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Hometalk is where people share and help with everything home & garden

Cheryl Rivera

13 Followers
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My Recent Boards

  • Cheryl Rivera's board

Recent Activity


  • Take your light and check it out closely as some are different. 1
  • By the bulb you should see some small screws
  • Remove the screws and SLOWLY pull the pieces apart. You will then see a normal, everyday, single AA battery. Yep, that is what gets charged by the sun during the day so that it glows at night! 2
  • Change the battery out with a new one and...Let there be light! 2
  • Now, if you have a different type of light, say like this one from WalMart, with the globe on top, it gets even easier to replace the battery.
  • Kathe With An E~DIY Fix Your Solar Lights
Simply pull the stake out and you will see this on the globe end.
  • One single screw. Leave the three screws by the bulb alone.
  • And there is your battery. Change it out, put the screw back in and you are done!
  • See 5 more photos

DIY Fix for Spring

Got solar lights that aren't working? Luckily, I know how to fix them right up! And, I am going to share my tip with you!Cuz, well, we're friends and all and that's what friends do, right?...

Kathe With An E (Kathe)
Kathe With An E (Kathe) Aurora, CO
117 Comments | Post Comment | 82415 Views
  • Cheryl Rivera
    Clipped on May 02, 2013 to Cheryl Rivera's board
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DIY No Sew Stenciled Easter Bunny Yellow Burlap Table Runner

I came across some YELLOW burlap on a recent trip to the craft store. I grabbed a couple of yards, a little rickrack and some pom pom trim and made this EASY, no sew table runner. The ...»
trim is glued on and the lettering is from a stencil. The bunny is a stencil that I made by having an image from the internet laminated at the copy center. Directions are on my blog

Serendipity R
Serendipity R Clarendon Hills, IL
2 Comments | Post Comment | 514 Views
  • Cheryl Rivera
    Clipped on Mar 24, 2013 to Cheryl Rivera's board
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DIY Mod Podge Picture Frames

Super cheap and easy way to makeover your old or thrifted picture frames. Just trace frame on scrapbook paper (or you could even use fabric), cut out and mod podge on to frame. I like to ...»
use a top coat for sealing as well but it's not necessary. I think this would make a good kids craft with maybe a little help with the trimming of the paper. You could use all different kinds of embellishments to make it that more unique and fun.

http://www.thisgirlslifeblog.com/2013/03/diy...

Easy
Melissa
Melissa Salina, KS
6 Comments | Post Comment | 1095 Views
  • Cheryl Rivera
    Clipped on Mar 24, 2013 to Cheryl Rivera's board
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  • Restoration Hardware Knockoff Nightstands
  • Ready for stain

DIY Knockoff Restoration Hardware Nightstands

After lusting over Restoration Hardware's nightstands, I decided to DIY my own pair, saving myself about $600! Check out my blog for the full tutorial: http://jenwoodhouse.com/blog/2012/07/05/buil...

Jen W
Jen W Fort Lee, VA
11 Comments | Post Comment | 3517 Views
  • Cheryl Rivera
    Clipped on Mar 24, 2013 to Cheryl Rivera's board
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Pottery Barn Knock Off Using Ikea Expedit Storage Unit

When I realized the storage unit I had been eying in the Pottery Barn catalog was being discontinued I begin to brainstorm on how I could recreate it, and on the CHEAP! Enter big, bulky, ...»
Ikea Expedit...It might not be love at first site (at first) but with a few pieces of trim, glue, and metal labels, it turned into a functional and beautiful piece of furniture that now displays my most valuable items. #bestof2012

2 Hours 150 Moderate
Christine at First Home Love Life
Christine at First Home L... Saint Cloud, FL
4 Comments | Post Comment | 28825 Views
  • Cheryl Rivera
    Clipped on Mar 24, 2013 to Cheryl Rivera's board
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  • DIY Easter Cross Centerpiece

http://www.madincrafts.com/2013/03/he-is-risen-easter-cross-centerpiece.html
  • Craft wood crosses are available online or in most craft stores.

http://www.madincrafts.com/2013/03/he-is-risen-easter-cross-centerpiece.html
  • You can easily paint air dry clay to look like stone!

http://www.madincrafts.com/2013/03/he-is-risen-easter-cross-centerpiece.html
  • http://www.madincrafts.com/2013/03/he-is-risen-easter-cross-centerpiece.html
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Easter Cross Centerpiece

You can DIY a simple religious #Easter centerpiece for your Easter table!
Jessica Hill
Jessica Hill Saginaw, MI
4 Comments | Post Comment | 1035 Views
  • Cheryl Rivera
    Clipped on Mar 24, 2013 to Cheryl Rivera's board
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  • The bright green texture of 4 week old annual rye – a great green manure crop to plant in the early spring garden
  • To have healthy tomato plants – you need healthy soil
  • Barren soil makes it easy for soil erosion to occur, and for weed seeds to blow in. Cover crops solve both problems.
  • Bright green annual rye about to be turned under to provide nutrients for our tomatoes!
  • Healthy plants make for great looking and tasting vegetables
  • Fall and spring cover crops are a must for replenishing soil
  • See 3 more photos

How To Breathe Life This Spring Into Your Tired Garden Soil

No matter how healthy your vegetable plants start off in the spring - no matter how carefully you water - how perfectly it rains, or how much of the sun's rays find their way to your ...»
garden – your plants are only going to turn out as good as the soil you plant them in. Period.

