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How To Use Neem Oil On Plants - southernliving.com - India - state Colorado
southernliving.com
22.08.2023 / 22:45

How To Use Neem Oil On Plants

If you’re interested in an organic solution for problems with your garden and houseplants, you may want to consider neem oil. “This botanical pesticide is used as an insecticide, which is most effective on immature insects,” says Barbara Smith, consumer horticulture extension agent at theHome & Garden Information Center at Clemson University. “It does have some fungicidal benefits for diseases such as powdery mildew.”

Ponds can absorb more carbon than woodland – here’s how they can fight climate change in your garden - theunconventionalgardener.com - Britain - Antarctica
theunconventionalgardener.com
21.08.2023 / 12:05

Ponds can absorb more carbon than woodland – here’s how they can fight climate change in your garden

Header image: <a href=«https://www.shutterstock.com/image-photo/pink-water-lily-lake-goldfish-142067443?src=» http:>NagyDodo/Shutterstock

Astronauts Are Growing Plants and Vegetables in a Space Garden - theunconventionalgardener.com - Russia
theunconventionalgardener.com
21.08.2023 / 12:04

Astronauts Are Growing Plants and Vegetables in a Space Garden

Header image: Mizuna lettuce growing aboard the International Space Station before being harvested and frozen for return to Earth. Image credit: NASA 

Grow houseplants to improve indoor air quality - theunconventionalgardener.com
theunconventionalgardener.com
21.08.2023 / 12:01

Grow houseplants to improve indoor air quality

Today is the first day of National Plants at Work Week, which aims to promote the use and benefits of indoor plants. You may have been eyeing up the windowsills in your office with a view to growing your own chillies or sweet peppers, but did you know that you can grow your own fresh air too?

Over 100 years of Antarctic agriculture is helping scientists grow food in space - theunconventionalgardener.com - Britain - Antarctica - state Texas
theunconventionalgardener.com
21.08.2023 / 12:01

Over 100 years of Antarctic agriculture is helping scientists grow food in space

Header image: The greenhouse at McMurdo Station in Antarctica is the only source of fresh food during winter. Eli Duke/Flickr, CC BY-SA

How World War II rationing gave us a liking for SPAM - theunconventionalgardener.com - Britain - Germany
theunconventionalgardener.com
21.08.2023 / 11:56

How World War II rationing gave us a liking for SPAM

Out with the ham and in with the spam [Image credit:63056612@N00, CC BY-SA]

Growing plants in lunar soil - theunconventionalgardener.com
theunconventionalgardener.com
21.08.2023 / 11:55

Growing plants in lunar soil

When Neil Armstrong made his giant leap for humankind in 45 years ago, he got covered in Moon dust. Throughout the Apollo missions, dust was an issue. Fine but rough, it caused problems with the space suits, and created mini dust storms in the cabin once the landers launched back into space.

Book Review: How to Make a Garden Grow (Heath Robinson) - theunconventionalgardener.com - Britain
theunconventionalgardener.com
21.08.2023 / 11:53

Book Review: How to Make a Garden Grow (Heath Robinson)

I grew up understanding the phrase “a bit Heath Robinson” as meaning something that had been cobbled together, but I wasn’t really aware of the fact that Heath Robinson was a real person. Born in 1872, he was an English cartoonist and illustrator, and he became famous for drawings of convoluted contraptions – ridiculously complicated machines that achieved things you don’t need a machine for. It was in this capacity that ‘Heath Robinson’ entered the dictionary in 1912; he became more synonymous with cobbling things together during the ‘Make Do and Mend’ campaign of the Second World War. In fact, one of the automated analysis machines at Bletchley Park – a forerunner of the codebreaking Colossus – was named Heath Robinson in his honour.

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