Monday, September 26, 2011

Well i wanted to let everyone know my business is underway and we are having a grand opening right now. We are selling our Professor tech shirt. It is a soft launch but i am excited about it. The company is called Anser  they specialize in performance outdoor apparel and Aerogel insulated outdoor clothing and gear. use coupon code GrandOpening to receive 22% off right now. www.ansergear.com go here.

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

This looks like a great show.

The Germans look so hard to beat! I hope they show this at Iggys so i can watch it. 

Sunday, September 18, 2011

Some people might say...

Some people might say i don't put enough of my own content on the internet. Well today this is for you. Her are a few photos from my summer. We spend some time gardening and we where pretty excited about our harvest this year. The bottom photo is of me and my nephew Gage on little blue four wheeler. That is the exact same four wheeler i would buzz around on as a kid. I can still remember being the age and getting around on that thing. Its surprising how fast you grow up.  Good times glad we kept the four wheeler for all those years so Gage can enjoy it. 




Saturday, September 17, 2011

Well they really do exist

I have had this idea on the back of my mind for years! Glad to see people are using it. check it out


Dish draining closet

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A dish draining closet.
The dish draining closet is a Finnish invention by Maiju Gebhard, intended to speed up the drying up of washed dishes, or even to make the entire drying phase unnecessary. It was developed in the Finnish Association for Work Efficiency from 1944 to 1945. The Finnish Invention Foundation has named it as one of the most important Finnish inventions of the millennium. Despite its advantages, the dish draining closet is not very popular outside Finland and has mostly remained a Finnish speciality. There are some dish draining closets in use in SwedenSpainItaly,[1] PolandRussiaSouth KoreaLithuaniaLatvia and Estonia.
The inspiration for the dish draining closet was a Swedish dish draining holder, which was kept on a table. Gebhard noticed that most families never used the holder, but instead dried the washed dishes by hand and moved them directly to the storage closet or cupboard. Gebhard's idea was to put the dish draining holder in the closet above the dish washing table (sideboard or counter top), so the dishes could drain dry in place. This way, an entire phase of normal household upkeep could be skipped. According to Gebhard's calculations, the average housewife spent almost 30 thousand hours of her life washing and drying dishes.[2]
Enso-Gutzeit started producing dish draining closets in 1948. Since 1954, dish draining closets were made of plastic-coated steel wire to help keep them clean. The measurements for the closets were standardised in 1982.
The cabinets have an open bottom that allows for the water to drain directly into the sink below.




http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dish_draining_closet