Your Market Produce
Buying Club
October 2011 Newsletter

Eggshell Planter

Greetings!     


We pray this finds you all in doing well in all areas of your life. This month we have chosen to do a reduce, reuse, and/or recycle segment. I had the pleasure of visiting a friend, Majeedah Muhammad, who happened to be cooking for a large gathering. I was soooooo impressed, pleased, and inspired when I saw her not throwing her eggshells (and other items) into the garbage. We began to compare what we do with our eggshells. It inspired me to want to do a reduce, reuse, recycle for the newsletter so that we can educate and share with each other ways we can take better care of the environment which directly benefits us.

The biblical verse that comes to mind is Genesis 1:26  

And God said, Let us make man in our image, after our likeness: and let them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping thing that creepeth upon the earth.

 

God is not wasteful! 

You may be wondering how can you reuse/repurpose eggshells. My top three are compost (worm or aerobic), feed to plants, or feed to birds. However, there are even more options. Please read below and tell us what you think. And if you have any other ideas, please share.

We hope you take the time to read and enjoy the newsletter. We are open to suggestions on ways to improve it and to get the members more involved. Feel free to send in any pictures, comments, suggestions, and recipes to us.

Sincerely,


 Erika Muhammad

5 Ways to use Eggshells in Your Garden 

By Colleen Vanderlinden, Planet Green

 

A normal person looks at an egg and thinks "omelet" or "frittata." A gardener (especially one who tends to be on the obsessive end of the spectrum) looks at an egg and thinks "yes! Eggshells!"

 

Five Ways to Use Eggshells in Your Garden

 

1. Add crushed eggshells to the bottom of planting holes, especially for tomatoes, peppers, and eggplant. These crops are susceptible to blossom end rot, which is caused by calcium deficiency. While this deficiency is most often caused by improper watering, there's no harm in making sure your plants have a steady source of calcium. As the eggshells break down, they'll nourish the soil, and your plants.

 

2. Use eggshells as pots for starting plants from seed. Then plant the seedling, "pot" and all, into the garden.

 

3. Use crushed eggshells to deter slugs, snails, and cutworms. These garden pests are a real pain in the gardener's neck, and cutworms are the worst, killing seedlings by severing the stems at soil level. All three of these pests have soft undersides, and dislike slithering across anything sharp. Crushed eggshells, applied to the soil's surface, may help deter these pests.

 

4. Add them to the compost pile. If you aren't planting tomatoes or trying to deter slugs, add the eggshells to your compost pile, where they'll add calcium to your finished compost.

5. If you are feeding birds in your yard, crush up the eggshells and add them to a dish near the feeder. Female birds, particularly those who are getting ready to lay eggs or recently finished laying, require extra calcium and will definitely appreciate it!

No matter how you want to use them, be sure to rinse the shells out well before using them in the garden.

 

Recycle Egg Shells by feeding them to the birds
Recycle Egg Shells by feeding them to the birds

You can always use the eggshells for art. Eggshell Art eggshell art Eggshell art-obama

In This Issue
Eggshells in Your Garden
Video: Feeding Eggshells to Birds
Photos: Eggshell Art
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What is Your Produce Market Buying Club?

We are a group of people who see the need for and are committed to establishing economic and agricultural unity in the black community.

Our inspiration is the teachings of the Honorable Elijah Muhammad, which teach us to "pool our resources and do for self."

Our Mission, "Empowering people to feed themselves."

Our primary goal is to establish a member-owned cooperative corporation supermarket in our community.
 
Contact Us

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Membership Administration: Majeedah Muhammad  buyingclubmembers@gmail.com 510-712-0094

Informational Presentations: Carlton Muhammad  carltonm@sonic.net  510.827.5203


"We must prepare and grow our own food, because this is a highly commercialized world. They graft a lot of food, and some of this food is not good for our stomachs."

  Reprinted from
How To Eat To Live,
Book One, 1967