If you didn’t get enough great home and garden ideas at last week’s NARI show, or if you missed the show, then you might want to check out the Discover Hometown Home, Garden, and Landscape show this weekend at the Waukesha Expo Center.
The show starts at 3 PM on Friday afternoon, then runs until 8:00 PM. On Saturday, the show runs from 9:00 AM until 5:00 PM, and on Sunday the show runs from 9 till 3.
Admission is only $5. Children 12 and under get in for free all weekend long. There are also some specials: on Friday tickets are buy-one-get-one free with a printed coupon from On Sunday you can get in for free if you donate 2 non-perishable food items which will benefit the Food Pantry of Waukesha County.
There will be plenty of displays, plenty of products to peruse and plenty of things to buy. The vendor’s list already looks pretty packed, so it should be a lot of fun! We won’t make it this year (too pooped from the NARI show) but we’re certainly wishing all of our friends, neighbors, and colleagues in the home improvement industry a great weekend, and we hope that you have a great weekend, too.
The Waukesha County Expo center is at 1000 Northview Road in Waukesha. Brave the snow and check it out!
Now it’s your turn. If you’re a regular attendee of home and garden shows, tell us more about why you go, what you enjoy there, and what you’re looking for when you go. We’d love to hear from you in the comment’s section below!
A tough month for the taliban,tough 8yrs for US:
by bornagaingumby By DEB RIECHMANN, Associated Press Writer
1 hour, 12 minutes ago
WASHINGTON - President Bush said Wednesday he is weighing whether to send more troops to Afghanistan. Bush said it has been a "tough month" in Afghanistan, where more U.S. and NATO troops died during the past two months than in Iraq.
The president told a Rose Garden news conference that one reason for the rising deaths "is that our troops are taking the fight to a tough enemy ... of course there is going to be resistance." It has also been a "tough month for the Taliban," he said