Expo 2020 Dubai reaches 20 million guest milestone
A magnificent fireworks display and special projection show on the Al Wasl Dome earlier marked the significant achievement of 20 million visits to Expo 2020 Dubai since it opened in October.
Daisy Payne has revealed a simple slug repelling tip, and it’s definitely one to try if you’re planning to spruce up your garden for spring. Her method doesn’t involve any harsh chemicals and it’s budget-friendly.
So with Daisy Payne’s easy garden idea we can ward off gardener enemy number one with a clear conscience. Daisy is a gardener and TV personality who regularly shares her gardening advice on ITV’s This Morning.
Image credit: Getty images / Despite Straight Lines (Paul Williams)
‘My top tip for getting rid of slugs, or at least keeping them away from your lovely young plants is simple,’ Daisy tells us. ‘Surround your plants with a ring of wool pellets or grit.
‘Put a thick layer all around the base of your plants and the slugs will steer clear! It’s that simple. No need for anything nasty!’
You can pick up wool pellets designed to deter slugs at Amazon or just look out for them in your local garden centre. These pellets are made from recycled wool and they form a mulch as well as creating a slug barrier.
Image credit: Daisy Payne
A mulch will help your soil from becoming too dry and can even reduce weed growth. As Daisy mentions, you could try using any horticultural grit you might have hanging around instead.
Grit will go some way in keeping slugs at bay, as will broken up eggshells. If you’re growing plants from seed, it’s definitely worth trying some preventative measures to avoid slugs eating them for dinner.
When we plant up beautiful flowers in our gardens, the last thing we’re thinking of is how one day we might find it’s been eaten up by slugs. But there’s always a balance to strike between aesthetics and wildlife garden ideas that support the insects, birds and other creatures in our gardens.
Image credit: Getty images / Simon Posnjak
Daisy’s tip is kind to the slugs and given that you can pick up wool pellets for no more than £5, it’s a winner. Will you be trying Daisy’s slug repelling tip this spring?
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Let’s face it, we all have unruly wires and old pieces of tech knocking around. In fact, Currys revealed that we hoard 527 million pieces of unused tech in our homes across the UK.
This isn’t all too surprising given how hard it can be to know how to get rid of them. Particularly if there’s personal data on old USB keys, floppy disks, and so on.
Enter, Currys’ Cash For Trash – a tech recycling scheme that gives you money in exchange for old electronics.
Image credit: Alamy
Currys is encouraging us to recycle those old speakers, kettles, iPod shuffles, games consoles and alarm clocks we never use. Those retro items we’re needlessly holding onto and allowing to clutter up our homes.
From now until April 15th, 2022, you can bring in unused tech, broken or in working order, to your local Currys store. You’ll be able to swap items for a voucher worth at least £5.
If you have an unwanted TV or small domestic appliances, you can trade them in for hundreds of pounds off new products. Time to trade in for the best washing machines… ‘We are already helping thousands of customers recycle unwanted tech every day. But Cash for Trash aims to take it to the next level,’ says Lindsay Haselhurst, Chief Supply Chain Officer at Currys.
Image credit: Getty images / Peter Dazeley
‘This trial is all about making recycling easy and rewarding. We’re urging the nation to look in drawers, under the sofa and up in the loft – as these unused tech devices that have seen better days could be repaired, rehomed, or recycled into something new,’ Lindsay adds.
Currys really is accepting any tech, bought from anywhere, even if it’s broken. ‘It might look like trash, but it isn’t to us,’ says Lindsay.
Currys’ month-long Cash For Trash is the UK’s first nationwide recycling scheme that gives money back for any old tech. The electrical retailer did some research and found that the most hoarded items are mobile phones (67%).
Image credit: Future PLC/ Colin Poole
But consumers are sitting on a goldmine of other old, unused tech. From hair styling products and speakers to old landline phones and headphones.
Sure, you might get a better price for your old item on eBay, but the Cash For Trash scheme is perfect for the sake of simply freeing up much-needed space.
