| Articles & Health News Feeds Online Today! | | Rabbit Fertilizers Online News Feeds - COMING SOON | | | | Branch Out With Your Gift Giving When you're rooting around for a great gift to give, why not try a tree? For a gift that truly keeps on giving and growing, plant a tree on behalf of a friend, relative or loved one. Planting a tree on someone's behalf is a thoughtful way to mark a joyous occasion while supporting a worthy cause -- the environment. |  | | Fall Yard and Garden Tips It doesn't look like it, and we all hate to admit it, but the end of summer is near. Although the annuals are bursting with color, the tomatoes and zucchini are producing prolific harvests, and the lawn looks great, fall is just around the corner. Just as everything growing has a season, so do the related tasks in your yard. It's time to consider how you're going to wrap things up for the season. |  | | When Household Products Turn Deadly With all parents have to worry about with their kids, who would have thought that household products would be one of them. Yet kids, sometimes as young as nine or ten, are getting high by using common items found around the house when they sniff (through the nose) or huff them (through the mouth). Airplane glue, rubber cement, paint thinner, nail polish remover, and bleach are just a few chemicals that become 'inhalants' when they are used to get high. |  | | Wake-Up Call for Rural America Drinking water quality is just a problem for big cities with too many factories and too many cars, right? Not so, says James Elder, Former Director of the Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) Office of Ground Water and Drinking Water. A recent study by EPA revealed atrazine, a common tap water contaminant in the Midwest, to be more dangerous than previously thought. |  | | A Report Card for Allergies Sneezy, Itchy, Watery, Runny, Sniffly, Coughy and Scratchy: These are the telltale symptoms of autumn allergies. Most of the more than 35 million people in the United States who have seasonal allergic rhinitis (hay fever), recognize their sneezes, watery eyes, runny nose and nasal congestion as their body's reaction to ragweed -- the most common seasonal allergen in the country. | | | |