Barrier Shutter
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Barrier Shutter
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Barrier home security is a protection system for residences that are in an enclosed area. The main entrance is barricaded with either a long rod or with spikes and only members of that estate can access their houses without questioning. The most common barriers are constructed by home makers or the house owners who live in these houses. However, ready-made ones can be purchased directly from steel companies or hardware stores.
Although this home security system does not guarantee the actual protection of houses, it helps in deterring intruders and unfamiliar people from coming in undetected into your residences. Apart from ensuring that unauthorized people don't have access to our houses, they also ensure that vehicle theft is prevented and any suspicious activities are dealt with in good time.
Homeowners can rest assured that their houses are safe, including their assets since the location of this device is usually strategic enough, is secured and has only one exit or entrance. This ensures that intruders trying to escape after a burglary will be apprehended. These devices are available in various models including electronic, guard raise, or manual level barriers where the driver lets himself through by lifting it moving the spikes and later replacing them.
Some roads that lead to the residences have police who man the systems placed strategically on the roads leading to the residences. In the case of visitors, they take records of their particulars and communicate for an identification confirmation. This helps in reducing crime and improving security as a whole.
Peter Gitundu Creates Interesting And Thought Provoking Content on Home Security. For More Information, Read More Of His Articles Here HOME SECURITY If You Enjoyed This Article, Make Sure You SUBSCRIBE TO MY RSS FEED!
Exterior Shutters Protect Your Home
If you're looking for an inexpensive way to dress up the exterior of your home, consider adding shutters (or changing the color or design, if your home already is fitted with these affordable elements).
Shutters used to have a functional purpose, rather than a decorative one. They were used to protect the fragile glass windows of the day during storms, and as an added barrier against intruders. If you live in an area prone to hurricanes, the shutters still perform the function of protecting your windows - and are made of steel or aluminum. However, in most regions shutters are used in a purely decorative fashion.
Decorative shutters are made of either wood or vinyl. The vinyl of course can be made to look like wood, but require less care - they won't warp, crack, swell, or need to be painted, and are cleaned easily with the use of a power washer.
Decorative shutters come in many designs: including raised panel, flat panel with cut out, false louver with flat panel cut out, board and batten, false louvered,flat panel, quarter-circle single and double panel.
The raised panel and flat panel shutters are self-explanatory - solid squares of vinyl or wood with no openings. A false louvered shutter gives the impression that the shutter has louvers (a series of overlapping slats whose angle can be adjusted to let in the sun or breeze). Cutouts in the design of trees, half-moons, or other shapes provide a unique appearance to the shutter. If you've got windows that have rounded tops, then you'll need quarter-circle shutters. A board and batten is a shutter made out of three separate pieces of wood, affixed to battens at top and bottom.
If you purchase your new shutters from a large home improvement store such as Menards or Home Depot, the hardware used to fasten the shutter to to the window may or may not be included. It's important to have the best quality hardware possible - nothing looks more tacky than a nice looking shutter with rust and water stains running down from the hinges.
If you'd like to accent your shutters with a more ornate design than the hinges that come with your shutters, you can always buy them separately, as well. There's as much of a range of hinge designs as there is of the shutters themselves.
Be aware that window sizes can vary from house to house, and for the shutters to give an elegant appearance they must be properly fitted to your window size. If you're going to install your shutters yourself, therefore, make sure you measure not once, not twice, but even three times! And if you have a two story house the window sizes can be different on the second floor, so bear that in mind as well.
Shutters can make your windows appear larger, and give them a finished appearance. If you're thinking of a a new look for the exterior of your home, give a thought to shutters.
About the Author
Andrew Caxton is a syndicated editor of http://www.home-decorating-reviews.com. A focused website that offers the best articles on
vinyl shutters
and decoration.
Okay all you rose gardeners, I need your advice. I want to plant a rose garden in front of my porch. The area?
ia 5 1/2 ' x 12'. My home is a white country house with black shutters, my front door is painted a merlot color. My questions? Should I keep all the roses the same color or mix it up? How many rose shrubs can I plant in an area this size without it becoming over-crowded. Should I keep them all shrubs or should I get a couple of climbers to travel along the porch rail. My fear there is that it will make painting difficult. One last question; I was planning to turn over the soil and mix in some composted manure, then I wanted to use one of those weed barriers over that, plant the roses and use a mulch to cover the barrier. Is that wise or will it cause problems. This is my first rose garden. My mom was an avid rose gardener and she passed away, I want to make it a memory garden. Thanks for any help you can give.
First, what kind of rose bushes do you want to end up with? If you want large ones that sprawl all over and put out lots of relatively small blooms, you wouldn't prune them much in winter. But, if you want fairly small bushes that put out very few huge, perfect roses, you'll want to prune them back to 3 or 4 1-foot canes each winter.
This will also determine the placement density. An unattended rose bush can get several feet across. But, if you are growing them small to get the bigger blooms, you can plant them about 3 feet apart.
And, do get the climbing roses for the rail. It's really a very cool look. Even if you have to remove them for painting, you might be able to salvage the length of the trailing stems. If not, you can just cut it back and let it start trailing again.
Regarding the weed barrier, that is ideal. You can cover it with medium cedar bark chips, and it will be ideal for weed protection as well as moisture retention (and protection from cold winters in harsher areas).
Regarding colors ... that's pretty much a personal taste issue. Having the same color (even the bushes having the same color as the climbers) can be a stiking effect, especially if you got something like red roses the color of your door. I once had roses all around my yard and put in different colors. The house itself was bluish gray and the colors looked nice ringing the green lawn. Since this is a tribute garden, I guess I would ask, "What did your mother have?" and go with that.
One good idea is to have a soaker hose winding through the rose garden for watering. You want to avoid getting water on the leaves when watering. This reduces the risk of fungus or mildew problems. Feed with a systemic rose food (granules you sprinkle around the base of each plant). This provides the nutrients for spectacular colors and also makes the leaves toxic to pests, especially aphids.
One of the best resources for roses is the Sunset Western Garden Book. They have a great section on growing and pruning roses for the best blooms. It also contains great information about just about any house or garden plant that you can grow in the western US. And, this is appicable to many other parts of the country, because of the variety of climates in the west.
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