Paper Potter

Paper Potter

The Paper Potter is a very simple idea that really works.  It’s made in the UK using wood from sustainable forests, and has just two parts – the potter and the base. The potter is 4.5cm in diameter x 11cm tall, and the base is 7cm diameter x 3cm tall. It’s used to recycle newspapers to produce free, biodegradable mini plant pots suitable for starting seeds and potting on seedlings. Gardeners have been making pots this way for years by wrapping newspaper around a glass, but the Paper Potter makes the process really quick and simple. A pot takes just a few seconds to make – a strip of newspaper is wrapped around the potter and the excess folded in over the end which is then pressed into the base to mould the pot. The young plants can be planted out in the pots and the roots grow out through the paper as it rots away in the soil with minimal disturbance to slow their growth.

This is a brilliant little gadget which would make a really good gift for a gardener. Children enjoy using the Paper Potter too, and it would be a useful addition in the school classroom for projects on gardening or recycling.

Wooden Eco Paper Seedling Potter

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Posted under garden products, money saving ideas

Jute leaf sacks

autumn leaves Recycling fallen autumn leaves is one of the easiest ways to produce lots of free garden compost.  Leaf mould is an excellent natural soil improver, lawn conditioner and weed-suppressing mulch, and it’s really good for your organic veg patch too.

Gardeners know that you can never have too much leaf mould, but you can’t buy it in the shops, so you need to make your own. The leaves of most deciduous trees and shrubs can be composted, although some rot down more quickly than others. Leaves of beech and oak compost swiftly, but sycamore and horse chestnut tend to take a bit longer.

If you have a big garden or lots of trees you are best making leaf mould the traditional way by building a metre-square bin with wire netting and posts to hold the leaves.  The bin is simply filled with leaves and they are left for a year or two to biodegrade – the leaves rot down more quickly if they are roughly chopped up first with a shredder or by running over them with the lawnmower.

A simple method for a smaller garden is to stuff the leaves into black plastic sacks with holes punched in them for drainage. Dampen the leaves, tie up the bags, then store them in a shady corner of the garden. By the following autumn they will have broken down into a rich crumbly material suitable to use as a mulch. If you leave them for another year they turn into compost which can be dug into the soil. biodegradable jute leaf sack

But do you really want piles of plastic bags in the garden? A better method is to use these biodegradable sacks made of loosely woven jute fibre. They are big enough to cram in loads of fallen leaves, then they simply need to be tied shut and stacked up in a corner of the garden. The sacks keep the leaves together but allow moisture and air to penetrate so the leaves and the sacks biodegrade together through the winter, then by the spring you have a pile of lovely leafy mulch ready to use in the garden. Or if you leave it a bit longer to break down further it can be mixed with garden compost to make potting or seed compost.

Many people just regard autumn leaves as a nuisance, so if you pop round to your neighbour with a couple of these sacks and offer to clear up their leaves for them you might increase your supply of compost and earn some brownie points at the same time! But do remember to leave a few heaps of leaves in quiet tucked-away corners and below hedges and shrubs for the hedgehogs to shelter under in the winter.

You can buy leaf sacks from The Recycle Works or from Nigel’s Eco Store.

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Posted under compost, garden products