The Go Greener Commission in West Lafayette is making it easy for you to give your broken or unwanted lights a second life.
If you're looking for an excuse to leave up your Christmas decorations, we've got you covered. Here's how you can transform them into Valentine's Day decor.
The Peoria Fire Department responded to a fire that occurred at a home near East Gift and Indiana Avenues on Wednesday. Crews ...
Since the Los Angeles fires began last week, “Parable of the Sower” and other Octavia Butler works written decades ago have ...
CHICAGO (WLS) -- As the holiday season ends, those who decorated their homes with a real tree this Christmas can plan where to drop it off to be recycled instead of sending it to a landfill.
It could be out of tradition or procrastination, but you may be looking at your lights, trees and other decorations and wondering when the best time to take them down might be. If you observe the 12 ...
Mentally, you may still be feeding off the festive high, refusing to let your Christmas flame burn out ... to start thinking about taking down the decorations and kicking your fir to the curb ...
Traditionally in Ireland (and apparently in Puerto Rico also), Nollaig na mBan is the day on which all the Christmas decorations must come down—not before or after—or else risk bad luck for ...
when should you put away your Christmas decorations and holiday wear? This seemingly innocuous question is not as simple as it seems. That is, if you want to follow certain traditions or even ...
INDIANAPOLIS — When your Christmas lights are no longer merry and bright, you are supposed to recycle them. If electronics sit in a landfill, metals can leech into the ground. Plastics also do not ...
it is still seen as the point when many people take down their Christmas decorations for the year to avoid bad luck. It all comes from a medieval notion that decorations left up after a certain point ...
The decorations, which were traditionally put up on Christmas Eve, used to stay out until February 2 (the end of Candlemas). This used to be the official end of Christmas in Medieval England.