Protect Water Quality as You Garden

Share

Admit it. You really want the “Yard of the Month” award.

But you worry that all those chemicals to keep the bugs at bay
may damage the environment. Well, now you can have the best of
both worlds: a beautiful yard that protects natural resources and
even costs less to maintain.


Photo: Susan
Varlamoff

Georgia Master Gardener Coordinator Bob
Westerfield gives some pruning tips to homeowners. It’s important
to know when and how much to prune.

“Best Management Practices for Georgia Gardeners,” a new manual
from the University of Georgia Center for Urban Agriculture,
teaches how to maintain your landscape and protect water
quality.

BMPs are commonsense, economical practices UGA scientists have
developed to help minimize fertilizer and pesticide use in the
home landscape. They were designed to protect Georgia waterways
from nonpoint source pollution, the technical term for
contamination by runoff from uncountable sources.

Higher Pesticide Levels

Water quality studies show that urban watersheds contain higher
pesticide levels than rural streams. Landscapers must have a
license to apply chemicals. But not homeowners, who often apply
the notion, “If a little is good, more must be better.”

The National Academy of Sciences reports that homeowners use more
chemicals per acre on their lawns than farmers use on their
lands. And a 1999 survey found that 76 percent of Georgia
homeowners maintain their own landscapes.

UGA Extension Service agents say half the diseased plants they
see are the result of improper watering, poor soil and bad
siting.

Theory Behind BMPs

So BMPs follow the theory that a healthy plant, like a healthy
person, can resist diseases and pests. Among the healthy
practices:

  • Place the right plant in the right place. Putting
    shade-loving plants such as azalea in full sun stresses them,
    making them targets for insect pests and diseases. And homeowners
    try fixing the problem with pesticides.
  • Some plants just tolerate pests better. If a plant in your
    landscape has become a five-star restaurant for insect pests,
    replace it, so you won’t have to cope with perennial
    infestations.
  • Group plants by water needs. Called Xeriscape gardening, this
    can save you 50 percent on watering costs. It helps prevent
    overwatering some plants and underwatering others, too. And
    during watering restrictions, it can save a landscape.
  • Know your plants’ and turf’s fertilizer and water needs.
    Fertilizing a dormant grass is wasting time and money. Applying
    fertilizer before a storm will guarantee its entry into the local
    watershed. It’s best to water before sunrise when it’s cooler and
    less windy, and before the dew has dried. Extending the dew makes
    diseases more likely.
  • Learn when and how much to mow and prune. Mow grass so you
    remove no more than one-third of the height. Scalping grass
    stresses it, dries it out and promotes insect pests such as
    chinch bugs. And trying to prune a 10-foot shrub to fit under a
    3-foot window may invite diseases.
  • Don’t kill the good bugs. Before you grab the pesticide,
    learn the difference between beneficial insects and pests. In
    nature, only about 3 percent are pests. In a well-balanced
    ecosystem, like a classic movie, the good guys beat out the bad.
    Look around your yard often. Know what bugs are out there, and
    protect your helpers. Even if pests are feasting on your favorite
    rose, nontoxic alternatives may be effective.
  • Give nature a hand. Pitch those banana peels and yard
    trimmings into a wire bin and help nature recycle them. It’s so
    simple. Just turn the pile and water it every few weeks, and
    presto: soil amendment and mulch at no cost in about six months.
    A 3- to 5-inch layer of mulch suppresses weeds and reduces soil
    erosion and the need for herbicides.

So go for it. Amaze your neighbors. Be a good steward of
Georgia’s environment by using BMPs in your garden. Learn about
home-garden BMPs on the Web at
www.griffin.peachnet.edu/garden
. Or get the manual by calling
(770) 229-3367.