STATION CLOCK (580) - Give your garden a touch of elegance with this double sided Station Clock.


STATION CLOCK (580) - Give your garden a touch of elegance with this double sided Station Clock.
Give your garden a look of stately elegance

This elegant Victorian railway station clock will look superb mounted on your garden wall or house. Based on an original Victorian station design it measures approx. 8″ diameter, and has a shower-resistant black powder finish. Both clock sides easily visible from a distance. No need to wear your expensive watch while gardening. Easily mounted indoors or out. Requires 2 x AA batteries not supplied.

Station Clock Was ?29.97

Now only ?19.97

Pk of 4 Long Life Batteries - ?2.97



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Price: $14.99
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In Warlords IV: Heroes of Etheria continues the fantastic Warlords tradition of immersive tactical combat with creator-made heroes! Thrilling multiplayer action for up to 6 players
List Price: $19.99
Used Price: $9.99
Customer Review: A mixed bag with a fatal flaw (for me)
I am a serious fan of the Warlords series and have owned all the turned based games and all of the BattleCry games. The first three Warlords (TB) games were seriously addictive. In fact, I still find myself playing way past the point when I should have gone to bed. I even have an old DOS system where I keep my old games and there you can find Warlords I and II (as well as x-com’s, Betrayla at Krondor, Master of Magic, etc.). In other words, I’m a fan. Warlords IV is a beautiful game with a visually rich world like those found in BattleCry. Cities are well-rendered and interesting. Units are varied and have tactical advantages and disadvantages that are consistent with the opposing units you will fight. The combat system allows you to choose which unit you will use to fight - and it allows you to change your fight order in mid-battle (something the earlier games would not allow). The city interface is a little confusing at first, but quickly becomes easy to use. Production cues are added so that you can plan out the tactical advantages of combined unit types in advance. The game is very challenging, but the greatest challenge occurs only in combat with cities, because those walls are always shooting at you. Now for that flaw. I like to play large maps with lots of cities and eight sides. In this mode, the game took FOREVER to play. I would make a couple of moves, square up my cities and hit the ‘end turn’ button. Then I would sleep for a few hours and go out for dinner, then come back and wait for the computer to move through the AI players. (Okay, that’s an exaggeration). But really, as the games progressed the turns lasted at least 5 minutes. Once, I got up and prepared a bowl of cereal as a snack - AND ATE IT - before the time was up (no lie). I play on a speedy laptop with lots of ram and I set all the game options to the fastest possible. By the end of my first (post-tutorial) game, I would hit the ‘end turn’ button and set the computer aside so I could watch the news as the game moved through players. That can’t be good. However, I was determined to send a powerful army to an opponent’s capital to try and take it. It took a long time to create the army, 45 minutes just to get there and I still lost 7 of my 8 units. But really, I didn’t care anymore. I just wanted to try. It was so boring that I didn’t want to do any more, so I quit. Now, I may try one more time, but I probably won’t. I will probably just keep playing War3 and shelf this one next to the disappointing end of the x-com series. Oh, well. p.s. - If you are a Warlords fan, by all means get this if you can get it cheap. You might tolerate the mind numbing waits better than I did and thus enjoy the other great aspects of the game.
Customer Review: Not as bad as people say, but not great
This game isn’t as bad as some of the other reviews say (especially once you get the patch), but I would agree that it’s not great. The main problem is that they removed some of the nicest features from previous versions of the game: 1. No more “King of the Hill” feature. To win, you have to capture every other enemy capital. That gets pretty boring once you’ve established an invincible supply chain. At least you don’t have to conquer every city; you just have to capture every enemy capital. 2. No more unit vectoring! Removing this was a big mistake. The new “production waypoints” system, as people have said, is a step backwards and can be a MAJOR hassle to tinker with once you’ve built a large empire. 3. I agree that magic items have become kind of wimpy now (though I don’t agree with whoever said that heroes have become expendable–you won’t feel that way when you see what a very high level hero can do). Exploring ruins usually isn’t a good gamble unless you have a very strong stack. Otherwise, you’ll lose units in the battle, and the reward is rarely worth it. 4. The AI is still very predictable. Basically, the computer will always choose the fastest route to its target, meaning that if you can take control of the obvious transit routes, the AI will have a hard time positioning its troops to attack you. So I don’t agree with the reviewer who said that strong flying troops negate the effect of terrain. In practice, it doesn’t work that way, because the AI (stupidly) always tries to use roads if it can. You almost never have to protect your flank. On the plus side: 1. Magic, though still too weak, has been seriously upgraded. There was virtually no reason to fool around with magic in previous versions of the game; at least now the spells are stronger and the magic system is more complex. 2. The graphics are a lot better. But no one has ever played the Warlords series for the graphics. 3. Combat is more balanced. Plan on losing more units than in the past. You also have to think more carefully about how to put a stack together. Hint: having an archon and a unicorn in the same stack can be VERY useful, because they bless and heal your troops (respectively). 4. The game is stable and loads surprisingly quickly.
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List Price: $6.99
Amazon Price: $6.99
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V&A Garden Tool Set in Anemone Print


V&A Garden Tool Set in Anemone Print
Anenome print by William Morris garden tool set in collaboration with V&A musuem London. Hand trowel and cultivator, one piece aluminium, lightweight and strong with an ergonomic grip.

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Bounty Hunter BHJS Junior Metal Detector
Bring a young explorer into the world of metal detecting with this Bounty Hunter Jr. Metal Detector. The junior-size device identifies coin-size objects up to 5″ underground and senses larger items up to 3′ deep. Features sensitivity control and maximum depth detection to hone in on precious metals. A discrimination control prevents the machine from detecting undesirable items like nails or cans. Includes speaker, low-battery indicator, 6″ weather-resistant coil and a lightweight, ergonomic design for easy handling. Made in USA. 21 32″ adjustable lengths.
List Price: $59.95
Amazon Price: $48.91
Customer Review: Matal detector
My son was thrilled with this! It is a perfect size for an 8 yr old, and easy to use. Can’t wait to take it to the beach!
Customer Review: Excellent kids detector!
This detector is excellent for kids, The size is just right and it introduces them into the world of detecting. The detector is of good solid quality and is a little version of an entry level adult model. You do have to explain to them how to use the discrimination controls because they are kind of confusing for a kid but they pick it up quick. The detector has actually found old cans and coins that have been about 5 feet underground so it searches pretty deep. I recommend this product!

Better Homes and Gardens Home Designer 7.0
Better Homes and Gardens Home Designer 7.0 was designed for better home enthusiast remodeling and home design projects. It’s got more design tools than ever; with it, you can create your dream home with feature-rich tools for home design, remodeling, interior design, decks and landscaping.

See your floorplans in 3D. View larger.

Design exterior spaces. View larger.

And plan the perfect kitchen. View larger.

