Sunday, January 29, 2012

Container Gardening


There are, of course, many people living in apartments, condos, have small yards or just don't want to tackle the work and sweat (which is the best part for me) or disturbing their lawn.  There are many options indoors and out, be creative or traditional.  Please see the link below to a fabulous site I found on the subject.



Lasagna gardening!

 There are many ways to garden, here we look at a great way to use your compost, newspapers and many more options!
Lasagna gardening is a no-dig, no-till organic gardening method that results in rich, fluffy soil with very little work from the gardener. The name "lasagna gardening" has nothing to do with what you'll be growing in this garden. It refers to the method of building the garden, which is, essentially, adding layers of organic materials that will “cook down” over time, resulting in rich, fluffy soil that will help your plants thrive. Also known as “sheet composting,” lasagna gardening is great for the environment, because you're using your yard and kitchen waste and essentially composting it in place to make a new garden.

No Digging Required

One of the best things about lasagna gardening is how easy it is. You don't have to remove existing sod and weeds. You don't have to double dig. In fact, you don't have to work the soil at all. The first layer of your lasagna garden consists of either brown corrugated cardboard or three layers of newspaper laid directly on top of the grass or weeds in the area you've selected for your garden. Wet this layer down to keep everything in place and start the decomposition process. The grass or weeds will break down fairly quickly because they will be smothered by the newspaper or cardboard, as well as by the materials you're going to layer on top of them. This layer also provides a dark, moist area to attract earthworms that will loosen up the soil as they tunnel through it.

Ingredients For A Lasagna Garden

Anything you'd put in a compost pile, you can put into a lasagna garden. The materials you put into the garden will break down, providing nutrient-rich, crumbly soil in which to plant. The following materials are all perfect for lasagna gardens:
  • Grass Clippings
  • Leaves
  • Fruit and Vegetable Scraps
  • Coffee Grounds
  • Tea leaves and tea bags
  • Weeds (if they haven't gone to seed)
  • Manure
  • Compost
  • Seaweed
  • Shredded newspaper or junk mail
  • Pine needles
  • Spent blooms, trimmings from the garden
  • Peat moss
Just as with an edible lasagna, there is some importance to the methods you use to build your lasagna garden. You'll want to alternate layers of “browns” such as fall leaves, shredded newspaper, peat, and pine needles with layers of “greens” such as vegetable scraps, garden trimmings, and grass clippings. In general, you want your "brown” layers to be about twice as deep as your “green” layers, but there's no need to get finicky about this. Just layer browns and greens, and a lasagna garden will result. What you want at the end of your layering process is a two-foot tall layered bed. You'll be amazed at how much this will shrink down in a few short weeks.

When To Make A Lasagna Garden

You can make a lasagna garden at any time of year. Fall is an optimum time for many gardeners because of the amount of organic materials you can get for free thanks to fallen leaves and general yard waste from cleaning up the rest of the yard and garden. You can let the lasagna garden sit and break down all winter. By spring, it will be ready to plant in with a minimum of effort. Also, fall rains and winter snow will keep the materials in your lasagna garden moist, which will help them break down faster.
If you choose to make a lasagna garden in spring or summer, you will need to consider adding more "soil-like" amendments to the bed, such as peat or topsoil, so that you can plant in the garden right away. If you make the bed in spring, layer as many greens and browns as you can, with layers of finished compost, peat, or topsoil interspersed in them. Finish off the entire bed with three or four inches of finished compost or topsoil, and plant. The bed will settle some over the season as the layers underneath decompose.

Planting and Maintaining a Lasagna Garden

When it's time to plant, just dig down into the bed as you would with any other garden. If you used newspaper as your bottom layer, the shovel will most likely go right through, exposing nice, loose soil underneath. If you used cardboard, you may have to cut a hole in it at each spot where you want to plant something.
To maintain the garden, simply add mulch to the top of the bed in the form of straw, grass clippings, bark mulch, or chopped leaves. Once it's established, you will care for a lasagna garden just as you would any other: weed and water when necessary, and plant to your heart's content.

Advantages Of A Lasagna Garden

While you will be maintaining a lasagna garden the same way you would care for any other garden, you will find that caring for a lasagna garden is less work-intensive. You can expect:
  • Few weeds, thanks to the newspaper suppressing them from below and the mulch covering the soil from above.
  • Better water retention, due to the fact that compost (which is what you made by layering all of those materials) holds water better than regular garden soil, especially if your native soil is sandy or deficient in organic matter.
  • Less need for fertilizer, because you planted your garden in almost pure compost, which is very nutrient-rich.
  • Soil that is easy to work: crumbly, loose, and fluffy.
Lasagna gardening is fun, easy, and allows you to make new gardens at a much faster rate than the old double-digging method. Now your only problem will be finding plants to fill all of those new gardens!

