Tuesday, June 24, 2014

Please recommend an 8 or 10 person family tent for us!?







I am heartbroken. I was going to order the Columbia Cougar Flats 2 and now it has been discontinued.

Can anyone recommend a tent that would be big enough for me, my husband who is 6'4 tall, and 3 children? My youngest will be sleeping in a pack and play.

Would like a bathtub floor, good ventilation. A canopy over the front door would be a great bonus. I like the idea of divided rooms.

We are not camping anywhere very cold.. but would need something that will stand up to rain.

Thank you.



Answer
My current family tent would satisfy all of those preferences with the exception of the canopy over the door. However, the lacking canopy has proven to only be a problem when going in and out while it is actually raining, and...really...how much are you going to actually do that?

The straight vertical walls allow for more usable floorspace (especially for things like a pack-n-play), it has a hanging divider, and even two doors. The doors are excellent for camping with kids because they are a hard D-frame with a hinge and velcro, so the kids can easily go in and out without having to zip/unzip/zip/unzip. You can zip up the doors when you want/need to, but you don't have to do it every time.

Big windows on three sides and doors on the fourth side have rather large windows as well. The entire top is mesh. I've never had a problem in the wind and/or rain in this tent.

The tent is very tall (I'm 6'3" so that's a requirement for me as well), and hands-down the easiest tent to setup that I have ever owned. Not exaggering when I say that I can easily setup this tent in 15 minutes by myself, including all guylines. It's also just as easy to break down, and it's the only tent I've owned that actually folds up SMALLER than it came from the store, so you can actually fit additional accessories in the original storage bag in addition to the tent.

It's made by Coleman but only sold in Target stores. If there's not a store near you, they usually offer free shipping on something priced that high. I've seen it on sale as cheap as $150, but it's usually $185-200.

camping tents?




rosemary j


what are some good quality camping tents


Answer
The best are made by a company called The North Face, but can be quite expensive. We camp all the time, and have a Coleman family tent, an Ozark Trail tent (from Wal-mart, I think made by Coleman), and an REI back-packer's 2-man tent. If you have any sporting goods store nearby (Bass Pro Shop has an excellent assortment), go in and talk to a sales person. Keep in mind that the size of the tent (how many people it sleeps) is a very crowded fit. For 4 people to be comfy, with duffelbags inside, you really need an 8-person tent. Keep in mind, too, seasonality, the type of material the floor is made of (you don't want it to tear if you have to put it up on a gravel or rocky area), and weight.




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Tentant won't remove property from yard?




Anonymous


I own a 2 family home which I live in 1 of the units. The tenant has left property in the yard and I want it removed. I have asked that he remove it on several occasions and he ignores my requests. There are several empty buckets and milk crates and they make the yard look disgusting. Can I legally remove these items. The lease states that the yard must be keep clean.


Answer
I own a triplex in Alaska and I must say, do NOT use a property manager just to manage one unit for you, 10% of the rent they collect can really cut into your own earnings and the most obvious reason not to hire one is YOU LIVE THERE. You have to put up with the person that they would end up renting to. I am currently asking tenants to move who have for the most part been "great tenants" they keep their place immaculate but they are childish. I've asked them to remove their camping gear and tent off the front deck bc they hang them out to dry for days (along with their cooler) and they argue with me about their stuff. They are not allowed to have pets, the guy saw me with my new puppy and said, "Why do you get to have pets, does this mean that I get to have a dog?" I've asked them time and time again to keep their vehicles parked far enough from the building so that I can bring the lawnmower up and have clearance to get it around the building to mow. They complain that they can't park right up to the building, (having their vehicle 2 inches from their door as if it would help them get in faster after work). I've updated all my units to include the doors and trim flooring and kitchen cabinets. EVERYTHING is nice in my units and I get the top rents for them, the exterior is always manicured and I take care of everything but these two idiots, are NEVER satisfied. Just this month I gave them a late fee bc I didn't get their rent until the 5th. Rents are due on the 1st it's late on the 2nd and you get a late fee on the 3rd. They were out of town and called me when they received their late fee to complain that "Wells Fargo took our money out on the 29th of last month you saw that our money was drafted, so why did you give us a late fee?" I explained to them that I don't know how Wells Fargo does their payments and I can't tell you how your rent check got here on the 5th bc I don't deliver the mail. You need to call Wells Fargo and find out what their process is but you are still being charged the late fee. They are NEVER satisfied. The other two units I have are being rented out in the same complex as these losers and I NEVER hear from them, they pay their rents two days before they are due and they mind their own business and keep their places looking great.




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Monday, June 23, 2014

What jobs were offered for woman in the 18th century?




Tauqeer Bo





Answer
The Industrial Revolution began in the 18h Century in the UK..
The mills were full of women --- and children --- especially the textile mills -- spinning cotton, making thread, cloth for clothes, industrial fabric for tents, sails, and such..
Colonial Williamsburg, Philadelphia, and Boston, among other places in the Colonial America, had many female owned businesses and shops ---- dress makers, seamstresses, commercial seamstresses that totally catered to the military and naval industry with uniforms, flags, banners, and such.
Remember Betsy Ross -- Her family of professional seamstresses was only one of several in town.
Many women were professional bakers and confectioneers.
Women had many professional and even technical roles in family businesses, especially if the family was small.
If the male of the family business was a skilled craftsman, many times it was the female who was the business accountant and bookkeeper and the handler of the merchants. (many successful 'family' businesses employed other craftsmen and non-famly employees)
Weaving, Crocheting, Needleworking, Tatting (lace makers) -- huge businesses almost totally female.
Women traded as merchants of all kinds without her husband's or father's authorization in businesses from dry grades to jewelry to livestock.
It was not unusual to find a female merchant or tradeswoman, literate and in possession of guild membership, married to a lawyer or craftsman.
Many women were mercers (haberdashers), whole-cloth merchants and fish vendors --- half were female.
The academic professionals --- nurses, nursemaids (for elderly individuals), tutors, teachers.
Domestics --- cooks, maids, housekeepers (women who ran household staffs), nannies, governesses.
The job of the professional laundress was huge --- every large household, school, military academy, military unit had a professional laundress or two or three.
A great many innkeepers were female in the 18th century --- bar maids and servers also.
Workers in the Sex Industry -- not simply prostitutes but in professional "gentleman's' clubs and bordellos -- many entertained with musical and singing abilities, full time cooks, laundresses, and service staff were employed right along with the "service girls".. (A town of sufficient size had several of these type establishments employing 10 to 30 females, half of which was purely non-sexual)

A combination of the growth of Colonial America, the rise of the British Empire, the Industrial Revolution beginning in the UK, and the Seven Years' War --- western females took a huge step into the professional world in the 18th Century.

18th Century Business Women in Publishing
http://pecancorner.blogspot.com/2011/01/part-two-18th-century-business-women-in.html
http://www.history.ac.uk/reviews/review/708a
Women in the workforce
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_the_workforce




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