Keep it all within budget using the cost estimation tools. It’s the right home design technology for everyday home enthusiasts. Color Chooser creates the perfect color for walls and floors. You can also insert doors, windows, and skylights. Get expert design tips from the editors of Better Homes and Gardens magazines

Home Designer 7.0 combines the leading-edge home design software from Chief Architect with the number-one home and garden publisher, Better Homes and Gardens. All products are fully compatible with 3D Home Architect version 4.0 and earlier as well as the Chief Architect professional product line.

With Home Designer you can add as much or as little detail to the design as you want–it’s fun and easy. Home Designer makes it easy to create your dream home:

  • Get started quickly and easily: The “getting started” tutorial will guide you through basic design projects. Watch more than 30 videos for step-by-step instructions. Select from over 1,500 sample home plans or use the House Wizard to design your house.
  • All-in-one home-design solution: create your dream home today with the look and feel before it is built with styles, colors, wallpaper, flooring, and materials.
  • Create your dream home: Design your dream home today with Home Designer. Quickly place and arrange walls, windows, doors, cabinets, choose colors, place furniture, create decks, and landscaping. Design and visualize your home with 3D models and virtual tours–it’s easy, it’s fun!
  • Choose from design templates: begin your design by choosing from one of six Better Homes and Gardens home-style templates that range from traditional to contemporary, complete with colors, cabinets, and moldings.
  • Powerful home-design software: Enjoy the same building and design tools the professionals use–Home Designer is made for the home enthusiasts. Powerful building tools like automatic roof generation, stairs, decks, framing, CAD, dimensioning, realistic 3D models, and Plan Check makes it easy for anyone.
  • Create floor plans: Select from over 1,500 sample home plans or use the House Wizard to design your house. Open sample plans and customize to your specific needs.
  • Customize designs from the library: Quickly place and arrange walls, windows, doors, cabinets, and architectural objects from a library of over 4,300 items to create a 3D Model in minutes. Use the library content to size your rooms, evaluate traffic flow, and create a visual model of your design.
  • Design tools: Inspire and enhance your designs with the Better Homes and Gardens Design Planning Center. Use Material Painter to create a virtual look and feel of the design before it is built with actual colors, wallpaper, flooring, furniture, windows, and window treatments.
  • Building tools: Complete automatic building tools for roof generation, framing, dimensioning, foundations, and more. Automatically generate a materials list for project-cost estimating. Includes a complete set of CAD (Computer Aided Design) tools to detail designs and Plan Check that automatically validates the design against current building principles.



List Price: $59.99
Amazon Price: $44.99
Used Price: $44.99
Customer Review: ok but very limited
This product was ok but I was really disappointed by the inadequate graphics available and that this program does so few of the things that they show on the tutorials. If it is this limited they should advertise it as such so it isn’t necessary to buy it, reject it and then have to buy the next step up, which I’m reluctant to do because this was wasn’t what I expected so I hate to spend more money on the same brand. On the other hand, it is very easy to learn and use if you just want to design some space and don’t need good graphics or want to change your terrain from a flat lot.
Customer Review: Better Homes & Gardens Home Designer 7.0
The product performs as advertised and comes with a decent tutorial disc. It made me realize I needed the next product level up in order to remodel both the house and the design of the lot the house sets on. For a small amount more the added features of the Suite 7.0 became important for what I wanted to do.

Baby Farm Friends Bowling
18 months & up. Let’s roll the ball and knock down the six numbered soft barnyard friends! They make all kinds of rattle sounds and have flat bases for easy standing. Great for building eye- hand coordination and gross motor skills.
List Price: $19.99
Amazon Price: $19.99
Customer Review: Pretty good toy
This is a pretty fun toy. I like that my 1 year old and 3 1/2 year old are able to play with it together. There are lots of things to do with the pins and ball, in addition to bowling. My only complaint is that the soft ball isn’t heavy enough to knock down the pins when my 1 year old rolls it. She has to use a heavier plastic ball.
Customer Review: Great for Toddlers
I bought this set for my 3 year old niece, and she loves it! She screamed with excitment after opening the box! She’s been playing with it since, and is even practicing trying to count them! I recommend it.

Draper gardening 64970 folding garden kneeler and seat?


Draper gardening 64970 folding garden kneeler and seat?
Sturdy tubular iron frame with folding legs/hand rails. Double-sided pad acts as seat (plastic) or kneeler (foam). Useful for planting, painting and other household tasks. Overall size: 540 x 250 x 400mm. Maximum carrying weight 125kg (19.1/2 stone). Display carton.

Customer Review: Vital for Less Stressful Gardening
I looked all over for a garden kneeler/stool, and this was available at a good price from Amazon. It is well made, easy to use, and has saved huge wear and tear on the knees of both me and my wife. It folds easily for storage, and has proved invaluable.



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Toro Ultra 12-AMP Electric Blower/Vacuum #51599
List Price: $69.99
Amazon Price: $69.97
Used Price: $65.95
Customer Review: Love my Toro so far!
Have used it only 2 times but love how light and easy to handle it is. It is very powerful for its size and would recommend it to others. Have not used the vaccuum.
Customer Review: This unit blows…… (that is, everything you point it at)!
I’ve only used this blower about five times and I think I’m influencing the weather around my property. Can’t say I’ve actually created a “cyclone”, but darn close. This things really can blow things out of the way. It seems a little noisy, but a set of earplugs takes care of that. I’ve also had trouble with the extension cord staying plugged into the blower. I have to use a small bungie cord to hold it in place when using it for long periods of time. I have not yet used the vacuum, but I’m sure it will work great also. I bought this item because it was a Consumer Reports Magazine recommended buy….. I recommend it also.

1st Rule of Gardening Apron
Price: $17.99

A Little Princess / The Secret Garden
Two of Frances Hodgson Burnett’s most treasured children’s novels come to the screen in wondrous adaptations. Alfonso Cuaron (Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban) directs A Little Princess, the magical story of a girl who uses her powers of imagination and zest for life to overcome hardships at a stern boarding school. And three lonely children are forever changed as they learn to trust each other while restoring and taking refuge in The Secret Garden. Agnieszka Holland (Europa Europa) directs and Francis Ford Coppola executive produces a luminous film in which magic and hope bloom.
List Price: $12.98
Amazon Price: $10.99
Used Price: $5.99
Customer Review: Great Classic!
I bought this DVD for “A Little Princess” after having seen it on TV and I already had the original “The Little Priness” with Shirley Temple. Both this remake and the original are great classics but I think this remake is better. Both versions have a happy ending but the remake is happier and doesn’t leave you hanging. The scond movie was a bonus and worth viewing once but it does not fall into the classic catagory that is enjoyable viewing numerous times. I would have rated this 5 stars if the DVD contained only “A Little Princess”
Customer Review: buy them seperatly and choose your version
The Little Princess by Francis Hodgson Burnett is a wonderful book. Probably my favorite book I read with my girls when they were growing up. This production doesn’t follow the book. It is basically a remake of the Shirly Temple version, which didn’t follow the book either. The Wonderworks version is true to the book. sadly, it doesn’t come in dvd. This is a delightful version of The Secret Garden, despite the license it takes with a grown up Colin and Mary at the end. buy it seperately.

