Thanks for Joining the Battle!
- Posted: 6:04 AM
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- Author: Flora
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- Filed under: environmental pollution, Gardening, global warming, greenhouse, natural gardening, winter gardening
I’m extremely pleased for your writings at our blog The Gardeners’ World. I hadn’t thought that my attempt to introduce all Garden Lovers at single platform and the way you bloggers turned out is really a great moral boost to the War against Global Warming and Environmental Pollution. I hope more and more bloggers will participate and contribute their valuable thoughts to this blog. Once again, I would like to convey my deep gratitude to Keith, Claire Splan, Ioannis Petrus, lkw, Harvest, K. B., Karen @ Wiggly Wigglers and Special thanks to wild flora for his valuable comments. This blog belongs to all of us and let’s make this blog a great success. You are free to use this platform for your websites’ and blogs’ promotion, too. You just mail me your sites/blogs’ URL and Titles @ cathysimpson@live.com and I’ll add them to the blog.
With Best Regards!
Thanks for the invitation!
- Posted: 8:56 PM
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- Author: Unknown
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- Filed under: greenhouse, permaculture, winter gardening
Just received an invitation to contribute to this blog. Thank you Flora. I'm spending a LOT of time in my greenhouse and, as the days grow warmer, more time in the garden. You can see pix of my greenhouse at
Winter Gardening in Southern Indiana
Going Dark for Earth Hour
- Posted: 7:22 PM
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- Author: Unknown
Excuse me now while I go hunt for some candles...
Glad to Be Here!
- Posted: 6:21 PM
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- Author: Unknown
Looking forward to many lively discussions ahead!
Why we garden
- Posted: 2:18 PM
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- Author: Lisa
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- Filed under: ecological gardening, ecological restoration, natural gardening
But I've found that gardening as restoration (of place and spirit) is an excellent antidote to environmental worries. Transforming our own yard from lawn to wildlife garden has been a remarkable source of satisfaction, and the ability of plants to heal degraded landscapes is something that we can actively embrace.
What I appreciate is the essential ability of gardens to restore patches of earth to support wildlife, and everything associated with a diverse array of plants. I know that we can transform barren spaces to areas that are both lovely and life-sustaining, and that communities, towns, and cities can 'green' themselves by planting a diversity of trees, shrubs, and perennials and encourage gardening for food and wildlife, and become living spaces in the process.
This is a perspective that has grown on me, as a plant ecologist interested in the natural world, and the wild plants and the wonderful diversity of plant communities that still exist on our planet.
I think gardening, and planting, is a way to actively restore our bit of habitat, and maybe more, as we seek to make a difference in how we approach living on the Earth. Nature restores habitat even more effectively if seed sources are available. Everything we plant is helpful in terms of taking up CO2, although I'm hardly worrying about that when I plant something. But by being good stewards of the little patches of earth in which we garden, we CAN make a difference by providing habitat, growing plants that don't need a lot of extra 'stuff' and vegetables (which are waterhogs), but nevertheless are the epitome of local food.
Never too early to Garden
- Posted: 11:09 AM
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- Author: Unknown
The Bradford pears are in bloom and so dominate the landscape, that some of our customers, whose landscape literacy is not complete, identify the tree incorrectly and come to the nursery asking for dogwoods, having completely substituted in their minds the correct species for the invasive species.
What has changed to create this wave of invasive species? A cursory reading of gardening literature and scientific reports shows a surface correlation with climate change, specifically an increase in CO2. The explosion of invasive species seems to be tied to the dramatic increase in CO2 which is the primary current villain for the increase in global average temperature.
Our traditional plant choices are changing, as plants once not hardy (could not survive the cold) in Washington DC now grow fine. Obnoxious plants such as poison ivy, a native, now are more toxic. This surge in activity in the garden means that we are spending more time and resources (energy) maintaining the status quo. This increase in energy used to halt change in turn contributes to the release of carbon into the atmosphere.
I look forward to commenting on future postings, and to instigating a few comments a long the way. Ipetrus
- Posted: 6:57 AM
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- Author: Flora
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- Filed under: Gardening
The Gardeners' World (Presented by The Ecosystem)
The blog is on a mission to spread awareness among bloggers around the world regarding Global Warming and Environmental Pollution. I invite interested bloggers to join this blog as a CONTRIBUTOR and post your valuable words to spread awareness. As a first step to this I've searched through several bloggers, selected and invited some of them to contribute to is blog. Hope they would accept my invitation and make the blog a real success. We would also use this platform to promote gardening tips, garden accessories and other garden related things.
Thanks for your kind support and soon we would come up with new postings.
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