Help Get Rid of Leaf Blowers!



The South Coast AQMD is conducting a leaf blower exchange program through which professional gardeners and/or landscapers can trade in their old (but operational) backpack leaf blower to get a new STIHL BR 500 leaf blower for only $200. This is the powerful low-noise 65 dB(A) low-emissions model with a suggested retail price of $469. Up to ten blowers per business can be exchanged. Tell your gardener to go to this site for more info!

For more insight on how to tackle this problem go to Zero Air Pollution.

Trash to Treasure






This is what recycling should be about!


Agnes Anderson from Transition Mar Vista wanted to avoid sending 33 realtor signs to a landfill when her husband changed firms. With a little networking, her trash became someone elses treasure!

Six signs went to Free Arts for Abused Children (to be used for signage for their events) and the balance (27) were donated to reDiscover (for a more creative reuse)! Yay!

Think about these organizations or others like them before discarding something or holding a lawn sale.

Free Arts for Abused Children
12095 W. Washington Blvd. #104
Los Angeles, CA. 90066
310-313-4278
www.freearts.org
In fact, here is a link to their wish list:
http://www.freearts.org/Wish%20List

reDiscover
12958 Washington Blvd.
Just west of Beethoven.
310.393.3636
www.rediscovercenter.org

GREYWATER-Frequently Asked Questions:




Q&A about greywater with Lynne Latham,
ASID, LEED AP, Sustainable Design



Q What will it cost me to have a Greywater system installed?

A In the words of Art Ludwig, Greywater is all about context. What are your goals, how easy is it to reach is your source of water, do you need a pump or will your system be gravity fed, are you sending your water to just one mulch basin or irrigating several places in your yard? That being said, you should be able to do a simple system for under $100.00 and that includes high quality plumbing fittings, not necessarily a home depot job.

Q Can I do the job myself or do I need a plumber?

A That depends on how handy you are and your experience. You may need a plumber if your collection plumbing is hard to access or buried in a slab. With these “Laundry to Landscape” directions, you can probably do this yourself with the help of someone who knows about drip irrigation. You don’t want your plumber or the “blow and go guy” to handle your distribution plumbing.

Q Can I just attach a hose to my washer and water my plants with it?

A Not a good idea. Greywater is a health hazard when it is not dispersed of subsurface. Greywater becomes Blackwater in less than a week, not a pretty picture. What you can do as a very simple system is have a couple different mulch basins adjacent to fruit trees or ornamentals. You can then bury your hose a couple of inches into your mulch basin and move from tree to tree between washes. Obviously, this will be more labor intensive, the alternative is to use a branched system that uses drip irrigation to do the work. A word of caution about washing machine pumps: Don’t try to make your water go more than 3’ above the top of your washer or you may burn out your pump.

Q Do I need to use special soaps if I use my shower or washing machine as my greywater source.

A Yes, most soaps have a lot of salt in them and bleach has been known to kill a fruit tree in one application. Use a liquid detergent, stay away from Sodium chloride, potassium chloride is Ok, boron and borax are not. Dr. Bronners liquid soap is good for showers. The laundry soap that I would recommend is, Bio Pac. It was originally created by Art Ludwig, you can find it on Bio-pac.com. Important distinction: Biodegradable just means that the product breaks down in Landfill. You want a Bio-compatible soap, which means that it is compatible with plant life. You may also want to test the temperature of your water when it reaches its destination to make sure that it is not too hot for plants.

Q What kind of plants like greywater?

A Citrus, fruit trees, blueberries, azaleas, camellias, most acid loving plants love greywater. Avocado and natives may be a bit sensitive. You can purchase aquarium strips to test your water. Anything above 7, iron will not available to plants.

Q What are some installation tips for beginners?

