Garden Compost Bin Point Pleasant Beach NJ

A garden compost heap made of veggie waste from the kitchen, as well as the leaves, cuttings and branches from yard work, can be rotted down over time to provide a ready resource of soil improver. What’s more, as many as one in five truckloads of waste delivered to U.S. landfills could find a home on a compost heap instead.

Rubber Playgrounds
888.436.6846
1985 Rutgers University Blvd.
Lakewood, NJ
Toms River Tree Service
(732) 349-3596
PO Box 4874
Toms River, NJ
Byrne Lawn Maintenance & Landscaping
732-657-3699
PO BOX 23
Lakehurst, NJ
Lawn Medic Of Delaware Valley
856-742-1111
P.O. Box 310
Haddon Heights, NJ
Fairway Green, Inc.
888-777-4151
9 Ilene Ct. Suite 14
Hillsborough, NJ
Rubber Mulch
(732) 904-0526
11 Cabinfield Cir
Lakewood, NJ
All American Pavers Plus
732-608-6331
600 manchester st
toms river, NJ
Garden of Eden Associates Inc.
(732) 730-0772
999 Bennetts Mills Rd
Jackson, NJ
Lawn Doctor, Inc.
800-631-5660
142 State Rte. 34
Holmdel, NJ
Tuff Greens Llc
973983-0640
74 Fox Hill Rd
Denville, NJ
Data Provided by:
  
provided by: Organic Food and Green Living

Heaps and Hedges

Our series of tips on “green” gardens continues with three more recommendations from Carl Smith, PhD, a landscape architecture professor at the University of Arkansas School of Architecture and coauthor of the new book Residential Landscape Sustainability: A Checklist Tool .

Hail to the Heap

A garden compost heap made of veggie waste from the kitchen, as well as the leaves, cuttings and branches from yard work, can be rotted down over time to provide a ready resource of soil improver. What’s more, as many as one in five truckloads of waste delivered to U.S. landfills could find a home on a compost heap instead.

Think in Layers

To attract the maximum biodiversity to your yard, you should use several layers of plants: ground covers, shrubs, larger shrubs and, of course, trees.

Hedge Your Bets

Housing, like all types of extended development areas, can divide areas of natural value like woodlands and grasslands. Rather than build a fence, plant a hedge to help provide a “green corridor” for animals to move through your neighborhood and between fragmented green areas. And if you don’t like your neighbors, you can always let your hedge grow tall!

Suggested Reading

  • Tips for “Green” Gardens
  • Organic Gardening: Think Local, Diversify and Design for Reuse
  • ...

Click here to read the rest of "Heaps and Hedges"