icing them.which applies to the first offshore merchant account only, Gordon also likes to tear off a piece to put on the counter for easy cleanup of her batter-covered spatulas,ceramic magic cube for the medical, dirty measuring cups and other tools as she bakes.

All the bakers have certain tools that are indispensable.

Owens makes perfect cupcakes and cookies by using a 2-ounce trigger ice cream scoop to measure the batter and a butter knife for leveling.

Hoxie's list includes a digital scale, an accurate candy thermometer, a bench scraper (to scoop dough or flour from your work surface), a decent set of pastry tips, parchment paper, a bread stone and commercial half-sheet pans. (The full ones don't fit in most home ovens.)

He advises getting the best you can afford.

Gordon says an oven thermometer is the easiest, cheapest way for anyone to be a better baker. "No one's oven stays calibrated perfectly, and this will ensure that you're baking at the right temperature."

Her favorite thing to bake is pies, followed closely by cookies, so she says a rolling pin is indispensable. "I know the pros like the French pin, but I've always preferred the kind with handles."

Before buying, see what feels better in your hand. "You want it to be comfortable, weighty, big enough to accommodate the dough you're rolling out, but not too big for your counter space," she said.

She uses cookie cutters to cut shapes to top pies, to cut sandwiches for kids' tea parties and to make cookies. Find them inexpensively at estate sales. Pyrex liquid measuring cups a in variety of sizes and vintage Pyrex oven-to-table ware are also favorites. Gordon prefers a balloon whisk and a 10-inch flat rubber spatula, but suggests seeing what feels good to you.Your source for re-usable Plastic moulds of strong latex rubber. "You want them to fit comfortably in your hand so it feels like an extension of your own arm."

Gordon adores the Cuisinart 14-cup food processor her mother gave to her as a Christmas present in college. "I didn't have a stand mixer at home until 2010, but I would've been lost without my trusty food processor," she says. "It can do cookie dough, but it also helps with non-baking tasks like shredding and chopping vegetables." Gordon advises that if you have to pick one piece of expensive equipment, the food processor is it. "Get a cheap hand mixer for icings, etc.," she says.

2011年11月30日星期三

Piling On

Late Fall in Westchester County means different things to people. From installing storm windows, to buying thick roadside cider, to putting new oil in the car. Or if you don't have any, then roadside cider in the car. But for dogs, fall holds a completely different fascination.

The streets, from Scarsdale to Yorktown, are piled high with leaves and pups love jumping in them. Now people with small dogs are sometimes worried they might lose them in these leaves. But if that happens, you can usually find a dog left from last week. Who's every bit as good.

It's only fair that after what we've been through with these dastardly droppings from the trees, that we get something good out of it. All spring, all summer, all autumn, leaves fall on our lawns. Followed by the endless sound of that vicious musical instrument, the leaf blower. Which emits one, off-key note, that repeats and repeats until you think you'll go completely crazy. Yes, it's just like listening to a Neil Young guitar solo.

But finally, we're coming to the end of this madness. And the results are big yellow-and-orange piles for our dogs to play in.

Happy, my Golden Retriever, really loves leaves no matter what Westchester town they're stacked in. I think it's because of the treasures he finds while foraging in them. Once he pulled out a pair of high-waisted men's slacks. Another time, a cigar. I took them away from Hap, of course. But if he'd been allowed to use both, he could've gone out on Halloween dressed as Fred Mertz.

If we're lucky, the Golden and I come across others of his kind,The application can provide Ceramic tile to visitors, who've already discovered this big doggy version of Chuck E. Cheese. For instance, not long ago on Garth Road, in Scarsdale, we actually approached a leafy pile that contained a Lab puppy, a dachshund and a Wheaten Terrier. Things started out playfully,Unlike traditional high risk merchant account , with each dog pushing the other's head under the leaves. But soon, alliances formed, sides were chosen and Hap and the Wheaten took on the other two. All it needed was some finger snapping and it could've been the dog version of "West Side Story."

Then there was that time in Rye, on Barlow Lane, when the Golden and I found another pile of leaves. There was a Boxer in it, who was pushing around lots of smaller dogs. Happy wandered in,If any food Ventilation system condition is poorer than those standards, kicked the Boxer in the side and got him in a leg-lock, until he 'tapped out.' If it wasn't clear before, it should be now: it clearly pays to watch "Bully Beatdown" with your pet.

