Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1   Report Post  
Old 11-12-2005, 01:39 AM posted to rec.gardens
Ablang
 
Posts: n/a
Default Dan Vierria: Do you compost? Grass clippings are great unless...

Dan Vierria: Do you compost? Grass clippings are great unless...
By Dan Vierria -- Bee Columnist
Published 2:15 am PST Saturday, December 10, 2005
Story appeared in Cal life section, Page CL5

Insecticide, herbicide and chemical fertilizers. A nasty concoction
but that's what some homeowners are spreading on lawns for lush green,
dandelion-killing, grub-whipping relief. Best looking lawn on the
block. Yup, the stuff works.

But dumping treated lawn clippings on compost piles or spreading them
as mulch around edibles - like a peach tree or strawberries - is
asking for a heaping helping of toxic chemicals. Trust me, you do not
want to sprout a third thumb or a tumor shaped like a zucchini.

No, I'm not one of those organic gardening champions who handpicks
aphid and gasps at the mere mention of Roundup. Roundup is my friend,
although we only hang out around ornamentals. I don't use Roundup near
fruits and vegetables. Food is different.

Often readers will ask if they can compost a particular leftover.

"Oh sure, that's great for composting," I'll respond. "Do you also add
lawn clippings?"

"Sure do!" comes the proud response.

"And you regularly spread turf-building products on your lawn?"

"Sure do!"

Let's face it, if you own a lawn spreader and use it often, the lawn
becomes a mini toxic-dump site. That's why the Sacramento Waterwise
Pest Control Program (www.sactostormwater.org) warns about chemical
runoff from gardens and lawns into gutters and waterways. Pollution is
not a good thing.

If you must use turf builders, don't put clippings anywhere near
gardens and fruit-bearing trees. And certainly not in the compost
pile. Moderation is a wise course of action if you're not willing or
ready to become totally immersed in the organic way.

Even with relatively safe pesticides, think about what and how much
you're spraying, dusting or spreading. Toxins linger, some longer than
others. Roots absorb the good and bad from soil. Give thought to how
that could affect home-grown edibles and the environment in general.

Prior to last year, pressure-treated wood for residential use was
infused with chromated copper arsenate. OK, arsenic. The substances
were infused into the wood to kill insects and protect against
rotting. Treated wood can last 30 to 40 years.

Readers frequently asked about its safety for use in building raised
vegetable beds. Even though some studies insisted there wasn't a
problem with the poison leaching into soil and up into our carrots and
potatoes, other studies disagreed.

Banning arsenic from pressure-treated wood for residential use in
2004, the Environmental Protection Agency has opted for
"lower-toxicity pesticides." Good old redwood is still my choice for
raised vegetable beds. Why take a chance?

Use pressure-treated wood for deck supports and privacy fence posts.
The stuff works.

Jim, a gardener from Fair Oaks, asks if composted walnut leaves will
inhibit plant growth. Black walnut trees have a chemical growth
inhibitor (juglone) that is strongest in its roots, less so in the
leaves. Juglone can kill tomatoes, apples, azaleas, peppers and other
susceptible plants.

According to the Ohio State University extension: "Walnut leaves can
be composted because the toxin breaks down when exposed to air, water
and bacteria. The toxic effect can be degraded in two to four weeks."

Shredded leaves will decompose faster and the toxic effects are
diluted when leaves from other trees are mixed with walnut. But, to
play it safe, compost leaves other than black walnut. Don't ever use
whole, uncomposted black walnut leaves as mulch.

Jim also asks if oak leaves can be composted? Yes. Although studies
have shown that oak leaves really don't make soil acidic, others
believe otherwise and insist they make great mulch around acid-lovers
such as azaleas.

What not to compost
* Meat or meat products, such as gravy, fats and bones

* Dairy products, such as cheese, whole eggs, sour cream and milk

* Used pet litter or pet feces

* Ashes from a coal stove or charcoal ashes

* Diseased garden plants

* Invasive weeds (seeds can survive if the pile isn't hot enough)

* Poison ivy

* Grass clippings treated with pesticides or herbicides

* Sawdust from pressure-treated lumber

* Chips or sawdust from black walnut, eucalyptus, red cedar and other
allelopathic trees with aromatic oils. Allelopathic plants produce
chemicals as a defense mechanism to kill off competing plants nearby.

Source: "Composting" by Liz Ball (Workman Publishing, $10.95, 106
pages)

http://www.sacbee.com/content/lifest...14788284c.html

====
"I don't care (if I get booed). I don't know any of those people. As long as my kids tell me that they love me, I'm fine. My motto is, when people talk about me, I say, 'Who are they? They're not God.' If God was out there booing me, I'd be upset."
-- Bonzi Wells, Sacramento Kings
_________________________________________
Usenet Zone Free Binaries Usenet Server
More than 140,000 groups
Unlimited download
http://www.usenetzone.com to open account
Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
great items for you lawn decorating plus great selection of bird houses carol pritt Lawns 1 12-05-2009 10:23 AM
Dan Wheeler: Where did you go? Geoff Kegerreis alt.forestry 0 02-08-2003 03:02 AM
Leave grass clippings on site? (not composting this year) pgh Gardening 3 17-04-2003 01:32 PM
Grass Clippings Paul Smart Australia 7 05-04-2003 06:37 AM
Grass Clippings Paul Smart Australia 7 29-03-2003 04:32 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 06:14 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2024 GardenBanter.co.uk.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about Gardening"

 

Copyright © 2017