Women choose TV over sex

2008/06/27

Lifestyle. IT may explain a lack of understanding between the sexes, or it just may mean our men need a sex lesson, but many women admit they are so hooked on their favourite TV shows they speed up sex so they don't miss them.
The UK's Sun paper reports that almost a fifth would even give up the chance of a romp in favour of slumping in front of Home and Away or Sex And The City.

Others plan annual holidays around the TV schedules or lie to friends about being busy so they can avoid missing their programme, a new study has revealed.

Telecoms firm Tiscali which quizzed 1,600 adults, found 17 per cent of women aged 16 to 24 will either race through sex or put it off altogether to get in front of the TV in time.

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The Grounded Gardener: Group has a nose for the best Northwest roses

With more than 3,000 possible roses to choose from, it's nice to have someone else sort through and pick out the highlights -- those roses that will grow and bloom well in your garden and mine.

That's what the All-America Rose Selections (AARS) program does.

Each year, new roses are planted out at trial gardens across the country, such as the Woodland Park Rose Garden. After a two-year test, AARS releases the results, and a chosen few become All-Americas. And then, says Steve Herbig, horticulturist at Point Defiance Rose Garden in Tacoma, "We get to display the winning roses."

But national honors haven't always translated into local fame. The few roses honored each year exhibit generally good characteristics for the country, not specifically for the Pacific Northwest.

So this year, AARS went a step further: The program announced Region's Choice winners, selected from previous national winners, to showcase the roses that are best for particular growing areas.

The 10 roses selected for the Pacific Northwest (and Northern California) encompass a variety of styles. So whether you are looking for a hybrid tea -- good long stems for cutting -- or an accommodating shrub for the border, or a low-growing landscape rose, you'll find one here.

The traditional rose garden includes many hybrid teas, those large, commanding plants that grow upright and produce single flowers on strong stems. Grandifloras are similar to hybrid teas, but usually carry more than one flower per stem and don't grow quite as large as the teas.

But don't tell that to 'Sunset Celebration,' one of the AARS regional choices for the Pacific Northwest. "It's a beast of a rose," Herbig says, adding that one at Point Defiance reached 12 feet easily.

It's worth the space. With fragrant blossoms of warm peach to apricot coloring that just keep coming, it will be a rose that you and your neighbors will admire. Just be sure that, if you let it reach its full potential, you provide it with a sturdy support system, such as a strong metal arbor or arch.

Floribundas are easy to incorporate into the landscape, and they usually are long-blooming. That includes 'Day Breaker,' another regional AARS choice, which combines a light-apricot color with tea fragrance, and 'Honey Perfume,' with apricot-yellow flowers.

Small-growing roses are not left off the list for our area. 'Carefree Wonder' is a landscape shrub to about 4 feet high and wide with loads of medium-pink flowers that keep coming.

The appeal of all those roses is obvious, not just to us, but -- as many readers are thinking -- to the local deer population, too.

No problem with deer in my neighborhood, because they rarely escape the zoo nearby, but Herbig has had to match wits with the Point Defiance population.

"We've tried a number of things," he says, "strobe lights, flood lights, sonic noisemakers, soap, cougar dung -- I was the lucky one who got to put that out." Even humans got into the act: From 8 p.m. until morning, a patrol would watch from the gazebo in the garden and chase out any intruders.

"We discovered a doe that would drop her fawns off on one side," Herbig says, "and then go around to the other side. She'd get chased away, but her fawns would get to eat."

Lights, sounds or smells would work for a while, but the deer became accustomed to the deterrents and then ignored them. The only thing that works: a tall, industrial metal fence that is painted black. "You look right through it," Herbig says, so for us it blends into the landscape, but for the deer, it's a barrier.

Point Defiance roses grow well without deer interference, and with a fertilizer regimen. Herbig uses Puyallup Rose Food, a recipe devised by the Puyallup Rose Society and sold by the Tacoma Rose Society each early spring.

The Tacoma group advises on the Point Defiance garden and schedules a pruning day in early March -- good thing, too; no telling how long it would take Herbig to prune 1,500 roses.

Go soon to visit the garden. Late May and the beginning of June are peak times for roses, and the Point Defiance Flower & Garden Show is on June 6-8 (ptdefianceflowershow.com), which is another great reason for a visit. But don't despair if you can't make it then, Herbig says there are roses in bloom until October.

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More business owners ask that parents control their kids -- or don't bring them

By KRISTIN DIZON

Lifestyle. In businesses and offices around Seattle, more and more signs are asking people to supervise their young children -- or leave them at home.

To some, it seems like reasonable boundary setting. To others, it smacks of anti-child attitudes, especially in an age when parents are more likely to tote children everywhere and incorporate them into their lifestyles. Naturally, they take offense at a stranger's attempt to guide their public parenting.

Business owners say they must guard safety and liability, protect their merchandise or the specific atmosphere they've created, or ensure that a space doesn't become dominated by kids to the dismay of other patrons.

At Diva Espresso's six locations around Seattle, a sign reads: "Unsupervised children will be given espresso and a puppy." It's a playful reminder that parents should mind their little ones, and because of the tone, owner Steve Barker said it's rare for someone to be miffed about it.

Barker said he posted the notice after children had twice broken his glass pastry case by banging on it.

"We were concerned about the safety of the kids and a lawsuit, which in this day and age happens," said Barker, who now uses plastic glass to front the case.

Feedback from customers has largely been good.

"We've had people ask for copies of it," he said.

