Turn Over a New Leaf and Resolve to be Green

With the coming of a new year, we have the chance to better our lives and turn over a new leaf. Why not start by living a more eco-friendly lifestyle. Clip this list of green alternatives and see how many you can apply to your daily life. You may be surprised at just how green you can be with very little effort, and who knows, maybe it will be contagious.

Water your garden with a rain barrel. Hook up a rain barrel to your downspout or attach a fancy copper water catcher and start storing water for those hot summer days. Your barrel will weigh over 400 lbs when full, so ensure you find a level place to store it. One quarter inch of rain will yield 200 gallons of water.

Gather your neighbors and start a community garden to grow your own vegetables. This is a great idea especially for people with limited yard space or apartment dwellers.

Set up a composter and treat your garden to free compost. Fill it up with any non-meat food scraps, vegetable peelings coffee grounds, leaves and grass cuttings. Your plants will love it and you’ll be buying less garbage bags.

Plant a tree. Build your own forest by planting trees and seedlings. They look beautiful, provide shade and habitats for animals and birds. They’ll even do their part to improve air quality by filtering out pollution and boosting oxygen.

Find alternatives to insecticides. Fight garden pests with organic means, such as dish detergent and water. Take some Ivory Liquid detergent mixed with water at a ratio of one to two percent and spray your plants to coat bugs and suffocate them.

Use solar power to light your walkway. Save money on bulbs and electricity with solar powered garden lights. You’ll love the wire-free installation. Where solar isn’t practical switch to low voltage or LED lighting.

When landscaping, focus on using native species of plants to help stop the spread of invasive, non-native vegetation.

Make a habitat. Help support our feathered friends by hanging feeders or bird houses, set up a bird bath and plant shrubs that bear fruit.

Let nature take care of mosquitoes naturally. Build a backyard bat box and let them feast on between 500 to 1,000 mosquitoes per hour. That sure beats spraying bug repellent.

Remember push mowers? They’ve become all the rage as an eco-alternative to gas mowers for cutting your lawn. They save money, mess and you get additional exercise.

Don’t forget the mulch. Adding mulch to your garden in the winter protects your plants from the cold and in the summer months keeps the soil cool, prevents water loss and helps to control weeds.

Reduce, reuse and recycle every chance you get. It may take some time, but just by being aware you will increase your practice of the 3 “R’s”. The next time you go to throw out that old piece of lumber, fencing, or light fixture, stop yourself and take a load to the local reuse store. You may also find that reclaimed lumber fits the bill for your next building project.

Carolyn Capalbo
http://www.articlesbase.com/home-improvement-articles/turn-over-a-new-leaf-and-resolve-to-be-green-717324.html

3 Responses to “Turn Over a New Leaf and Resolve to be Green”

  • eli says:

    I need to rid my front yard of Bindis before they turn prickly, What do the plants look like? flowers?
    An Aussie,
    I have thick Buffalo grass but each summer out comes the Bindi. I am resolving to get rid of them (pull them out) so We can enjoy the summer grass barefoot, but there are a few weedy plants coming through the buffalo.

    I’ve got clover, which i am happy to leave there,
    One weedy plant with tiny blue flowers,
    One with tiny daisy-shaped yellow flowers
    One with a reddish-purple stems and green leaves like that of clover, and One with small yellow flowers like those of clover, and lastly,
    THere is the one I think it probably is, Which is completely green, but with tiny soft (at the moment) burrs all over looking like small venus fly-traps.

    One of these is Bindi, or Bindi-eye, whichever you call it, and at the moment I am pulling It all up, but there is only one day of holidays left and I need to be just picking the right one, but which one is it?

  • milboka says:

    I lived in Aussie for a long time and pulled many a out of my feet and toes. In the spring time (now) they look a little like flat parsley and are a pretty lush green colour. The little spikey bits are soft and friendly right now and are in the centre of the cluster. I don’t recall there being any flower per se.
    References :

  • babyboomer says:

    try this link

    http://images.google.com.au/images?hl=en&q=picture+of+bindi+eye&cr=countryAU&um=1&ie=UTF-8&sa=X&oi=image_result_group&resnum=1&ct=title

    every year we spray with bin di this kills the weed before they take hold

    its hard yakka digging them out
    References :

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