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			 Don’t 
			spend time and energy bagging and hauling landscape trimmings to the 
			recycling center. Put it to work in your garden. Use shredded 
			leaves, evergreen needles, herbicide-free grass clippings, or other 
			pest- and weed-free organic material as mulch. Spread a 
			one-to-two-inch layer of these materials over the soil around annual 
			and perennial flowers and vegetables. 
 Spreading organic mulch over the soil surface helps conserve 
			moisture, suppress weeds, moderate soil temperatures, protect the 
			soil during heavy rains, and improve the soil as it breaks down. 
			Besides all these benefits you’ll be burning calories and 
			strengthening your muscles.
 
 Convert larger tree and shrub trimmings into wattle fences, arbors, 
			or plant supports. Or chip them into mulch to spread around trees 
			and shrubs or as pathways throughout the landscape. You don’t need 
			to buy a chipper but may want to team up with your neighbors to rent 
			one. Maintain a two-to-three-inch layer of mulch around these 
			plants. Keep the mulch away from the tree trunks and crowns of the 
			plants.
 
 Still more landscape trimmings? Start a compost pile if your 
			municipality allows it. Transform plant-based kitchen scraps and 
			landscape trimmings into a valuable soil amendment. Do not add meat, 
			fat, or bones that can attract rodents. Avoid adding weeds gone to 
			seed, perennial weeds like quackgrass and bindweed, and plants 
			infected with disease or insects. Most gardeners do not compost at 
			high enough temperatures to kill these organisms, so they get added 
			back to the garden with the compost.
 
 Compost is good for the environment and helps build healthy soil 
			more equipped to retain moisture, provide nutrients, and help 
			suppress some plant diseases and insect pests.
 
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            Continue growing lawn grass tall and mowing high as 
			long as your grass is actively growing. Taller grass is more likely 
			to outcompete the weeds and forms deeper roots making it more 
			drought tolerant. Minimize the stress by removing no more than a 
			third of the total grass height each time you mow. 
            Improve your lawn’s appearance, save time, and use 
			fewer resources with sharp mower blades. You can mow faster with 
			sharpened blades and your mower will consume up to 22% less fuel. 
			Lawns will also use up to 30% less water. Sharp mower blades make a 
			clean cut that is less noticeable plus the wound closes quickly, 
			helping you grow a healthy better-looking lawn. 
 Leave the clippings on the lawn. They add nutrients, moisture, and 
			organic matter to the soil. A season’s worth of clippings equals one 
			fertilizer application so every time you mow you are fertilizing the 
			lawn and improving the soil.
 
 Finish every garden chore with a bit of cleanup. Sweep clippings, 
			plant debris, and fertilizer off walks, drives, and patios, so it 
			won’t wash into the storm sewer. Keeping plant debris out of our 
			waterways is good for us and the environment.
 
 Melinda Myers has written over 20 gardening books, including Midwest 
			Gardener’s Handbook, 2nd Edition and Small Space Gardening. She 
			hosts The Great Courses “How to Grow Anything” instant video and DVD 
			series and the nationally syndicated Melinda’s Garden Moment radio 
			program. Myers is a columnist and contributing editor for Birds & 
			Blooms magazine. Myers’ website is www.MelindaMyers.com.
 
            [Photo courtesy of MelindaMyers.com] |