Your web link is showing up as invalid. I am assuming you are looking for Solar Tiki Porches. Technically, they will work when placed all day under flourescent light and other strong indoor lights. Solar lights charge by strong light (such as from the sun) but do not require the same type of light as plants (which only grown under florescent lights or "grow lights." Problem with this: you could probably find battery or outlet-rechargeable fake Tiki ports that might be overall cheaper. For that matter, a good solar light that uses as little power as required for Solar Tiki porches would probably also work (though not for as long) if placed directly in sunny window.
1. building an outdoor cat enclosure?
Cats do not like being confined in small places...whatever you built would have to be quite large. Let me suggest two options: 1. Ask a friend to keep your cats until you move into your own place. You provide their food etc. 2. Move into another relative 's home where your cats can be accommodated. There is a medication that enables people with allergies to endure the presence of cats AND you can vacuum daily all spaces where the cats are segregated into a room your grandfather does not enter. Use a vacuum cleaner that has a hepa filter ... the allergy is most probably to dander.
2. Advice for converting to outdoor propane brewing
I can not speak to any of the Blichmann equipment, as I have none. With that said, I also run a single burner set up, and I would highly recommend you change the title of your 5 gallon cooler from 'mash tun' to 'hot liquor tank'. That is what I use and it works quite well. ..plus you have this already. So you heat your mash water on the burner and mash in with that. While mashing, bring your sparge water up to temp on the burner. When ready to sparge, transfer your hot water to your 5 gal cooler. Now you can sparge and collect your wort in the pot directly on the burner...so you can be heating your drained wort throughout your sparge. Without getting into a zillion other details RE: a potential set up, I will leave it at that. But besides, if you are going to drop the coin on the Blichmann 3-tier set up and Blichmann pots and burners etc. I would say there is not much else left to the imagination...I would say there is a certain level of enjoyment/satisfaction when creating a brewing set up which is engineered and imagined by. ..you. To me, this is all part of the hobby.
3. The best outdoor tech
We've spent the last two months testing grills, coolers, and also keeping tabs on various outdoor lighting and audio products -- in other words, all the stuff you might need to put on a generally enjoyable outdoor social function. You can (and should!) go down the rabbit hole on other outdoor tech like grilling accessories, outdoor security cameras, and other things. For this list, I tried to stick to a core scenario: you want to cook or entertain outside more days this year, you have the space to do it and the disposable income to throw at a few things to hopefully make the experience more pleasant for everyone. As follows: We reviewed six popular gas grills this year, and the Dyna-Glo 4-Burner offered the best combination of price and performance. Whether at high temperature grilling, low-and-slow cooking, or somewhere in between, this one scored highest on our taste tests. It has an MSRP of $450, but you can find it for under $400 if you shop around. Extra points for the convenient slide-out tray for the big propane tank, which makes swapping fuel easy. The best cooler under $100 For the last two years we've rounded up coolers across the price spectrum, from $10 disposable models to $300 coolers made of rotomolded plastic. The Igloo MaxCold is not the most amazing performer, but it's in the top five, above coolers that cost more than $200. If you want to splurge, Cabela's, Orca, and Yeti all have rotomolded designs that will keep their contents colder longer, but the small gap between those models and this $60-ish Igloo MaxCold make it hard to justify spending more. The best way be outside and listen to whatever you damn well please and also be a good host I am not saying a middle-aged white dude should be embarrassed for liking Lizzo. I am that guy, and she's great. What I am saying is, it's nice to be able to hear whatever music you like without earphones and without anyone -- family, friends, neighbors -- judging you or asking you to change it, especially when you've taken on the semi-isolating responsibility of working the grill at an outdoor social event. That's what these Bose Frames, essentially sunglasses with a decent microspeaker built into the arms, will let you do, and without totally cutting you off from human interaction like headphones or ear buds will. Battery life is not great, but they charge fully in less than 2 hours. Keep an eye on a line of outdoor lights expected from Ring later this year, but right now Philips has the most comprehensive assortment of smart outdoor-rated LED lighting products. The Hue White Outdoor Floodlight LEDs ($50 for two, $30 for one) offer all the great programmability, remote control, and support for all the major voice assistants as Philips' other Hue products, in a weatherproof design that's suitable to install on your back deck. Supplement it with Philips' new Outdoor Sensor for about as comprehensive a set of automation options as you can find in outdoor lighting. It's a great way to make sure no one falls to their doom down your otherwise poorly lit back steps. None Best waterproof camera for shooting underwater video in 2020 None The best fire pits for 2020 None The best outdoor games to play with your family None Best filtered water bottles for 2020 to remove bacteria, sediment and more None Sony's new Bluetooth speaker line gets a welcome refresh None Get ready for summer with these 7 aboveground pools
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