Landscaping for Less in the Landfill

Contact: Diane Relf, Extension Specialist, Environmental Horticulture, Virginia Tech

Publication Number 426-716, Revised 2001

Table of Contents

Introduction

Select appropriate plants

Create easy maintenance designs

Leave materials where they fall

Move materials to best landscape use

Process materials for use

Build a compost pile

Give away yard waste

Participate in municipal composting

Virginia is rapidly running out of landfill space. Fifteen to twenty percent of solid waste sent to landfills is comprised of leaves, grass clippings, and other yard wastes. Gardeners can plan their landscapes to produce less yard waste and use what is produced around their homes to enhance yards, gardens, and soil. Following are steps gardeners can take towards landscaping for less in the landfill. They are all effective ways of reducing the amount of solid waste in our landfills, thereby also reducing the amount, of tax dollars spent for the landfills.

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Select Appropriate Plants

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Create Easy Maintenance Designs

Use permanent ground covers (periwinkle, pachysandra, hosta, English ivy, sedum, bugleweed) instead of lawns or plants that require pruning; this will reduce mowing and yard waste accumulation, as well as water consumption.

Create more decks, paths, or patios to reduce mowing, but not too many as they can create runoff and possibly erosion.

Understory plantings (shorter plants, such as azaleas and dogwoods, planted beneath oaks or other larger trees, for example) create a more natural look, as well as provide an area where leaves can be allowed to accumulate, rather than being raked or mowed.

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Leave Materials Where They Fall

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Move Materials to Best Landscape Use

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Process Materials for Use

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Build a Compost Pile

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Give Away Yard Waste

Find a neighbor who composts and would appreciate your yard wastes. Community gardens are also often grateful for the organic material.

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Participate in Municipal Composting

Remember your tax dollars pay the cost of collecting yard waste and composting; it's cheaper to keep material on your own property.

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For more information on selection, planting, cultural practices, and environmental quality, contact your local Virginia Cooperative Extension Office. If you want to learn more about horticulture through training and volunteer work, ask your Extension agent about becoming an Extension Master Gardener. For monthly gardening information, subscribe to The Virginia Gardener Newsletter by sending your name and address and a check for $5.00 made out to "Treasurer, Va. Tech" to The Virginia Gardener, Department of Horticulture, Virginia Tech, Blacksburg, VA 24061-0349. Horticultural information is also now available on the Internet by connecting with Virginia Cooperative Extension's server at http://www.ext.vt.edu

The original development of this series was funded by ESUSDA Smith Lever 3(d) National Water Quality Initiative Funds and the Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation, Division of Soil and Water Conservation.

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