Newspapers and Your Greenhouse
There are a few uses for newspapers
in the greenhouse that maybe you havent thought about. Newspapers
easily breakdown and can be absorbed in to the soil. When you are using
newspapers in your greenhouse or in gardening only use the black and white
sections, the colored glossy sections of the newspapers are more difficult
to absorb into the soil and do not absorb water as well.
You can cut up or shred newspapers and put them at
the bottom of your pots before you place the dirt in the pot to hold a
little bit of extra water.
You can use newspapers on your shelving to keeps messes
under control. When you spill dirt or make a mess trimming plants you
can easily wrap up the newspapers and dispose of.
When you find that you are running short on pots right
in the middle of planting, you can take a section form it into a plastic
cup and a little tiny piece of tape (tape takes a long time to disintegrate
into the soil) or you can use a rubber band that you can remove easily
after the plant grow. You can then put the amount of soil in the pot
and plant your seeds. The paper cup will hold up long enough during the
growing season and you can then remove the tape or the rubber band and
put the plant and newspaper right in to the ground or into a larger pot
when the plant gets growing.
While it is not as pretty as mulch, you can use newspaper
like mulch. To keep your plants moist cut up or shred paper and put over
the top of the soil. The newspaper doesnt allow the sun to bake
the soil in your pots as much as with out the use of this newspaper mulch.
When you are planting your outdoor garden, you can
use newspapers between the rows of your plants, to keep weeds to a minimum
and to add back to the soil while you are recycling the paper!
Give newspaper recycling a try in your gardening and
you may be surprised the money and time you can save!
This article was published
by: Garden Moose.
Garden Moose is a
feature contributor to Greenhouses.com
a leading internet destination for gardening and greenhouse information
and ideas.
This work is licensed
under a Creative
Commons License.
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