Write an article based on this "Book your flight. Go to Canada or Norway. Go to Barneo. Ride a helicopter."
article: The fastest and easiest way to get to the North Pole, if you can afford it, is to fly. Flights to the North Pole depart primarily from Norway, but chartered flights are also available from Canada Fill out the paperwork and book your tickets.  To fly from Norway, you should expect to pay between ten and twelve thousand dollars. Visit the Polar Explorers website, open the "expeditions" tab and pick "North Pole Flights." The information and forms you need to register for the trips are all located on this page.  Chartering a flight from Canada can cost as much as ten times as much as trip from Norway. For rates and booking, you'll need to contact Kenn Borek Air by phone, email, or fax. Contact information is available on their website.  Because of the harsh conditions at the North Pole, booking a trip there will require you certify that you are in good health,, and also to purchase medical evacuation insurance.  Other forms of insurance, such as trip-cancellation insurance are also recommended.  If you just want to see the North Pole but don't feel strongly about actually standing on the spot, you can take a sight-seeing flight that will pass over the North Pole but will not actually stop there. This is a considerably cheaper option. Flights are available from Berlin, Germany, and start from about $500 dollars. These flights can be booked through the Air Events website. Flights to the North Pole from Norway depart from Longyearbyen, a village north of the Arctic circle. Kenn Borek Air, the company that books charter flights from Canada is located in Calgary, but flies out of several locations.  Book a ticket from wherever you live to one of these places.  Norwegian Airlines flies regularly to Longyearbyen from Oslo. You'll probably need to book two separate flights--one to Oslo from wherever you live, and then a second flight to Longyearbyen. You'll need to contact Kenn Borek Air to establish details as to where you'll fly out of. Whether you are flying from Canada or Norway, your next stop will be Barneo, an ice-station about 60 miles from the North Pole. Accommodations and meals at Barneo are provided as part of many North Pole visit packages. From Barneo, you can take a helicopter to the North Pole.  The helicopter ride is 20-40 minutes long, via an MI-8 helicopter that is stationed at Barneo.  Polar Explorers will give you several opportunities to take pictures and typically provides a champagne toast to their North Pole travelers. However, because of the intensely cold temperatures at the pole, you'll only have about an hour to take it in before the helicopter takes you back to Barneo.  Alternatively, you can ski in from Barneo, an adventure known as "skiing the last degree." Tour packages to do this with a trained guide will cost you roughtly $25,000. You can also go by snowmobile or dogsled. The Polar Explorers website has information about the itinerary and cost for each of these options, as well as the application forms you'll need to fill out. Visit the North Pole Expeditions page and select the option you are interested in.  If you're an athlete, you also have the option to participate in marathon that departs from Barneo in April. This will cost you roughly $15,000 dollars, but includes a flight from Svalbard, Norway to Barneo (and back), as well as accommodations and a helicopter trip to the pole.  Visit their website and fill out the online application to register for the race.

Write an article based on this "Use a calendar. Clean up your physical environment. Use checklists and to-do lists."
article: And only use one! If you don’t already have one, buy one.  If you do have one, be sure to use it. There are many types - the calendars or organizers in your Smartphone or on the computer, or a paper desk version.  Often, a careless mistake comes out of forgetting about something we’re supposed to do. Writing down or typing in our upcoming commitments, appointments, and deadlines on a calendar can be extremely helpful. Color coding your calendar can help- red for work, blue for kids, green for hobbies, etc. Look at the upcoming week and make notes of what you need to do in order to prepare for the events coming up. You’ll be amazed at how much more clear-headed you’ll feel and more able to concentrate you are when your surroundings are clean and organized.  Continuously put things away at home. Don’t leave a room empty-handed when there is clutter. Create a “donation station” for things you no longer need and want to give away. Create organized filing systems at work. Get a notebook and start dumping everything that you’re thinking about that you need to do into there. Write down all the home improvement things, shopping trips, and other mental clutter to help get them out of you mind. Cross off items later when you've done it. These may not be the types of things that have specific dates and times that should to go onto a calendar, just general things that you need to do at some point in the future.

Write an article based on this "Prepare the salt. Have the basil leaves ready to add. Layer the basil leaves into the crock. Fill to within 5cm or 2 inches from the top. Store. To use, simply remove the leaves needed and restore any removed salt layer."
article:
Sprinkle 1cm or half an inch of salt into the base of a clean and dry crock, jar or ceramic storage container with lid. Make sure they're clean and dry. Sprinkle a light layer of salt over each layer of basil leaves. Continue this way until all the leaves have been added. About every 10 or so layers, press down gently to slightly firm but not crush the layers of leaves. Press firmly but gently. Finish by pouring in a lot more salt to compact everything down. Shake and jolt the crock a bit to help ease the salt into all the cracks and crevices between the layers. Place the crock in a cool and dry spot. The pantry is often ideal, or a cellar. Leave as long as you like. Shake the salt off the leaves then cook with them as usual.