Leaf Your Leaves in Your Yard – Composting and Winterizing Your Garden Demonstration to Be Held on Saturday, Nov 3rd

raking autumn leavesLearn the best ways to dispose of Fall leaves and how to winterize your garden on Saturday, November 3rd from 10 – 12 at the future site of the Ewing Senior Center Demonstration Garden.  The Ewing Green Team Community Gardens Committee will be demonstrating how to create a compost pile and how to use your Fall leaves layered lasagna style to set up a gardening bed now that will be ready to go in the spring.

This is a prime opportunity to discuss the best way to handle your leaf cleanup at the end of the gardening season.  Every year you see homeowners all across the Township disposing of their leaves either in brown bags or in piles at the curb for the Township to pick up.  This is such a waste of natural materials that could benefit your yard!  There are a number of really simple environmentally friendly ways to handle your leaf drop that don’t starve your yard and also decrease your impact on municipal services to save $$$.

The first method is the lazy man’s way (my favorite) and involves very little raking and effort on your part.  Simply run your lawn mower over the leaves where they lie and chop them up into small pieces.  The chopped leaves can stay on your lawn and decompose there.  This is an excellent way to help build up the soil.  This works best with a mulching mower which is meant to chop materials (you do grass cycle, don’t you?) into fairly small pieces.    Do this as needed until the end of the season and the leaves will break down over the winter providing your soil with valuable nutrients.  You won’t have to rake a single leaf, and your lawn will thank you for it with improved performance next year.

Another method is not quite so effortless, but you can take those chopped up leaves and mulch your garden beds with them.  This will protect your plants from the vagaries of the winter weather and also provide your beds with nutrients when the leaves break down.

You can also add your leaves to your compost pile.  No matter how small your yard there is always room for a small one tucked away in some out of the way place.  The leaves will decompose more quickly if you chop them with your lawn mower as recommended above. Then gather them up (it’s amazing how a large pile of leaves reduces in size) and add them to the pile.  If your pile is composed only of chopped leaves, you can make leaf mold for use at a later time.  If you have green debris from your garden you can mix the two in layers and let it sit over the winter.  Turn the pile when the weather permits and you will eventually have the Black Gold of the garden world – compost.

At the demonstration on Nov 3rd yet another way of using your leaves will be discussed.   The no dig lasagna garden style will be demonstrated.  By spring you will be ready to plant.

So come out next Saturday.  We’ll hope to see you there.  Participants are asked to bring a gift of some compostable materials for the pile.

When: Saturday, November 3rd from 10 a.m. to noon
Where: Ewing Senior and Community Center at the site of the future Senior Demonstration Garden (near the Community pool)

West Trenton Railroad Trail Cleanup Announced

A cleanup date for the West Trenton Railroad Trail behind the DOT, Ewing Senior and Community Center and General Motors has been announced.  Make an impact by volunteering today.

Date: Sunday, November 18
Time:  8 to 11:30 am

All volunteers will meet at the back right edge of the DOT parking lot by the day school and Lower Ferry Rd. The Township usually provides bags & gloves. Dress for the weather in comfortable grubbies!  Please join us in helping to keep our Ewing trails beautiful.

For more information call Peter Boughton at (609) 313-5021.

Get Involved in Community Gardening in Ewing!

Ewing Residents Are Invited to an Organizational Meeting of Ewing’s Community Gardeners for the 2013 Gardening Season

The Ewing Green Team will be hosting an organizational meeting for the 2013 gardening season in collaboration with the Ewing Seniors.    Residents interested in expanding and improving opportunities for community gardening in Ewing are invited to attend.

Topics to be discussed include:

  • Introductions
  • Are there sufficient number of plots available?
  • Gardening at Whitehead Road – issues?
  • Additional Gardens Required in Ewing?
  • Senior/Demonstration Garden at the ESCC
  • Setting up a Community Garden Organization
  • Events Calendar – composting demo and November meeting.

Please join us and bring a gardening friend.

Date: Wednesday, October 17th from 7 – 9 p.m. Where: Ewing Senior and Community Center – Boardroom 999 Lower Ferry Road (across from the DOT)

For more information call:

  • Mary Jane Leach 336-207-6261
  • Lisa Feldman 620-0722
  • Joanne Mullowney 883-0862
  • Jeanette Span 883-2900 Ext 6206

Or email: Ewingcommunitygardens@gmail.com

Ewing Township Community Festival

Members of the Ewing Sustainable Green Team and the Ewing Environmental Commission will gather at ComFest at TCNJ on October 6th to educate the public about their mission.  Our hope is to spur participation from community members in creating a sustainable future for Ewing.  At ComFest, the Green Team will have representation from each of its projects throughout the day, tips on sustainable living and activities for kids.

The Ewing Green Team is part of the statewide Sustainable Jersey effort (www.sustainablejersey.org).  Sustainable Jersey’s mission is to promote meaningful environmental change in New Jersey by helping municipalities that want to go green, save money, and take steps to sustain their quality of life over the long term.

The Sustainable Jersey program identifies actions that municipalities can implement to go green and then certifies municipalities that have reached recommended milestones   Of the 566 municipalities in New Jersey, 376 are already registered and 109 are certified to date.   The Ewing team is pleased to announce a recent partnership with TCNJ Bonner Sustainability Scholars for the 2012-13 school year.   The students are trained to assist municipalities in working toward sustainability goals.

A major focus in Ewing this year will be on educating the public about sustainability – what we can do as citizens, what our municipality can do to help, and about the Green Team and how citizens can get involved.   “It’s important in our current economy and especially for future generations to create a more resilient community that can weather economic and resource shifts”, says John Hoegl, Chair.  Green team leadership is excited about its growing and diverse team with a presence on the Township website and Facebook.

The Ewing Green Team meets the 4th Wednesday of each month, 7-9pm at the Ewing Senior and Community Center on Lower Ferry Rd.  For more information, come by the booth at CommFest, or contact  John Hoegl at ewinggreenteam@gmail.com or 609-530-1530.

raking autumn leaves

Some Timely Tips for Fall Leaf Removal

Composting is a good example of how a homeowner’s actions can have a positive impact on municipal costs:  composting kitchen waste, leaves and grass clippings rather than putting them in the landfill could save our Township money in county tipping fees and labor. Homeowners would also see a direct additional benefit – the improvement of the soil health of their yards.  Yards where the homeowners have trashed their grass (clippings) and leaves are starved for nutrients by the removal of these natural materials that would break down naturally and rebuild the soil.

Composting your leaves is not all that hard.  Simply start up your trusty mulching mower (or buy a mulching blade and install it if you don’t have one) and mow away.  You can leave the leaves on the grass to enrich the lawn or collect in the bag or dishcharge to the side and keep making passes until the shredded leaves reach the garden bed of your choice.  It’s that simple.  Check out this video to see how easy it is to enrich your soil, benefit the environment and save the Township $ on garbage costs.  Who knows?   It may even have the additional benefit of depressing your next tax hike!