Positively Balanced Five Videos

Videos by Positively Balanced Five. Health and Wellness for the earth and ALL of its inhabitants.

Other Positively Balanced Five videos

Yesterday’s walk

Dixie hears us singing happy birthday and runs in to open presents. One of her favorite things to do is open presents. 🤣

Just start, take small definitive steps and you’ll get there.

Love my neighborhood these people aren’t messing around!! Hope they have solar

A Wethersfield resident who has been doing this for at least 20 years now. Clark Griswold has nothing over this guy. I’ve got to imagine neighbors who sell their homes have to have a “clause” 🎅 in their sales agreement 😆 stating this is a Christmas event every year.

Crowxtravaganza

Pesticides are no joke...toxic for years after, immediately toxic to anyone around it, and then too it ends up in your home. read on. Credit to Washington Post. What's more, there is no scientific standard for how long one should stay off a lawn after it is treated. Many companies that use these chemicals warn that people should stay away from sprayed surfaces for six to 24 hours. Yet a 2013 study examining the levels of lawn pesticides in the urine of dogs found that herbicides persisted on lawn surfaces for at least 48 hours after spraying. "If you're trying to get rid of the bulk of the exposure, you want to be off of [a treated area] for at least two days, and I would say more like three," Ginsberg says. It is not just direct exposure to sprayed areas that presents a concern. "There's some inevitable transfer into the home or the neighbor's home from the use on the lawn," Ginsberg says. Some pesticides waft in through vents and windows during and after spraying; people and dogs also track residue inside. A 2001 study found that a week after lawn treatment, 2,4-D could be detected on all indoor air surfaces, including tabletops and windowsills. The team estimated that indoor exposure to 2,4-D for young children was about 10 times higher during the week after lawn application than it was in the week before the lawn was treated.

Throwback Thursday of my Dixie girl

She saw me pick up the toy once and bounce it to get the treat out and she’s been doing it ever since.

Every changing environment
The backyard after last nights monsoon. I meant to take video of the crazy winds this morning when Dixie‘s daddy was dropping her off. Simply insane.

Hopefully not a big deal as the firemen and women don’t seem to be rushing to the scene and then I noticed how crazy the sky looked so there’s that

The holidays, as EVERY day, should be about spending time with each other and learning how to love all the quirks within each and everyone of us and learning how to accept people as they are because we are all beautiful in our own ways. Be well and happy this holiday season lovely people!! Bring joy and peace!

Tater tester

Sometimes it takes a village and a village of many you may not even know.