The Pink Garden Kit


The Pink Garden Kit
The Pink Garden Kit is a fantastic and vibrant alternative to all those standard green and wooden garden accessories and makes for the ultimate ladies garden set….

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Victorinox SwissMemory 256 MB (Silver Alox)
From the makers of the original Swiss Army Knife, this 2-1/4-inch-long tool combines the Swiss Army Knife’s renowned versatility and a removable 256 MB USB memory stick for storing and transporting data such as music, photos, and text files. Displaying the Swiss Army Knife’s famed Swiss-flag logo of white cross against a red background, the rugged silver Alox housing also holds a knife blade, a combination nail file and screw driver, a scissors, a retractable ballpoint pen, a LED mini light, and a key ring. Accompanying the tool is a USB cable for connecting the memory stick to PCs and MACs.

About Victorinox
In 1884, Swiss cutler Karl Elsener set up shop in Ibach-Schwyz, installing a waterwheel in Tobelbach Brook to run his grinding and polishing machines. Thus began what would become the international brand name Victorinox, a combination of Victoria, for Elsener’s mother, and “inox,” or stainless steel. Today, Victorinox produces watches, luggage, clothing, and, famously, Swiss Army Knives. The forerunner of that name dates to 1897, when Elsener patented the Swiss Officer’s and Sports Knife he supplied to the Swiss Army. Following World War II, American servicemen and women shopping in PX stores shortened the name to Swiss Army Knife, which lives on in English-speaking countries around the world and has become a metaphor or versatility.

Price: $66.00
Customer Review: nice…
this was a gift for my fathers b-day. very quality product and he was very happy with it.
Customer Review: Good sale.
Used it as a gift to a groomsman, and he loved it. Good product, good sale.

Johann Strauss - Die Fledermaus / Domingo, Te Kanawa, Prey, Royal Opera Covent Garden
Kiri Te Kanawa is featured in this glittering Covent Garden Opera production of Johann Strauss’ masterpiece. Placido Domingo conducts the Royal Opera House Orchestra and Chorus. Other soloists include Hermann Prey, Hildegard Heichele, Benjamin Luxon.
List Price: $29.99
Amazon Price: $26.99
Used Price: $24.81
Customer Review: Very good DVD, Very good delivery!
This DVD was delivered quickly, and in prime condition. I am very glad to own a new copy of this beautifully performed operetta.
Customer Review: Good live performance, fun the first time, but with problems for repeated viewings
SOURCE: Live 1983 performance at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, London. SOUND: Reasonably good stereo. The singing of the soloists is generally well caught, the orchestra and chorus slightly less so. Some dialogue fades occasionally, but that may be due to the performers as much as the sound pick-up. CAST: Gabriel von Eisenstein, a prosperous Viennese gentlemen with a roving eye - Hermann Prey (baritone); Rosalinde, his wife - Tiri Te Kanawa (soprano); Alfred, Rosalinde’s would be lover - Dennis O’Neill (tenor); Adele, Rosalinde’s maid - Hildegarde Heichele (soprano); Dr. Falke, Eisenstein’s good friend but also the victim of one of his practical jokes - Benjamin Luxon (baritone); Frank, Governor of the City Prison - Michael Langdon (baritone); Prince Orlowsky, a jaded and bored visiting aristocrat - Doris Soffel (mezzo-soprano); Dr. Blind, Eisenstein’s lawyer - Paul Crook (tenor); Ida, Adele’s sister - Ingrid Baier (speaker); Frosch, a jailer - Josef Meinrad (speaker). CONDUCTOR: Placido Domingo with the Royal Opera House Orchestra and Chorus, Covent Garden. TEXT: The lyrics are sung in a German not heavily burdened with Viennese lilt. Spoken dialogue veers wildly from one language to another. SETS AND COSTUMES: The Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, is a very large theater with a big stage. The settings are of necessity of large scale. This makes Eisenstein’s residence, which ought to be the well-appointed townhouse of a prosperous but nevertheless middle-class Viennese banker who keeps only a single servant, seem out of scale. The ballroom set for the second act and the jail in the third are serviceable. The costumes are generic, late 19th Century, but attractive and appropriate. STAGE DIRECTION: Overall, the stage blocking is quite traditional, even sensible, leading one to make wild speculations about the director having actually read the libretto before staging the piece, improbable as that seems. The decision to sing in German and speak the dialogue in polyglot form is a questionable one, probably earning, I imagine, about equal quantities of praise and disdain. COMMENTARY: The roots of Johann Strauss II’s “Die Fledermaus” stretch back to an 1851 German farce by Robert Benedix, “Die Gef?ngnis” (”The Prison”). In 1872, that admirable pair of hacks, Meilhac and Hal?vy, cobblers of libretti for both Offenbach and Bizet, converted the old German play into a French vaudeville called “Le r?veillon” (”The Revel” or perhaps “The Christmas Eve Party”). In 1873-4, the French text was re-translated back into German for Strauss to set to music, but with all references to Christmas carefully expunged as a sop to respectable Viennese sensibilities. Oddly enough, the one-time Christmas Eve tale that premiered not far away from Easter in 1874 has taken firm root in Austria and elsewhere as a New Year’s Eve entertainment. If there exists a poor sound recording of “Die Fledermaus,” I have never encountered it. Each major recording has its unique merits and its champions. Choosing the best among them is simply an exercise in expressing personal taste. “Chacun,” as we are wisely advised, “? son go?t.” Unfortunately, the same cannot be said for all the DVD outings of “Die Fledermaus” (and especially not for two recent outright horrors from Salzburg and Glyndebourne, respectively.) Let me now hasten to allay fears by assuring you that this DVD “Fledermaus” is a good one. Many, including the Good Grey Gramophone Magazine, regard it as a very, very good one. The cast is a generally sound one, and everyone (but Heichele) seems to be having an infectiously good time, especially Domingo, conducting in the pit. They are all right, but neither Te Kanawa nor Heichele would be my first choice for Rosalinde and Adele, respectively (nor, indeed, my twenty-first choice, if it came to that.) Hermann Prey is a sprightly Eisenstein, although perhaps a bit too old and stolid-looking to make Eisenstein’s shenanigans entirely convincing. Eisenstein is a low-lying tenor part or a high-flying baritone role. I prefer a character tenor as Eisenstein, especially in Act II where he will be the only tenor voice. Dennis O’Neill sings pretty well as Alfred, here translated into as Alfredo. Benjamin Luxon, oddly enough for an operatic baritone, is adequate singing but notably better in speaking the dialogue. Doris Soffel, is a tall, splendidly epicene figure as Prince Orlowsky. Soffel, a very fine and well-known mezzo-soprano, here sounds very soprano-ish. Had I been given the choice, I’d have cast her as Adele and Heichele, if I had to use her at all, as Orlowsky. While the performance is enjoyable enough the first time through, there are problems that emerge on subsequent viewings. The choice of having characters speak in different languages to one another–Te Kanawa in English to Dr. Falke but in German to Eisenstein and Adele, for instance–gets real tired real fast. The part of Alfred was intended for a Viennese tenor–imagine the young Richard Tauber. Strauss wrote appropriately Viennese music for him. Performance tradition, however, has turned Alfred into a caricature of an Italian tenor, Alfredo, and interpolated all kinds of tags and snatches from Puccini and Verdi. Here, they have gone one step further and made him speak in Italian–hardly the native tongue of a Dennis O’Neill, I fancy. It’s a wearisome conceit. (When they extend the idea to make Eisenstein emulate Wotan when he bids “farewell” to Rosalinde, it’s really just too much!) Even more wearisome is the “gala” in which outside performers offer a mixed bag of turns during Orlowsky’s ball … amusing once, tedious thereafter. Finally, there is the matter of Domingo’s conducting. The Good Grey Gramophone calls it “stiff.” Since the Royal Opera House Orchestra is manifestly not a Viennese band, I’ll give Domingo a pass on that point. On the other hand, he seems to me to be a little over-indulgent on making comedic points at cost to the essential snap and crackle of Strauss’ champagne-soaked score. Compared to the overall enjoyability of the show, my negative comments count as relatively minor. You can certainly do worse–much worse–than acquire this particular version of “Die Fledermaus.” Four stars.

