Thursday, September 30, 2010

Waitress knife to make your job easier

Your restaurant guide for you is as important as your customers. But without the server, customers never get their food. Your staff is as valuable as your cooks and you should, with a small token of appreciation for your reward. Waitress knives are small pocket knives, knives that include a bottle opener, corkscrew, e. This useful tool can be a maid's best friend. You can also go the extra mile, and the maid custom knivesengraved with the name of your waiter and the restaurant logo.

Waitress knives are available in silver from promotional supply companies. Most of the time the space is large enough for engraving the name of the waiter on one side and company logo on the opposite side. You can work with a knife, while at home, or at any other time the waitresses need a tool – like a screwdriver – the maid can be used for custom knives.

With yourRestaurant waitress knives custom logo for you server as a gift, something that you remember to set their time to yours. Waitress knives may not be granted as welcome as a good pair of shoes that your feet while working waiter console, but the that you show your server what they mean business, and giving them a tool that can help them do their job bettersay something, especially when you personalize it by using their name to the point.

Waitress knives are also comfortable to wear. This easily run into the server so that they have it, if the need arises to use it. They fit into the pocket in front of a pair of jeans and can be thrown into a bag for easy transport. With your name engraved on the side of the knife waiter waitress, will never be any question of the knife which liesa desk or table after use.

You think you feel like your waiter is when they go to a party and someone needs a bottle opener and corkscrew. They could save the party that grants the chance to produce the tools of their open a bottle of wine or beer, when they take out their knives maid. You can imagine the look on their faces when other important servers will exceed the your gift? The term "tools" a new meaning when youGive your server a great gift like waitress knives.

Waitress knives are fairly cheap and can be ordered in bulk to your restaurant logo already printed on them. In this way, the waitress can custom knife at all times. Give them for Christmas gifts, birthday gifts or for special occasions such as work milestones. Whenever you decide to have a gift for your employees, make sure that what they value andoften use. If you are in the restaurant business, are thinking of your waitresses their very own waitress knives.

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Sunday, September 5, 2010

The Mayflower and It's Passengers – A View from England

By: Paul hussey


I thought it would be of interest to write this article about the The Mayflower and it's voyage to the new world from Plymouth, England to Plymouth in the New World. One of the unusual things about the first colony was that the Turkeys that were eaten at the first Thanksgiving were taken to the colony from England. By 1776 there were 13 Colonies of the Commonwealth of America and to this day there are 4 Commonwealth States of America.



The Mayflower was the ship that transported the English Separatists, better known as the Pilgrims from a site near the Mayflower Steps in Plymouth, England to Plymouth Massachusetts, Commonwealth of America (which would become the capital of Plymouth Colony), in 1620. There were 102 passengers and a crew of 25–30.


The vessel left England on September 6th 1620 (Old Style) September 16th (New Style), and after a gruelling 66-day journey marked by disease, which claimed two lives, the ship dropped anchor inside the hook tip of Cape Cod Provincetown Harbour on November 11th / November 21st . The Mayflower was originally destined for the mouth of the Hudson River near present-day New York City, at the northern edge of England's Virginia colony, which itself was established with the 1607 Jamestown Settlement. However, the Mayflower went off course as the winter approached, and remained in Cape Cod Bay.


On March 21st / 31st , 1621, all surviving passengers, who had inhabited the ship during the winter, moved ashore at Plymouth, and on April 5th / 15th the Mayflower, a privately commissioned vessel, returned to England.


In 1623, a year after the death of captain Christopher Jones, the Mayflower was most likely dismantled for scrap lumber in Rotherhythe, London.


The Mayflower has a famous place in American history as a symbol of early European colonization of the future US. With their religion oppressed by the English Church and government, the small party of religious Puritan separatists who comprised about half of the passengers on the ship desired a life where they could practice their religion freely. This symbol of religious freedom resonates in US society and the story of the Mayflower is a staple of any American history textbook. Americans whose roots are traceable back to New England often believe themselves to be descended from Mayflower passengers.


The main record for the voyage of the Mayflower and the disposition of the Plymouth Colony comes from William Bradford who was a guiding force and later the governor of the colony.


To establish legal order and to quell increasing strife within the ranks, the settlers wrote and signed the Mayflower Compact after the ship dropped anchor at the tip of Cape Cod on November 11th / 21st in what is now Provincetown Harbour.


The settlers, upon initially setting anchor, explored the snow-covered area and discovered an empty Native American village. The curious settlers dug up some artificially made mounds, some of which stored corn while others were burial sites. Nathaniel Philbrick recounts that the settlers stole the corn and looted and desecrated the graves, sparking friction with the locals. Philbrick goes on to say that as they moved down the coast to what is now Eastham, they explored the area of Cape Cod for several weeks, looting and stealing native stores as they went. He then writes about how they decided to relocate to Plymouth after a difficult encounter with the local native Americans, the Nausets, at First Encounter Beach, in December 1620.


However, Bradford's History of Plymouth Plantation records that they took "some" of the corn to show the others back at the boat, leaving the rest. Then, later they took what they needed from another store of grain, paying the locals back in six months, which they gladly received.


Also there was found more of their corn and of their beans of various colours; the corn and beans they brought away, purposing to give them full satisfaction when they should meet with any of them as, about some six months afterwards they did, to their good content.

During the winter the passengers remained on board the Mayflower, suffering an outbreak of a contagious disease described as a mixture of scurvy, pneumonia and tuberculosis. When it ended, there were only 53 passengers, just more than half, still alive. Likewise, half of the crew died as well. In spring, they built huts ashore, and on March 21st / 31st 1621, the surviving passengers left the Mayflower.

Please visit my Funny Animal Art Prints Collection @ http://www.fabprints.com


My other website is called Directory of British Icons: http://fabprints.webs.com


The Chinese call Britain The Island of Hero's which I think sums up what we British are all about.


Copyright © 2010 Paul Hussey. All Rights Reserved.



About the Author


My family tree has been traced back to the early Kings of England from the 7th Century AD. I am also a direct descendent of Sir Christopher Wren both of which has given me an interest in English History, English Sports, English Icons, English Discoveries and English Inventions which is great fun to research and I call "An Englishman's Favourite Bits Of England". Please visit my Blogs page http://Bloggs.Resources.Com where I have listed all my articles to date.


Copyright © 2010 Paul Hussey. All Rights Reserved.

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