Monday, January 23, 2012

Environmental Benefits of Composting








Compost use can result in a variety of environmental benefits. The following are a few of the most important benefits:

Compost enriches soils

Compost has the ability to help regenerate poor soils. The composting process encourages the production of beneficial micro-organisms (mainly bacteria and fungi) which in turn break down organic matter to create humus. Humus—a rich nutrient-filled material—increases the nutrient content in soils and helps soils retain moisture. Compost has also been shown to suppress plant diseases and pests, reduce or eliminate the need for chemical fertilizers, and promote higher yields of agricultural crops.

Compost helps cleanup contaminated soil

The composting process has been shown to absorb odors and treat semivolatile and volatile organic compounds (VOCs), including heating fuels, polyaromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs), and explosives. It has also been shown to bind heavy metals and prevent them from migrating to water resources or being absorbed by plants. The compost process degrades and, in some cases, completely eliminates wood preservatives, pesticides, and both chlorinated and nonchlorinated hydrocarbons in contaminated soils.

Compost helps prevent pollution

Composting organic materials that have been diverted from landfills ultimately avoids the production of methane and leach-ate formulation in the landfills. Compost has the ability to prevent pollutants in storm-water runoff from reaching surface water resources. Compost has also been shown to prevent erosion and silting on embankments parallel to creeks, lakes, and rivers, and prevents erosion and turf loss on roadsides, hillsides, playing fields, and golf courses.

Using compost offers economic benefits

Using compost can reduce the need for water, fertilizers, and pesticides. It serves as a marketable commodity and is a low-cost alternative to standard landfill cover and artificial soil amendments. Composting also extends municipal landfill life by diverting organic materials from landfills and provides a less costly alternative to conventional methods of cleaning contaminated soil.

Easy Ways to Recycle and Reduce Waste


  • Look for products marked with "Post-Consumer Content" and "Recycled Content"
    Computer printer paper, notebooks, paper towels, toilet paper, plastic products, and many other household items can be found that are made from at least partially recycled materials.
  • Reusable bags
    Rather than using paper or plastic disposal bags, use reusable bags instead.
  • Stop getting "junk mail"
    Don't let paper be wasted on mail that you do not want anyway. Just call the customer service number printed on the catalog or advertisement and ask to be removed from the mailing list. You can also use Catalog Choice, a free service which lets you decide what you receive in your mailbox.
    Additional information for businesses: EcoLogical Mail Coalition

Styrofoam is EVIL!

It is illegal to burn styrofoam because this would release harmful chemicals to the atmosphere, notably benzene, a known human carcinogen used in the manufacturing process of polystyrene. (that means it causes cancer)
 It is bulky and hard to recycle, and takes an incredible amount of time to break down. You probably heard a chemistry teacher tell your high school class that polystyrene foam will be around much longer than the Statue of Liberty. The use of polystyrene for food packaging is now completely banned in some US cities. Environmentalists and oceanographers also note that EPS is one of the main ocean pollutants, being found in abundance in what is known as the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, an area in the northern Pacific Ocean that’s said to contain 3.3 million pieces of plastic garbage per square kilometer.
If your favorite take out places utilize polystyrene, consider bringing your own container and ask them to use yours as you are against carcinogens holding your food.

Reuse it
I’m sure there were times when you were packing something for shipping and there just wasn’t any packaging or padding material in the house. To reduce volume and save on storage space, you might want to cut the bricks into smaller pieces – it’s faster to do this with a heated knife or wire – and store the material in a plastic bag for future use.

Mailing companies
Check with your local UPS store for Styrofoam recycling. Many of these will now accept Styrofoam packing peanuts for reuse. A few will take in both peanuts and bricks for reuse in packaging.










Buy recycled

The essence of recycling is the cyclical movement of materials through the system, eliminating waste and the need to extract more virgin materials. Supporting recycling means feeding this loop by not only recycling, but also supporting recycled products. We can now find high recycled content in everything from printer paper to office chairs.
If you can't find or afford these items, you can look at the packaging you are buying - is it in a container that can be recycled?  I buy milk in plastic jugs because I can't recycle the cardboard containers in my area.

What can you do with your hazardous waste?

Hazardous


Hazardous waste is just that – hazardous. Many states require that this type of waste is processed and disposed properly. The hazardous waste that you generate is often distinguished as household hazardous waste, or HHW, because industrial hazardous waste is handled in a different manner. Many cities have HHW facilities where you can drop off materials so they don’t end up in the landfill.

Click below to 

Battery Recycling Jumps 900,000 Pounds in 2011

In 2010, Call2Recycle®, the North American leader in consumer battery recycling, announced that battery recycling records were crushed, up 10.1 percent from 2009 to 6.7 million pounds.
Now, they have a similar announcement, only the percentage increase is even greater – a whopping 13.1 percent increase over 2010, totaling more than 7.6 million pounds of rechargeable batteries collected for recycling.

Please recycle your E-waste

Electronics


Electronic waste, or e-waste, is generally considered anything that plugs into a wall or accepts batteries. E-waste has surfaced as an important issue, because it can be dangerous if disposed of improperly. Many major retailers have instituted take-back programs and municipalities have created drop-off locations to help quell e-waste issues.
Click on the link below to

My "Compost College" graduating class


Did you know this class is FREE?! 

