Gardening is naturally an activity that lends itself to reducing,
recycling, and re-using resources. In any garden the first goal needs
to be to reduce inputs. Next, we should recycle, especially by composting
as much plant material as possible. Finally, we should strive to find
ways to reuse items that would otherwise be discarded.
Below (in alphabetical order) is a list of tried-and-true ideas that my husband and I have used around the country and in Europe. Finding uses for discards is an earth-friendly activity that can inspire student creativity, plus you can incorporate recycling/reuse activities into your math, language arts, and art curricula. Share this list with your young gardeners, and watch their imaginations go wild!
Bed Sheets
Wrap clean sheets around a towel that was recently used to dry a person
or a dog (or let the dog sleep on it), then place along the edge
of the garden. Use replace the towel with a newly scented one after
each rain.
Business Reply Envelopes from Junk Mail
Use for seed collecting.
Campaign Signs
The metal hoops that form the legs of campaign signs work well as supports
for short vegetable plants. The wire is stronger than that of regular
coat hangers.
When frost threatens, place hoops over short plants and cover with
row covers, old sheets, or towels to produce a protective tent.
Canning Jar Lids
Make a hole in used canning jar lids and thread with heavy string.
Hang them in the garden where theyll swing and catch the sunlight,
flashing and scaring away berry-stealing birds and foraging deer.
Nail used canning jar lids to sticks for use as plant markers. Paint or use permanent marker to write plant names, dates of planting, and so on.
Cans
Cover coffee cans with wallpaper samples or contact paper to create
lovely vases. Fill with flowers and offer to friends.
Cans make handy and durable seed scoops for wild birdseed, and for scooping soil into pots for seed starting.
Cardboard Boxes
Lay large pieces of cardboard in garden paths and cover with straw.
Makes a very durable, weed-free path.
Carpet Remnants
Use as weed barriers under a layer of mulch.
|
CDs
Use them as sun catchers, or like with canning jar lids, to repel birds
and deer.
Cereal Boxes
Cut cereal boxes to various heights to create little organizers for
seed packs, cards, or for use as desk drawer dividers.
Coffee Filters (used)
Use them repeatedly for collecting and drying seeds, and
when they
won't stand up anymore, use them for sprouting seeds in plastic bags.
Coolers/Ice Chests
Use to store small garden supplies.
Dryer Sheets (used)
Place them in the bottom of pots to keep the soil from running out
and to prevent slugs from crawling in through drainage holes.
Feather Pillows
On spring days when rain is not expected, place a handful of feathers
on a piece of cardboard where birds can find them for nest building.
If they blow away, don't worry, the birds will find them! (Note:
Do not put dryer lint out for birds to use for nests. It gets wet
and dries hard. Add it to compost instead.)
Garden Hose
For earwig control, place short (1 to 2 feet) lengths of hose around
the garden where earwigs are a problem. The next day, shake the pests
into a can of soapy water. (You don't want to get rid of all the earwigs
because they are good at controlling some other pests, but this method
is unlikely to eliminate them!)
Metal Baskets (from chest freezers)
Cover seedlings with metal baskets to protect them from digging cats.
Use them to protect your catnip from felines, too!
Use them to support row covers over tender seedlings. This is especially effective on very cold nights when you want to keep the cover from touching the plants, or to protect seedlings from heavy rain.
Pallets
Put potted plants on pallets to discourage roots from growing into
the earth below.
Use as a platform for kids to stand on to help them reach a tall table or work surface. If there are wide gaps between the slats, cover pallets with linoleum, plywood, or heavy cardboard.
Use as a raised sidewalk over muddy patches in the garden.
|
Paper
Newspaper and all uncoated junk mail can be composted. Worms love it!
Place it in the garden, cover it with grass clippings, and the worms
will find it and break it down.
Layers newspaper several sheets thick in garden paths and around plants, and cover with straw. Makes a very effective weed barrier.
Make seed starter pots by wrapping two or three strips (about 3x12 inches) around the sides of a small can, such as a soup can, fold the bottom down over the bottom of the can, tape the bottom, tape the side, then slide it off. Paper pots hold up quite well, and you can plant the whole thing right in the soil.
Start a worm-composting project with a small trash can. Shred newspaper,
moisten it, add a bit of soil, mulch or fallen leaves, and some composting
worms. The castings left by the worms make rich fertilizer for plants!
Potting Soil
If you want to reuse potting soil, pasteurize it first in a simple
solar oven. Here's where you can get
instructions:
Solar Cooking,
Blue Rock Station Style
Solar Box Cooker
Build Your Own Solar Oven
Plastic Grocery Bags
Hang bags from the hoop on your garden apron as a handy place for stashing
weeds and trash while you work.
Plastic Sandwich Bags
Stick plant cuttings into used plastic bags, add some water, then zip
closed around the plant stalks. Hang bags from a curtain rod or clothes
line with clothespins, and you can watch for roots to form.
Soda Bottles or Milk Jugs
Wash and dry, and cut off the bottom third of the bottle. Bury the
neck of the bottle in the ground next to a plant that requires a
lot of water (e.g., tomato, pumpkin) and fill with water daily. This
gets the water right to the roots.
Use them as vases for transporting cut flowers home. (This is very handy if the child is riding home in a car, because soda bottles fit into cup holders!)
Cut off the bottom of a gallon milk jug and use for seed starter trays, or as paint trays for garden art classes.
String
Hang odd pieces of string around the yard in trees or discarded baskets
for birds to use as nesting material.
Tires
Car and tractor tires make great raised beds. Cut the top rim away
to increase the planting space. Visit www.tirecrafting.com
for more
ideas.
Toilet Paper Tubes
Use to start seedlings of plants that are sensitive to transplant shock
(morning glories, cypress vine, sunflowers). Cut four 1-inch-long
slits in one end and fold the tabs inward to create a pot with a
bottom. Fill will soil and sow seeds. Plant the entire tube outside.
Give them plenty of light and air circulation to prevent mold growth.
Tube Socks
Cut into strips and use to tie tomato plants to stakes.
Umbrellas
If you have no choice but to transplant seedlings on a sunny day, use
old umbrellas to shade them.
Annie Warmke is co-owner of Blue
Rock Station, a green living education
center. Annie learned to reduce, reuse and recycle as a child and never
outgrew it. She is a scientist, writer, and lover of nature who milks
goats and loves helping anyone who will listen to love the earth in
some small way. She has written and contributed to several books with
topics ranging from natural gardening to raising money to help battered
women, and her work has appeared in newspapers around the world.
Annie is a member of the Kidsgardening Advisory Board. This board of youth gardening experts and advocates from around the country provide NGA staff with ideas, suggestions, and feedback for kidsgardening.org