REDUCING PLASTIC WASTE IN YOUR GARDEN

You might need to ask your question about how free your garden is of plastics. Is the park a plastic-ridden zone or a plastic-free zone? There are many ways that the use of plastic as a plant pots appeals to garden owners, which makes many people cherish the use of plastic, so in a way, it becomes more difficult to say you want to have a garden that is free of plastic. However, It is easier than you think to start turning from plastic usage and switch to using other materials that can help reduce the threat and harm plastic usage poses to our environment. It ranges from the labels on plants, compost bins, and other plastic materials used in planting as plant pots. It is well noted that plastic materials are a significant component in our garden. For instance, is the example of plastic materials used as plastic pots; according to history, the invention of plastic pots is as far back as the 1960s, and this appears as a game-changer, and as of today, we have an estimate of about 500 million plastic pots and seed trays that are sold annually. Most of these plant pots and seed trays end up in landfills or incinerators. 

The truth is that with a considerable quantity of fossils used in the processing and production of plant pots which are plastics will take nearly 500 years for the process of its decomposition to be completed. There is a lot of attention being drawn towards gardening and other industries such as food and drinks packaging in the fight against plastics and their side effects on the environment, ensuring a reduction in the usage of plastic as plant pots. Instead, other alternatives can be considered that will reduce the use of plastic materials, such as plant pots in our gardens. It may appear prominent and, at the same time, not obvious; however, one of the most effective ways to reduce plastic in our parks is simply stopping to purchase it.

Having to stop purchasing plastic materials as plant pots in the garden will immediately help our minds shift in the direction of possible options that can be used. Understandably, a need for an alternative will help sustain the decision to reduce the number of plastic materials in the land. There are alternatives such as biodegradable pots made from coir (coconut husks), rice husks, wood chips, and seaweed. Another great option that can be brought to remembrance from way back is Terracotta, and all these are alternatives that will help get plant pots without having to use plastics, hence reducing the number of plastics being used in our garden.