Archive for the ‘Greener Gardens’ Category

Energy Saving News

Gardening Saving Top Tips

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

As a gardener, you can help the environment by creating spaces for wildlife or producing your own food. You can help to save water, and recycle unwanted household items and food waste. Here are a few steps you can take to make your gardening greener.

plant in hands

Ditch the peat

Help protect environmentally precious peat bogs by choosing peat-free mulches, soil improvers and fertilisers. These are just as good or better than peat.

Peat-free products are widely available at high street stores and garden centres. Check that the bag says “peat-free” or ask an assistant.

Use pesticides responsibly and only as a last resort

Some pesticides can harm people, wildlife and the environment. Only use them as a last resort, and work with nature to control pests and weeds instead.

Get a water butt

Thousands of litres of water fall on the average rooftop every year. You can easily save on mains water by collecting some of this to use on your garden. Water companies and local councils often sell water butts at subsidised prices.

Compost garden and kitchen waste

compost  bag
A third of people in the UK who have a garden say they compost

Start a compost heap or get a compost bin and put your kitchen and garden waste to good use in your garden. Ask your local council if subsidised compost bins are available in your area.
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Hunt hopes to find ancient trees

Friday, July 24th, 2009

house

One of the UK’s biggest landowners is embarking on a comprehensive survey to identify previously unrecorded ancient trees on its properties.

The National Trust hopes to find 40,000 of them during the three-year project.

Ancients trees provide unique habitats that support a wide range of rare species, which will be at risk if the trees are allowed to die, say experts.

The data will be fed into a national record, managed by the Woodland Trust, which is available online.

“Ancient trees can be thought of as the cathedrals of the natural world,” said Ray Hawes, the National Trust’s head of forestry.

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<p>“This new survey will provide us with the opportunity to understand more about these special trees in our care and map their exact location.”<br />
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National Trust responds to latest figures on UK climate change

Thursday, July 23rd, 2009

A survey by Yorkshire Bank reveals one in three British adults (33 per cent) are returning to live off the fat of the land like Tom and Barbara from the hit 70’s TV show, The Good Life.

The British public cites economic and environmental reasons for them becoming meaner and greener in the garden; one in three agree that they can save money by having greener fingers and one in ten even admit to using an old wellington boot as a water butt.

a more effective way to plant plants
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Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009

Forests are of vital importance both to reducing poverty and tackling climate change.
More than 1.6 billion people depend to some degree on forests for their livelihoods, many of them the world’s poorest people.

Deforestation generates almost a fifth of carbon emissions. It is the third largest source of greenhouse gas emissions – larger than the entire global transport sector. The Eliasch Review recommended that deforestation should be halved by 2020 and that the global forest sector should be carbon neutral by 2030.

Douglas Alexander, International Development Secretary, said about the Review:
“With more than a billion of the poorest people on our planet dependent on forests to provide them with a livelihood, today’s report highlights the challenges we face in reconciling the short-term interests of individuals with the global challenge of tackling climate change.”

trees

Forests are being lost at a rate of 13 million hectares a year because the environmental benefits they provide are not valued and they are worth more when converted to agriculture. Poor governance and lack of knowledge and institutional capacity are contributory factors.

See what you can do at home and in the garden to do your part.

Everyday watering tips

Tuesday, July 21st, 2009

Things you can do include:
• use a watering can instead of a hose
• if you do use a hose, use a trigger to control the flow
• avoid using watering can roses, except on young seedlings, as much of the water doesn’t reach the roots where it’s needed
• watering early in the morning or late at night means water doesn’t evaporate in the heat of the day before it can reach the roots
• leave plants and shrubs dry until they show signs of wilting – watering too often can keep roots shallow and weaken plants
• weed regularly to make sure that watering helps plants and not weeds
• prioritise young plants and seedlings; more established plants will survive longer periods without water

Check out our range of water saving garden products which can help reduce your water consumption.

Go Green With A Wormery

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

wormery3

It is estimated that each person in the UK generates about 500kg of waste per year, and that each household throws away over a tonne of waste annually. Around 70% of our household waste has the potential to be either recycled or composted.

This is where the Wormery comes to the rescue! A Home Composting kit which uses special types of worms to help break down organic matter from your home.  From your Wormery, you will get a strong, nutrient rich liquid feed, which you dilute with water prior to use as an excellent plant food for house plants, garden flowers, shrubs, vegetables or as a lawn feed. Also, a rich organic compost known to keen gardeners as “Black Gold”.

Our Wormeries come in 3 sizes:

The Original Wormery

The Midi Wormery

and The Junior Wormery