A Use a 3 way diverter valve, don’t skip this step! This way you can have the option of sending your water to the sewer if you have to use something toxic. Or if you have a really hard rain and the ground is already saturated, or you have relatives staying who might wash dirty diapers in your laundry (also a health hazard). Give yourself a way out. Label your greywater lines, HDPE comes with a purple stripe that indicates that it is greywater. You don’t want to confuse your potable and greywater lines. Also, I highly recommend HDPE pipe over PVC or ABS. PVC is toxic in every way and will leach toxins into your soil. To buy good quality fittings, Oasis Design is Art Ludwig’s website and there are fittings for sale as well as about 600 pages of greywater information, also try Dripworks USA.

See Laundry to Landscape pdf here...

Lynne Latham is also a graduate of the PermaCulture Design Certification course. For more information, contact Lynne at llpdinc@earthlink.net.

Composting at Mar Vista Farmers Market!



Bill Rosendahl stopped by to congratulate the Mar Vista Farmers Market as they took a huge step to 'Go Green'!

There are now three bins at each station.

1) Compostables go in a green bin that has great signage about what can go in - food, used paper and much more than you can put in your home compost bin.

2) Recyclables go in the blue bin - pretty familiar.

3) Trash - this gets confusing as it is also a green bin but clearly marked Trash Only!

It was exiting as we watched the compost bin get filled twice as the trash bin was less than a quarter full. A HUGE thank you to Jeanne Kuntz as she played composting coach and helped visitors learn the new system.

This program will divert the food waste (85% of which is compostable!) and take it to a composting facility, (instead of a landfill), and turn it into useful by-products such as soil amendments and fertilizers.

The market is using Athens Services who is very pleased to be a partner with the City of Los Angeles to provide food waste & organic recycling for all food service establishments in the City of Los Angeles. Perhaps our Farmers Market can inspire our local businesses to embrace this as well!

Q&A on Green Restaurants with Kevin O'Donnell




Photo courtesy of Curious Palate - one of our favorite green restaurants - read why here..

Green LA Girl posted about inspiring our favorite restaurants to 'Go Green' and prompted a spirited debate that Sarah of Mar Vista Mom and I jumped in to. We took the questions to Kevin O'Donnell of Thread Collaborative - you may remember him from our Wise Water Use Expo.

Question -
We have local restaurants that we want to inspire to ‘go green’. Which is the better use of resources for cups and glasses –


Reusable ceramic and glass (or plastic) that gets rewashed?

Kevin - I usually prefer anything reusable. Anything we can do to keep material out of the landfill is better. Both glass and ceramic are manufactured with products from the earth (depending on the ceramic glaze) and are on the low end of the spectrum regarding energy needed for manufacturing. This way of thinking is often referred to as an heirloom strategy - building, buying, and using products that last a lifetime. However, the downside to this option is that they have to be washed, and therefore water is used over that lifetime. There are low energy/low water dishwashing systems, but you still need to use energy and water.

Disposables made from a recycled material that will go to the landfill?

Kevin - This is the least attractive of the options. Even though they would be made from recycled material, they will still end up in a landfill. It's my own bias, but I'm trying to get things to move the other direction and divert as much as possible from the landfill. Sometimes it's difficult to know exactly what's involved with the recycling process. As an example, are bleaching agents used? If so, that's potentially more harmful that the material going straight to the landfill. And most materials are not recycled one to one - meaning they don't return to the same level as the original - they are more often down-cycled. Meaning the material is returned at a lower grade than original.

Disposables made from a biodegradable material that will go into compost (when that is an option)?
Kevin - This is a great option, but it has to be brand appropriate for the restaurant. Biodegradable products tend to look that way. It's an aesthetic that may not be appropriate to the restaurant brand - type of food, clientele, price point, etc. And it's somewhat dependent upon whether the restaurant can maintain a composting program. If not, then it ends up at a landfill anyway. The upside being that it won't do harm once it gets there, but it still required energy to get it there.

We're looking forward to having Kevin O'Donnell of Thread Collaborative as our guest at the MVCC Green Commmittee booth soon for more Q&A! See his slide show from the Wise Water Use Expo here.