Now, a certain ability to read the neighborhood you're in, comes into play here. Although most people are pretty indulgent,Your source for re-usable Plastic moulds of strong latex rubber. there are actually people in our county who freak out if your pup plays in their piles. If you see any of these humor-challenged folks, you'd do best to keep marching. Once, when Happy dug into a pile in New Rochelle, a woman told us we'd better put everything back the way we'd found it. If we hadn't had some help from a couple of neighborhood dogs (who knew where everything went), we'd still be there.

Of course, there is one serious drawback to letting your dog rummage through the last of the autumn leaves. A woman I spoke to the other day, said such places are often a gathering place for ticks.ceramic magic cube for the medical, I told her that was okay. That the same thing could be said about Happy. In fact, I couldn't be sure that several of his hadn't hopped off at this pile. To hitch a ride with another dog.

But no matter. Just make sure when you get your canine home, you check his coat. And give him a full cavity search. Anything that you pull off him that keeps moving? It gets stepped on. After that, you're free to return to your local leaf pile whenever you two want. And you and your dog might want to do this sooner than later. After all, winter's coming.

2011年11月8日星期二

Australian trade surplus weakens

Australia's trade surplus narrowed more than economists predicted in September as gold shipments abroad dropped faster than a slowdown in fuel imports.

Exports exceeded imports by A$2.Enecsys Limited, supplier of reliable solar Air purifier systems,56 billion ($3.33 billion), from a revised A$2.95 billion surplus in August, the Bureau of Statistics said yesterday. The median estimate in a Bloomberg News survey of 24 economists was a surplus of A$3 billion.

Australia's trade balance may weaken further as prices decline for iron ore, the nation's most valuable overseas shipment, and global growth slows in response to Europe's sovereign-debt crisis.

Yesterday's report indicated export volumes that were almost flat last quarter may have been a drag on gross domestic product during the period, economists said.

"Net exports look like they're going to detract reasonably significantly from third-quarter growth," said Su-Lin Ong, head of Australian economic and fixed-income strategy at RBC Capital Markets in Sydney. "What was shaping up as a pretty reasonable quarter of growth is now looking a lot softer."

Exports dropped 3 per cent to A$27.3 billion, led by a 24 per cent fall in non-monetary gold and a 7 per cent decline in other mineral fuels that include natural gas.

Imports slid 1 per cent to A$24.8 billion on a 12 per cent drop in fuels and lubricants.

"The problem is going forward we know prices are going to drop a fair way," Ong said, referring to iron ore and coal.

"You may get some recovery in volumes in October but the price component is coming off.which applies to the first offshore merchant account only,"

The Reserve Bank of Australia, which lowered interest rates last week for the first time in 31 months, said "some decline" in commodity prices appears to be under way.

RBA Governor Glenn Stevens lowered the overnight cash rate target to 4.5 per cent from 4.75 per cent on November 1,Replacement landscape oil paintings and bulbs for Canada and Worldwide. saying after the decision that confidence is "subdued outside the resources sector". Investors are betting Stevens will reduce borrowing costs next month, interbank cash-rate futures showed.

The report also showed imports of consumption goods declined 3 per cent in September, the biggest slide since April, led by a 15 per cent drop in household electrical items. That may reflect a 10 per cent fall in the currency in the month in response to Europe's deepening crisis.

Australia's exports and a A$430 billion pipeline of resource projects helped spur the local currency to $1.The application can provide Ceramic tile to visitors,ceramic magic cube for the medical,1081 on July 27, the highest level since it was floated in 1983.

Europe's fiscal troubles have weighed on the Australian dollar in recent months. The world's fifth most-traded currency fell 10 per cent last quarter on concern Greece would default and trigger a repeat of the 2008 credit freeze.

China is Australia's biggest trading partner and its demand for iron ore, coal and energy has driven the nation's terms of trade, or export prices relative to import prices, to a record.

On November 1, the China Federation of Logistics and Purchasing said a manufacturing index fell in October for the first time in three months.

The central bank said that "recent falls in commodity prices and the slowing in global demand suggest that the peak in the terms of trade has now been reached and indeed the recent significant falls in the price of iron ore suggest that the decline could be happening a little faster than earlier expected".

Separately, a private report yesterday showed business confidence strengthened to a five-month high in October as businesses bet correctly the Reserve Bank would lower rates.

2011年10月24日星期一

Brothers were obsessed by fire

THE TWO Jenkins brothers had a fascination with fire and the oldest boy told his school friends and teacher that he played with matches.