And the sign got nowhere near the reaction as one reminding people that, per health department code, dogs are not allowed in the coffee shop. Same goes for another sign asking people to hang up their cell phones while ordering. That one has since been removed.

At a Phinney Ridge-area coffee shop, some patrons bristled at a sign that reminded them, "If you bring children to our shop, we ask that you please be considerate of noise levels and of others' space."

To Jessica Rose, who takes her two sons to the shop for doughnuts once a week, the sign singled out kids.

"It sort of made you feel like the only people in the world who are disruptive are children," said Rose, who works nearby. She said plenty of laptoppers clack away and sometimes answer calls in the cafe.

"They just kind of look at you, like, 'Why are you in my office? And, I just kind of look at them like, 'Why are you in my coffee shop?' " Rose said.

The owner of the shop, who talked on condition of anonymity for himself and his business, said the sign has been retired but that "99 percent or more of the people were happy to see it."

He added that his staff sometimes gives a gentle reminder to people talking loud on a phone, or parents of rambunctious children.

"People feel like you're telling them how to handle their children, and that ends up being the sticky sore spot. You're just trying to protect your business and people think they're trying to tell them how to run their lives."

Earlier this year, a story in The New York Times chronicled the outcry from parents when a popular Brooklyn pub banned strollers and went 21 and over. Two years ago, parents in a kid-filled Chicago neighborhood fumed when a cafe posted a sign that children "have to behave and use their indoor voices." Some boycotted the bakery.

While parents here haven't erupted to that extent, there are pockets of angry rebuke.

A sign at Duque + Duque in Ballard reads: "About the little ones ... Due to the delicate nature of our business, we ask that children not be brought into the salon, spa or boutique. Thank you."

Owner Giovanna Duque said despite the gentle language, reaction is sometimes fierce.

"It caused a huge amount of upset. We've had mothers on the sidewalk giving us the finger over the top of the baby stroller," Duque said. Another woman, 2-year-old in tow, cursed at the staff over the policy before she was escorted out.

"She was screaming that she was going to call police and who do we think we are? The sense of entitlement is incredible," Duque said. "Who am I? I'm the owner."

Another reason for the sign is that unsupervised children have destroyed or damaged merchandise in the boutique -- and only on one occasion did a parent offer to replace the broken item.

"I love children and they're just learning their boundaries. We are not anti-children at all," said Duque, whose two grown children work with her.

But, she said, the family has worked hard to create an environment in which women can get away from it all.

"We did it because we're an oasis for women -- we believe that mothers are the hardest workers on the planet and deserve a break without kids," she said.

Other times, it's hard for a business to focus on customers when children are disruptive.

At Habitude, an upscale salon and spa in Ballard, owner Inez Gray also asks parents to leave young children home. The reaction is sometimes acrimonious or emotional, particularly from new moms.

"Certainly it's been very difficult for some of our customers, especially nursing moms," she said. "We've had a lot of push-back from moms who say we're not a family place and we don't cater to kids."

Some have tried to get their hair bleached while nursing under the plastic cape, but Gray says it's dangerous to work with strong chemicals, or scissors and razors, around babies.

"The moms typically say, 'Well, she's just going to sleep in her car seat for three hours. I just fed her,' " said Gray, a mother of three. "And, there's a good chance that that's true. But for every five that might do that, there's one who's not going to."

At Pike Place Magic Shop, a decade-old sign reads: "Stray children will be sold to the highest bidder."

It used to say such children would be sold to Gypsies, but after some Gypsies complained about insensitivity, it was changed, co-owner Sheila Lyon said.

"Most of the kids -- I'd say 85 percent -- are great," said Lyon. "Every once in a while, the kids start jumping or screaming or running around and the parents don't say anything."

More than anywhere in Seattle, the emotional tug of war over children's behavior in public seems to center on fancier restaurants, where plenty of diners want adult ambience sans running toddlers and the potential of a noisy meltdown.

Many parents, such as Rebecca Staffel, say they carefully select where their kids dine. Her daughter Meg, 9, eats with her parents at plenty of kid-friendly restaurants such as The Hi-Life and Wild Mountain Cafe, but she also visits white-tablecloth restaurants such as Restaurant Zoe.

"When we go places that are a little bit grown up, we talk abut having princess manners -- that's sort of the code for keeping it together," said Staffel, a Microsoft contractor. "The current mind-set in parenting is bring the child everywhere. I don't have a problem with that," she said, "if it's accompanied with fine discipline."

Beyond individual experiences, much disgruntlement is expressed online, where the aggrieved unleash their displeasure at kids in public spaces. If you judge by certain message boards, you'd think out-of-control kids and clueless parents were rampant in Seattle.

Part of the problem is the language -- which flames quickly from campfire to raging inferno. People with children are considered breeders of hairless monkeys who travel in stroller herds, while urban singles are selfish, anti-child hipsters who will die alone.

Parents point out that children are -- no surprise -- unpredictable, and that learning how to behave well in public is a process that takes time. Some add that, if you think it's so easy, you're welcome to give it a try.

"Even the best-behaved child is going to have a bad day and throw themselves down on the ground and scream," said Rose, a Wallingford mother of two. "I'm sure my children have annoyed countless strangers over the years, but they've annoyed me, too. As a parent, you don't have a magic wand you can wave to make them behave."

Reality is, "Everyone's had the experience of being around parents who aren't doing their best," said Rose. "I think it goes without saying that if you go somewhere with children they should act in a way that's appropriate and respectful."

But behavior standards do vary.

"No matter what you do as a parent," Rose said, "there's someone telling you you're doing wrong."

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