Showing posts with label landscaping. Show all posts
Showing posts with label landscaping. Show all posts

Thursday, April 30, 2015

“Organic” (not Roundup) Weed Killer

DSC02088Our midcentury modern home has nearly an acre of xeriscaped gardens (most original to the house).  This means we have a lot of gravel and rock where weeds love to try and grow.

For a while I was using Roundup to take care of the weeds, but then I did a bit of research into glyphosate (what Roundup is made of), and was appalled at what I found.

Before I get into the evils of glyphosate, I’ll let you know what I replaced it with.

  • 1 gallon white vinegar
  • 2 cups Epsom salts (not table salt!)
  • 1/4 cup dish soap

I was extremely skeptical at first, not to mention worried about quite literally salting the earth so nothing else could grow, but it turns out Epsom salts are mostly magnesium and sulfur, whereas table salt is sodium chloride.  Epsom salts are actually used as a fertilizer to promote plant growth!

I started using this mixture this spring, and I found it works EVERY BIT as well as Roundup!  And, hey, no cancer (or hundreds of other major problems associated with glyphosate)!

IMG_8693

So if you need something to end those pesky weeds in your meticulously cultivated xeriscape, I highly recommend the above mixture.  It works best if you use it on a sunny and hot day, and I usually see results by sunset, with the plant dying out completely in just a few days.

Now, if you want to know more about the absolute evils of Monsanto and it’s promotion of Roundup/glyphosate, read on (apologies, as I’m about to climb up on a big ol’ soap box)…

Glyphosate was invented, for the second time, oddly enough, by John Franz in 1970 and marketed by Monsanto as Roundup.  It was actually first synthesized in 1950 by Swiss chemist Henry Martin for his employer Cilag, but they did not realize the herbicidal potential.  In 1970, Monsanto had been exploring the water-softening benefits of various analogs of aminomethylphosphonic acid, when they found a few to be mildly poisonous to plants and hired Franz to explore the herbicidal potential.  After only three tries (his third analog), Roundup was born.  The Monsanto patent expired in the year 2000, so now you can get generic glyphosate (it’s cheaper!), but it’s no less evil than the Monsanto branded Roundup that they continue to pour all over the earth in increasing quantities (in combination with other life threatening practices like modifying plants to withstand glyphosate so they can use MORE of it on crops). 

Without going super deep into the evils of glyphosate (and Monsanto’s denial thereof), here’s a little snippet from the Glyphosate Wikipedia page:

“The German Federal Institute for Risk Assessment published a toxicology review in 2013, which found that "the available data is contradictory and far from being convincing" with regard to correlations between exposure to glyphosate formulations and risk of various cancers, including non-Hodgkin lymphoma (NHL).[6]:Volume 1, pp. 64–66 A meta-analysis published in 2014 identified an increased risk of NHL in workers exposed to glyphosate formulations.[7] In March 2015 the World Health Organization's International Agency for Research on Cancer published a summary of its forthcoming monograph on glyphosate, and classified it as "probably carcinogenic in humans" (category 2A) based on epidemiological studies, animal studies, and in vitro studies.”

Most European countries have banned glyphosate.

By the way, you know what else Monsanto invented?  DDT.  DDT was banned in the 70’s after being exposed as extremely dangerous to, well, just about everything in the food chain (cancer, nervous system damage, liver damage, etc.) –not to mention it doesn’t break down for years and years (thus remains in the food chain for a long, long time).

While glyphosate doesn’t stick around as bad as DDT,

“glyphosate is not included in compounds tested for by the Food and Drug Administration's Pesticide Residue Monitoring Program, nor in the United States Department of Agriculture's Pesticide Data Program. However, a field test showed that lettuce, carrots, and barley contained glyphosate residues up to one year after the soil was treated with 3.71 lb of glyphosate per acre (4.15 kg per hectare).”[National Pesticide Information Center Technical Factsheet on: GLYPHOSATE]

For the record, Monsanto also invented Agent Orange (to literally scorch the earth of vegetation in the Vietnam War), not to mention recombinant bovine somatotropin (that nasty growth hormone used in cows).  They’re a great group of fellas with only your well-being in mind!

