Earth Day Events Set for April 21 in the North Country
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This year, you can help out on Earth Day with a neighborhood clean-up, upcycling project, commitment to eat more local, sustainable food, by signing a few petitions or volunteering for some outreach advocacy projects, or simply by stopping in at an Earth Day festival to learn more about the environmental issues affecting you now. Whatever you choose to do, the North Country is rich with environmental events scheduled April 21.
Here are three activities that are sure to have you busy all day:
Here are three activities that are sure to have you busy all day:
- Redwood Clean-Up Better Farm, in conjunction with the Redwood Neighborhood Association, will be hosting an annual Earth Day cleanup in downtown Redwood in an effort to help beautify the neighborhood. Interested parties are to meet at the pavilion downtown (behind Felder's) at 10 a.m. and wear appropriate footwear (and gloves if desired). Bags will be provided. Groups will disperse among side streets and trails (adults will also cover either side of Route 37). A picnic lunch will follow in the pavilion. Email us for more information or to register.
- Earth Day Event in Watertown The Mustard Seed Natural Market will host its Sixth Annual Earth Day Event on Arsenal Street in Watertown from 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Event highlights include a kids' craft table sponsored by Better Farm featuring environmentally friendly craft projects utilizing upcycled household items; and a "how-to" composting display sponsored by Better Farm. There will also be plenty of free samples from Liberte Yogurt, Field Roast Sausage, Tofurkey, Shirataki Noodles, Mu Mu Muesli, and more. Click here to learn more.
- Third Annual Green Fest Expo The Green Fest is set from 12-2 p.m. at Cerow Park Arena in Clayton and features vendors and exhibitors who relate to the five zones of local sustainability: eating, shopping, powering, moving, and acting locally. There will also be residential and commercial energy workshops, a health and wellness fair, volunteer fair, kids' bike rodeo, and more! Click here for additional information.








The key to the lawn care game is competition. You want to make things favorable for the grass and unfavorable for the weeds so the grass will choke out the weeds. Naturally.
MYTH: "If I mow short, it will be longer until I have to mow again." False! Wrong! (SLAP! SLAP! SLAP!) Your grass needs grass blades to do photosynthesis (convert sunshine into sugar) to feed the roots. When you whack the blades off, the grass has to RACE to make more blades to make sugar. It then grows amazingly fast. This fast growth uses up a lot of the grass's stored sugar, and weakens the plant. It is now vulnerable to disease and pests! Tall grass is healthier and can use the extra sugar to make rhizomes (more grass plants) thus thickening the turf. Have you ever noticed that short grass in the summer is always riddled with dead brown patches? If you have a serious weed infestation, consider mowing twice as frequently as you normally do. The sensitive growing point for grass is near the soil. The sensitive growing point for most weeds is near the top of the plant. So when you mow, it's as if you are giving your grass a haircut and cutting the heads off of the weeds. Finally, when mowing, be sure to leave the clippings on the lawn. It adds organic matter and nutrients back into the soil. If you don't leave the clippings, your soil will begin to look more like "dirt" than soil. Soon it will be a form of cement that nothing will grow in and you will have the world's most pitiful lawn. Some people are concerned about "clumping" - that only happens when you mow too short or when you don't mow often enough. Mowing higher gives the following perks: 
Let's take a quick look at an earthworm. I'm going to call him ... Fernando. Fernando tunnels through the soil, eating as he goes. He gets to the surface and poops out a lot of dirt and digested organic matter. His travels make it so the grass roots get air and water. He eats organic matter like dead leaves and dead blades of grass. He converts them to materials the plants can take up as nutrients. In an organic yard, Fernando takes a decaying blade of grass down in his burrow and munches on it "
18 inches or more soil would be optimal. I have a friend that has soil this deep. While everyone else waters a dozen times or more over the summer, she waters just once or twice. She uses no fertilizer or pesticides. She has thick, dark green, weed-free grass which requires frequent mowing. Her lawn is about as "no-brainer lawn care" as you could get. This is a good time to talk about soil quality too. There is a big difference between dirt and soil. Soil is rich in microbial life and has a lot of organic matter in it. Dirt comes in many forms and it's a challenge to get anything to grow in it. If you are getting "topsoil" delivered to your house, be prepared for it to bear more resemblance to "dirt". You may want to have compost also delivered to your house so that you can mix the two and have the beginnings for "soil". One part compost to two parts dirt is a good mix for lawn care. 





