Yesterday, when my friend was heating the oil in the pan. Later he went to check his email and forgot to watch the pan. The oil caught because of overheating. He throw the pan on the kitchen floor and try to use the welcome carpet to put it out but it still on fire. When I came home i used my wool blanket soaked with water to put out the fire. Now my blanket has some plastic stuck on it. Does anyone know how to remove the plastic from the wool?
Yes, at my place of work there is a smoking section and it's like a little island surrounded by rocks, theses are medium sized rocks sometimes people slip and fall on these and they are especially slippery in the rainy season, even though I have sent the suggestion to remove and replace with either grass or pavement it has been ignored, oh well I guess it's an open door to a lawsuit!
I believe so. Most do. Call your local Real Estate office/Property Management office and ask. Asking is free with no obligation. They can tell you right away.
There is no specific class of solar-reflective materials. Reflective is reflective. Essentially, the shinier it is, the more reflective it is. Aluminized Mylar is more reflective than rabbit fur. And so on. Just look around you. If it looks shiny, then it's reflective.