I thought it might be worthwhile to put together a few ideas for gardeners, as to things we can do to help the environment. These are based on my "do as I do not do as I say" philosophy of life ie things I put in to practice and they are mostly old ways.
1) compost your kitchen as well as your garden waste
2) buy things loose where you can - eg no pre-packed veg and no tea bags.
3) make-do and mend - an old rotary mower blade will make a good garden knife - and obviously plants can be grown in all sorts of old containers
4) don't buy gimmicky stuff which may only be used once - this follows on from 3 and sometimes requires a bit of thought - so if you need a dipper for your liquid manure, an old tin nailed to a length of wood will probably do the trick ( may have failed here as I just bought some grow lights - time will tell)
5) grow your own green manure - comfrey is a useful for making liquid feed
6) pass on spare seedling plants, cuttings etc to other gardeners
7) preserve spare fruit eg make jam - or give it away
8) if you have a solid fuel stove, use the top to cook things like stew
9) collect rainwater
10) even if its only an old sink a bit of open water in the garden is good for wildlife
11) don't be too tidy - bugs and beasties need a habitat in which to over-winter and scruffy places in which to find food
12) if the quality is good, consider buying things like honey and eggs locally.
13) trees can last more than one lifetime and the ones we enjoy today were often planted by people who are long gone.
And if I may be allowed one wish as well :- I'd like to be able to take a container in to my local supermarket and be able to buy fresh milk there to fill it. (This happens in Lithuania where my wife is from - so it must be possible, if there is sufficient demand)
Happy New Years - Nick
(PS mods please move this, if you feel it should be in a different forum)
1) compost your kitchen as well as your garden waste
2) buy things loose where you can - eg no pre-packed veg and no tea bags.
3) make-do and mend - an old rotary mower blade will make a good garden knife - and obviously plants can be grown in all sorts of old containers
4) don't buy gimmicky stuff which may only be used once - this follows on from 3 and sometimes requires a bit of thought - so if you need a dipper for your liquid manure, an old tin nailed to a length of wood will probably do the trick ( may have failed here as I just bought some grow lights - time will tell)
5) grow your own green manure - comfrey is a useful for making liquid feed
6) pass on spare seedling plants, cuttings etc to other gardeners
7) preserve spare fruit eg make jam - or give it away
8) if you have a solid fuel stove, use the top to cook things like stew
9) collect rainwater
10) even if its only an old sink a bit of open water in the garden is good for wildlife
11) don't be too tidy - bugs and beasties need a habitat in which to over-winter and scruffy places in which to find food
12) if the quality is good, consider buying things like honey and eggs locally.
13) trees can last more than one lifetime and the ones we enjoy today were often planted by people who are long gone.
And if I may be allowed one wish as well :- I'd like to be able to take a container in to my local supermarket and be able to buy fresh milk there to fill it. (This happens in Lithuania where my wife is from - so it must be possible, if there is sufficient demand)
Happy New Years - Nick
(PS mods please move this, if you feel it should be in a different forum)
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