How to make a non-toxic cleaning kit

Do you have little ones in your home?  
Invest a little time and very little money to make cleaning supplies that work and won't harm any living creature.  Many thanks to a wonderful web site: 
WWW.care2. com
 
Non‐Toxic Formulas:
CREAMY SOFT SCRUBBER
Pour 1/2 cup of baking soda into a bowl, and add enough liquid detergent to make a texture‐like frosting. Scoop the mixture onto a
sponge, and wash the surface. This is the perfect recipe for cleaning the bathtub because it rinses easily and doesn’t leave grit. Note: Add
1 teaspoon of vegetable glycerin to the mixture and store in a sealed glass jar, to keep the product moist. Otherwise just make as much as
you need at a time.

WINDOW CLEANER
1/4‐1/2 teaspoon liquid detergent
3 tablespoons vinegar
2 cups water
Spray bottle
Put all the ingredients into a spray bottle, shake it up a bit, and use as you would a commercial brand. The soap in this recipe is
important. It cuts the wax residue from the commercial brands you might have used in the past.

OVEN CLEANER
1 cup or more baking soda
Water
A squirt or two of liquid detergent
Sprinkle water generously over the bottom of the oven, then cover the grime with enough baking soda that the surface is totally white.
Sprinkle some more water over the top. Let the mixture set overnight. You can easily wipe up the grease the next morning because the
grime will have loosened. When you have cleaned up the worst of the mess, dab a bit of liquid detergent or soap on a sponge, and wash
the remaining residue from the oven.

ALL‐PURPOSE SPRAY CLEANER
1/2 teaspoon washing soda
A dab of liquid soap
2 cups hot tap water
Combine the ingredients in a spray bottle and shake until the washing soda has dissolved. Apply and wipe off with a sponge or rag.

FURNITURE POLISH
1/2 teaspoon oil, such as olive (or jojoba, a liquid wax)
1/4 cup vinegar or fresh lemon juice
Mix the ingredients in a glass jar. Dab a soft rag into the solution and wipe onto wood surfaces. Cover the glass jar and store indefinitely.

VINEGAR DEODORIZER
Keep a clean spray bottle filled with straight 5% vinegar in your kitchen near your cutting board and in your bathroom and use them for
cleaning. The smell of vinegar dissipates within a few hours. Straight vinegar is also great for cleaning the toilet rim. Just spray it on and
wipe off.

Sunday, January 22, 2012

Did I leave something out??

You may be thinking to yourself - she didn't include the main things others put in their recycle bins!!

No, I didn't forget the paper bags, newspapers and cardboard.  As I expand my raised bed gardens each year I utilize them quite effectively.  I save them up all year and then when I am ready to construct the new beds, these materials go down a couple of inches thick on the bottom.  They decompose and stop the weeds and our famous valley rocks from coming up.  My existing beds I am going on my third year of use - the only weeds I have had to deal with are a few around the edges and the blasted little trees that pop up due to the neighbors tree that hangs over the fence.  I make my beds no more than four feet across so I don't have to reach any further than 2 feet to reach my goodies.

I also add my own, home made compost.  I use the three bin system and have produced some great compost for my beds.  I refuse to apply chemicals of any kind to any of my gardens.

 If you would like to see how aggressive composting is done you click the link below to see a pile I did last year from start to finish - - including photos, tips and even how to set up a worm bed so the little red wigglers can eat your garbage!!  Of course, composting will happen on it's own over time - compost happens!  If your aggressive you can have compost (black gold) in as little as 6 weeks!

 http://protheropile.blogspot.com/

The project was named for my brother-in-law Mr. Prothero who donated the fine ingredients.

What are you tossing in the garbage?


(keep in mind I live in Spokane County, Washington - 
you may be able to do more or less depending on where you live)

I have always recycled to some extent - now, everything I can. I didn't have the Green Bin for a long time, mainly because I didn't realize what all can be included.  I thought like many people - "that's for grass clippings and leaves."  Boy was I wrong.  Then I had to justify the cost - this was actually the easy part.  By using the Recycle Bin to it's full extent and the Green Bin along with composting I was able to reduce my Garbage Can size from a 2 can size to a 1 can size.
1 can size down + green bin = the same money.

Now, what was I missing that I can include in the Green Bin?

Take out pizza boxes 
Cardboard style egg cartons
Egg shells
Chinette plates (not coated ones like the Dixie brand)
Cheap-o paper plates
Paper towels
Food scraps (including bones and meat)

What was I missing that I can include in the Recycle Bin?

Tin cans (they need to be rinsed)
Glass bottles and jars (they need to be rinsed) any color
All type 1 and 2 plastics (mouth of container must be smaller than the base)

Adding these items reduced our "garbage" by half.  Yes, it's more work, I have to rinse the cans and glass items as well as any plastics that might have food stuck in them.  The worst thing I have come across would be peanut butter jars.

I learned about all of this when I took the class "Master Composter/Recycler" through Spokane Regional Solid Waste System.  I am now certified and have promised to pass on my knowledge.  So, please, if you have any questions, go ahead and ask.  I can help you reduce your waste and use the facilities available to reduce you garbage and expenses.