What Can You Do Right Now?

Set sprinklers to water the lawn or garden only - not the street or sidewalk.

 

Use the microwave to cook small meals. (It uses less power than an oven.)

 

Purchase "Green Power" for your home's electricity. (Contact your power supplier to see where and if it is available.)

 

Scrape, rather than rinse, dishes before loading into the dishwasher; wash only full loads.

 

Cut back on air conditioning and heating use if you can.

 

Turn off appliances and lights when you leave the room.

 

More Tips »





 


Entries Tagged as 'Organics'

Time To Grow Your Own Food? Start With Healthful, Easy-growing Herbs




July 11th, 2008 · No Comments

By Julie Bonnin
There are many reasons to grow your own food, and recent unresolved food safety concerns about summer favorites like tomatoes and cilantro, the official herb of Tex-Mex cooking – are likely to have more folks cultivating an interest in growing edible plants.
Herbs are the perfect entry-level plant for first-time food growers. Given [...]

[Read more →]

Tags: Food · Organics · Trees & Plants

Community Gardens: A Plot For Growing And Eating Locally




April 20th, 2008 · No Comments

By Shermakaye Bass
and Barbara Kessler
There’s no doubt that community gardens, a tradition that first surfaced in the United States in the early 1900’s, are at the grassroots of today’s urban “buy local/grow local” movement. But today, in places as diverse as New York City and Madison, Wisc., community gardens are also a socio-cultural [...]

[Read more →]

Tags: Food · Green Enthusiasts & Researchers · Model Projects · Organics · Trees & Plants

Companion Gardening: A Visual And Edible Bounty




April 16th, 2008 · No Comments

By Barbara Kessler
After nine years, Mary Bakatsa’s garden is bearing fruit…and vegetables…and flowers…and herbs. It is a chorus of life, and supports more activity than even Mary imagined when she started gardening nearly 20 years ago with a few potted herbs.
Along with her flowers and veggies, which grow side by side, she has [...]

[Read more →]

Tags: Green Enthusiasts & Researchers · Organics · Trees & Plants · Xeriscape & Water

Here’s How Her Garden Grows




April 16th, 2008 · No Comments

By Barbara Kessler
Mary Bakatsa is “organic all the way” in her sprawling Austin garden. But that doesn’t mean she simply avoids pesticides and blithely sits back to watch. Organic gardening is more proactive and veteran gardener Bakatsa runs dozens of schemes to nudge nature in the right direction. She places certain plants near others [...]

[Read more →]

Tags: Green Enthusiasts & Researchers · Organics · Xeriscape & Water

Composting: Don't Be Squeamish, Give Scraps A Second Life




April 15th, 2008 · No Comments

By Harriet Blake
Your first reaction might be YUCK. Composting is not for the squeamish among us.
The definition alone is enough to turn you off: the aeorobic decomposition of biodegradable organic matter, performed by aerobic bacteria, yeasts and fungi and in the later stages, assisted by ants, nematodes and worms.
Organic gardening expert Howard Garrett describes compost [...]

[Read more →]

Tags: Green Enthusiasts & Researchers · Organics · Recycle & Reuse

Composters, Dig In, There Are Lots Of Choices




April 15th, 2008 · 1 Comment

By Barbara Kessler
Manufacturers have pounced on the composting trend, giving you, the consumer, many choices for how you want to recycle your kitchen and garden waste. Here are a few:

This Tumbleweed Compost Bin was Member Tested and Recommended by the National Home Gardening Club, according to Clean Air Gardening, an online store that sells [...]

[Read more →]

Tags: Organics · Recycle & Reuse · SHOP GREEN

Keep Off The Greedy Grass, Go Native




March 28th, 2008 · No Comments

By Shermakaye Bass
Ah, the smell of freshly mown grass. It’s the smell of childhood, of school vacations and picnics and lying in the backyard, finding faces in clouds. No one will deny that plush turf is a big part of modern Americana. But the imported, “exotic” grasses of our childhoods, nostalgic and fragrant as they [...]

