1 / 56

The Master Composter / YardWise Revival

The Master Composter / YardWise Revival. “What’s happening today in Texas and the Southwest should be a wake-up call on climate change. These are the kinds of conditions that we expect to see more often as climate warms,”

Download Presentation

The Master Composter / YardWise Revival

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Master Composter / YardWise Revival

  2. “What’s happening today in Texas and the Southwest should be a wake-up call on climate change. These are the kinds of conditions that we expect to see more often as climate warms,” - Dr. Julia Cole, Professor of Geosciences, University of Arizona (Project on Climate Science)

  3. Water for Texas 2012State Water PlanTexas Water Development Board “In serious drought conditions, Texas does not and will not have enough water to meet the needs of its people, its businesses, and its agricultural enterprises.”

  4. By 2060: Population will increase to > 46 million Water availability will decrease by 10% Inaction could cost $116 billion/yr. and 1,000,000 jobs. 26 new reservoirs recommended to increase supply by 1.5 billion acre – feet. Fixes will cost $231 billion in capital outlay. Water for Texas 2012Texas Water Plan

  5. Where Does Our Water Go?

  6. Urban Water Usage

  7. Non-point source pollution accounts for 65% river pollution, 76% lake pollution in U.S. More than 200 stream segments in Texas do not meet water quality standards. Farming accounts for 10% of U.S. pesticide use – buildings, lawns, gardens, and other landscaped areas receive 90%. Water Quality

  8. Electrical generators consume 3X household water use, per household. Utilities could account for 60% of all non-farm water use by 2030. - 150 coal-fired plants planned in US. “…water is becoming a greater permitting issue than air quality.”– Thomas Feeley, US DOE National Energy Technology Laboratory Water or Power?

  9. Oil Boom = Water Bust? • Rising oil prices spur increased production from marginal, obstructive geological formations • Hydraulic fracturing “fracking” = high pressure injection of sand, water, & chemicals (some hazardous) to release oil & gas deposits

  10. Fracking one well in S. Texas Eagle Ford shale requires 13,000,000 gallons of water. • Water for S. Texas fracking to increase 10X by 2020, 20X by 2030 - groundwater pollution feared.

  11. Today's problems cannot be solved by thinking the way we thought when we created them. - Albert Einstein

  12. Everything must go somewhere. Everything is connected to everything else. There’s no such thing as a free lunch. Nature knows best .(Nature recycles life). The Four Laws of Ecology

  13. “The Natural Cycle”

  14. Xeriscaping (native/adapted plants) “Don’t Bag It” (grass-cycling) Efficient Watering Mulching Composting Integrated Pest Management YardWise Elements:

  15. Blueprint for Action: Keep America Beautiful 5-Step Attitude Change Process

  16. Step 1: Get the Facts:

  17. Additional Publications • TCEQ • Guia Verde (Green Guide, Spanish) • City of Austin • Earth-Wise Guide to Fire Ants • Earth-Wise Guide to Fleas • Earth-Wise Guide to Lawn Problems • Earth-Wise Guide to Products • Texas AgriLife Extension • Earth Kind:Integrated Pest Management • Earth Kind: Landscape Pesticides

  18. Helps sandy soil retain moisture Breaks up clay soils Protects against wind and water erosion Improves soil tilth Compost Benefits Water Conservation

  19. Prevents water runoff Judicious use multiplies water retention Promotes healthy root systems to hold soil in place Reduces need for pesticides & herbicides Compost Benefits Water Quality

  20. Contains complete spectrum of plant nutrients Retains nutrients Optimum pH for nutrient availability Slow, steady nutrient release Compost Benefits Soil Fertility

  21. Fertilizer: What’s In It?

  22. A Healthy Diet ?

  23. Promotes diverse beneficials: Bacteria, fungi, actinomycetes Insects Worms Breaks down organics into plant nutrients Suppresses diseases & pests Compost Benefits Beneficial Soil Life

  24. Soil Biology Principle Population: Number of Soil Organisms + Diversity of Soil Organisms = Soil Functions: Soil Structure, Fertility, Moisture Retention, Disease Suppression

  25. NRCS Soil Biology Primer

  26. Bacteria: 90,000,000 Actinomycetes: 4,000,000 Fungi: 200,000 Algae: 30,000 Protozoa: 5,000 Nematodes: 30 Earthworm: < 1 Number of organisms in 1 cubiccentimeter of agricultural soil:

  27. Ecosystems are not only more complex than we think, they are more complex than we can think. -Frank Egler

  28. Carbon / Nitrogen Ratio Moisture Aeration Temperature Time Composting Essential Elements

  29. Basic Compost Recipe GREEN STUFF + BROWN STUFF + WATER + AIR COMPOST

  30. Step #2: Involve the People • STAR staff / Compost Advisory Council compost professionals • Keep Texas Beautiful staff • Texas AgriLife Extension • Partner & sponsor organizations • KTB affiliate community coordinators • Master Composter Candidates • State & local government

  31. ‘Xeriscaping’Native and Adapted Plant Selection El Paso Austin Houston

  32. “Don’t Bag It” 2/3 grass blade removed & bagged 1/3 grass blade removed, mulched in

  33. Efficient Watering

  34. Mulching

  35. Integrated Pest Management

  36. Step #3: Plan Systematically Master Composter Program Roles

  37. Local Coordinator • Conduct 20-hour MC training • Provide 20 hours volunteer service • Monitor & document candidate hours • Submit documentation to central program administration • Present Master Composter Certificates

  38. “GREENS”: already there - reinforce “SPROUTS”: ready – prime target “BROWNS”: resistant “Don’t Preach to the Choir, Turn them into Missionaries.”

  39. Compost Advisory Council • Provide 2-day ‘train-the-trainer’ workshops for local coordinators. • Provide / identify core Master Composter training & curriculum materials. • Green Guide reprint • Rodale Book of Composting • State & local program materials • Maintain YardWise web site

  40. Statewide Administration (CAC & Partners) • Provide local coordinators with all program forms • Issue official MC Certificates to all successful candidates • Serve as ongoing resource for local coordinators • Consultation • Presentations • Literature • Web Site Management

More Related