Grow A Truly Green Garden
Just because your garden is full of green plants, doesn't mean it's environmentally friendly.
The Early Show gardening expert Charlie Dimmock says there are ways to go green in your own backyard.
The easiest way to achieve this, Dimmock says, is to stop using chemicals in your garden. Then your garden will provide habitat for native insects and animals.
"The problem with chemicals is not only do they kill off all the bugs, but they kill off the good bugs as well as the bad ones," she said. "They totally over-do the situation."
Some people claim that natural chemicals don't work, but Dimmock says they will still kill bugs as well as traditional pesticides, they just might take more time.
"The thing with bugs and things like that is they're not silly," she said. "They're not going to kill everything off because they want a supply of food. It's a case of getting a balance in your garden so it's not going to be instant. It's going to be a year, two years."
Try propagating good bugs like lady bugs, which eat other bugs. You can buy lady bugs and other insects at garden centers, online and from garden catalogues and magazines. Dimmock also suggested tiny microscopic worms called nematodes.
Dimmock says that natural chemicals protect the groundwater and runoff and are also better for your plants. The problem with traditional pesticides is that they don't just kill bugs or weeds, they kill everything they encounter, Dimmock says. If you plant is not in good health, the traditional pesticide could wind up hurting, not helping, matters.
Plant a variety of flowers and shrubs so you have something in bloom all year long, or as much of the year as possible. This attracts insects and birds to your garden year round.
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