[Read more →]

Tags: Green Enthusiasts & Researchers · Greener Businesses · Organics · Trees & Plants · Xeriscape & Water

Learn Your Native Grass Species




March 28th, 2008 · No Comments

By Shermakaye Bass
To sort out which grasses to use and where, we consulted native grass expert Bill Neiman, head of operations and farming for Native American Seed in Junction, Texas. For much of the United States, he recommends “Native Sun Turfgrass,” a blend of 34 percent Blue Grama and 66 percent Buffalo grass created [...]

[Read more →]

Tags: Green Enthusiasts & Researchers · Organics · Trees & Plants · Xeriscape & Water

A Beginner’s Guide To Vegetable Gardening




March 18th, 2008 · No Comments

By Shermakaye Bass
So you want to plant a vegetable patch, and you’ve already found the sweet spot in your yard. But, exactly how will your garden grow? What should it grow? And when should it grow?

[Read more →]

Tags: Green Them · Model Projects · Organics · Trees & Plants

Gardener, Spare That Snake!




February 8th, 2008 · No Comments

By Bill Marvel
We welcome birds and butterflies into our backyards. But what about the little brown snake that slithers out from under the flowerpot? And those weird gummy lizards hanging around the porch light? And — ugh! — toads? Do we really want to share our environment with . . . creeping things?

Photo: Jeff Ettling [...]

[Read more →]

Tags: Green Enthusiasts & Researchers · Organics · Trees & Plants · Wildlife

8 Organic Landscape Products At Your Local Feed Store




July 24th, 2007 · No Comments

By Barbara Kessler
Frustrated trying to find natural products at boutique nurseries and big-box retailers that have a patchy (kinda like your July lawn) selection of organic products and whose sales staff don’t know much about them?
Try finding a local feed and seed store. Many stock just what you’re looking for. Why? Because organic [...]

[Read more →]

Tags: Organics

Xeriscaping: The Path to Water Independence




April 19th, 2007 · No Comments

By Barbara Kessler
There’s been a lot of talk lately about energy independence. Important, no doubt. But we need to think about preserving water too, and nothing works harder toward this goal - or offers as much creative satisfaction - as Xeriscaping.

Planting drought-resistant and native plants that survive on natural rainfall is a familiar concept in [...]

[Read more →]

Tags: Energy & Water · Organics · Xeriscape & Water

advertising


     
 

World Bank Told to Toughen its Global Eco-Efforts

July 24th, 2008

By John DeFore

Efforts by the World Bank to ease global poverty draw critiques from many quarters, sometimes including the people of those nations the group seeks to help. The latest round of criticism, though, comes from within the bank itself.

A lengthy new report written by the Independent Evaluation Group (”an independent, three-part unit within the World Bank Group,” as the report puts it) studied the bank’s environmental efforts from 1990 [Read more →]

 

Paper, Please: Los Angeles Votes to Ban Plastic Bags

July 24th, 2008

By John DeFore

In another development sure to result in gray hair, if not legal action, for those in the plastics industry, the city of Los Angeles voted this week to ban plastic bags by July of 2010.

The city’s action isn’t a law, though: It will only become one if the state of California fails to adopt a 25-cent fee for plastic bag use that has been proposed but was met with resistence earlier this year. As a result, plastic-bag advocates tell the Los Angeles Times that this week’s vote won’t inspire [Read more →]

 

Encounters of a Nuanced Kind

July 23rd, 2008

By John DeFore

Over the last few years, moviegoers may have come to expect that any documentary pairing scientists and ice caps will be a scare-fest or a sermon — a big-screen effort to hammer home the urgent need to take action countering climate change.

Not so with Encounters at the End of the World, a film that’s drawing glowing reviews as it expands into theaters across the country. Yes, the movie has things to say about the environment — in at least one instance, it even suggests that humankind’s days here are numbered — but it is far from strident, superficially issue-driven, or even political. [Read more →]

A WFAA.com Site