Certified Organic Fenugreek Sprouting Seed: 1/2 Lb. (8 Oz.) of Fenugreek for Sprouts, Planting, Cooking, Hydroponics, Gardening & More: Rich in Chlorophyll & Vitamins. Revered By the Chinese for Hormone Balance & Weight Loss. They Make a Zesty Addition to Sprout Salads.
Fenugreek from the Orient is considered an herb and can also make herb tea that dissolves mucous.Sprouts do the same thing as well as providing other natural enzymes and nutrients. The Fenugreek seed can be sprouted. Fenugreek can also be made into a tea or taken in capsule form and is an herb. The fenugreek side effects include increased testosterone, increased hair growth and milk production for breast feeding mothers other fenugreek side effects include breast enlargement, increased lactation, and weight loss. Fenugreek for Moms: Fenugreek seeds contain hormone precursors that increase milk supply. Fenugreek and Weight loss: Fenugreek contains 40% soluble fiber, and has been linked to reduced blood glucose levels Fenugreek and Hairloss: Fenugreek is thought to work by increasing the dilation of blood vessels to the scalp, thereby improving blood circulation and nutrient supply to this area.
Price: $6.99

Sonic Cat Repeller- Protects Your Garden Habitat & Helps Bring Wildlife Back


Sonic Cat Repeller- Protects Your Garden Habitat & Helps Bring Wildlife Back
PROTECT YOUR GARDEN HABITAT:

There are 9 million cats in the UK. The mammal society says cats kill around 275 million prey items a year, including 55 million birds. Voles and other small mammals make up much of the remainder.

The Sonic Cat Repeller will help protect your garden habitat and encourage wildlife and birds back into it.

Customer Review: it works,but keep at it
As with the other reviewers, cats were a constant problem.The cat repeller worked within a day or so,so I left it in the front garden for about a week so the cats got used to it being there,then I moved it into the rear garden.Now instead of jumping out of bed a number of times every night with my trusty water pistol whenever I heard cats jumping over my fence or gate I could sleep through the night-heaven! But after a couple of weeks I noticed [the evidence was rather obvious!]that cats had discovered that the scarer was no longer in the front,so I had to put it back there again.I now divide it between the front and back gardens ['cos I'm tight and won't buy two!] a couple of weeks in each,and it seems to work OK.My 12year old son can always hear when it’s on,though I can’t,but that can be an advantage if I forget to turn it off during the day and leave it on when there’s a lot of foot traffic in the “cat alarm zone”.I haven’t been able to find rechargable 9v batteries,but if the scarer is placed correctly the batteries last quite a time.I found it better not to place it facing the entrance to the garden as everyone passing by sets it off.[unless you have a solid,reasonably high fence or wall]I place mine near the gate facing the house and garden,so only anyone/thing coming into the garden sets it off.Just keep it out of sight of neighbouring kids or it may disappear!Nothing else kept the persistant cats out-netting,nails+wire in the top the fence,but this is brilliant.It works!

Customer Review: At last a deterrent .(yahoo !!!!!!!)
I’ll keep this short and sweet.These work great at keeping cats away,and cause them no harm.Especially when they stay out of my garden.Not only did I have them doing their dirt in my garden.They would also just wander into my house if I opened the door to let some air in. Even if I was sitting watching tv.Then give me a dirty look when I chased them out.10 out of 10 for these repellers.A tip is to buy rechargable batteries.(bye bye pussycats!)

Just a little add on to the above after couple of weeks use to let any potential buyer know that there are a few dissapointed cats in my area now.Its really turned into a no go zone for them.And contrary to what a couple of people who shouldnt have been allowed to review these would have you think… the cats that have come near are still alive,and so are my kids.Strange eh!



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fucoTHIN is a natural, whole food based supplement that is made with a proprietary concentration of fucoxanthin combined with pomegranate seed oil, for a patent-pending formula that is naturally thermogenic. fucoTHIN has been studied by leading scientists
List Price: $49.95
Amazon Price: $39.99
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The One Garden Tool You MUST Have! Ergonomically designed for lefties and righties alike, this tool reduces wrist and elbow strain, maximizing your gardening time. Many garden tools claim to be multi-purpose, but the CobraHead? truly does just about anything you need it to, from weeding to furrowing, digging to fluffing, de-thatching to designing. High-quality, built to last forever, and friendly to use, it is an all-purpose tool extraordinaire.Made of heat-treated, high carbon steel that is professionally ground to knife-blade sharpness on all sides, the “head” of the blade is super-sharp and indestructible. The ergonomically designed handle, suitable for righties and lefties alike, is composed of recycled plastic and wood fibers. This tool makes those delicate gardening jobs a snap (it is often described as a “steel fingernail” able to root out weeds right next to valuable plants and carve perfect lines in the soil), and also tackles larger chores such as digging trenches, laying furrows for the vegetable g
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The Arnold tire chains are designed for 23-by-9-1/2-inch garden tractor tires. These tire chains fit rear tires on all MTD garden tractors.
List Price: $89.99
Amazon Price: $79.99
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New Mexico Gardener’s Guide, Revised Edition - Park Seed Gardening Books

Landscaping & Gardening Information

Hills and Holes: Not Part of Your Landscaping Design?


