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Thursday, April 30, 2009

Green Way to Get Rid of Garden Pests

How green is your green thumb? Traditionally, gardening is viewed as a pretty eco-friendly activity. You’re planting life that can offset carbon and if you’re growing vegetables or herbs in your backyard, you really can’t eat any more local than that, right? However, there are a couple of not-so-eco-friendly aspects to consider about gardening.

First of all, when bugs or other garden pests arrive, what do you do? If you reach for a chemical pesticide, somethings gotta change! Leave the toxins out of your garden and try a natural solution instead like Flower Pharm Organic Ready to Use Inscecticidal Soap. The natural remedy calls on pure cinnamon oil to keep intruders out of your garden. It promises to control insects and prevent fungal spores from causing trouble. Plus, if you have kids and pets running around near your garden, you won’t have to worry.

Similarly, chemical fertilizer is a big eco no-no. If your garden needs a nudge to grow, sprinkle used coffee grounds or compost over the soil–they’re both effective natural fertilizers. And don’t let water conservation go to the wayside when it comes to your garden. Rely on nature to wet the soil with rainfall. If you don’t want to wait for the weather to change, keep a rain bucket nearby to collect water during showers that you can use days later.

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Julie @ 10:19 am on Thursday, April 30th, 2009

Friday, May 23, 2008

How Green Does Your Garden Grow?

Daily Greenz #155

Hose_nozzle_5
  Just because your lawn or garden is lush with vegetation doesn’t mean it’s actually green. The EPA tells us that an astounding 30% of the water Americans use is devoted to the outdoors, and more than half of that is used on lawns and gardens. Save water by fitting your garden hose with a low flow nozzle like Niagara Conservation’s 6 Position Hoze Nozzle, $9.95. But saving water isn’t the only way we can make our own backyards more eco-friendly. The millions of pounds of fertilizers and pesticides we apply to our lawns every year have the potential to pollute water when used incorrectly. And pesticides don’t discriminate – they kill all of the insects in your garden, including the beneficial ones.The National Resources Conservation Service
suggests
these natural methods

Click here to read more