The above should be enough, but the horrors go on and on (and on and on and on).  Here are just a few more things about glyphosate and why you shouldn’t use it (nor should ANYONE).

"A recent study from Harvard, published on March 27th of 2014, has definitively confirmed what scientists outside the US have been saying for years: neonicotinoids are THE [emphasis added] cause of colony collapse disorder (CCD). The study showed that 50% of colonies populated by bees who had been in contact with these pesticides collapsed, compared to only 1 in 6 who were not in contact with neonicotinoids.” [quote copied from this site

You can download a pdf of the Harvard report here:

http://www.bulletinofinsectology.org/pdfarticles/vol67-2014-125-130lu.pdf

Here is another study in collaboration with the Apiary Inspectors of America (AIA) and the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) that illustrates the threat of glyphosate in colony collapse disorder:

http://beeinformed.org/2014/05/colony-loss-2013-2014/

I could go on and on, but it just gets more depressing.  Long story short, vinegar, Epsom salts, and soap work better than Roundup and won’t kill your friends!

Saturday, April 2, 2011

Midcentury Topiary

I am wild about funky shaped bushes outside of midcentury houses.
 
Some of my favorite shapes are called Cloud, Pom Pom (or Ponpom), The Platter, and Swirl (not so much the Spiral, in fact, not at all).  There are a lot of really great specimens in the neighborhoods of Colorado.  I will try to get some pictures of my own soon, but for now here are a few I found on the web.
 

Cloud (this is simply fantastic)
 

Platter
 

Swirl
 
The three photos above were taken from the blog “Printer and Piemaker.”  I suggest visiting the site (the link is to anything on the blog tagged “topiary”) to view some great “real life” photos of topiary bushes in San Francisco Bay Area neighborhoods.  Thankfully there are no animal shapes –ugh.
 
The house across the street from us has some really great bushes, that are just kind of amoeba-like in shape.  Eventually I will head over there to see if they’ll let me take a look (and pictures!).  Maybe they’ll even give me some tips.  They’ve obviously been around for decades though (they’re huge!), so who knows how much information they’ll have.
 
I spent this morning looking for good tutorials (video or picture illustrated) on trimming bushes in the Midcentury Modern style.  You know how many I found?
Exactly zero.
 
What the what?!  I scaled back my search to simply “topiary,” but most of the tutorials were either Martha Stewart types creating dorky looking table decorations, or people who were really proud of their pig and giraffe bushes.  There was also quite a bit of Bonsai stuff, and while I would love to get into that someday, I just wanna start trimming my bushes.
 
I have two low lying Junipers, some Sea Green Junipers, and a Golden Tam Juniper that I planted two years ago.  I think they are big enough to start shaping, but I don’t want to ruin them by using incorrect tools, starting the shaping process incorrectly (cutting the branches wrong), or beginning before the bushes are ready (both time of season and overall age and size of the plant).
Here are some photos.
 
CIMG0938 Sea Green Junipers after planting. CIMG4693 Two years later.

CIMG0956 Old Gold Juniper right after planting. CIMG4702 Two years later.

CIMG4694
Some of the bushes have flourished.
 
CIMG4695 Others have not. CIMG4697 Some really have not.  Colorado can be really hard on plants!

CIMG0953 Of the five boxwoods I planted to create a new hedgerow to mimic the one in front of the windows (see below)… CIMG4701
…only one sad plant remains.  And, mysteriously, cacti have started growing in this spot!

CIMG4700
Here’s the nice, mature boxwood up by the house.  It’s pretty easy to keep shaped by simply hitting it with a trimmer a couple times a year.
 
So anyway… I’m on a quest for topiary instruction, and I hope to start shaping my bushes soon.  I’ll post more photos from houses around Denver and Boulder in the future, and I’ll be sure to share any information I find regarding proper trimming and other tips!
 

CIMG6544
In memory of the fallen.