Do pests ‘gopher’ your lawn? Chances are, if you have a lawn, you risk
the chance of having pests, such as the gopher and his cousin the mole.
And, perhaps even those pesky six-legged creatures- ants and other
insects- call your grass patches home.

Fertilizers - What you Need to Feed Your Lawn


Just like humans need food, water and shelter to survive, lawns depend
on certain elements to live, sixteen to be exact. Most of these elements
are already found naturally in the environment, but several others need
to be added to your lawn.

Guide to Basic Lawn Mower Maintenance


Trying to start your lawn mower after a long winter can be very
frustrating. Performing a few routine maintenance tasks before you store
your lawn mower for the winter can save you time in the spring, prolong
the life of your lawn mower, and save you money over the long run.

How to Attract Butterfly Activity…


The flittering of the butterfly through your garden is no accident if
you planned your garden carefully. The adult butterfly flitters from
flower to flower - sipping nectar from many flowers in your gardens,
while other adult butterflies search for areas to lay their larvae.

Planning a Water Garden…


A water garden is the area of your landscape that will provide you with
relaxing sounds of the water, while adding to the overall details of
your landscape. The water garden is a project that you must ‘plan’ for
continued success.

A Bit About Bare Root Roses…


Scents from the rose garden filling the air as you walk by..

Garden Room Boundaries…


The areas of your landscape can be divided into several sections and
areas, which are also known as garden rooms. Garden rooms are spaces
where you plant, grow, and display different ideas in gardening in
various creative methods.

Starting a Shade Garden…


The shade garden can be exploding with color and texture. No matter how
much shade is in your landscape, the right flowers, plants, bushes and
bulbs will grow in this area when given a chance.

Choosing Pond Plants


A pond without plants is like cake without icing. Pond plantsfight
algae, give fish a hiding place against predators, andbeautify our own
little slice of paradise to plunk down in at theend of a tiring day.

Hand Feeding your Koi


One of the most rewarding and entertaining things about having aKoi pond
is when your fish finally start eating out of your hand.There is no
better way to learn each fishes’ personality andtemprament than to have
them nuzzle your fingers when they arehungry.

Summer Pond Tips


Low Oxygen levels Kill FishUse an oxygen tester and air stones to keep
your availableoxygen level to at least 7.0 parts per million of
dissolvedoxygen in 90 degree F.

Gardenscape On A Shoestring


Many of us flip through garden magazines, all the while thinking that it
takes years, a professional, or tons of money to landscape the gardens
featured in the glossy pictures. This isn’t necessarily true.

Beauty With Indigenous Species


A garden a serves a man’s every day need for s refreshing and pleasent
experience.We have to appreciate that the garden serves as a home not
only to the trees and plants that appear, but is a home to lots of small
and big creatures of animal kingdom.

Landscaping of Hindu Religious Places


Traditionally Hindu tepmples were located either on hills or forests or
river banks.In ancient times, the temples were constructed in such
locations faraway from human habitations for providing a calm, peaceful
and pleasant environment and also for ensuring a close bond between man
and nature.

How To Choose Water Garden Plants


So. The water garden bug has bitten.

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Welcome to Gardening in New Mexico! Expand your gardening knowledge from season to season. The Gardener’s Guide books provide information on plant characteristics, habits, and basic requirements for growth. Information on the various climatic conditions of your area, general pest control, and landscape tips aid you in creating a beautiful and successful garden. A Gardner’s Guide Book is available for each state. Published by Cool Springs Press.
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List Price: $19.98
Used Price: $3.10
Customer Review: Big Letdown
I love gospel music and ordered this video expecting gospel music. I got more preaching and testifying than music. I didn’t send the tape back because by the time I paid shipping it just wasn’t worth the effort. I donated the tape to a religious organization. I will be extra careful when ordering gospel music again.
Customer Review: Inspirational and invigorating
I have watched this video several times and I love it. I am sending gift copies to family members. I am also sharing it with my pastor.
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*(OXO International-16043-Bypass Hand Shears)* - Small hand pruners feature hardened steel cutting blade with nonstick coating. Soft, comfortable, nonslip grips with easy-to-use locking switch that is easily accessible for right or left hand user. Weight: 10 oz. Cutting capacity: 3/4″ diameter.
List Price: $16.99
Amazon Price: $14.99
Customer Review: Excellent Value
Great value for the price. Nice, sharp blades and comfortable in your hand. Easily as good as those twice the price sold in home stores, assuming they last.
Customer Review: NOT up to OXO standards, took over 2 mos to arrive
Correct about poor alignment. I’ve worked with these for a week, cutting shrubs, flowers, simple plants and I can’t lock them anymore. The handle is good on the hand, but they don’t do the job I expected of Oxo or even a medium brand. They hang up on wet bush branches, okay for geraniums or roses, but not for trimming back bushes. They are a disappointment. AND they took literally months to arrive!
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A lyrical, controversial recreation of the story of The Passion, which examines the role of the Church in the persecution of homosexuality.
List Price: $14.98
Used Price: $2.98
Customer Review: Jarman’s greatest…
This is my favorite Jarman film. I’ve seen it many times, and it gets more profound every time I see it. This film and The Last of England are Jarman’s two greatest films. Jarman weaves his own personal, incredibly lyrical tapestry while shooting in 8mm, 16mm, video, and 35mm, and editing it into an amazing film. The film is essentially the Passion, except Christ is replaced with a gay couple. It is not told in a narrative sense, but in a meaningful, artistic way. It’s Jarman’s greatest film. Despite the subject matter here, this film (and Jarman’s other work) are not strictly for gay audiences. I’m straight, and I really love Derek’s work. I believe Jarman to be the most underrated filmmaker in British history. He usually gets identified as “alternative, gay filmmaker”, but he’s so much more than that. I hope this film will be released on DVD soon.
Customer Review: Tribute to Jarman
“The Garden” is the only (but not last) film I saw by the late gay British director Derek Jarman. I was impressed. Sex and religion, so I’ve read, seem to be a recurrent theme in Jarman’s work. I’m not gonna brag to much about the “daring” portrayal of homosexuality, although this film clearly sought to make a (subtle) statement. To me it was refreshing, sensual, and at some point quite erotic. I myself am not gay, but Jarman’s experimental touch poses a unabashed alternative to the recent “gay movies” coming out of Hollywood.
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landscaping tip

The landscaping tip of all time

There is many a landscaping tip out there to satisfy even the most desperate of landscapers or would be landscapers and you can find hundreds of them online. But in all of my years as a landscape artist I have come to the conclusion that while there are many different landscaping tips only a few are universal and there is a good chance that only one landscaping tip will do you any good. The landscaping tip that you need the most will be different than the one I needed because each project is different, so take your time and learn about as many landscaping tips as you can before you start your project.

