Going Green Information, Articles and Reports





Gardening eco-tips


We have more of your great eco-tips: This time, gardening! Please click the link below to see our favourites. Thank you for all your entries! This finishes our eco tips competition, we would like to say a big thank you to all who entered and we loved reading all your tips. We hope you will [...]

Another fun World Car Free Day at The Consortium
Once again employees at The Consortium have outdone themselves with whacky and fun ways of getting into work without using a car. This year the winners of our World Car Free Day competition were Phillipa and Nick, who came in to work in a trolley!!! It’s all above board though as it was one of [...]

In Search Of Spirit Book – Statement
No social or legal definition of Indian exists in the United States. Yet, 10 to 20 million U. S. citizens may have Indian ancestry. Few identify themselves as such. Nevertheless, an uncounted number of mixed-bloods struggle to capture their place on the American landscape of who and what an Indian is. This book is written [...]

How to Plant Healthy Trees
I know this is the age of instant gratification, but — this being the season — let’s hear it for planting young trees. The rewards (I speak from experience) are huge: a personal forest or great big hedge isn’t simply a visual treat, a haven for Our Friends The Birds and a way to help fight global warming. It’s also a shelter from road intrusions, wind and whatever lies next door. Even a single tree offers most of these benefits, and if it provides shade from summer sun it gets extra points, for making it easier to turn off the air conditioner. All this and money too. As long as you don’t overpay at the start, trees are a terrific investment. Deposit a 4- to 6-footer now, enjoy a major increase in property value when it hits the 14-foot mark — or, of course, soars beyond. My husband Bill trimming our hemlock hedge. That’s a 12-foot ladder. The hedge in the picture is about a hundred trees long, so it had to start out as young ones. We paid 5 or 10 bucks apiece — this being 12 years ago, more or less — for an assortment of rather spindly 4- to 5-footers. Two years later, when the tallest had barely hit 6 feet and all were still more promise than performance, I got antsy. Bought a bunch of 10-footers, at about 40 bucks a pop, to plant in front of the most grievous eyesore. Sure enough it did make an immediate difference, but the little guys only took two or three more years to catch up, and once they did that was it for the benefit. Annual pruning evened it all out. Now that every tree in the hedge is 14 to 16 or more feet tall, you can’t tell which is which. Other benefits of starting small: * Small trees suffer less damage when taken from the field, so they recover more quickly when planted (big trees usually stay the same height for at least a couple of years; they’re too busy repairing their roots to do much of anything else). * Small trees are DIY, which matters huge when you’re talking about a lot of them. You can pick up a 4-footer without serious consequences for your back. You can dig a hole for it without taking all day, and you can keep it watered…even a skinny 8-foot tree needs about 20 gallons of water each week, more if the weather is hot and windy.