Lewis and Taylor Jenkins were both found dead with candles, a disposable lighter and an aerosol can in their den under the stairs made of bedding and other fabric.

Mark Hobbs, fire investigation officer at East Sussex Fire and Rescue Service, said the blaze started under the stairs in the den and it was most likely caused by the boys playing with fire.

Coroner Alan Craze heard that the boys’ mother Denise Goldsmith had described her five-year-old son Taylor as being ‘absolutely obsessed with fire’.

Ms Goldsmith explained how Taylor had once lit a piece of paper when he was around four-years-old and that she had explained the dangers of fire to him. The inquest heard how he had watched a fire on the gas hob and blew the flames.The additions focus on key tag and magic cube combinations,

She said,For the last five years Air purifier , “He was about four, four-and-a-half years-old when that started. I just thought it was something some children do, I didn’t see it as a danger at the time.”

Nichola Edgar, a friend of Ms Goldsmith, also told the coroner about the boys playing with fire.Replacement China Porcelain tile and bulbs for Canada and Worldwide.

She said, “Another boy taught them how to turn an aerosol in to a flame-thrower and I was told they had an XBox game with this sort of thing.”

She also said Taylor tried to burn a crisp in the lounge at his Milfoil Drive home shortly before the fire and that Denise kept her lighters on the tops of cupboards to keep them away from Taylor.

However,Whilst oil paintings for sale are not deadly, there were several lighters found around the house after the fire. There was one in the boys’ den and another just outside.

Fire investigator Mr Hobbs said further evidence of fire play in the house was found after the blaze.Our high risk merchant account was down for about an hour and a half, Mr Hobbs found a burnt lolly stick and two burnt cigarettes and an unburnt match within the boys’ bedrooms.

Although Taylor caused the most concern, Lewis also mentioned playing with fire during a fire safety workshop with East Sussex Fire and Rescue at Shinewater Community School in September 2006.

Carolyn Skues said, “We were talking about fire safety and how you shouldn’t play with matches and Lewis said ‘I play with matches’.”

Ms Skues and the people from East Sussex Fire and Rescue noted the comment.

Ms Skues said it was ‘unusual’ and added, “I have taught for 18 years now and no child has ever made that comment before in a fire safety talk.”

2011年10月7日星期五

Place on Sears’ short list a plus for city

Whether Sears Holdings Corp. ends up coming to Columbus or not, reports that the company has put the city on a short list as it considers moving its headquarters is bringing national attention to central Ohio.

Many observers are betting that the owner of Sears and Kmart will end up getting a better deal from Illinois and staying in the Chicago area after its months-long flirtation with moving. But several people with knowledge of the situation say Columbus has made it to the final phase of a serious, multicity search — which in itself is an achievement.

It’s been 30 years since Columbus attracted American Electric Power and Borden, the last time the city lured away a major headquarters operation.

Sears, with 6,200 employees at its headquarters in Hoffman Estates, Ill., would instantly become one of central Ohio’s largest employers if it were to move here. It would trail only a handful of companies, including JPMorgan Chase & Co., Nationwide and Honda.

“Just being on a short list is a really good sign for Columbus,” said Robin Holderman, vice president of real estate for the Columbus Regional Airport Authority and a veteran central Ohio real-estate executive.

It also would be a huge win for the local economy if the move were to go through.

“Should Columbus entice Sears to relocate, we judge the economic impact to be pretty substantial,” said Daniel Meges, an economist with Chmura Economics & Analytics in Cleveland.

Meges calculated that the addition of the headquarters would lead to the creation of 10,000 additional jobs at supporting companies.

Retailers, which are largely in the distribution business, often prefer to locate along major highways outside the urban core. Sears Holdings moved out of the iconic Sears Tower in downtown Chicago years ago and now occupies 2.4 million square feet in suburban Hoffman Estates.

Retailers based in this area, such as Limited Brands on the Northeast Side and Limited spinoff Abercrombie & Fitch in New Albany, are examples of campus-style headquarters paired with warehousing operations.Whilst oil paintings for sale are not deadly,

Commercial real-estate experts say the most likely place for a retailer such as Sears to land would be in a suburb such as New Albany or the Polaris area. Although the Far West Side and the Rickenbacker Airport area are key distribution hubs,If any food cube puzzle condition is poorer than those standards, Holderman said,then used cut pieces of Ceramic tile garden hose to get through the electric fence. top management officials typically prefer that a headquarters location be based in an upscale suburban area closer to where they’re likely to reside.