The landscaping tip that everyone can learn from is to always make your yard one that will look great at any time of the year. This can be tricky because in the middle of winter many things do not look so hot. This is why it is so important to learn about the kinds of plants and trees that will still bring beauty to your home in the depth or winter and in the summer heat.

To find the plants that will make this landscaping tip work will require you to do a little more work. You will have to find out what plants will thrive in your climate all year round. Of course some will do better during certain months but you need to always have something going on that is attractive in your yard. The best place for you to find out the best plants for this landscaping tip is your local garden center. They are the experts and they should be able to answer all of your questions about what your choices in plants and trees should be. If this does not work for you then take a trip to the library and check out some books on local flowers and trees. These can be gold when you are trying to choose just the right things for your yard.

Another good landscaping tip is to layer all of your planting beds. This will bring a sense of unity and balance to your entire yard. To get this particular landscaping tip working at its best you should also use repetition in this design. Have these layers repeated throughout the yard and it will look that much better to those walking by.

Japanese Gardening

Japanese gardening is a cultural form of gardening that is meant to produce a scene that mimics nature as much as possible by using trees, shrubs, rocks, sand, artificial hills, ponds, and flowing water as art-forms.  The Zen and Shinto traditions are both a large part of Japanese gardening and, because of this; the gardens have a contemplative and reflective state of mind.  Japanese gardening is much different than the Western style and most would say it is far more meditational and soul soothing.

In Japanese gardening there are three basic methods for scenery.  The first of these is reduced scale.  Reduced scale is the art of taking an actual scene from nature, mountains, rivers, trees, and all, and reproducing it on a smaller scale.   Symbolization involves generalization and abstraction.  An example of this would be using white sand to suggest the ocean.  Borrowed views refers to artists that would use something like an ocean a forest as a background, but it would end up becoming an important part of the scene.

There are essentially two types of Japanese gardening: tsukiyami, which is a hill garden and mainly composed of hills and ponds.  The other is hiraniwa, which is basically the exact opposite of tsukiyami: a flat garden without any hills or ponds.

The basic elements used in Japanese gardening include rocks, gravel, water, moss, stones, fences, and hedges.  Rocks are most often used as centerpieces and bring a presence of spirituality to the garden.  According to the Shinto tradition rocks embody the spirits of nature.  Gravel is used as a sort of defining surface and is used to imitate the flow of water when arranged properly.  Stones are used to create a boundary and are sculpted into the form of lanterns.  Water, whether it be in the form of a pond, stream, or waterfall, is an essential part of a Japanese garden.  It can be in the actual form of water or portrayed by gravel, but no matter what form water is in, it is crucial to a Japanese gardens balance.

There are several forms and types of plants that are signature of Japanese gardening, the main one being Bonsai.  Bonsai is the art of training everyday, average plants, such as Pine, Cypress, Holly, Cedar, Cherry, Maple, and Beech, to look like large, old trees just in miniature form.  These trees range from five centimeters to one meter and are kept small by pruning, re-potting, pinching of growth, and wiring the branches.

Japanese gardening is a tradition that has crossed the Muso Soseki, poet, said “Gardens are a root of transformation”.  A Japanese garden is sure to bring about many different feelings and is definitely a transforming experience.

The 11th Hour The Sequel to 7th Guest

Discount Patio Furniture - An Easy Way to Get the Best


Buying discount patio furniture is an economical way to obtain quality
furniture for your patio. Many department stores offer patio furniture
at discounted prices towards or at the end of the summer season.

Patio Design - Expanding Your Home Outdoors


A patio can be just like another room in your house. Effective patio
design can mean that your increase the floor space of your home, by
adding an outside room that allows you to entertain like never before.

Daphnes for Scent and Colour


Anyone with even a passing knowledge of plants knows that daphnes have
wonderfully fragrant flowers. And because some of them - usually the
most scented - flower in winter, they’re the sort of must-have plants
that are usually among the first planted in any new garden.

Can Your Sundial Really Tell The Time?


“I am a sundial, and I make a botch Of what is done far better by a
watch”So wrote Hilaire Belloc, but is this really fair? Sundials are the
earliest known form of time-keeping having been used for some five
thousand years. The Greek historian Herodotus stated that sundials were
first used by the Chaldeans and Sumerians in Babylonia which was part of
the modern Iraq.

Science Cant Explain Everything!


You will know that if you have spent at least some time reflecting on
the world around you, some things cannot be explained in purely
scientific terms. Armies of scientists and researchers swarm in labs
around the world trying to take the mystery out of every bit of wonder
we witness.

No Dig Gardens - How to Build One


The no dig garden is exactly what it describes..

Starting Seedlings Indoors


Unless you have access to a greenhouse, or something like it, those
living in cooler climates will have to start seedlings indoors if they
are to take full advantage of their growing season.Here are some
gardening tips to starting seedlings indoors.

Composting - aka: The Circle of Life!


Composting is where the gardening thing comes full circle. You’ve
created your garden bed, you’ve nurtured your plants.

Growing Vegetables in Containers - The Compact Solution


Container vegetable gardens are a great alternative for those that don’t
have access to backyards. There can be a range of reasons to grow your
vegetables in containers.

Cat Repellent or How to Keep Cats Out of Your Garden


Do cat repellents work? How to stop a cat from using garden as litterbox?
Tell me how to keep cats out of my garden. These are common questions of
concern to all gardeners but is there a real answer?The first line of
defence is to ensure that your yard boundaries are secure.

Grow Herbs in your Garden for Pleasure and Profit


Herbs can add a touch of magic to your garden with their supernatural
associations and practical uses.Records show that herbs were in use in
ancient Greece where they were valued as flavorings and for their
fragrance.

Wildflower Seeds - Ten Reasons Why You Should Plant…


Native wildflowers are those that were growing naturally in the
landscape before the first settlers arrived from Europe. Ever since that
time more and more plants have been introduced from around the world
with very mixed results.

How to Build a Waterfall For Your Garden Pond


Building a waterfall is easier than you think and will add a new
dimension to your pool.When building a waterfall, as with any garden
project, you must first consider the design and make a plan.

Orchids Plus More Newsletter - December, 2004


Newsletter Name Change?After several of you made suggestions to me to
shorten the name of the newsletter we have decided that it may be a good
idea. But first I’d like some suggestions from you, our readers.

Understanding Weeds - But mostly How to Kill em


When I was a child, I loved to pick Dandelions. The pretty yellow
flowers were small, colorful, and looked nice tucked behind my ear!
However, if one had popped up in the front yard, my hair accessory would
have been considered an atrocity!I often feel sorry for weeds.

