Eco-towns or eco-gardens: a project you London gardeners could champion

Posted on July 17th, 2009 in GardenLend by GardenLend

The announcement of the four areas to be the nascent Eco-Towns is, for may people, too little, too late and in the wrong place.  The upheaval, maladministration and bureaucracy involved makes the whole prospect quite unlikely to reap benefits for an appreciable period.  Then the results will be analysed, mulled over, reported upon, have money wasted in stated the bleeding obvious about, then reappraised with some potential further action along simlar lines, perhaps, maybe, sometime later.

These eco-towns are, for the most part, away from major centres of population and industry.  On most levels, it would never be noticeable if they were a success as they are effectively being measured in a void.  Unless fully sustainable, the additional impact of transport and provision of services, utilities and goods may well wipe out any benefits accrued.

Why not start nearer to home, if not at home itself?  Most people live in cities; the most populous in the UK being London; the same will apply to all conurbations.  Why not change food miles to food feet by growing your own food.  Your garden would be a starting point; failing that, an allotment.  With the scarcity of municipal land available, why not volunteer to use some council, church or state-owned space that has gone to wrack and ruin?  The LandShare scheme started after GardenLend approached Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall to help promote our garden-sharing and home-grown food and flowers message.  The best systems seem to be ones organised on a face-to-face basis, on a local level – how local do you want?  Miles from anywhere?

Have a scout along the road where you live – has someone got a garden that really could do with a make-over?  Offer to help out; it will brighten up the area and help someone else, as well as providing a healthy outlet for pent-up energy – much more fruitful and cheaper than a session at the Gym.  The owner could guide you as to what their dream garden might be, or perhaps you could volunteer a few ideas of your own.  The social benefits, along with the more obvious health and environmental ones, are potentially enormous.  Why not help your neighbour? Just be prepared to lend a hand.

Our new shop for all your gardening and home security needs

Posted on April 14th, 2009 in Allotments, GardenLend, Gardening, Gardening News, News, Promotions, Voluntary Sector, garden sharing by IanSpringham

Our shop http://shop.GardenLend.co.uk has – at last! – been incorporated into our blog, streamlining the gardening, garden sharing, environmental and home security experience that may be had here. The shop is now to be found in the GardenLend Pages under GardenLend Shop – how much more simple could it be? Our product categories include:

Books: on Gardening and Environment & Ecology

All you could want for the Home & Garden

and Security for indoors and outdoors to protect, you, your family, pets, plants and garden

plus Stick Insectalia along with The Tiger Lillies (two areas of additional personal interest!)

Please feel free to drop by, look around, buy something that takes your fancy or let us know if there is anything else that you need that we can stock for you. All this and more at the GardenLend Shop page.

Should you be looking for environmentally-friendly web hosting, please click this link: Super Green Hosting

World Environment Day – thoughts please

Posted on June 5th, 2008 in Discussion, GardenLend, News by GardenLend

Today is “World Environment Day” – according to the UNEP website: “the day’s agenda is to give a human face to environmental issues; empower people to become active agents of sustainable and equitable development; promote an understanding that communities are pivotal to changing attitudes towards environmental issues; and advocate partnership, which will ensure all nations and peoples enjoy a safer and more prosperous future. “

One way of empowering people that immediately springs to mind – quite naturally! – is to join GardenLend and to put more neglected green spaces to good use. 

Failing that, any thoughts on what can be done to help slow, if not reverse, the planet’s hastening environmental decline are welcomed here. 

Also, please let us and our readers know what you have done or plan to do by commenting on this post.