Home Improvement and How to Manage the Debris

Published: 12th November 2011
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Independent homeowners who have some carpentry skills have boundless enthusiasm starting a project but soon realize that they are knee-deep in leftover materials so they need something to put it in and a way to clear the junk from the property. The renovations could include enhanced security features with attention going to door locks, fencing, CCTV platforms, and stoage area locks. During this period of a world economic downturn many forecasters are urging people to concentrate their home improvement efforts on home security and storing things like dehydrated food supplies. Economic and social forecasting companies such as The Trends Research Institute. Publisher Gerald Celente of the Trends Journal says "the Great Depression is underway" and homes will have to contend with hungry people trying to steal food, so security of the home is more important than ever before.

The bursting of the mortgage bubble in the U.S. in 2008 took that possibility away when homes lost their value either directly or indirectly when foreclosures swept the nation. Even if your house was in good shape there were several boarded-up homes in the neighborhood that would automatically make your house lose value simply by having a less attractive location. That hasn't been the case in Canada so far but economic disasters south of the border will have echoes across the world eventually. This gives all the more reason to keep the home in top shape.


In the 1950s the home improvement market was booming with the popularity of basement or backyard bomb shelters; even lower middle class families were stocking can of food under the stairs in the basement where they could huddle in some safety, not realizing that the atom bombs of the day were set to explode above the ground; their house would collapse down to crush them instantly should World War III break out. There would, however be plenty of time to hear the warning on the radio because airplanes were the nuclear delivery system of the 1950s in the good old days before ICBMs.

Upon further research there seems to be a faint ray of property value hope in the radioactive mist of our tense planet. It is certainly worth spending time on a home improvement project if it provides future value and present security. There may not be a nuclear Armageddon after all: there were two military reports concerning exercises using dummy warheads in missile-firing maneuvers where UFOs appeared and shot energy rays that knocked out the fake warheads. Perhaps the hundreds of thousands of UFO sightings mean that there's something on Earth that they want - minerals, elements, even water. This would give aliens a reason to stop Earthlings from wiping out the planet. The notion may sound crazy but the military knows far more about extraterrestrials than they let on. (At one time I would have said the idea of UFOs was ridiculous until I saw four flying saucers in British Columbia.)


Let's assume that building a bomb shelter is impractical for limited budgets. The next priority is beautification of the home. Armed only with a toolbox and a pickup truck full of materials, the home improvement amateur can get the saw and hammer warmed up to build a new room or redo the kitchen. The bits of wood and piles of sawdust get noticeable so it's time to call a trash bin rental company for a container. On a job of any substantial size the company will provide dumpster rental so that the junk bin can stay on the property until it's full or until the project is over and the junk removal company comes to retrieve the dumpster containing the fallout from your atomic effort to make your home the best in the neighborhood.

SEO consultant Pat Boardman writes this in respect to the junk removal company JUNKchasers who provide dumpster rental services for residences and businesses in the area around London Ontario including Kitchener, Waterloo, Stratford, Cambridge, St. Thomas, Brantford, and Woodstock Ontario.

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Source: http://patboardman.articlealley.com/home-improvement-and-how-to-manage-the-debris-2387163.html


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