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Used Price: $6.78
Customer Review: Great game, not worthy of a “Sequel”
Well if you read my 7th Guest review, you would know the story about when my sister got the game and how it was cool but scary. Well a year or two later (dont remember when THIS game came out), my sister picked up this game since she loved the original game “7th Guest”. Well since I was scared of 7th Guest when I was little I was thinking “Great another game that’s going to make me crap myself” (I was around 6-7 at the time when this game came out). Well I saw her play it and it’s not a freaky and it’s not as cool. My sis let me borrow it and the patch over the summer and I beat it, here’s the review. Story: Well the story for 7th Guest was about how 6 guests went into Henry Stauf’s mansion and never came out. Well this one isn’t as cool. You play as Carl Denning who one day receives this “gamebook” and finds out his girlfriend who is a reporter has been locked into the Stauf Mansion. So you go in there and figure out what’s going on. (7/10) Gameplay: Exactly the same as 7th Guest, go around solve puzzles, except there’s one or two twists. You also have to go around and solve these riddles which are EXTREMELY hard and don’t make sense. Also I’d like to add that this game is harder than 7th Guest, this game makes 7th Guest look like a Mathblaster game, no offense. (8/10) Sound: Well the music is somewhat the same as 7th Guest, they have an eerie feeling and they freak you out. Some have upbeat tempos and some are just freaky. Some of the music is the same so you have to give props to that. Again the music sets the scene. (10/10) Graphics: This is my favorite part of the review for this game…the Graphics. The thing I really like about this game is that it’s the same graphics, nothing has changed. The really cool thing about this game is that your in the same EXACT mansion, everything looks the same except older. The only thing I didn’t like about this game compared to 7th Guest was that the real actors in this game weren’t actually in the mansion when shown like 7th Guest, it shows them as in a movie where they are in a real place and not a cartoony mansion. But a couple times they are like at the end of the game. (9/10) Outro: This game is cool and anyone who loved the 7th Guest should get this game. It’s definately not as cool as 7th Guest but it’s still worthy of a play. My sister let me borror with the patch a while ago and i’m probably going to buy it sometime soon so I can beat it again. I would say pick this game up if it’s $20 or less new or used, you might also want to buy a strategy guide for this one cause it’s harder but that’s up to you, I personally had no problem. I would also like to add that this game isn’t as freaky as 7th Guest but still fun to play.
Customer Review: Too Convoluted
I greatly enjoyed the 7th Guest. Its sequel, The 11th Hour, is not bad, but it’s not very good either. On the plus side, the graphics and the music are just as creepy and cool. On the minus side, the plot is just too stupid, and the extra puzzle elements make the game too convoluted. In the 7th guest, the plot (although not the greatest) was creepy and entertaining, and held the game together. In the 11th hour, there are some elements that are so unbelievable even horror, mystery and intrigue can’t account for them (example: somebody gets raped by a house: THAT’S JUST DUMB). The actual gameplay is also unecessarily convoluted. In the 7th Guest, you solved the puzzles to open more doors, where you could solve more, and open more, until you’ve been able to solve the puzzle that will take you to the end of the game. The plot elements emerged around the house as a natural part of this process. In the 11th Hour, there are actually two different goals: you have to play the word-clue puzzles to unravel the plot, but you have to play Stauf’s puzzles in the House to open doors and get to where you need to go. Perhaps this was an attempt to make sure the plot was revealed “sequentially.” In any case, it makes the game less enjoyable, with the word-clues seeming kind of like nagging errands which distract you from the meat of the game. Final verdict? Play it if you have the chance to borrow it from af friend, or if you have a buddy you can play it with. But don’t pay money for it.
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Kiri Te Kanawa is featured in this glittering Covent Garden Opera production of Johann Strauss’ masterpiece. Placido Domingo conducts the Royal Opera House Orchestra and Chorus. Other soloists include Hermann Prey, Hildegard Heichele, Benjamin Luxon.
List Price: $29.99
Amazon Price: $26.99
Used Price: $24.81
Customer Review: Very good DVD, Very good delivery!
This DVD was delivered quickly, and in prime condition. I am very glad to own a new copy of this beautifully performed operetta.
Customer Review: Good live performance, fun the first time, but with problems for repeated viewings
SOURCE: Live 1983 performance at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, London. SOUND: Reasonably good stereo. The singing of the soloists is generally well caught, the orchestra and chorus slightly less so. Some dialogue fades occasionally, but that may be due to the performers as much as the sound pick-up. CAST: Gabriel von Eisenstein, a prosperous Viennese gentlemen with a roving eye - Hermann Prey (baritone); Rosalinde, his wife - Tiri Te Kanawa (soprano); Alfred, Rosalinde’s would be lover - Dennis O’Neill (tenor); Adele, Rosalinde’s maid - Hildegarde Heichele (soprano); Dr. Falke, Eisenstein’s good friend but also the victim of one of his practical jokes - Benjamin Luxon (baritone); Frank, Governor of the City Prison - Michael Langdon (baritone); Prince Orlowsky, a jaded and bored visiting aristocrat - Doris Soffel (mezzo-soprano); Dr. Blind, Eisenstein’s lawyer - Paul Crook (tenor); Ida, Adele’s sister - Ingrid Baier (speaker); Frosch, a jailer - Josef Meinrad (speaker). CONDUCTOR: Placido Domingo with the Royal Opera House Orchestra and Chorus, Covent Garden. TEXT: The lyrics are sung in a German not heavily burdened with Viennese lilt. Spoken dialogue veers wildly from one language to another. SETS AND COSTUMES: The Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, is a very large theater with a big stage. The settings are of necessity of large scale. This makes Eisenstein’s residence, which ought to be the well-appointed townhouse of a prosperous but nevertheless middle-class Viennese banker who keeps only a single servant, seem out of scale. The ballroom set for the second act and the jail in the third are serviceable. The costumes are generic, late 19th Century, but attractive and appropriate. STAGE DIRECTION: Overall, the stage blocking is quite traditional, even sensible, leading one to make wild speculations about the director having actually read the libretto before staging the piece, improbable as that seems. The decision to sing in German and speak the dialogue in polyglot form is a questionable one, probably earning, I imagine, about equal quantities of praise and disdain. COMMENTARY: The roots of Johann Strauss II’s “Die Fledermaus” stretch back to an 1851 German farce by Robert Benedix, “Die Gef?ngnis” (”The Prison”). In 1872, that admirable pair of hacks, Meilhac and Hal?vy, cobblers of libretti for both Offenbach and Bizet, converted the old German play into a French vaudeville called “Le r?veillon” (”The Revel” or perhaps “The Christmas Eve Party”). In 1873-4, the French text was re-translated back into German for Strauss to set to music, but with all references to Christmas carefully expunged as a sop to respectable Viennese sensibilities. Oddly enough, the one-time Christmas Eve tale that premiered not far away from Easter in 1874 has taken firm root in Austria and elsewhere as a New Year’s Eve entertainment. If there exists a poor sound recording of “Die Fledermaus,” I have never encountered it. Each major recording has its unique merits and its champions. Choosing the best among them is simply an exercise in expressing personal taste. “Chacun,” as we are wisely advised, “? son go?t.” Unfortunately, the same cannot be said for all the DVD outings of “Die Fledermaus” (and especially not for two recent outright horrors from Salzburg and Glyndebourne, respectively.) Let me now hasten to allay fears by assuring you that this DVD “Fledermaus” is a good one. Many, including the Good Grey Gramophone Magazine, regard it as a very, very good one. The cast is a generally sound one, and everyone (but Heichele) seems to be having an infectiously good time, especially Domingo, conducting in the pit. They are all right, but neither Te Kanawa nor Heichele would be my first choice for Rosalinde and Adele, respectively (nor, indeed, my twenty-first choice, if it came to that.) Hermann Prey is a sprightly Eisenstein, although perhaps a bit too old and stolid-looking to make Eisenstein’s shenanigans entirely convincing. Eisenstein is a low-lying tenor part or a high-flying baritone role. I prefer a character tenor as Eisenstein, especially in Act II where he will be the only tenor voice. Dennis O’Neill sings pretty well as Alfred, here translated into as Alfredo. Benjamin Luxon, oddly enough for an operatic baritone, is adequate singing but notably better in speaking the dialogue. Doris Soffel, is a tall, splendidly epicene figure as Prince Orlowsky. Soffel, a very fine and well-known mezzo-soprano, here sounds very soprano-ish. Had I been given the choice, I’d have cast her as Adele and Heichele, if I had to use her at all, as Orlowsky. While the performance is enjoyable enough the first time through, there are problems that emerge on subsequent viewings. The choice of having characters speak in different languages to one another–Te Kanawa in English to Dr. Falke but in German to Eisenstein and Adele, for instance–gets real tired real fast. The part of Alfred was intended for a Viennese tenor–imagine the young Richard Tauber. Strauss wrote appropriately Viennese music for him. Performance tradition, however, has turned Alfred into a caricature of an Italian tenor, Alfredo, and interpolated all kinds of tags and snatches from Puccini and Verdi. Here, they have gone one step further and made him speak in Italian–hardly the native tongue of a Dennis O’Neill, I fancy. It’s a wearisome conceit. (When they extend the idea to make Eisenstein emulate Wotan when he bids “farewell” to Rosalinde, it’s really just too much!) Even more wearisome is the “gala” in which outside performers offer a mixed bag of turns during Orlowsky’s ball … amusing once, tedious thereafter. Finally, there is the matter of Domingo’s conducting. The Good Grey Gramophone calls it “stiff.” Since the Royal Opera House Orchestra is manifestly not a Viennese band, I’ll give Domingo a pass on that point. On the other hand, he seems to me to be a little over-indulgent on making comedic points at cost to the essential snap and crackle of Strauss’ champagne-soaked score. Compared to the overall enjoyability of the show, my negative comments count as relatively minor. You can certainly do worse–much worse–than acquire this particular version of “Die Fledermaus.” Four stars.
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Whether prospecting for gold or seeking rare coins on the beach, the avid treasure hunter can make good use of these full-stereo headphones. Compatible with all Bounty Hunter metal detector models, the headphones utilize a 1/4-inch stereo plug, feature individual volume controls for left and right sides, and can help extend metal detector battery life. Padded for comfort, the headphones measure 8 by 8 by 4 inches. –Ann Bieri
List Price: $29.99
Amazon Price: $23.96
Customer Review: Order Cancelled without any explanation.
I ordered these in combination with a metal detector for Christmas and now that Christmas is here, the order cancelled without an explanation. I have no idea as to the quality of the headphones, but there appears to be a problem with supply and distribution which will make me look elsewhere!
Customer Review: Recommended
Ordered this product to go with the Bounty Hunter Fast Tracker Metal Detector. If you don’t want to disturb the neighbors when searching for treasures in your back yard, this is the product for you.
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What to Do Each Month to Have a Beautiful Garden All Year. Take the guesswork out of gardening. The Month-by-Month Gardening Guides offer valuable advice on the proper timing of garden maintenance for each month. Use of the guide will take the fear and guesswork out of gardening, as well as provide an achievable plan for gardening success for beginners and experienced gardeners alike. A Month-by-Month Gardening Guide is available for each state or region.Published by Cool Springs Press.
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Infrared 1.3W Wall Mounted Garden Heater


