BUY MY BOOKS
NEW! THE VEGAN GARDENER: Using Vegan-Organic Techniques for a Planet-Friendly, Wildlife-Abundant, Beautiful and Productive Garden
‘I found this book interesting, enlightening, honest, practical and sensible.’
‘Comprehensive, beautifully illustrated, down-to-earth, useful and inspiring.’
Recent Posts
- How to Make Seed-filled Bombs That Bloom Into Flowers for Bees, Insects and Other Wildlife
- It’s Time For Gardeners to Break Their Silence on Climate Breakdown. What we Do in Our Gardens and Allotments Does Affect the World Around us
- Add Water, Add Life: How to Make a Simple DIY Wildlife-attracting Pond in Your Garden, Allotment, Greenhouse or Polytunnel Using Free and Found Materials
- Make Your Own Easy, Cost-free Biodiversity-Boosting ‘Insect Hotels’ For Your Garden or Allotment and Encourage Wild Solitary Bees and Pest-eating Wasps to Live and Nest There
- Here’s Some Real Gardening News: Peat-free Composts – Fertile Fibre and SylvaGrow – Bag Two Out of Three Which? Gardening Best Buy 2017 Awards for Container Growing
Recent Comments
- John Walker on Here’s Some Real Gardening News: Peat-free Composts – Fertile Fibre and SylvaGrow – Bag Two Out of Three Which? Gardening Best Buy 2017 Awards for Container Growing
- Cooker on Check That Your Mousetraps Are ‘Bird-friendly’ This Spring
- andy on Here’s Some Real Gardening News: Peat-free Composts – Fertile Fibre and SylvaGrow – Bag Two Out of Three Which? Gardening Best Buy 2017 Awards for Container Growing
- shae on Check That Your Mousetraps Are ‘Bird-friendly’ This Spring
- Tree Surgeon East Sussex on Surprise Sale of Ryton Organic Gardens: A Revealing Email Sent to Garden Organic Volunteers on 1 February 2018
Archives
Categories
- allotments (34)
- bees & other insects (6)
- blight-resistant 'sárpo' potatoes (5)
- blog (32)
- carbon emissions (43)
- carbon footprint (44)
- climate change & global warming (46)
- climate- & earth-friendly gardening (91)
- container gardening (7)
- earth-friendly books (8)
- easy gardening (3)
- eco gardening (49)
- ecological footprints (18)
- ecological sustainability (43)
- energy use (48)
- environment (96)
- ethics (37)
- food & kitchen gardening (50)
- food miles (23)
- fossil fuels (34)
- freegardening (4)
- garden centres & gardening industry (49)
- garden compost (13)
- garden compost & composting (36)
- gardening footprint (27)
- genetically modified (GM) crops (4)
- glyphosate (8)
- good life (6)
- green gardening (56)
- greenwash (29)
- leaf mould (3)
- mail order (6)
- media (35)
- nature & the natural world (67)
- neonicotinoids or 'neonics' (2)
- no-dig gardening (3)
- open gardens (6)
- organic gardening (102)
- overconsumption (21)
- packaging (10)
- peak oil (5)
- peat & peat-free compost (42)
- permaculture (1)
- pesticides in the garden (26)
- plastic (7)
- politics (14)
- pollution (24)
- published articles (100)
- rainwater harvesting (7)
- recycling (7)
- renewable gardening (35)
- resilience (15)
- retail monoculture (4)
- soil (18)
- transition (7)
- tv gardening & celebrities (23)
- vegan-organic gardening (4)
- water & 'water footprints' (8)
- weedkiller residues (4)
- weeds (10)
- wildlife gardening (3)
- wildlife pond (1)
- woodchips (1)
- © John Walker 2011- 2022
an ethical internet website
Category Archives: renewable gardening
How to Make Seed-filled Bombs That Bloom Into Flowers for Bees, Insects and Other Wildlife
Dropping bombs is the sweetest, most gentle kind of revenge we can take for the savage treatment of our flora-rich roadside verges. Our gardens are brimming with ripe seeds, so it’s time to get vengeful – with flowers. By John Walker. Originally … Continue reading
Posted in bees & other insects, climate- & earth-friendly gardening, earth-friendly books, eco gardening, environment, glyphosate, green gardening, leaf mould, nature & the natural world, organic gardening, peat & peat-free compost, published articles, renewable gardening, wildlife gardening
2 Comments
It’s Time For Gardeners to Break Their Silence on Climate Breakdown. What we Do in Our Gardens and Allotments Does Affect the World Around us
‘Keep quiet and grow on’ simply isn’t tenable any longer. What we do in our gardens does make a difference to the chaos of climate change – for better or for worse. By John Walker. Originally published on the Hartley Botanic website as … Continue reading
Posted in allotments, carbon emissions, climate change & global warming, climate- & earth-friendly gardening, earth-friendly books, energy use, environment, ethics, garden centres & gardening industry, green gardening, greenwash, media, organic gardening, overconsumption, published articles, renewable gardening, tv gardening & celebrities
Tagged allotment, carbon, climate breakdown, climate change, environment, garden, gardening, global warming, horticulture, nature
Leave a comment
Gardening in England is Set to be Completely Peat-free by 2020 – Where is The Persuasive, Compelling & Inspiring Green-fingered Roadmap That’s Going to Get Us There?
