INPUT ARTICLE: Article: If you’ve been trying natural remedies to extend how long you last without success, talk to your doctor. Even if there’s no clear underlying cause for your condition, there are a variety of medications that can help you last longer during sex. Some possible options include: Topical anesthetics, which can numb the sensitive skin on your penis and make you less likely to ejaculate early. Certain antidepressant medications, which can delay orgasm. Pain medications such as tramadol (Ultram), which are also known to delay orgasm. Medications for erectile dysfunction, such as sildenafil (Viagra) or tadalafil (Cialis). These may work best in combination with SSRI antidepressants.

SUMMARY: Discuss medical treatments if natural remedies aren’t working.


INPUT ARTICLE: Article: Make sure that they put on gloves before they start. Ask them to check all areas of your head and scalp. Ticks can be quite small, so the person should look for tiny brown or black flecks on your skin.  If they see any unattached ticks, they should pick them up with gloved fingers, a piece of tissue, or tweezers. It will be easiest if you have a partner remove the tick from your hair for you, but if you are doing it yourself, use a mirror to help you see your scalp. Using a fine-toothed comb, brush your hair to loosen any ticks that might be hiding. If any ticks fall off or become stuck in your comb, kill them by putting them in a cup of rubbing alcohol. Within two hours of coming inside, take a shower, and wash your hair with normal shampoo. This can help rinse away ticks before they have a chance to attach. Doing this soon after you come home will reduce the chance that the ticks will burrow into your skin.

SUMMARY: Ask someone to check your scalp. Comb through your hair. Wash your hair.


INPUT ARTICLE: Article: Finding a good location is imperative when installing nesting boxes. Place nests in the least-traveled part of the coop to prevent disturbances while hens are laying. This will discourage predators from invading, and it will prevent debris from collecting on the floor of the coop. You can prop it up on bricks, cinder-blocks, or tightly-pressed earth; nail it to the wall or hang it from the ceiling; put it onto (sturdy) stilts, or nail together a simple wooden base. Make sure that the nest boxes aren't so high that the hens have a hard time accessing them. If the nest boxes are higher than the roosts, you'll have hens sleeping inside the nest boxes. Arrange the six-inch-wide back-panel door to face inward, and set the "front" of the cabinet facing outside. This way, you will be able to open both cabinet doors from outside the hen house. Put a roost bar or step in front of the entrance for the chickens to jump up onto. Make sure that there is space for the chickens to clutch the roost with their talons. Use a 2x4 plank, an old broomstick, or any sturdy wooden pole. Add a "lip" to the front of the nesting box to keep the bedding material and/or eggs from being pushed out: affix a small (2-5 inches high) piece of wood to the front so the eggs do not fall if the chickens move. Encourage chickens to use nesting boxes by placing plastic eggs or golf balls in the nests to simulate recently-laid eggs. You should collect the eggs daily, but bear in mind that chickens are more likely to add to an existing clutch of eggs than to start a new one. Keep boxes clean, and do not disturb laying chickens. Once nesting boxes are accepted as a safe and serene laying site, chickens will return daily without prodding.  To introduce chickens to the nesting box, try putting them in the box at night, when they are blind. They will find their way out in the morning when they are all calm and at ease. This way, they won't forget where to find it later on. Nesting boxes are not meant to be used for sleeping. Encourage your chickens to use nests only for laying. If your hens aren't using the nesting box, figure out where else they are laying their eggs. Try to understand why they aren't using the nesting box. Consider comfort, safety, and ease of access. Perhaps the box is too small; too high off the ground; too open; too dirty. Make any adjustments that seem necessary to set your chickens at ease.

SUMMARY: Place the nesting box in a low-traffic part of the coop. Install the nesting box two or three feet (0.6-0.9 meters) off the ground. Consider building the cabinet into the outside wall of the hen house. Build a roost bar and a protective lip at the entrance of the nesting box. Introduce the chickens to the nesting box. Keep any eye on the box.


INPUT ARTICLE: Article: You can use your hand, but an actual seed spreader is best, because it gives you more even coverage. You should spread the seeds so that you have approximately one seed per 1 square inch (2.5 square centimeters) of space. The package of seeds should tell you how many pounds of seed you should use per 1,000 square feet of planting area, to give you a better idea of how much seed you need for large areas.

SUMMARY:
Spread your seeds.