Scotts Valley Senior Center- Chocolate and Wine tasting Festival

The Scotts Valley Senior Center is holding it’s second Wine and Chocolate Festival. Not sure which of those two words will spur you to go or to make you salivate, but the combination is sure nice. The event will be held October 10th, so be sure to leave time in your schedule for this. There will be a farmers market in the morning from 9-1 and then the tasting and sampling from 1-5 for the wine and chocolate. Tickets are $20 for the glass and some tickets. Buy early and save $2.

If you have not been to the center, it is a nice facility located on 370 Kings Village road in Scotts Valley. It is behind Kings Village Shopping Center in Scotts Valley. At the intersection of Blue Bonnet, go left and the center is on the right.

It is just past the metro center so you can bus there too. You can call for other information at 831-438-8666.

Here is some of the much anticipated line up…… I can’t stop drooling in the keyboard:)

Wines- Roudon-Smith Winery, Hunter Hill Wines, Hallcrest Vinyards, Bargetto Winery, Stones Cellars, Mint, Poetic Cellars and Heart O the Mountain windery.

For the Chocolates–mmm-  Chocolate Visions, Segovias Sweets, The Healthy Chocolates, Luis Moro Chocolate, Truffles in Paradise, Lula’s Chocolate, Starz cupcakes, and Trader Joes with some as well.

So come early and come all and enjoy a great day in the sun and have some fun and support our Scotts Valley Seniors.

If you want to search around and see what is happening in Scotts Valley real estate or mobile homes, there are some good values. Call me for any real estate help, Gregg Camp, 831-818-7524, a Seniors Real Estate Specialist( SRES)

How To Manage Your Osteoporosis As You Age

According to the National Osteoporosis Foundation( www.nof.org) :
“Osteoporosis is a disease in which bones become fragile and more
likely to break. If not prevented or if left untreated, osteoporosis
can progress painlessly until a bone breaks. These broken bones, also
known as fractures, occur typically in the hip, spine, and wrist.”

While any bone can be affected, of special concern are fractures of the
hip and spine. A hip fracture almost always requires hospitalization
and major surgery. It can impair a person’s ability to walk unassisted
and may cause prolonged or permanent disability or even death. Spinal
or vertebral fractures also have serious consequences, including loss
of height, severe back pain, and deformity.

If you look at healthy bones you will see that there are small holes
between the bone cells. In osteoporosis those pores are larger making
the bones brittle and easy to break. The best way to prevent
osteoporosis is to prevent bone loss in the first place. In Rio Del
Mar, California, there are many people who have homes there so they can
easily get exercise walking on the beach. Rio Del Mar beach homes are
favored by many, but one of the advantages they have over other Santa
Cruz beach homes
is a very nice long beach and easy access to the sand.
This invites exercise which helps strengthen bones.

Children and teenagers form new bone faster than they lose the old
bone. This means their bones get denser and denser until they reach
what experts call peak bone mass, which happens around 20 years old.
After you reach peak bone mass, the balance between bone loss and bone
formation might start to change. In other words, you may slowly start
to lose more bone than you form. In midlife, bone loss usually speeds
up in both men and women. For most women, bone loss increases after
menopause, when estrogen levels drop sharply. In fact, in the five to
seven years after menopause, women can lose up to 20 percent or more of
their bone density.

The best ways to prevent that massive loss of bone is to make sure you
keep your calcium levels up.  Taking a multivitamin can be
helpful, but for menopausal/post menopausal women a higher dose of
calcium may be needed.  Calcium is nice on its own, but it is
only part of the story. Vitamin D helps your body to absorb calcium.
The NOF recommends 1,200 mcg of calcium and 1,000 mcg of vitamin D each
day.  If you have a severe deficiency of vitamin D you may
need to take as much as 100,000 mcg per week.

The third aspect of preventing and treating osteoporosis is
exercise.  Bones are like muscles– they strengthen as they
are used. Here are some exercises that can be done: some are high
impact and others are low impact for those who cannot do the high
impact exercises.


High Impact Exercises

•    High-impact aerobics
•    Hiking
•    Jogging/running
•    Jumping Rope
•    Stair climbing
•    Tennis
•    Dancing

Low Impact Exercises


Elliptical training machines
•    Low impact aerobics
•    Stair-step machines
•    Walking (treadmill/outside)

The best approach to preventing osteoporosis is really three-pronged:
keeping up levels of calcium, vitamin D, and exercise. Some of the
calcium can be taken from your diet, so can the vitamin D. Leafy green
vegetables are often good sources, such as spinach, kale and others.
Exercise is a necessary evil for every age group, but is especially
important for those of us who are over 50. Getting out and walking is
an easy way to start your exercise. While you don’t need a Rio Del Mar
beach house
, to start, a walk around the block is a great way to start.
You will find with more walking a greater connection to your neighbors
and community. Start slowly, with your physicians’ guidance and
exercise yourself to health and strength.  Be sure to check
out the National Osteoporosis Foundation’s website at
www.nof.org  for more information on this process.

Why Air Particulates Create A Need For Tougher Emissions Control

Airborne particulate matter is a complex mixture of organic and inorganic substances that are divided into two groups: coarse and fine particles. The fine particles include formed aerosols (gas that turned to particles), combustion particles, and metal vapors. The large particles are things like dust from the road or a factory. The fine particles are the ones most directly linked to acid rain and those are the ones that we are going to deal with today. They have the most relevance to the new laws in California regulating the emissions from semi-tractor trailers. While Santa Cruz is not a big city, we have a major artery, highway 1 which runs through our lovely ocean side communities as well as mining in the mountains which generate particulates too.

Particulate air pollution is a mixture of solid and liquid particles that are suspended in the air that you breathe. It is best to classify air particles by the aerodynamic properties because these properties determine the removal of them from the air, and where they deposit in your respiratory system.

The fine particles are mainly created from gases. There are four major origins for the gases that are to blame for these particles: heavy metal (vaporized during combustion or casting), carbon from combustion, organic carbon, sulfates and nitrates. Take sulphur dioxide. It is created during engine combustion, but when it gets into the atmosphere and mixes with rain it turns into sulphuric acid. We all probably know what that can do- as it is highly corrosive and dangerous in concentration.

The relationship between air pollution and lung cancer has been well established. The fine particles are the ones mostly to blame. Air pollution makes all lung diseases (COPD, asthma, emphysema) worse as the smog levels go up.

It has also been proven the lung development in children in areas of high smog is slower than in other areas. Some children do not achieve full lung capacity because of the smog they live in. The good news is that lung development begins again if the child moves away from the smog. These results were issued in the American Journal of Respiratory And Critical Care in 2001 and 2002.

The damage being done to the growing lungs of our children and the irritation in the lungs of the elderly, has led to tougher emissions control laws being enacted in California. Not every child or senior can move away from the danger, so the danger should be minimized for them.

I plan to discuss these new emissions control laws in my next post. I hope you come back and read on with me. If you want to read up on COPD follow the link to get more information.

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