Meeting the UK government target of turning gardening peat-free by 2020 will bring a dark, nature-damaging side of gardening to an end. But it will only be achieved with determined effort – including a campaign to educate all those non-gardening folk buying a ‘bag of dirt’. … Continue reading
Posted in climate- & earth-friendly gardening, container gardening, eco gardening, environment, garden centres & gardening industry, garden compost & composting, media, nature & the natural world, organic gardening, peat & peat-free compost, published articles, renewable gardening, tv gardening & celebrities
Leave a comment
Here’s Some Real Gardening News: Peat-free Composts – Fertile Fibre and SylvaGrow – Bag Two Out of Three Which? Gardening Best Buy 2017 Awards for Container Growing
The April 2017 issue of Which? Gardening magazine brings good news for gardeners, and for our natural world: two out of three of its Best Buy awards for container compost have gone to modern and reliable peat-free compost brands (the other went to … Continue reading
Falling Assets: How to Turn Your Free and Renewable Autumn Leaves Into Rich, Life-giving Leaf Mould to Improve Soil and to Make Your Own Peat-free Potting Compost
Canny gardeners don’t leave any leaves lying – this beautiful and noisy autumn windfall matures into gardening gold that’s free for the raking, and is infinitely renewable year after year after year… By John Walker. Originally published on the Hartley Botanic website as … Continue reading
SylvaGrow Peat-free All-purpose Compost Awarded Two Best Buys by Which? Gardening* – and it’s the First Peat-free Compost to be Endorsed by the Royal Horticultural Society (RHS)
SylvaGrow peat-free compost was launched in spring 2014. It’s a 100% peat-free all-purpose compost made with sustainably sourced fine bark, wood fibre, and coir from a single, known source (it doesn’t contain any ‘green waste’ compost), plus plant nutrients sufficient for 4-6 weeks. SylvaGrow … Continue reading
Is Gardening Really ‘Green’?
Exploring the reality behind gardening’s widely touted but increasingly unconvincing claim that ‘gardening is green!’ By John Walker. First published in The Garden, magazine of the Royal Horticultural Society, December 2015 Writing about gardening is a solitary game. But using the pen to place gardening … Continue reading
Forget Black Friday – Green is the New Black for Gardeners Who Want to Escape the Hype of Mass Consumerism and Make Every Day in Their Garden a Green, Earth-friendly One
Mortified by the annual spectacle of pushing and shoving that celebrates overconsumption on ‘Black Friday’, I headed home in search of a more sedate and decidedly green gardening Friday… By John Walker. Originally published on the Hartley Botanic website as ‘Green days’, 14th … Continue reading
How to Succeed in Your Garden With Modern, Reliable and Nature-friendly Peat-free Sowing and Potting Compost
Gardeners have never had it so good when it comes to nature-friendly, peat-free composts for sowing seeds, potting up plants, filling pots and containers, or for simply improving our garden or allotment soil. By John Walker. Published in The Telegraph, 11th October 2014. … Continue reading
Potting Up Dandelions
If you cultivate an enlightened attitude to wild plants instead of trying to constantly eradicate them, your garden can share in their success. By John Walker. Published on the Hartley Botanic website, 13th August 2014. Put ‘kill dandelions’ into a search … Continue reading