Sustainability
The City Of Casey Sustainable Gardening Tips:
Want a sustainable edible garden that nourishes you with delicious healthy foods and reduces your carbon footprint? We’ve got you covered. Here are some practical ideas that will help you get started:
Grow your own fruit, vegetable and herb produce. This will help reduce the distance your food travels from the farm to your plate , it avoids plastics and food packaging and promotes food security. Don’t have a backyard, why not join a Community Garden.
Keep chickens. They are low maintenance, provide fresh eggs saving you money at the shops, their manure can be used as fertiliser on the garden, they eat food scraps and are great pets for children.
Install a beehive. Bees play an important role in pollinating fruit and flowers, they support biodiversity and are crucial to our agriculture industry. Bees provide honey to eat and wax for various products such as candles, cosmetics, food wraps, furniture and shoe polish, waterproofing and so many more.
Use water wisely and consider adding a rain garden with native shrubs and perennials to an area that tends to collect runoff, where they will be able to absorb excess rainwater. Installing a rainwater tank can be useful too.
Plant indigenous plants. They are drought tolerant and need less water. Species that are best suited to your local soil and climate can be found here which plants are indigenous to your area.
Heavy rainfall events are predicted to increase in the future due to climate change. Prepare for heavy rainfall events by including lots of permeable ground such as grass, garden beds or loose gravels in your backyard. If you have large areas of hardstand, ensure there is appropriate drainage or gutters as flooding can cause significant damage to buildings.
Have a compost or worm farm and apply for a rebate.
Upcycle items in your garden to divert waste from landfill. Use old items for containers to grow vegetables or herbs in, get creative and build a sculpture, use old items such as a wheelbarrow or timber ladder as interesting focal points in the garden.
Nature strip planting has many benefits that you may have not considered.
Join Greater South East Permaculture Group who meet at the Old Cheese Factory, on the 2nd Friday of each month. You can contact them at gsepg1@gmail.com
Avoid plants that are known invasive species in our bushland and wetlands. Find out how to better manage weeds.
Create a wildlife-friendly garden
Avoid using synthetic fertilisers and pesticides.
Plant indigenous plants
ENERGY
How to teach your children to use less energy
Most kids love learning new things and relish the opportunity to be helpful around the house. When you explain the importance of saving energy, they’ll be more than happy to do their bit. Here are a few tips on how to encourage kids to save energy.
Educate your children
Most children will learn about the importance of saving energy at school, but you can reinforce the message by teaching them how to contribute at home. Look at the appliances around your house and explain the energy sources. Do they understand the meaning of finite resources? Where does the gas for your cooktop come from? How does it get to your home? You could research the answers together as a family project.
Make it fun to learn
Go through each room of your house together and discuss ways you can save energy. Ask your kids to write down a set of rules for the family to follow – you can allocate tasks to specific family members. This will teach your children to be responsible and they’re more likely to complete the tasks. For younger children, you can set up a reward chart and give them a small prize at the end of the week if they follow the rules. Ask children to point out if you’re wasting energy – they’ll love it!
Easy habits to teach your kids
Keep it simple and give kids positive reinforcement when they follow the rules. Also, make sure anything you ask them to do is age appropriate.
Cut down on screen time. Encourage them to make up projects, play games, do puzzles and read books.
Get them to play outdoors, even in winter. If it’s cold, rug them up in coats and gumboots and let them run around.
If their electronic devices are not in use, teach them to turn them off.
Encourage kids to turn off lights and close doors to rooms that are not in use.
Time showers and make a game out of who can have the shortest shower - while still getting clean, of course. If everyone takes showers of four minutes or less, you could reduce your water heating costs by up to 20 per cent.
Ask them to close the door behind them when they go in or out.
Don’t leave the fridge door open.
Ask kids to tell parents if they can feel a draught coming from under a door or through a window.
On hot days, ask them to close their bedroom curtains to keep out the heat.
If you’re implementing any energy-saving measures, explain what you are doing. This might include changing light globes, sealing doors and windows or replacing the hot water system.
Kids like to feel useful, especially if you let them know that their actions could have a beneficial effect on the planet, which is good for their future. Try our online quote tool to help make the switch, and find the best energy plan for your family.
From: https://www.energyaustralia.com.au/blog/better-energy/how-teach-your-children-use-less-energy