Monday, October 24, 2011

Brains Not Brawn in the Garden

At the ECO School, we believe in making the highest quality sustainability education affordable. Money should never be a barrier to getting top notch information to people of moderate means, and delivering that information expertly by making it logical, practical, relevant, easy to understand, and teaching to multiple intelligences.

We reach the world through the Web, and we reach out in our community (and those communities where we are invited) by working with teachers in schools, presenting to community groups, running workshops and offering consulting services. Most of our local initiatives are payable 100% in REBS, our local currency, meaning anyone can join that network and attend a workshop "on credit" and "pay" for it later by offering their own talents to the REBS network. And on top of that, all of our workshops and consulting services are designed to help people save money. In most cases, the cost of the education pays for itself in a matter of months, and after that it is all savings. Compare that to the average US or NZ university degree!

By far our most popular and most successful workshop has been "Organic Weed Control: Human Scale Design and Management" aka, "Low-Maintenance / High-Productivity Gardening." We've trained over 300 people over the last four years in Australia, USA and New Zealand with excellent feedback. We will be offering this workshop on Sunday, November 13th from 1 to 5 pm here on Arawa Place. Some aspects of the programme include:


• Designing garden beds with the mantra, "Tools, Timing, Technique."


• Improving germination rates in chunky soils.


• Tips for transplanting, spacing, staking, propagating and pruning tomatoes.


• The judicial use of mulch, and growing great garlic and onions.


• Super lazy, super productive pumpkin patches.

• Eco-thrifty compost making. For more details, click here.


And while you're here, check out the rest of or eco-thrifty landscaping...


... including our almost finished brick patio. (John and Amy, Come back and help us complete it!)

And, most importantly, someone tell me the name of this plant. It has a thick, perennial woody root but the foliage dies back in winter. It grows everywhere in our sandy section.


Pre-registration required. Contact us through the ECO School. As always, discounted rate for our neighbors in Castlecliff.

Peace, Estwing

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