Category: Water

Xeriscaping –  Dry Landscaping Going From Freaky to Increasing Property Value

Xeriscaping – Dry Landscaping Going From Freaky to Increasing Property Value

I grew up in a suburb in Milwaukee, where everyone had front lawns with grass, bushes and trees.  Well almost everyone.  There was one girl’s mother who changed their front lawn into a prairie – with tall wild grasses, flowers, and tall plants.  This filled the half circle of lawn inside their driveway, and you could not see the front door of their house.  We used to stare at the “freaky lawn” as we passed by on the bus and some people used to make fun of the girl because of her crazy wild grass front lawn.

Today there is a name for this type of alternative landscaping which is gaining momentum, called xeriscaping.  The word xeriscaping comes from the word xeros, which is Greek for the word dry combined with part of the word landscaping.  Xeriscaping refers to a method of landscape design that minimizes water use.

The term was started in Denver in 1978, where employees from the Water Department made up the term for landscapes that conserve water.  This approach of landscaping emerged when there were severe water shortages in Colorado.  Generally, plants that are considered local native plants are used in xeriscaping, and the landscape design works to avoid water evaporation and run-off.   The xeriscape garden uses plants that usually have low water requirements, and are able to handle short periods of drought.

Some of the benefits of xeriscaping is that it saves water, requires less maintenance then traditional grass lawns, does not use fertilizers or pesticides, provides habitat for wildlife, and can sometimes improve property value.

The plants used in xeriscape projects vary based on the location.  In the Midwest, prairies, or native plants with heavy mulching might be used.  In the southwest, cactus, yucca, and sage might be planted with boulders and rock mulch around.

On my street, there are a few houses that have front yard gardens, or have partial lawns with native plants and grasses in the front.

My parents still live in the same area outside of Milwaukee, so I have biked by the house where I first saw a wild prairie in the front lawn.  It still exists, but today looks like a contemporary landscaped front lawn, with birds, larger trees, and flowers.

Each Summer at my  house in Cleveland, we decide not to water our lawn – and let it get brown if there is a drought.  I do plan eventually to have a lawn with alternative plants and landscaping.  The idea of retiring the lawnmower is appealing.

Image Source:
ecohomeresource.com

 

Links:

Xeriscape: Denver Water

eartheasy.com – Xeriscape

www.colostate.edu – Xeriscaping

 

Saving Water?  Cleaning my Pants in The Freezer

Saving Water? Cleaning my Pants in The Freezer

A while ago  I wrote about Levis changing practices to save water.   One way they are doing this is to put tags in new Levis jeans that suggest that the owner wash them less and only use cold water.

So – if you wash your jeans less how do you clean them? One way to get them clean is to put them in the freezer, a practice that will kill germs that cause them to smell.

I’ve been wearing my jeans for a few days.  (off and on – I rotate them with others.)  They do not look dirty – but do not smell as fresh as a new pair.

I looked around on other blogs – and others have talked about the  ‘freeze clean’ method which is reputed to kill the bacteria. It doesn’t remove dirt or dust, (or cat hair) but will remove the “dirty” smell.

The recommended method is to put your  jeans in a plastic Ziploc freezer bag and put them in the freezer. Some say for 24 hours  and some say for a week.

I just put them in the freezer and will see what happens if I leave them in the freezer for 24 hours, then see if I need to try this for a week.  I will report back after I give this a test.

 

** Monday February 6th – update

Two days later I took my jeans out of the freezer and gave them the sniff test.
I think they smell cleaner, but they still smell a little bit like pants that have been worn.

I plan to get the cat hair off them – and wear them today.  I plan to try the test once I have dirty jeans again.

 

Clean Your Jeans in the Freezer?  Levis is Making More Jeans with Less Water

Clean Your Jeans in the Freezer? Levis is Making More Jeans with Less Water

A typical pair of blue jeans consumes 919 gallons of water during its life cycle, which is enough water to fill 5 spa-size bathtubs.  This water includes the irrigation of the cotton, stitching the fabric, and washing them.  This past year, a new line of Levis jeans have been developed with future water shortages in mind.

The Levis company is planning ahead, for future water shortages caused by climate change that could make cotton too expensive or scarce, and possibly bankrupt the company. Behind each pair of jeans is two pounds of cotton.

Some new changes include developing a new non-profit program to teach farmers in India, Pakistan, Brazil and West and Central Africa new irrigation and rainwater-capture techniques.  Another new development is new stone-washed denim which is smoothed with rocks but does not use any water.

