Showing posts with label ECOnomics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ECOnomics. Show all posts
Jun 28, 2010
Keep Your Plants Happy & Lower Your Waterbill (Part I)
With record-breaking temperatures many gardeners are looking for ways to keep their garden from wilting in the heat and keep their water bills low. While mulching reduces the need for watering and rain barrels reduce the amount of municipal water you're using, you can reduce your dependence on municipal water even further by watering more efficiently. This involves using systems like drip-irrigation, soaker hoses, and water timers. In the first part of this series I will go over the basics of drip irrigation.
Apr 11, 2010
Why Everyone Should Garden
Have you every tasted garden-fresh food? Did you notice that the taste bears almost no resemblance to store-bought varieties? Peppers from the garden seem to be an entirely new and different vegetable. They are crisp, sweet, and so packed with flavor you wonder that one vegetable can contain it all.
Everyone can garden at home. A garden need not be large, complicated, or a lot of work. A garden can be a single potted tomato plant, a window box, a window farm (more on this in a future post) a few peppers on a balcony, or a small plot of land in your yard. Gardening doesn't have to cost a lot of money - you can get many materials for free or cheaply on craigslist, at thrift stores, or from a local garden club.
The trick is to start small and do your research. By starting a small garden and adding to it gradually, you can learn to take good care of the few plants you have now without getting overwhelmed. You don't need to buy fancy books to learn gardening either. There are many gardening books available at thrift stores and used book stores, or you can take advantage of the huge wealth of information on the internet, on websites like Garden Guides. Many garden clubs, like Tricycle Gardens, offer free or low cost workshops to help you get started. Learn which plants grow well in your area, and in the space and lighting you have available. Vegetables generally need 5+ hours of direct sunlight a day, but if you are growing indoors you can supplement this with fluorescent lights.
Gardening is a relaxing and rewarding hobby, and can be great exercise too. Growing vegetables and herbs can save you money, and can allow you to try different varieties that would otherwise be too costly or simply unavailable in your supermarket. If you grow organically you can have fresh food free of pesticides, preservatives, and artificial appearance enhancers, such as wax on apples. So why not give gardening a try this Spring? Because who wouldn't want their very own produce stand in their own backyard?
Everyone can garden at home. A garden need not be large, complicated, or a lot of work. A garden can be a single potted tomato plant, a window box, a window farm (more on this in a future post) a few peppers on a balcony, or a small plot of land in your yard. Gardening doesn't have to cost a lot of money - you can get many materials for free or cheaply on craigslist, at thrift stores, or from a local garden club.
The trick is to start small and do your research. By starting a small garden and adding to it gradually, you can learn to take good care of the few plants you have now without getting overwhelmed. You don't need to buy fancy books to learn gardening either. There are many gardening books available at thrift stores and used book stores, or you can take advantage of the huge wealth of information on the internet, on websites like Garden Guides. Many garden clubs, like Tricycle Gardens, offer free or low cost workshops to help you get started. Learn which plants grow well in your area, and in the space and lighting you have available. Vegetables generally need 5+ hours of direct sunlight a day, but if you are growing indoors you can supplement this with fluorescent lights.
Gardening is a relaxing and rewarding hobby, and can be great exercise too. Growing vegetables and herbs can save you money, and can allow you to try different varieties that would otherwise be too costly or simply unavailable in your supermarket. If you grow organically you can have fresh food free of pesticides, preservatives, and artificial appearance enhancers, such as wax on apples. So why not give gardening a try this Spring? Because who wouldn't want their very own produce stand in their own backyard?
Mar 29, 2010
Be Heard at the Earth Day Climate Rally

It is time for us to stop seeing ourselves as separate from the environment in which we live. If we pollute the air, we are the ones that have to breath it. If we pollute the water, we are the ones who have to drink it, and deal with reduced harvest from fisheries. And if we rely on just fossil fuels to provide jobs, we are the ones who will become unemployed when they run out. If we start the transition now to jobs in the green energy sector, we will not face a sudden economic crisis in the future, when the fossil fuels become exhausted.
I hope to see you at the climate change rally on April 25th. Come to make a difference, stay for the inspirational speakers and live music!
When: 11:15am - 11:15pm, Sunday, April 25th
Where: National Mall, Washington, DC
Why: Because we want a better future!
Earthday.org
Labels:
Eco Events,
ECOnomics,
Green Power,
Take Action Now
Feb 12, 2010
Nifty Thrifty
I wish there was a map of all of the thrift stores near Richmond, Virginia. Oh wait a minute, now there is! Using the fantabulousness of Google Maps, I was able to combine various maps that other people have made for thrift stores in the Richmond, Virginia Beach, Williamsburg, and Washington DC area into one super-map! Now you can easily save money and the environment, all in your own backyard!
View Virginia and DC Thrift Stores in a larger map
To combine your own maps is easy, just follow these simple steps...
View Virginia and DC Thrift Stores in a larger map
To combine your own maps is easy, just follow these simple steps...
Really Really Free Yourself From Consumerism
Richmond, VA's "Really Really Free Market" is a new found phenomena for me, and something I will be sure to start visiting! Held on the last Saturday of the month, rain or shine, everything you find there is free for you to cart away. Expect to see books, movies, toys, furniture, food, clothes, anything! You can bring your own things to give away, or just come to reap the free goodness. I've heard there are often free workshops by community members, such as how to change a tire! And as the weather gets better there is sure to be free music as well.
Not only do events like this save you money, but they also allow items to find new homes, reducing the amount of new materials and items being made, and keeping old items out of landfills. Plus, I seem to remember a few of you resolving to get organized and clear out your clutter, hmmm? So stick it to the man, and make it out to the next Really Really Free Market:
RVA Free Market
Saturday, February 27, 2010
12:00pm - 5:00pm
Monroe Park
Corner of Laurel and Main Streets
Richmond, VA
Contact Phone: 804.300.0026
If anyone knows of any similar free markets in their community, let everyone else know by posting a comment!
Not only do events like this save you money, but they also allow items to find new homes, reducing the amount of new materials and items being made, and keeping old items out of landfills. Plus, I seem to remember a few of you resolving to get organized and clear out your clutter, hmmm? So stick it to the man, and make it out to the next Really Really Free Market:
RVA Free Market
Saturday, February 27, 2010
12:00pm - 5:00pm
Monroe Park
Corner of Laurel and Main Streets
Richmond, VA
Contact Phone: 804.300.0026
If anyone knows of any similar free markets in their community, let everyone else know by posting a comment!
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