The post Currys will buy your broken and unused tech off you with Cash for Trash scheme – here’s how it works appeared first on Ideal Home.
Homebuyers snapped up endowment mortgages in the 1980s and 1990s, lured by low repayments and investment plans to repay their debt, but these deals failed to live up to salesmen’s promises.
These interest-only mortgages came with an endowment policy attached that was meant to provide enough to repay the loan at the end of the term. But ultimately, endowment mortgages resulted in an enormous mis-selling scandal when millions of people found that they faced a shortfall.
Here’s what you need to know about endowment mortgages, and what the alternatives are to these now. If you’re in the market for a mortgage, make sure you check out our guide to getting the best mortgage rate.
No, you cannot get an endowment mortgage following the mis-selling of these products, as years of bad press saw them consigned to history.
Chris Sykes, mortgage consultant at broker Private Finance, says: ‘The product in itself was a good idea and initially was quite realistic, helping all demographics of borrowers to invest and get benefit from the gains on their investments.’
‘It was the mis-selling of these mortgages with promises of extreme returns, a lack of alternate repayment provisions and market fluctuations that lead to their eventual demise.’
Image credit: Future PLC
When endowment mortgages originally became popular, interest rates on mortgages were sky-high, at up to 12%, so they were seen as a way to reduce monthly costs. Borrowers only paid the interest on the mortgage, so they didn’t need to repay any of the capital borrowed during the term.
In addition, they benefited from tax relief on endowment premiums. These advantages made it reasonably simple for estate agents and lenders to sell endowment mortgages, in return for hefty commissions.
The idea was that the endowment policy could provide a large enough lump sum to repay the mortgage balance in full after, usually, 25 years. Borrowers could simply pay the monthly interest on their mortgage, and the premium for the endowment policy. They also paid for life insurance to repay the loan if they died during the term, as part of the package.
Homeowners with endowment mortgages typically hoped there may be a surplus from the endowment once their debt had been fully repaid. In reality, this rarely happened, and most people found that instead their endowments didn’t produce enough to repay their mortgages.
When interest rates eventually fell, ultimately to record lows, and stock markets slumped in the wake of the financial crisis, the chances of endowment policies underperforming significantly increased.
Miles Robinson, head of mortgages at online mortgage broker Trussle, says: ‘This resulted in millions of homeowners left with massive shortfalls, with endowments that wouldn’t cover the amount of capital they originally borrowed. Many banks and lenders ended up having to pay out the difference.’
Often, people who took endowment mortgages weren’t properly advised of the risks, and given false promises that policies would definitely pay off their mortgage. The charges attached to these types of mortgages were not always clear, either, which contributed to the mis-selling scandal.
Possibly, and if you think you were mis-sold an endowment mortgage at some stage, you could be entitled to compensation from the Financial Services Compensation Scheme (FSCS). But you must have suffered a loss as a result of being poorly advised, and received advice after August 1988.
You must first complain to the company that sold you the endowment mortgage, and you can find details of the process for making a mis-selling complaint on the Financial Conduct Authority website, the city watchdog. The FCA can also help if the company that sold you the endowment mortgage no longer exists.
Image credit: Future Plc/Tim Young
You can still get interest-only mortgages, depending on your personal circumstances, so your repayments cover just the interest on the loan. This makes them substantially cheaper than repayment mortgages. However, remember that the amount borrowed will need to be repaid with a traditional repayment method, such as savings or investments.
Sykes says: ‘To get an interest-only mortgage you now need to give details of a repayment vehicle so this could be cash you have already, investments, or one of the more popular repayment vehicles is sale and downsize of a property after the term. Often, though, this method requires that the property must have at least £300,000 equity and it’s often limited to 50-60% of the property’s value.’
You’ll need to consider carefully if an interest-only mortgage is the right option for you, as you’ll need to make your own arrangement to repay the debt. Speak to your mortgage lender or a mortgage broker to find the best option for your circumstances.
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