The reason for the company’s interest in conserving water began last year when floods in Pakistan and a drought in China ruined cotton crops and made prices higher.  This increase of droughts and floods support the predicted patterns of global warming.

The cotton grown with the new farming methods is called by Levis Strauss as the “better cotton” initiative. About 5% of the cotton used in the two million pairs of jeans made this fall was grown with the sustainable method. The company wants that number to rise to 20% by 2015.

All Levis jeans have new tags in them that suggest that the owner wash them less and only use cold water.  Wash your jeans less?  Is there an alternative to wearing dirty and stinky pants?  One way to get them clean is to put them in the freezer, a practice that will kill germs that cause them to smell.

I’ve been wearing my Levis jeans for 2-3 days now.   Tonight, I am going to try the freezer method to clean them – and will report back how it works.

 

Image Source:
Levis Water<Less

Links:

Levis Water<Less

More Jeans – Less Water – from LS&Co. Unzipped

 

Make your own Snow Machine

Make your own Snow Machine

Want to cover your yard with white fluffy snow?

On the DIY website, Instructables, there is instructions on how to build your own snow machine that will make a unit you can hook up to your hose and make powdery white snow as long as the weather is cold enough to keep the snow from melting on impact.

To build your own, you only need around $100 dollars and a trip to the hardware store.  The machine works by mixing air and water together – which is then blasted through nozzels, turning the water into snow.

The directions are available through the website instructables.com, where users create and share DIY projects, and there are weekly challenges.

Image Source:
MakeSnow

Links:

Make a Snowmaker – on instructables.com

Snowmaker Plans 

 

Ecowatch.org, The Cuyahoga River, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. speaks

Ecowatch.org, The Cuyahoga River, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. speaks

Yesterday I went to a public event that celebrated the launch of Ecowatch’s new nationwide news service website.  EcoWatch, publisher of EcoWatch Journal which has a  distribution of more than 80,000 copies across Ohio,  launched its new nationwide news service which will be based in Cleveland.

The website—www.ecowatch.org—went live the morning of Oct. 27 and will  unite the voice of the grassroots environmental movement.  This will be the first media source to focus exclusively on environmental news from more than 700 environmental organizations across the country.

The site focuses on five critical issue areas—water, air, food, energy and biodiversity—and covers topics including renewable energy, water and air quality, sustainable agriculture, fossil fuel depletion, solution-based sustainability projects, species protection, global warming, climate change and pending legislation.

The site of the event was in Rivergate park, which is near the historic site where the Cuyahoga River caught on fire 42 years ago in June of 1969.  This event played a major role in starting  modern-day environmental movement and creation of the Clean Water Act.

The event started  with short speeches from Cleveland Mayor Frank Jackson; Cleveland City Councilman Joe Cimperman; the George Gund Foundation’s Senior Program Officer for the Environment, John Mitterholzer and the Cleveland Foundation’s Program Officer, Nelson Beckford.  The speakers commended the work that Ecowatch has done for Ohio, and talked about the potential that the new nationwide website will do for the country.  Joe Cimperman showed support for Cleveland saying that, “Cleveland is a place that learns, earns, and shows why the best is yet to come.”

The keynote speaker at the event was Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., founder and president of Waterkeeper Alliance.  Kennedy talked about how the environmental movement is not about protecting animals – but people.  He talked about how the parks, rivers, and waterways are assets of the community – and assets of the people.  “We don’t have to choose between good environmental policy and good economic policy – we can have both,” Kennedy stated. He then talked about how the environment is an investment and will create economic prosperity in the future.

He talked about the power of grassroots organizing – and talked about what it was like before Earth Day in 1970.  Lake Erie was called “dead,” you could not swim in the Hudson and other rivers, large cities had smog so bad that you would get black soot on your clothing, and most waterways were polluted.  He talked about the Cuyahoga River burning in Cleveland – and that this was the catalyst for 10 million people going out into the streets demanding rights to clean waterways and fisheries.

Kennedy mentioned throughout history – all tyrannies take away public access to wildlife and waterways – and that it is time for us to take this back.   He went to say, “At this time all of the Great Lakes have fish that are deemed to be uneatable, and we need to continue to fight the polluters!”

After the event, I was able to walk by the banks of  the Cuyahoga River in the park,  which had a quiet but strong presence at the event.

Links:

Ecowatch – www.ecowatch.org

Water Keeper Alliance

Rivergate Park