Infrared 1.3W Wall Mounted Garden Heater
IP44 rated weatherproof casing for full outdoor use . Simple to fix & install with pre-drilled holes for fixing on walls.
Mains powered 220-240V 50H. Carry handle for easy fixing and portability. Insulation class 1. Lamp holder r7S.

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WIRELESS GARDEN SCB03 Cantenna Wireless Network Booster
Extend the range of your WiFi wireless network or connect to other networks in your neighborhood. Easily connects to your wireless router, access point or home computer with the integrated RF cable.
Price: $64.58
Customer Review: don’t waste your money
This is a piece of junk. Poor quality materials and poor construction. Very thin metal, cheap coax. Tripod won’t lock in position. Compared to D-Link DWL-M60AT signal strength is about the same although the SC803 is supposed to have higher gain. Buy from a reputable vendor such as D-Link or Hawking.

Blitz 5 Gallon Steel Gas Can #11010
5 Gallon, Industrial Metal Gasoline Can, Corrosion Resistant 20 Gauge Steel, Interior Coating Prevents Rust, Complies WithUnited Nations Regulations, National Fire Protection Association, NFPA 30&Meets Military Specifications MiL-C-1283, Spill Proof, Not-CARB Compliant, Not For Sale In CA, CT, DC, DE, MD, ME, NJ, NY, PA, TX&5 Northern Counties Of VA.
Price: $43.99
Customer Review: tough as nails and no leaks like its plastic cousin
the only problem i have had is the finish comes off too easy they could improve that and make it just a little more dent proof
Customer Review: Blitz gas cans
I have three of these cans that I bought during the Hurrican Katrina evacuation and they work flawlessly. For those who are commenting about leaks, it is probably due to your lack of using the rubber o-ring that comes with the can. Use the o-ring and nothing leaks. These are a keeper! Warren

Bionic Gardening Gloves - Men’s XXL
Designed by a world reknown hand surgeon, “Dr. Jim” [Kleinert], the Bionic Glove’s patented and patent pending features bring anatomy and hand function to the forefront of glove design. improving comfort without interfering with hand motion. Now carries the Arthritis Foundation Ease-of-Use Commendation! Protect your hands while enhancing dexterity!
Price: $40.00

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