How Green is your Garden?
Posted on Jul 16, 2009 under Best Perennials | 5 Comments
Canadians love their gardens – whether that means a patch of grass and a few sturdy shrubs by the deck, or a full-scale, blowsy English garden of roses, perennials and vegetables. Our little patches of green tend to be our personal sanctuaries and play spaces – away from the stresses of the world.
Well, for our gardens to be our sanctuaries, it would be best if they were health-inducing – and that means eco-friendly.
Here’s some tips for “green” landscaping to improve your outdoor living this summer:
Begin With The Trees
Your trees are your best landscaping asset. Deciduous trees let winter sun into your house when you need it most, and shield you from the sweltering rays of summer. If your house is blessed with shade, you’re already a leafy 10 degrees cooler than properties exposed to full sun. Mature trees provide the best air conditioning possible — clean, free, and majestic! Evergreens planted on the north side of your home will help stave off the winter chill. There are other important health benefits to trees, too: all types of trees will clean the air around you. It’s no surprise that many homeowners are paying big bucks for big trees. But if you start planting now, before you know it (with patience and minimal care). you too can enjoy the many benefits that trees freely offer.
Birds And Bees
Butterflies and ladybugs too. You want to attract all sorts of good creatures to your garden for pest control. Birds love thick shrubbery, shallow birdbaths, native plantings, and fruit, nut and seed-bearing plants. They also love to have a little trickle of water. A small pump will help create the best effect: the slightest stream of water flowing into a shallow plate or rock depression.
Provide butterflies with sheltered sunny spots filled with brightly coloured blooms, and a flat warm rock for butterfly sunbathing. Bees love nectar-producing flowers, ladybugs love Queen Anne’s Lace, and all of these treasures thrive in a chemical free environment.
These are the creatures that will help establish a healthy, happy garden – and protect your plants from the nasty pests.
Go Native
Nurseries offering indigenous plants are springing up everywhere now, making it easier for you to find native plants. There are all kinds of reasons for showcasing hardy native plantings in your garden; they are generally pest and disease free, resistant to drought, and attractive to beneficial wildlife.
Queen Anne’s Lace, tansy, all sorts of daisies and lilies – the roll call of our native plants is impressively long and beautiful.
Roll Out The Barrel
We’re talking rain barrels here — ideally several for maximum water collection. The volume of water captured after an even seemingly brief rainfall will surprise you. Your plants will be happier with warm untreated water instead of the freezing cold chlorinated water that comes out of your garden hoses — and you’ll save on your water bill too.
Black gold
Start composting now and by next year you will have the most amazingly rich black stuff to sprinkle onto your lawn and flowerbeds. Many communities offer plastic compost barrels, but it is more efficient (and aesthetically pleasing) to build a wooden three-solid-sided unit with a slatted moveable front piece.
Just remember not to put in any animal by-products — most kitchen and garden waste (not weeds) is acceptable. Keep your compost pile slightly moist (positioning it in a shaded spot helps) and poke a stick in it once in a while. That’s it.
Acceptable pest and weed control
Synthetic garden chemicals do your garden no favours – upsetting the balance of healthy soil, earthworms, good insects, birds and other creatures. Declare a no-chemical season in your garden. Kill weeds with vinegar, or a dose of boiling water. Use soapy sprays to control aphids, and diatomaceous earth to stop slugs.
Put up a bat box; a bat will eat thousands of mosquitoes, and don’t deserve their Halloween-y reputation. Garden-friendly insects such as ladybugs and praying mantis will patrol for a range of problem insects. Physical trapping is also good (i.e. dishes of beer for slugs etc.) Don’t hesitate to use the good old methods of hosing off, and squashing too!
Mr. Toad
A clay toad-house or other cool spot may attract a
toad: one of your garden’s best friends.
Push mower renaissance
Remember the delightful “clackety” sound of your grandfather’s old push mower? Cancel your gym membership for the summer: low-tech and clean, push mowers cut your grass efficiently, quietly, and give you a bit of a workout too.
The House Team Of Mortgage Intellingence
http://www.articlesbase.com/gardening-articles/how-green-is-your-garden-75093.html
July 16th, 2009 at 9:44 pm
how can you feed a wild green garden snake?
we live in southern virginia and found a green garden snake that we want to keep, but we dont know ho to feed it!
July 17th, 2009 at 2:46 am
that is why you don’t! Not only is keeping wild animals illegal, but it is also very cruel and unfair, especially if you don’t know how to keep it! Don’t keep the snake if you don’t know how to feed it and take care of it!
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July 17th, 2009 at 2:48 am
They are not garden snakes, they are called Garter Snakes.
They will eat toads, frogs, small mice, pinkies, and fish.
The best thing to do with wild animals is let them go though.
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July 17th, 2009 at 2:50 am
if you keep a wild-caught snake, it will die. if you are interested in snakes buy captive-bred at a reptile show or from a breeder. please let the snake go.
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July 17th, 2009 at 2:52 am
Ok if the snake is green, despite what has already been written its not a garter snake. A green snake in southern Virginia is most likely a Rough Green Snake, So don’t believe what the haters before me wrote (garter snake?). Crickets and grasshoppers are the major component of their diet, most pet stores sell crickets, but they will eat about any bug they can swallow.. They like water so it needs a water dish it can curl up and soak in. It will take so time for in to calm down but don’t give up. The snake if it bites is completely harmless though it might scare you at first . Be patient and you will have a great pet.
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