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Sunday, January 27, 2019

Why I’ve turned my house into a home for rescued plants | Eva Wiseman

I like to feel that I’m rescuing them, but maybe it’s the other way around

There’s a greenhouse at the back of my local garden centre where they keep the big houseplants and each one is carefully labelled: “Plant”. I buy one at a time to avoid ongoing domestic dispute and they collect greenly in my house under varying levels of care. Varying levels of care, but infinite love, love I learned from my parents’ relationship with a plant that lives at the top of their stairs which they call the “moon flower”. I’ve identified it online as a night-blooming cereus – further, an Epiphyllum oxypetalum, and my sister and I receive texts alerting us to news of an opening bud. My parents will have woken to a smell, sickly but good, like someone’s caramelising a memory, and they will tell us to be round at dusk. Because then we can stand on the stairs and watch it open, actually watch the petals creak open, until it is there basking in the moonlight, that smell now quite raw and conquering. By morning the flower will have died, and hang from a leaf like a washed up squid.

When I moved house, my dad gave me a cutting, which now stands dwarfed by a giant version I found in the garden centre bin. But much as I love the garden centre with its jolly disregard for potted things, my preferred way to acquire new plants is via adoption. It’s a similar feeling I get on my weekly tour of the local charity shops – the cancer one is good for books, the hospice one is better for furniture, and the one raising funds for sick children is excellent for pottery.

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from Home And Garden | The Guardian http://bit.ly/2G4UsRt
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Why I’ve turned my house into a home for rescued plants https://t.co/7lUmosT3t1 Solicitors & Estate Agents In One Just £899 + vat .. https://t.co/eLmKfiYyW9


Why I’ve turned my house into a home for rescued plants https://t.co/7lUmosT3t1 Solicitors & Estate Agents In One Just £899 + vat .. https://t.co/eLmKfiYyW9 (via Twitter http://twitter.com/conveyandmove/status/1089449046241144832)

Why I’ve turned my house into a home for rescued plants

I like to feel that I’m rescuing them, but maybe it’s the other way around

There’s a greenhouse at the back of my local garden centre where they keep the big houseplants and each one is carefully labelled: “Plant”. I buy one at a time to avoid ongoing domestic dispute and they collect greenly in my house under varying levels of care. Varying levels of care, but infinite love, love I learned from my parents’ relationship with a plant that lives at the top of their stairs which they call the “moon flower”. I’ve identified it online as a night-blooming cereus – further, an Epiphyllum oxypetalum, and my sister and I receive texts alerting us to news of an opening bud. My parents will have woken to a smell, sickly but good, like someone’s caramelising a memory, and they will tell us to be round at dusk. Because then we can stand on the stairs and watch it open, actually watch the petals creak open, until it is there basking in the moonlight, that smell now quite raw and conquering. By morning the flower will have died, and hang from a leaf like a washed up squid.

When I moved house, my dad gave me a cutting, which now stands dwarfed by a giant version I found in the garden centre bin. But much as I love the garden centre with its jolly disregard for potted things, my preferred way to acquire new plants is via adoption. It’s a similar feeling I get on my weekly tour of the local charity shops – the cancer one is good for books, the hospice one is better for furniture, and the one raising funds for sick children is excellent for pottery.

Continue reading...

from Property | The Guardian http://bit.ly/2G4UsRt
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A £24,000 penalty for failing to submit one piece of paper to the council https://t.co/v2IYysnVx5 Solicitors & Estate Agents In One Just £899 + vat .. https://t.co/eLmKfiYyW9


A £24,000 penalty for failing to submit one piece of paper to the council https://t.co/v2IYysnVx5 Solicitors & Estate Agents In One Just £899 + vat .. https://t.co/eLmKfiYyW9 (via Twitter http://twitter.com/conveyandmove/status/1089434168004698112)

Buyer beware! Don’t inflate your income to get a mortgage https://t.co/Wo5rjknPaK Solicitors & Estate Agents In One Just £899 + vat .. https://t.co/eLmKfiYyW9


Buyer beware! Don’t inflate your income to get a mortgage https://t.co/Wo5rjknPaK Solicitors & Estate Agents In One Just £899 + vat .. https://t.co/eLmKfiYyW9 (via Twitter http://twitter.com/conveyandmove/status/1089434166343684096)

A £24,000 penalty for failing to submit one piece of paper to the council

Botched legislation over a ‘commencement notice’ means owners face losing their home

When Mark Walker’s stepfather had a heart attack, it was clear he could no longer live alone. Walker therefore got planning permission to extend his home in Rickmansworth, south-west Hertfordshire, so that the 81-year-old cancer patient could be cared for by his family. However, he did not formally notify Three Rivers district council when construction started at the end of 2017. The omission may cost him his home. Because he failed to submit a one-page form, he incurred a penalty of £24,274 and was ordered to stop the work.

“We stretched ourself to the limit with this project and, over a year on, we have been unable to finish it,” he says.

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from Property | The Guardian http://bit.ly/2sRvLQw
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Buyer beware! Don’t inflate your income to get a mortgage

It’s one of the things that could lead to a refusal, making it harder to get a future loan

Homebuyers have been warned to avoid inflating their income when applying for a mortgage, which can lead to their application being rejected. New figures show that one in six homeowners had been refused a home loan in the past. This crucially can lead to delays in being accepted for another at a later date.

Consumer group Which? found the highest number of refusals was in the capital – far higher than the national average – with one in three mortgage holders saying they had been refused in the past. London is followed by the West Midlands.

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from Property | The Guardian http://bit.ly/2sRvpta
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