RE: salvaged brick
- Subject: RE: [cg] salvaged brick
- From: H* A*
- Date: Mon, 24 Jun 2002 14:55:13 -0400
Kristin,
The Garlic lady is right.
Moss is good and belongs in gardens. A someone who risked life and limb to
transplant some spectacular mosses that I found in the Central Park 77th
Street vehicular underpass to the Clinton Community garden, ground up some
of it with buttermilk and painted it, transplanted it and watched it
eventually blow away ( do have a pot and some soil where it seems to be
working) let me tell you - moss is good.
A German/English Japanese Garden Link: http://www.ifa.de/garden-japan-2000/
A Moss site: http://www.mossacres.com/moss/info_2.asp
Kristin, even though it looks like the daft Blair government is giving Mick
Jagger a "K" ( despite the fact that he is a tax-exile,cheap and a general
drag-nasty)leave the Rolling Stones and gather that moss while you may.
Best wishes,
Adam Honigman
-----Original Message-----
From: Alliums [g*@earthlink.net]
Sent: Monday, June 24, 2002 2:20 PM
To: community_garden@mallorn.com
Subject: Re: [cg] salvaged brick
Kristin Faurest wrote:
>Does anyone have environmentally friendly suggestions for how to keep old
>bricks used in paving and edging for raised beds looking nice? Mine seem
>to be plagued by moss and a sort of vague dusty coating that's hard to get
>off and keep off (residue from hard water? or something else?)
Moss is actually a good thing -- it's a sign you've got damp in your area
and the moss is sucking it up rather than letting things mold (which often
is not nice as it can cause allegeries and play havoc with folks who have
asthma). Not sure what the dusty coating is (could be dead moss), but it
sounds like your garden IS taking environmentally caring for itself.
Moss is way underrated in the US -- in Japan, they pay big bucks to create
shady moss gardens which, once established, don't need any further
care. In the US, folks pay big bucks to fungicide moss so that they can
plant grass, which has to be cut constantly -- and usually dies because
mossy areas are too wet for grasses.
Over time, your moss will suck up the excess water, die down and produce
humus so that vascular plants can live there. Enjoy it for what it is. . .
Dorene
Dorene Pasekoff, Coordinator
St. John's United Church of Christ Organic Community Garden
A mission of
St. John's United Church of Christ, 315 Gay Street, Phoenixville, PA 19460
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