This blog post is going to be quite nice. I discover a great deal of things over the internet and quite a lot of it is unusual but the following piece is actually rather interesting. Things like this makes it quick to get the web page current. I already know you will like this bedding blog post. Tell me if you agree.
Fiction review: ‘Nine Simple Patterns for Complicated Women’ by Mary Rechner
Rechner reads from “Nine Simple Patterns for Complicated Women” at 7 p.m. Tuesday at Broadway Books.
Read more on The Oregonian

WVEC Channel 13 News, May 7th, 2008 NORFOLK – Mattresses by the hundreds end up at the landfill each day. They pile up because they’re not made of materials that break down. Cheryl Hahn’s company, Organic Comfort Zone, produces and sells organic mattresses and bedding. renewable and sustainable. Her Ocean View business is one of only a handful of facilities in the US that even try to recycle conventional mattresses. All the materials in these “green” bedding and pillows come from Kapok to organic cotton and wool. They’re completely renewable and sustainable. Hahn says you’ll like sleeping on these organic mattresses. “It’s very breathable. All natural materials breathe. We lose a pint of moisture every night when we sleep. Where does that go — into your spongy mattress. All of this breathes. It keeps your bed very dry and healthy, resistant to dust mites, mold and mildew. There’s no chemicals, no hazardous PBDEs and you’re not taking that in your lungs or your pores at night so it’s a very healthy sleep system as well,” she notes. It’s hoped that over the next 30 to 40 years when these mattresses lifespan is complete, there will be processes to recycle the material if they’re separated. The wool, the organic cotton, and the rubber from the rubber trees can be broken down so the mattress won’t take up landfill space. For more information about CozyPure® organic mattresses and bedding, visit www.organiccomfortzone.com or http or www.cozypure.com