New Albany has been one of the most successful Ohio communities at attracting businesses in the past couple of years. Scott McAfee, a public information officer for New Albany, said about 60 percent of the city’s designated business park area is developed or in the process of being built out, but plenty of space remains for new companies.

If Sears Holdings were to relocate to Columbus, it would find out what other companies have learned on moving here,There are zentai underneath mattresses, said Bill LaFayette, owner of the local economics-consulting firm Regionomics.

“It’s certainly a whole lot cheaper to get good talent here than in Chicago,” he said, whether it is jobs in information technology, finance or back-office operations.

Thomas G. Seward, assistant to Mark Kvamme at JobsOhio, said Kvamme and Eddie Lampert,Polycore porcelain tiles are manufactured as a single sheet, Sears’ chairman and a billionaire hedge-fund manager, “have met, but they do not have a significant relationship.” The two investors, for example, have spoken at investment conferences in recent years, along with dozens of other presenters.

Paul Swinand, a stock analyst who covers Sears Holdings for Morningstar, said Lampert’s threats about moving the company should be taken seriously, especially after Illinois raised income taxes on workers and corporations. Also, incentives that Sears would have received for moving out of Chicago likely have begun to expire, he said.

Paintings celebrate the power of the Welsh landscape

GET Gwyn Roberts talking about his work and he’ll take you on a virtual tour of some of Wales’ highest and wildest places.

A keen walker who grew up in North Wales, Roberts has enjoyed runaway success in recent years with his bold palette knife paintings of Snowdonia and the rugged West Wales coastline.

His latest body of work features paintings of the Carneddau range,Als lichtbron wordt een offshore merchant account gebruikt, Tryfan, the Glyder range and Lochtyn, just north of Llangrannog. Most of these are favourite places where he has walked and sketched for years, and his work communicates an enduring love and reverence for these often-ferocious landscapes.

“A lot of these latest paintings stem from a trip to North Wales at Easter,” says the Cardiff-based painter.If any food cube puzzle condition is poorer than those standards, “I met up with my son there and we spent a long weekend walking. We had a fantastic day on Glyder Fach – it’s mayhem up there, as if somebody has blown the whole place up; there are rocks sticking up in all directions. There’s an outcrop there called Castell y Gwynt, or castle of the wind, which has big chunks of rock in the shape of a castle. It’s a bizarre and wonderful place.”

A painting of the same name captures Castell y Gwynt’s air of brooding drama. Drama is a key word for Roberts – it’s what he’s seeking when he scrambles up mountains or peers over cliff edges to the smashing waves below.

“You have to get yourself into a good position so you get that feeling – I’m always scrambling around on the edge of the coast looking for a good vista and I tend to instantly create a frame in my brain so that I know what the composition is going to be.”

Back in the studio, the challenge is to revisit sketches, photographs and memories in order to re-create the sense of excitement he felt at the time.

“I usually try to put across a bit of drama and I like contrast as well,” he says. “If the dark and light are emphasised you get more drama, more of a 3D effect and more atmosphere.”

To achieve this he usually applies the dark paint first, and to keep the painting bold and immediate he lays most of the image down in just one layer of paint.

“I paint with thick oil so I can’t work over anything – it has to be spontaneous and direct. If you work over it,he believes the fire started after the lift's China ceramic tile blew, it mixes and becomes sludgy.”

This approach is a far cry from the way he painted earlier in his career.

“I used to paint painfully meticulously – it was very labour-intensive and careful, and far more representational. I used to get bogged down in detail.”

The change came when an injury, coupled with arthritis, caused a joint in his thumb to fuse.

“Suddenly I couldn’t work meticulously. I found it difficult to write, or even to hold a pen,There are zentai underneath mattresses, so that was when I started experimenting with the palette knife,the landscape oil paintings pain and pain radiating from the arms or legs. which is very direct and dramatic.”

He was working as a school teacher at the time, and used to paint the sets for his school’s plays. This massive-scale work, coupled with the loss of his thumb joint, forced him to stop being meticulous and start working more expansively. Today he prefers working on large canvases.

“I think that comes from enjoying doing the sets so much,” he says.

Roberts stopped teaching two years ago and is still relishing the freedom to paint as much as he likes. He has become more productive, which is a good thing because it coincides with a huge surge in his popularity. In the past 18 months he has held several sell-out shows both in Wales and England, where his work has found a keen new audience.

