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In this issue
Buy Cut n Paste
Competitions
Findaplant.co.nz
Tropical Delight - Design Case Study
Human Waste and compost
Wally Richards - making compost
Favorite images from social networks
Featured plant: Hosta Empress Wu
Videos
PIzza
Get on top of your weeds this spring...

Buy a bottle of Cut 'n' Paste herbicide gel  - for hard to control weeds. This gel is low toxcity and is great value at only $25.95 per 250ml bottle.

Check it out and buy  here...

terrascape
compCompetitions  
 
 

 


Win a Cape Cod Chair from Garden Pine Design 
 
 
 
new findaplant

 

 

Our sister website - NZ's online nursery and plant finder.  

 

Use Findaplant.co.nz to search for wholesale and retail nurseries, growing on lines, revegetation and new species.  

 

Bookmark us today! 

 

Greetings!,

 

Successful gardeners know that good quality compost is essential to establish and maintain healthy plants; so where do you start?

 

You can buy in compost from companies like Living Earth who take pride in recycling green waste and producing high quality compost on a commercial scale. 

 

Some regional councils have also started turning bio waste (the polite term for sewage) into compost... 

 

If you want to make your own compost to reduce the amount of food and garden waste that may be headed for landfills, Wally covers this off in his article. Even if you live in an apartment or very small section, you can use small worm farms or bukashi bins to transform your kitchen scraps into super food for your plants. 

 

Every household should have some form of composting system; if you don't you can enter our competition to win The Worm Factory so you will have plenty of compost tea!  

   

 

Regards,  

Tim Durrant and the Landscapedesign.co.nz team   

Tropical delight on the shore - Peter Fry Landscapes

  

The brief on this Mairangi Bay property in simple terms was:  
"I want to be in Fiji without leaving my backyard"
. With this in mind and an openess for creativity we went about our task with a passion. Read more and view the gallery...
compost

 

The Thames Coromandel District is one of the very few districts in the country mixing biosolids with green waste and turning it into Grade A compost with its own Biosolid Composting Facility.

 

"This is an innovative and sustainable outcome of creating a beneficial product from human waste," says Thames Coromandel District Council Project Manager Rob Paterson. "This waste would otherwise be disposed of in landfill at an on-going cost to the ratepayer and the environment."

 

Do you have an opinion?: What to you think about human waste being converted into compost?  Comment on this article  

wallycompost

Wally Richards thumbnail

 

Wally Richards - Making Compost 

 

Some of my favorite images from our social network this month...  click an image to look at more...
 
W
 Like us on Facebook Find us on Pinterest View our videos on YouTube View our profile on LinkedIn Follow us on Twitter 

Featured Plant: Hosta Empress Wu 

Hosta Empress Wu is one of the world's largest growing hostas.  This amazing plant when mature (5 years) reaches a height of approx 1.2m high by 1.5m wide read more...

 

   

 

Youtube Videos - compost... 

 

 

And a Nostalgic one from 1989 "Old Mans Beard Must Go..."

chicken

This month's recipe from Foodlovers.co.nz:

 

 

Ingredients

  • 400g highgrade flour
  • 3 teaspoons yeast granules
  • 250ml (1 cup) luke warm water
  • 2 teaspoons sea salt
  • 3 tablespoons olive oil
  • 1/2 cup tomato pasta sauce
  • 200g marinated char grilled artichoke hearts
  • 1 generous bunch asparagus spears
  • 100g thinly sliced prosciutto
  • 150g mozarella or bocconcini cheese, sliced
  • 1 cup freshly grated parmesan cheese
  • freshly ground black pepper
 

Method 

 

Sift the flour into a bowl and make a well in the centre. Dissolve the yeast in the warm water and pour into the well along with the salt and olive oil.

 

Mix until the dough comes together and then knead for 7 minutes or so until the dough is smooth and elastic.  Place the dough in a lightly oiled bowl and cover. Place the bowl in a warm place and leave for 1 1/2 hours or until dough has doubled in bulk. Alternatively you can make dough in your
breadmaker by using the dough setting.  

Divide the dough in half and roll out into 2 discs of approximately 28cm in diameter.


Preheat oven to 220 C.

Place one disc on a pizza stone or oiled pizza tray.  Spread with tomato pasta sauce.

 

Slice artichoke hearts and scatter over.  Slice asparagus spears in half lengthways (if not too thin) and arrange over the pizza. Slice prosciutto slices in half and place over the pizza before covering with mozzarella and parmesan cheeses.  Sprinkle with a generous grind of black pepper and bake for 12-15 minutes until crust is golden and firm and the cheese bubbling.

 

Use the remaining pizza base for a garlic pizza bread or as a different flavoured pizza.

That's all for this month!

 

If you have any feedback or comments, we'd love to hear from you. You can comment or respond at the bottom of every article on our site.  

  

Kind regards,

 

Tim Durrant

Adv. Cert. Landscape Design & ConstructionEditor | Managing Director

 

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