Posts Tagged ‘winter’

Canadians love winter and want to protect it

Monday, May 25th, 2009
because

Because I love the purity of the snow
and how the white contrasts with the sky.

because

Because the sun feels sooooo good
when it comes out! Soul-ar powered!

peace

I love winter for the wonderful
peace angels we can become!

Who needs to mine for diamonds when mother nature
provides us with diamonds all winter long!

We asked our Nature Challenge community to tell us how they celebrate winter. Here’s a portion of the note Dominique Larocque sent us along with her pictures:

My Nature Challenge In 1994, I made a conscious decision to embrace a new form of challenge! Getting people to fall in love with playing outside. As a two time National team athlete focused on winning medals, I had ‘profoundly lost’ the real meaning of what it was to simply play outside for the pure sake of what I call today my three environmental R’s: RECONNECT-REWILD-

REWIRE.

New Year, New Leaf

Monday, January 5th, 2009

Happy New Year! Hope your holidays were filled with joy! Thanks to the Green Room community for making this space an informative and interactive go-to about green living and achieving sustainability within a generation!

Following the holidays, I still have a bowl of delightful clementines to enjoy. But for how much longer will these foreign fruits brighten winter days and palettes? When I was a kid, and their sweet aroma arrived in November, it was a sure sign of Christmas coming (it still is). Usually grown in Morocco, Spain, and California, clementines have been available from mid-November through January for many years. Receiving one in a Christmas stocking has been a treat for generations – an orange in winter? How exotic!

For years, these juicy imports have come in by the thousands of cartons and as the denouement of the holidays approached, so would the last of the tastiest clementines. What would the holidays be without special treats? Then again, how would the holiday spread be if it was strictly native and local foods?

Traditions for treats aside (and detoxing from the holidays’ decadence in mind), the crisp start to January has inspired me to eat local during winter months, just like so many of us so easily do in summer. Apples, cabbage and potatoes don’t have to become dull. The green leaves of kale and Savoy cabbage brighten winter’s dreariness. And if we were busy at harvest, the art of canning and preserving can tastily take us through this hibernation. Thanks to some greenhouses, locally-grown salad fixings aren’t hard to come by.

Were your holiday meals local? Share your methods for buying and eating local during the stark winter months.

The new year presents opportunity to turn a new leaf. But first, let’s catch up on some notes from our readers that came in before the holidays. Perhaps they’ll trigger reflection on how you and yours celebrated them, and how we’ll keep a green conscience and the spirit of giving with us year-round! ~ Elizabeth

Curing apple scab

Monday, November 24th, 2008

A reader from Prince Edward Island writes:

We have five beautiful apple trees and this year hundreds of pounds of apples fell from the tree with an infestation of “apple scab," I believe. I looked at the markings and compared them to a book on gardening that identified it to be “apple scab” – the result of a small fly that lays eggs in the tree in the fall that gradually make their way to the apples in the spring. A beautiful crop of juicy red apples – wasted!

Please help us save the tree, the apples, and if it’s OK, to waste some apple flies. I would like to know how to keep these pests away before next spring. I do have some insecticide but want to stay away from that sort of thing.

David Suzuki’s gardening expert Lisa Atkins consulted with Martin Harcourt of Mainland Landscaping who writes:

Apple scab is a fungus that survives over winter in leaf litter and on the branches and fruit left on the ground, so sanitation is very important.  All leaves should be taken away and incinerated, or taken far enough away down wind to compost.

Lesions on the tree limbs should be pruned out aseptically – that is, the pruning equipment is dipped into a weak hypochlorite solution or vinegar and water (about a cup to a five gallon pail) in between cuts. Prune off a lesion and dip the pruner, saw off a branch and dip the saw. After the pruning and sanitation the tree should be sprayed with dormant oil lime sulphur – usually three applications, three days apart.