Wednesday, December 16, 2015

Home Automation for the Holidays

Bing Crosby sings about a happy holiday season with white snow falling and people happily shopping for presents, but the truth is when it begins to look a lot like Christmas stress levels can hit an all time high. Shopping, decorating, preparing for family visits, cooking, cleaning; the list seems to go on and on. In order to remove some items from your to-do list this season we put together a list of 7 holiday IFTTT (“if this then that”) recipes that let home automation do some of the work for you this year.

Set up these 7 holiday recipes, pour yourself a glass of eggnog, relax by the fire and let your smart home do the work this season. Maybe, just maybe, this year will feel a bit more like those Bing Crosby songs.

1. Turn on your holiday lights at sunset
Don’t worry about having to turn on your holiday lights every evening - now you can come home to a lit up house every evening.

2. Turn off your holiday lights at 1am
Save some energy and head to bed knowing your holiday lights will turn off for you every night.

3. Keep your inflatable decorations from flying away
When the wind goes above 10 mph this recipe will turn off your inflatable decorations to keep them from turning into balloons.

4. Celebrate Christmas day with Red & Green Lights
Make sure everyone knows it’s Christmas day by automatically turning your hue lights red and green.

5. Get in the holiday spirit with a festive phone wallpaper
On Christmas Day let everyone know you’re in the holiday spirit with a Christmas wallpaper on your phone.

6. Make sure your tree lights are turned off when you leave
Every time you leave the house this recipe will ensure that the lights on your tree have been turned off.

7. Wish a Merry Christmas to all your friends
Be the first of your friends to post a holiday message to your Facebook page with this recipe.

Wednesday, December 9, 2015

How To Water Your Christmas Tree (aka, don’t make your tree experience a drought)



Christmas is the most wonderful time of the year, or so a song has told me. And nothing says Christmas like a beautifully decorated tree. When I was a youngster my family believed in using a fake tree. It was a sad little tree, relegated to spending most of its life folded up in a box. Then a Christmas miracle occurred one year, my Dad decided no more, and he bought a live tree. This truly was a seminal moment of my childhood.

Of course, with a live tree comes some steps for preservation. If not followed, your tree will begin to resemble something out of a Charlie Brown Christmas Special. What is the magical tree elixir from the Gods? It is quite simple: clean water. If you do this, a well cared for tree should last for 3-4 weeks.

Here are just a few Christmas tree Do’s and Dont’s for any non-Scrooge to follow.

Do

Cut the tree down yourself if possible.

Not only will channeling your inner Paul Bunyan impress your wife and kids, you will know when it was cut, and how it looked when cut.

Use a tree stand with a water basin.

The rule of thumb is that a tree needs 1 quart of water per inch of stem. Therefore, a 4-inch stem needs to be in a gallon of water. Less than that, and you run the risk of the tree running out of water. This could make the tree unhappy, which might result in your tree taking itself and your presents over to the Jones's house. They have a top of the line tree stand with a 1-gallon water basin.

Put your tree into water within 6-8 hours of cutting.

After you keep up with the Jones and get that deluxe water basin, it’s imperative that the tree is placed into it within 8 hours. Once cut, the sap at the tree base will start to crystalize and make it impossible for the tree to take up water, which happens after about 8 hours.

Ensure your tree has water at all times.

When you wake up after having a few eggnog drinks at your office party you’re probably a little parched. A tree is no different, except for maybe the eggnog it needs to quench its thirst. Remember a Christmas tree is just as important to the season as Santa, so make sure your green friend has plenty to drink.

Recut the base if not freshly cut within the past 12 hours.

If you weren’t the one who cut the tree down make sure you ask Mearl at the lot when it was cut. If Mearl can’t remember, or you do not speak lumberjack, then cutting a 1/4” section from the base perpendicular to the trunk - no diagonal cuts - will allow the tree to absorb water again.

Keep your tree away from heat sources.

Nothing says Christmas cheer like a five-alarm fire at your house. But seriously, heat will dry out your tree, so keep it a safe distance from the fireplace.

Don't

Don’t drill a hole into the base of your tree.

This is often referred to as the IV method. Don’t try to further evolution. Trees have got the water intake process down. This doesn't help your tree.

Don’t spray your tree with antitranspirants.

Antitranspirants are just like antiperspirants, they attempt to prevent water loss. A plant can lose moisture just as fast as Santa when he is under all of those bright lights in the mall. However, they don't work on cut trees and they can make the leaves dry out faster.

Don’t add water-holding gels to your water basin.

Once again clean water is important. Not water that contains some strange gel made from who knows what, and who knows where. You don’t want your tree to sprout a second trunk because of the chemicals in the gel. Next thing you know the tree is alive and talking about moving in with your family once the holiday is over.

Don’t spray flame retardants on your tree.

In an ironic twist of fate that no one saw coming, flame retardants dry your tree out, making it a greater fire hazard.

Don’t whittle the sides of the trunk to make it fit.

The sides of the tree are the most efficient water uptake areas of a tree base. Would you like it if someone tried to whittle you down so you could fit into that ugly Christmas sweater?

Don't worry about the temperature of the water in the base.

I get it. No one wants to spend all day with their feet in cold water. I assure you 100% that your Christmas tree will not care about the temperature of the water. The only thing your tree will be concerned with is the simple fact that there is water.