The Bakersfield Californian

HINTS FROM HELOISE

PRACTICAL, DEPENDABLE TIPS FOR TODAY’S BUSY CONSUMERS

- Send your hints to Heloise@ Heloise.com or mail them to Heloise, P.O. Box 795000, San Antonio, TX 78279-5000.

Dear Heloise:

Homes with masonry siding have weep holes located every couple of feet apart along the base of the house.

This is to let moist air flow out of the walls.

However, it also allows critters to enter the home and live in the walls. To prevent this from happening, get a piece of tight mesh metal screen from a hardware store. Using tin snips, cut little 1-inch circles. Take one of those circles and wrap it around a pencil, then remove and push the mesh circle into the weep holes so it sets against the sides of the hole all around. You have now created a barrier to bugs while allowing air to flow in and out of your home.

— Rich S., Bulverde, Texas

Rich, this is a good idea. In many southern states there are very large cockroache­s, geckos, fire ants and more that we need to keep out of our homes.

— Heloise

Dear Heloise: It’s been suggested that one in every three bites of food we eat depends on pollinator­s such as bees, butterflie­s and birds.

Sadly, one of the major pollinator­s, bees, is dwindling globally, and it could drasticall­y affect food production worldwide.

To help bees, please plant flowers and shrubs in your gardens that attract bees and butterflie­s. Some of the flowers that attract butterflie­s and bees are hibiscus, mountain laurel, gardenia, rose of Sharon, rhododendr­on, zinnias, lavender and wisteria, to name a few. Do not use pesticides, because too many are poisonous to pollinator­s. By planting flowers and restrictin­g pesticides, you’ll be helping to save our planet and the pollinator­s we depend on.

— Michael H., Defiance, Ohio

Dear Heloise: I retired and thought I couldn’t wait to sleep in every morning instead of getting up at 5:30 a.m.

five days a week.

By the end of the first year, I was depressed and overweight. I went in to speak to a therapist, and she told me to go back to work at something or do volunteer work.

Working just two days a week has provided me with benefits physically and psychologi­cally, just like the therapist said it would.

It’s just a simple job where I work 9 to 3, but it has widened my circle of friends, and it’s fun to work among younger people and listen to them talk about their lives.

The extra money is nice, too.

— Patty L., Ashland, Wisconsin

Patty, work gives meaning to many people and gives us a reason to get up and get going.

So I say, “Good for you, Patty!” — Heloise

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