How to Grow Garlic
As far as I’m concerned, garlic gets the blue ribbon for growing your own. It’s absurdly easy to plant and care for; it tastes great; it looks beautiful and it takes up so little ground that even those with very small gardens can raise enough to be self-sufficient in garlic for a good part of the year. All you have to do is choose the right varieties; plant at the right time, in the right soil; then harvest when just right and store correctly. Homegrown garlic, fresh out of the ground. Choosing Varieties of Garlic If you look in a specialist catalog like the one at Gourmet Garlic Gardens, you’ll find dozens of choices. The folks at Filaree Farm, who offer a hundred, divide them into seven groups: Rocambole, Purple Stripe, Porcelain, Artichoke, Silverskin, Asiatic Turban and Creole. Gourmet GG says it’s 10 groups because they divide Asiatic from Turban and add Marbled Purple Stripe and Glazed Purple Stripe to the list. You see where this is going — and you can see a lot more on either of those websites, but for general purposes the most important difference is the one between softneck and hardneck. Softnecks are so called because the whole green plant dies down to pliancy, leaving nothing but the bulb and flexible stems that are easy to braid. Hardnecks have a stiff stem in the center that terminates in a beautiful flower — or cluster of little bulbs — then dries to a rigid stick that makes braiding impossible. Softnecks, the standard garlics of commerce, are the easiest to grow in regions where the weather is mild. They keep longer than hardnecks, but they are less hardy and more prone to make small, very strong-flavored cloves. Hardnecks do best where there is a real winter and are more vulnerable to splitting — or simply refusing to produce — when grown in warm climates. Gardeners in most of the U.S. can try some of both. Southerners should probably stick to softnecks and northerners (that’s us) to the hard ones, but microclimates matter. Specialty sellers will suggest best bets based on your climate and tastes, and of course it’s wise to get some seed stock from your local farmers’ market: whatever it is, it’s growing where you are. Garlic Planting and Care Plant in mid fall, (@ October 10 in the Hudson Valley) in loose, very fertile soil that’s as weed free as possible. Insert cloves root side down about 8 inches apart in all directions (if space is limited, you can squeeze by with 6), burying the tips about two inches down. Green shoots will come up; mulch around them with straw. Hard freeze will come and kill the shoots. Draw the mulch over the whole bed. In spring, pull the mulch back when the new shoots emerge. Give them a shot of mixed fish emulsion and liquid seaweed. Keep them weeded. Water only if the soil is dry two or more inches down, being sure to avoid pouring water into the crowns of the plants.

Learn These 7 Habits of Great Gardeners BEFORE Spring!
Or is it the Seven Pillars of Horticultural Wisdom, or the Ten All-time Top Garden Tips? As everyone’s resolutions remind us, we love attaching a number to advice, a number smaller than the one I regard as most realistic: The Twenty Three Thousand, Four Hundred and Sixty Two Things It’s Important to Remember Before Getting Out of Bed. So be warned; I haven’t really honed it down to only seven; these are just the first seven essentials that came to mind when I decided to do this. And not in order, either. The compost bins at Stonecrop Gardens in Cold Spring, New York. * Make Compost * Use Compost * Plant Crops in Wide Beds * Mulch * Feed the Soil, Not the Plants * Share Something * Be There Make Compost Short version: Mother Nature never throws anything away. Longer version: Composting is the rare silk purse from sow’s ear, something for nothing win-win. You start out with kitchen, yard and garden debris and wind up with two benefits: 1) a great soil amendment and 2) many green points for avoiding the landfill. It’s easy to fall into thinking that compost’s last name is bin, and that careful layering and turning are part of the deal. But piling shredded leaves in a corner counts too. So does “trench composting,” handy for those with little garden space, and so does bringing your kitchen scraps to a place (try the nearest community garden) that will compost them if you can’t. I have a friend in Manhattan, for instance, who brings her coffee grounds, orange peels and such to the Lower East Side Ecology Center at Union Square Greenmarket.

In Search Of Spirit – The Book
Welcome to In Search Of Spirit – The Book

5 Tips For Fall Tulip Bulb Planting
Tulip or Not to Tulip? That is the question. Happens every year, as dazzlers never seen at the florist beckon from page after glossy catalog page.In addition to being beautiful (and frequently fragrant), tulips are inexpensive; the more you buy the cheaper they are. They’re easy to grow – in fact almost impossible to screw up – and in spite of the general wisdom, they often come backRed tulipsThese Giant Darwin hybrids have been around for so many years I no longer remember what they are. Probably ‘Parade,’ famous for returning almost as dependably as daffodils….

In Search Of Spirit Book – ABOUT THE AUTHOR
ABOUT THE AUTHOR Author Ed Bates is a tribal member of the Yankton Sioux Tribe. Although he lives off the reservation, he and his brothers carry their Nakota/Lakota legacy with them in all they do. His book, In Search of Spirit, surfaces from six years of steady research. It equally relies upon a life-time of the [...]

A Failproof Method for Growing Roses
Ha! No such thing. But if you want to be sure you don’t buy something like this: Grandiflora I forgot the name of And wind up with something like this: Dr. Huey, an uninvited visitor Be sure the roses you buy are …

Comments are closed.