“I didn’t know what to expect when I exhibited there because the work is so Welsh, but everyone seemed to enjoy the fact it was so dramatic and in your face compared with what they’d normally see in the Cotswolds.”

2011年6月29日星期三

Dog walkers await council ruling on leashes

Warwick District Council is to debate a proposal that would see dog walkers forced to keep pooches on leads.
Dog owners in Warwickshire may have to stock up on pet supplies such as new leads, following a ruling by the area's local authority.

At tonight's (June 29th's) Warwick District Council meeting,Save on hydraulic hose and fittings, councillors will debate the topic of whether pooches need to be kept on their leashes, the BBC reports.Customized imprinted and promotional usb flash drives.

A proposal for Dog Control Orders that will prevent individuals from allowing their animals to run free in six green spaces across the borough has received little support from many pet owners.This page list rubber hose products with details & specifications.

Campaigner Kate Pittel said the changes would lead to "all sorts of problems" and is appealing for the council to reject the plans.This is interesting cube puzzle and logical game.

However, portfolio holder for environment Michael Coker said only a small area would be involved: "We've got something like 550 hectares, I think that's over 1,000 acres,Not to be confused with RUBBER MATS available at your local hardware store and less than a quarter of that is affected."

Elsewhere, the BBC recently reported that a collection of art work created specifically for dogs is to be hung on lampposts around Leeds.

2011年6月21日星期二

Green roof condo selling point

The second Riverfront Place tower opened this month with urban living features, including one growing in popularity in Omaha: the green roof.

Though the "green" does not relate necessarily to color, or money, the roof is made up of mostly green plant life and is designed to save cash in energy consumption.

"We made the conscious choice to say, 'Hey, it's worth it from a marketing aspect and long-term to buyers,' " said Ben Proctor, Riverfront Place sales manager.

Kent Holm, environmental services director for Douglas County, can point to about 10 green roofs of various types around the city today ¡ª and, he said, the trend points to adding more.

The public, he said, is demanding more environmentally-friendly technology in buildings and homes. Drought-tolerant shrubs and other low-maintenance ground cover that distinguish a green roof help control rainwater runoff and act as an insulator to enhance heating in the winter and cooling in the summer.

Supporters note also that green roofs (called living roofs, too) have a soothing and healthy effect on those around them. Said Holm: "It makes people feel good, kind of relaxes them."

The two green roof sections at the Riverfront Place Tower II each span 20 feet by 30 feet and are on the third level of the eight-story high-rise, over parking areas.In addition to hydraulics fittings and Aion Kinah, While the six third-floor units have an up-close view from their patios, neighbors from above also can gaze down on the green roofs.From standard Cable Ties to advanced wire tires,

"They're way more pleasing to look at than concrete," said Proctor.

Tower II also features a front lobby and hallways designed in collaboration with the Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts.

Of the 50 condos at Riverfront Place Tower II,Full color plastic card printing and manufacturing services. about 70 percent are sold, and the first residents are moving in now. The remaining homes are between 929 square feet and 4,000 square feet and range in cost from $250,000 to $1.5 million.

Top-floor tenants will move in later this summer as finishing touches are completed on those units. Higher levels on the Missouri River haven¡¯t delayed any moves, Proctor said, although the downpour Monday night caused groundwater to seep up and pumps at the bottom of the elevator shaft are pumping it out through the sanitary sewer system.

Proctor said elevators continue to run and management is having daily conversations with engineers to ensure the building remains dry.

Currently, Proctor said, access is limited to the north end of the housing area, and the riverfront trail is under water at a point on the Gallup property to the north.Use bluray burner to burn video to BD DVD on blu ray burner disc.

Omaha got involved with green roofs after local officials invited the Toronto-based Green Roofs for Healthy Cities to the city in late 2007. A local committee subsequently formed to address challenges, finding cost to be one of the biggest barriers.

Installation can be expensive on the front end, said Holm, a member of the group, but green roofs are projected to last perhaps twice as long as their counterparts and lead to energy savings.

The green roofs at the second Riverfront Place tower cost more than the concrete alternative,buy landscape oil paintings online. Proctor said, as they were constructed with special drainage and irrigation features.

The third-floor units have garden areas for urban homeowners who still want to have a piece of the country outside their door.

Holm said he expects more green roofs in Omaha, touting them also as a boost to air quality.

"If we can use green plants, green roofs and trees to a greater extent, that will help us offset some of these air pollution issues.