Eco-Friendly Garden Supplies Salt Lake City UT

A naturally occurring material is not automatically the eco-friendly choice. Ask your supplier where materials come from. Natural stone trucked from hundreds of miles away may be no better for the environment than a concrete block manufactured just down the road. Look for timber that is local and certified as being from a sustainable source.

Herbarium Landscape Design & Consultation
(801) 520-3293
406 S. 100 East
Bountiful, UT
A-Abco Sprinklers & Irrgtn
(801) 467-0222
2896 E 3300 S
Salt Lake City, UT
RPM Property Maintenance LLC
(801) 277-0625
2611 Murray Holladay Rd
Salt Lake City, UT
Cedar Bay Design
(801) 566-6690
1670 E 8640 S
Sandy, UT
Countrywood Nursery
(801) 816-9104
611 W 12300 S
Draper, UT
Gilson Sprinkler/ Snowplow
(801) 466-2988
PO Box 1062
Salt Lake City, UT
Wasatch Lawn & Landscape
(801) 262-9006
5159 S 300 W
Murray, UT
J & L Garden Ctr
(801) 292-0421
620 N 500 W
Bountiful, UT
Bland's Nursery
(801) 561-1321
8630 Redwood Rd
West Jordan, UT
Real Foods Market
(801) 854-4110
420 West 800 North
Orem, UT
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provided by: Organic Food and Green Living

Think Local, Diversify and Design for Reuse

Yesterday, I posted some Tips for “Green” Gardens from Carl Smith, PhD (right), a landscape architecture professor at the University of Arkansas School of Architecture and coauthor of the new book Residential Landscape Sustainability: A Checklist Tool .

Here are three additional recommendations from Dr. Smith.

Think Local—and Check the Label

A naturally occurring material is not automatically the eco-friendly choice.

Ask your supplier where materials come from. Natural stone trucked from hundreds of miles away may be no better for the environment than a concrete block manufactured just down the road.

Look for timber that is local and certified as being from a sustainable source. A Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) stamp is recognized as the most reliable.

Diversify Plantings

Native plants drive global biodiversity and can be a great environmental feature in your garden, especially if you live near an existing native habitat that you can help protect and extend.

But research is showing that noninvasive, non-native plants can also be attractive to many bugs and beasties.

Design for Reuse

Whether it’s looking old and tired—or you simply want to spruce things up a bit—remove, replace or repair garden items like decks, fences and areas of hardscape from time to time.

Use screws and bolts instead of nails to secure timbers. Use lime mortar or sand to bed paving instead of cement. These choices allow you to easily dismantle and reuse, rather than smash and du...

Click here to read the rest of "Organic Gardening: Think Local, Diversify and Design for Reuse"