Morningside Garden Zone 7b

Sunday, February 14, 2010

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About Me

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DD
Richmond, VA, United States
I am just an average person faced with the daunting task of trying to salvage our Planet
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  • http://www.consumegreen.blogspot.com/

TIPS that I practice

STOP:

  1. Stop Gas Powered Lawn mower, Weed eater & Leaf blower emissions: One old gas powered lawn mower running for an hour emits as much pollution as driving 650 miles in a 1992 model automobile. In 2006 lawn mower engines contribute 93 times more smog-forming emissions than 2006 cars, according to the California Air Resources Board. Lawn Mowers May Account for Five Percent of U.S. Air Pollution, EPA Says.
  2. Stop using dangerous fertilizers on you lawn. Phosphorous runoff from lawns contributes to algae blooms in our waterways and eventually wind up in our oceans destroying reefs and fish habitat.
  3. Stop using invasive exotic plants for you landscaping. Plants like English Ivy might be pretty but they provide no benefit to wildlife and choke out native plants
  4. Stop filling Plastic Garbage bags with leaf & yard waste & stop sending it to landfills. Fifteen to twenty percent of solid waste sent to landfills is comprised of leaves, grass clippings, and other yard wastes
  5. Stop using Poisonous Bug Spray & Weed Killers: Exposure to common pesticide such as Roundup is documented to cause cancers, skin disorders, spontaneous abortions, premature births, and damage to the gastrointestinal and nervous systems. Think about what your doing to your air and soil when you unload a full can of ant or wasp killer on your patio a place where your children and dog play.

START:

  1. Buy and use a reel push mower, it will make you a healthier person by giving you exercise, they require little or no maintenance, produces no pollution and make no noise. Other options include electric & solar powered mowers. If you must mow with a gas mower buy a newer model with a catalytic converter
  2. Use native plants for your area – Native Plants require less care, less water and provide food for native animals in your area
  3. Use Xeroscaping – Use plants that require less watering especially if you live in places where drought is common.
  4. Replace your lawn or portions of your lawn with ground cover that require less care like moss, clover, buffalo grass, Mixed fescues or native ground covers. Also reducing the size of your lawn, which will reduce your watering bill. Change a portion of your lawn to a rock garden, a sand box a horse shoe pit or a badminton or volley ball court
  5. Plant a Native Tree - A single tree, a natural source of carbon sequestration, will absorb approximately one ton of carbon dioxide during its lifetime. Trees also provide food and cover for wild life and they will lower your homes cooling costs by providing shade and windbreak.
  6. Grow some of your own food, tomatoes and cucumbers require very little care
  7. Companion Plant: Marigolds with tomatoes, garlic and thyme with roses. Some plants provide disease-fighting properties and repel insects while others attract beneficial insects. Use plants that have insect repelling properties like lemon balm & penny royal
  8. Go Organic, Stop using pesticides & herbicides. Start using organic fertilizers – not only is this good for your family its good for the plants and animals
  9. Compost – A natural source of fertilizer. Reduce landfills, compost your kitchen wastes. If you can’t compost, many cities have leaf pickup for a small fee
  10. Rain Barrel – Supplemental water source from rain run off
  11. Encourage beneficial insects & animals – Ladybugs, praying mantis, spiders, predatory wasps, birds, bats all consume an enormous amount of “bad” bugs like aphids. Learn what is a good bug and what is a bad bug and stop killing everything that moves.
  12. Create a certified wildlife habitat in you backyard. It’s very simply, just provide a source of food, shelter and water.
  13. Use leaves as mulch and leave grass clippings on you lawn as green fertilizer
  14. Go Solar with your outdoor lights
  15. Eradicate invasive exotic plants & noxious weeds from your property, but don’t do it with harmful chemicals.
  16. Use plant-based mosquito repellent and eradicate standing water from your property during summer months.
  17. Think about what you are doing, at what cost is that perfect Rose or that perfect unblemished tomato. What you do affects everything from the simplest microbes below the surface to the very air that your family is breathing. Talk with your neighbors and friends about what they are doing to their yards and gardens. Teach your children how to care for the outdoors.
  18. Most of all, Start working in harmony with nature.

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