Vegetable crops like tomatoes, peppers, corn and cucumbers take a heavy toll on the soil' structure and make-up. They devour valuable nutrients as they grow to produce the very fruits and vegetables we love to eat. Eventually, after a few years - even the best of soils will begin to break down and weaken if not replenished and re-energized. Soil that becomes weak in nutrients will result in successively weaker crop yields that are also increasingly prone to disease and pests.

So what is the best way to keep your garden strong? Feed your soil!

And no - we're not talking about heaping on generous amounts of expensive synthetic fertilizers. Those are temporary fixes to a problem that can leave your soil weak, unstable, and full of excess salts and chemicals.

The real answer lies in adding back natural nutrients to the soil - and one of the best ways to do that is with a "green manure crop" in the spring - before you plant your garden or raised beds.

Planting A Green Manure Crop In Your Garden Or Raised Beds In The Spring

We talk a lot about cover cropping in the fall - and for good reason. Fall cover crops plays a vital role in developing and keeping garden soil beds full of rich organic matter. They minimize soil erosion and hinder the establishment of weeds, and then feed your soil with organic matter when turned over in the early spring.

But in the spring - we add a green manure crop to put back even more organic material prior to the vegetable garden planting. It's quick, easy - and pays huge dividends!

A lot of people are confused by the term "green manure". First of all, it doesn't smell and it's certainly not a by-product from animals.

So why the name?

Green manure is the term given to a cover crop that is grown specifically to be turned right back into the soil to replenish valuable nutrients and organic matter. Much like a farmer spreads horse, cow or chicken manure on his fields to fertilize and replenish - growing and digging in a bright green cover crop has the same effect and benefits. It's the same concept as why fresh-cut green grass is great to add to a compost pile. In its fresh-cut green state, grass is a valuable nitrogen source that heats your compost pile up. Green manure crops do the same, releasing nitrogen back into the earth as they slowly decompose. Consider it almost a sacrificial offering to the soil :)

When a cover crop such as annual clover, rye or hairy-vetch are young, vibrant and bright green - they are at their absolute height of nutritional value. Their root nodules below the soil help to "fix" nitrogen levels - and the green matter that is turned back into the soil gives off additional nutrients and nitrogen as it decomposes during the summer months. All of which serves to replenish the soil and feed your summer crop of vegetables.

Green manure crops also provide many of the same benefits that fall cover crops give - helping to loosen the soil with their fast and deep growing roots and protecting the surface topsoil from heavy spring rains and erosion. All the more reason to incorporate them into your garden plan!

So when and how do you plant them?

We will turn our fall cover crop over in the soil beds about 4 to 6 weeks before we plan on planting our vegetables (about mid-march if the weather allows). At that point we will plant the spring "green manure" cover crop seed right into the soil, raking the soil out lightly after turning it over and spreading our seed. The new seedlings emerge in as little as 7 to 10 days, and by the time we are ready to plant our vegetables in Mid may – it has filled in with a strong thick stand of growth. Then, we simply turn them under again with the pitchfork – and plant our summer garden. As the green manure crop starts to break down – it releases its energy back into the soil and provides nutrients for the new crops. If you didn't plant a fall cover crop, a spring green manure crop can be even more valuable to getting your soil back on track!

Annual rye, annual clover and hairy vetch are all great choices as green manure crops - and can usually be found at your local feed store.

Will I get weeds from them later?

In short - no! These are annual varieties - so once you till them into the soil as young green plant material - they wont come back like stubborn weeds. Furthermore - you incorporate them back into the soil quickly - so the plants don't have the ability to establish seed heads or seeds that could become a problem. In fact - using cover crops in the fall and spring can greatly diminish your weed problems by keeping the soil from being barren and open to drifting weed seeds - and the thick, fast growing growth crowds out competing weeds.

Cover crops and green manure crops simply work. They keep your soil healthy and alive, let your plants thrive - and most importantly, are 100% natural.

If you would like to receive our weekly DIY and Gardening Posts – be sure to sign up to follow our blog via email, Twitter or Facebook in the right column.

- Jim and Mary

Old World Garden Farms
Old World Garden Farms Newark, OH
17 Comments | Post Comment | 17911 Views
  • Cheryl Rivera
    Clipped on Mar 24, 2013 to Cheryl Rivera's board
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  • Back porch painted rug.

Painted Rug

I painted and stenciled this rug on my back porch two years ago and it is still going strong. Painted rugs are so much easier and safer to maintain than actual rugs.
Victoria
Victoria Lockhart, TX
5 Comments | Post Comment | 380 Views
  • Cheryl Rivera
    Clipped on Mar 16, 2013 to Cheryl Rivera's board
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  • Cheryl Rivera
    Followed 1 board on Mar 15, 2013
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Family Room Reveal - Making What You Have Work

Decorating after a move into a new home can really be a challenge. What worked in your last home, does not always work as well in your new home. This is what happened to us. ...»

We have a big wool traditional style rug that we love and it looked great in our last home with dark wood floors. Put that same rug with lighter wood floors and it looks very different.

Determined to make it work I pulled the colors from the rug (black, ivory, red and green) and used them throughout the room. I love lots of texture and shine in a room so I also added several baskets, silver accessories, weathered pieces, burlap and linen.

Hope you will stop by my blog for the full tour, lots of pictures to share.

The Endearing Home
The Endearing Home Cary, NC
22 Comments | Post Comment | 4680 Views
  • Cheryl Rivera
    Clipped on Mar 13, 2013 to Cheryl Rivera's board
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