Joe Hahs Gardening Tips

May

Finally warm temperatures are here to stay and you don’t have to worry about that frost. You may think it’s too late to grow all your favorite vegetables from seed but warm May temperatures have made the soil perfect for sowing seeds. Warm soil will allow for fast germination and growing plants. Good choices are summertime kitchen garden staples like squash, beans, cucumbers and melons.

Beans:
Start planting both bush and pole beans now that the soil and air are warmed up. Try a continual 7-10 day sowing of different varieties. This will give you continual bean crops and not one large harvest with wasted crop.
Suggested variety: Contender, Kentucky Wonder, Topcrop

Beets
Sow beets now for a fast, early summer treat.
Suggested Varieties: Detroit Dark Red

Cabbage
Cabbage is one of the easier plants to grow in the garden. Select a variety that is right for your location (size and maturity length). Be sure to fertilize and water when cabbage head begins to form.
Suggested variety: Premium Late Flat Dutch, Golden Acre, Michihili

Carrots
Planting carrots by mid-July yields a fall crop that will keep in the garden until used.
Suggested variety: Little Finger, Scarlet Nantes

Corn
One of the most rewarding and fast growing crops to grow. Corn is delicious when cooked only minutes after being pulled off the stalk. Try a small plot of corn, working your way to a large field of several varieties.
Suggested variety: Peaches and Cream, Incredible, Sugar Buns

Cucumbers
Fast growing vine or bush cucumber plants can produce an abundance of cucumber fruits. Be careful to pick a variety for the space you have in your garden. Vine cucumbers can be the best tasting but need far more space than bush varieties.
Suggest variety: Spacemaster 80, Muncher, Marketmore 76

Herbs:
Plant heat loving herbs like basil, oregano, thyme and sage.
Suggested varieties: Italian Basil, Greek Oregano, Dill

Melons
Melons are some of the most rewarding plants to grow. Great for hot, long summers. A staple for summer picnics and family fun.
Suggested variety: Sugar Baby, Crimson Sweet, Hales Best

Peppers
Fresh, crisp peppers are a garden favorite. Peppers take up little space and can produce high yields when planted close together. Plant as many different varieties as possible. They come small, big, hot, mild, and an array of different colors. Start seeds indoors for best results.
Suggested variety: California Wonder, Early Jalapeno, Sweet Banana, Super Chili

Summer Squash
Yum! Summer squash sowing in June will lead to fresh squash and zucchini in July and August.
Suggested Varieties: Cocozelle, Waltham Butternut

Tomatoes
The most popular garden vegetable. Growing tomatoes is not only fun but treats you to some of the best tasting fruits in the world. Tomatoes come in many colors, shapes, taste, and sizes. Grow a few varieties every year to find your favorites! You may want to think about buy transplants in May.
Suggested variety: Brandywine, Cherokee Purple, Roma, Sweetie, Heirloom Blend

Joseph Petrick, Demand Media

A roof system shields occupants of a building from natural elements such as storms and the sun. Roofing managers play a significant role in ensuring that the final structure is stable, safe and durable. In order to fulfill their duties effectively and produce desirable results in a project, they require knowledge of supervisory practices and principles, project costing and an ability to design, review and prepare project plans. Applicants require a bachelor’s degree in architectural engineering or a closely related field, and experience in the roofing industry.

Design
A roofing manager holds consultative meetings with architects, contractors and facility managers before designing a roofing plan based on safety, budget, client’s expectations and state and local regulations. For example, if the building does not have an air conditioner, a roofing manager can recommend the use of cool roofs — roofs whose surfaces reflect sunlight and emit heat keeping them cooler in the sun — to improve indoor thermal comfort. He also prepares cost estimates and material specifications reports.

Safety Management
Fatal work injuries involving contractors accounted for 12 percent of the 4,609 workers killed on the job in 2011 in the U.S. Without a proper safety strategy, sharp-edged, low-slope and steep roofs can present safety challenges to workers. A roofing project manager ensures that there are personal arrest systems and safety net systems for employees working on low-slope roofs, and toe boards for those working on steep roofs. He also ensures that workers are wearing protective gears such as hand gloves and head helmets to protect them against cuts and head injuries. It is the manager’s responsibility to budget for training sessions and safety supplies such as first aid kits.

Quality Control
A roofing manager inspects all work material such as tiles, timber and iron sheets to confirm absence of tear, color non-conformance and other defects. He then instructs workers and supervises them to ensure that they adhere to specific details related to quality, texture, color, size and layout of roofing materials. The manager also inspects work in progress and reviews assessments performed by agency inspectors to guarantee conformance to specifications.

Personnel Management
Coordinating and managing personnel in a construction plays a critical role in ensuring quality and deadlines are met. A roofing project manager advices the recruiting department on skills he will require to accomplish a project. It is also his responsibility to define the scope of the project and day-to-day targets to his team. Using reports from supervisors, he resolves any work-related challenges the team is facing, as well as ensure that enough supplies are available for continuous work.

Joe Hahs General Contractor

Joseph Hahs MN general contractor is a manager, and possibly a tradesman, employed by the client on the advice of the architect, engineer or the architectural technologist or the client him/herself if acting as the manager. A general contractor is responsible for the overall coordination of a project.[3] A general contractor must first assess the project-specific documents (referred to as bid, proposal or tender documents). In the case of renovations, Joseph Hahs MN a site visit is required to get a better understanding of the project. Depending on the project delivery method, the contractor will submit a fixed price proposal or bid, cost plus price or an estimate. The general contractor considers the cost of home office overhead, general conditions, materials and equipment as well as the cost of labor to provide the owner with a price for the project.

Joseph Hahs MN contract documents include drawings, project manual (including general, supplementary and/or special conditions and specifications), addendum or modifications issued prior to proposal/ bidding and prepared by a design professional such as an architect. The general contractor may be the construction manager or construction manager at risk.