Ads

Posts Tagged ‘green’

Gru Tea | Organic Tea | Bulk Tea | Herbal Tea | Lemon Tea | Tulsi Tea | Bulk Green Tea

GRU TEA

Ranbir Singh Bhai is the co-founder of “Yogi Tea-a renowned lifestyle tea in USA since 80s”. His experience and realization became the vision of Gru Tea: to inspire the well being of mind, body and spirit with the simple art of tea.

Gru Tea’s dedication to provide the finest teas can be found in the highest-quality ingredients it sources through its sister company Yogi Botanicals and the wisdom it applies when combining herbs and spices at processing and blending sites in Germany and India, while also acting socially responsible by protecting the earth’s natural resources. All Gru teas contain naturally organic ingredients in variable proportion. Our worldwide team of growers, processors, packers, blenders and tasters are committed to deliver the product and service for our clients.

Read the rest of this entry »

Top 10 Upgrades To Green Your Home

A green home is one that is eco-friendly and is at harmony with the environment. You can help the environment by making your home greener. Here is how you can do so by adopting a more energy-efficient and earth-friendly lifestyle.

Read the following top 10 ways to green your home.

Read the rest of this entry »

Organic Green Tea

Aware of the harmful effects of chemical fertilizers and pesticides, organic green tea has come to popularity, the world is taking the natural ways of nourishment without any chemicals. Green tea is widely produced and mainly consumed in China and Japan and is recently gaining popularity in the U.S. where traditionally black tea is taken. Green Tea has long been valued in China for its medicinal properties useful in the maintenance of good health.

Read the rest of this entry »

Tomato Hornworm – Large Green Tomato Plant Eating Caterpillar


I have been neglecting my garden due to lack of time. When I got the opportunity to check it today I got quite a surprise. One of my tomato plants had been eaten by a large green caterpillar. After doing some research on Google, I discovered that this thing is called a Tomato Hornworm due to the fact that they eat Tomato Plants (and Tobacco Apparently).

Binghamton: Green is our color


Binghamton University has received top recognition by The Princeton Review in its second annual Green Rating of colleges. One of only 15 colleges recognized by this rating, Binghamton is the only SUNY institution and the only university in New York state named to the honor roll. Binghamton University’s sustainability efforts range from an energy management system to wide-ranging recycling efforts that include organic gardening and composting. Other initiatives include numerous energy-savings projects, LEED building standards and educational efforts that include a residential community energy contest as well as regular programs and events that engage and educate the campus community in thinking about and changing energy habits. In fall 2007, President Lois B. defleur was a charter signatory in endorsing the American College and University Presidents Climate Commitment (ACUPCC). To date, over 640 universities nationwide have signed on to work toward a goal of climate neutrality. For more on Binghamton University’s top green initiatives, programs and campus environment highlights such as research initiatives, the Nature Preserve, recycling and energy savings, see: www2.binghamton.edu

Green Gardening

Mary, Mary, quite eco-friendly, how does your garden grow? With rain barrels and compost bins, and native flowers all in a row.

Like it or not, grass is bad. Take your pick – fescue, rye, bluegrass – they don’t belong in the Midwest, and they require vast amounts of resources to care for. Weed and feed mixes in the spring, grub and pest toxins and gallons of water in the summer. Weekly or bi-weekly mowing. All these actions add up to one big carbon foot-print. The gas in the lawn mower; the oil and fossil fuels used to create the fertilizer; the water that is sprayed on lavishly; the runoff from chemical applications. Our crisp, clean lawns are, well, environmentally messy.

And considering the environmental loss from a yard full of fescue, the carbon cost rises. The lack of mature trees, for one, reduces a yard’s ability to recapture carbon dioxide, and the added shade from mature trees help reduce your home cooling costs in the summer while providing a wind break in the winter. But what is a suburbanite suppose to do on a treeless landscape?

Read the rest of this entry »

Mary, Mary Quite Contrary- How Green Does Your Garden Grow?

If you’re wanting to make your lawn and garden more eco-friendly, well, that’s a good thing. Considering the fact that the average suburban lawn uses six times the hazardous chemicals per acre, as conventional farming and that a gas mower emits 10 times as much hydrocarbon as a car, you’re sentiment is one that the earth is in need of. Although gardens have that illusion of being “green” just by their very nature, truth is, in most garden centers, the supply sources for many gardeners, you will likely find rows of chemical pesticides and nitrogen fertilizers, products that have been linked to serious illness and the production of carbon dioxide. So here are a few tips for you to lessen your footprint as you go about beautifying your outdoor space.

Read the rest of this entry »

Going Green and Giving Up All Those Chemicals

GOING GREEN and GIVING UP ALL THOSE CHEMICALS

the great living site – is for natural product for the home – for the kids – for the family – for gifts .. for anything and everything in your life ..

Read the rest of this entry »

A Nourishing Option: Green Gardening

There is a new world developing in the gardening world that is called green gardening, otherwise known as organic gardening. Since it is becoming more popular, there is more gardening help available to help a person who has been gardening for years change over to green gardening from traditional methods. There is also plenty of information that allows those who have not ever gardened before to become green gardeners in a short amount of time.

Going Green

Read the rest of this entry »

Go Green … Go Organic

Whilst most people seek out organic skin care for the sake of their bodies, there are benefits to organic products other than letting your skin go all natural. Organic is less allergenic and its feels good to know that chemicals and synthetic materials aren’t getting plastered over your body. The ultimate benefits of organic products to your skin are not finite and although it can’t be a bad idea using toxin-free products, other factors should influence the purchase of organic cosmetics.

The typical woman uses more than two hundred chemicals on her skin a day and recent research has reflected that over 60% of these chemicals are absorbed into the bloodstream; why should we take risks with chemicals when nature provides us with the organic means to care for our skin. Our skin is exposed to harmful elements everyday in our homes and environments and the amount of people suffering from allergies, eczema, and skin complaints are on the increase. It is so easy to protect our skin and stop bombarding it with the chemicals and harmful toxins that are so prevalent in standard non organic skin care products.

Read the rest of this entry »

Currently Reading
Image of Organic Gardening: The Natural No-dig Way
Organic Gardening: The Natural No-dig Way
Ads

Powered by Yahoo! Answers