Fall into Green Habits

As the leaves begin to change colors and the weather cools, there are still lots of great things to do to stay green! If you enjoy sweater-weather and your pumpkin-spiced latte, then consider some of these ideas to complete your fun, fall days!

Get Outside…
A regular for many families, consider visiting a local orchard to get some fresh apples, pears, and pumpkins! Eckert’s Boyd Orchard is in Woodford County, Evan’s Orchard can be found in Scott County, and Reed Valley Orchard can be found in Bourbon County. Check out events happening at their locations to maximize your visit!

If you are a spiritual person and looking to spend some time outside, consider a day of silent hiking at the Abbey of Gethsemane in Trappist, KY (bring me back some fudge!) or peaceful meditation at Furnace Mountain in Stanton, KY. Being outside in the woods or mountains can be very recharging for the soul and spending some time with nature is always a great way to remind ourselves of the environment we love to protect.

This is my favorite time of year to go hiking. You can work up a sweat without feeling too overwhelmed by the heat AND your risk of dealing with ticks is significantly lower! Consider finding a local hiking trail you can visit to better explore your own community. From the Red River Gorge to Raven Run in Lexington, check out this list from Kentucky Tourism to find a great trail close to you!

Or Stay Inside!
For our readers that may not be able to get around so much or just prefer to stay indoors, there are great ways to stay green indoors as well. This is a great time of year to crack open windows to cool your house and cozy up with a blanket and a good book. Remember that hot air rises and cold air sinks, so open upstairs windows to let warm air escape and let the cool air settle on the lower floors. If you live in a single story home and your windows were made to open up or down, leave a crack at the top of your window to let hot air escape, much like you might crack a window in your car.

This is the time of year where it is good to switch the direction of your ceiling fan! Look for a little switch around the neck of your fan and give it a switch: you want counter-clockwise in the spring/summer and clockwise in the fall/winter! A ceiling fan and a cracked window can save you a lot of money on your heating/cooling without a lot of effort.

I also recommend watching the big game with some friends. Melt the queso and ready the guacamole and get your friends to share your TV with you! Having many people together sharing a TV as opposed to having people in their own homes with their own televisions and lights on is a great way to reduce your carbon footprint!

Enjoy!
Whether you’re outside or inside, consider the environment in all that you do. It’s easy to do and can still be lots of fun. This October, I hope you FALL into some new GREEN habits and share them with me!

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Applications are Open for Potential New Green Check Businesses

Bluegrass Greensource recently helped honor the City of Lexington’s newest Green Check certified businesses. Including the first ever, Gold Level business, Town Branch Tree Experts! 

Town Branch Tree Experts, Inc. (Gold)

Unitarian Universalist Church of Lexington (Silver)

Perspectives, Inc. (Silver)

Meg C Jewelry Gallery (Bronze)

Lextran (Bronze)

Minglewood (Bronze)

Boone Creek Outdoors (Member)

A Cup of Common Wealth (Member)

The Green Check program recognizes businesses for their green initiatives and helps them expand their sustainability efforts. Becoming a Green Check Member business begins with a personal consultation and completion of the Green Check Sustainability Scorecard. The Sustainability Scorecard caters to organizations across a variety of sectors, including restaurants, non-profit organizations, retail, and manufacturers.

Based on their baseline Sustainability Score, the business or organization is awarded Gold, Silver, Bronze, or Member designation. While the certification is valid for three years, member organizations are encouraged to pursue higher tiers through continued participation and achievement.

These eight businesses demonstrated a commitment to increased sustainability within their facilities and operations. Examples initiatives from the businesses include parking lot renovations with permeable pavers, installation of rain gardens, upgrades to energy efficient lighting, office compost programs and promotion of alternative transportation. Beyond these high-impact features, there are lots of actions individual team members can take to improve sustainability in the workplace.

“As a Green Check Certified company, we recognize the importance of establishing procedures and policies to streamline and fulfill our mission of environmental responsibility,” says Sara Hesley, CEO of Town Branch Tree Experts, Inc. “It has allowed us to extend and formalize these commitments throughout everything we do as a company.”

Applications are open for 2019! For more information, including how to become Green Check Certified, please visit www.LexingtonKy.com/GreenCheck.

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Saving Your Streambanks

Saving Your Streambanks

Why is the drainage ditch or stream in my backyard or on the farm getting deeper? Or wider? Why are the edges getting steeper? What can be done?

Our Kentucky streams face many challenges from our day-to-day urban and agricultural activities. Streams and drainage ways are straightened, mowed to the edge, stripped of their floodplains, dammed, used as illegal dumps, and overrun with invasive plants, all of which affect their ability to move water and provide healthy habitat. When we look for answers to our streambank erosion and water quality issues, it’s important to look holistically at the causes. What are the outside factors affecting the stream off-property? What is happening on my property that may be affecting the stream? What does the stream look like on my property, and how could that be affecting the problem?

These are all questions and topics we will explore in our Saving Your Streambanks Free Workshop Series this October, a partnership with County Cooperative Extension and Conservation District Offices. One of the main characteristics of a stable stream is vegetation along the edge and banks of the waterway, as well as access to the floodplain, or low-lying area around the stream prone to flooding. This vegetation along the edge is known as a riparian or streamside buffer and acts as a transition between water bodies and upland uses such as manicured lawns or agriculture.

These buffers are usually a combination of fast and slow growing trees, shrubs, grasses, and perennials. The diverse native vegetation holds soil in place and protects the streambanks from the removal of soil, rocks, and other woody materials. Even taking a more passive approach and maintaining a simple 10-to-15 foot no-mow zone around the edge of your stream can improve your streambank and water quality conditions. Streamside buffers have many other benefits, including trapping and filtering sediment and other pollutants from stormwater runoff, reducing flood damage, providing shade and habitat to streams, recharging groundwater sources, and improving the aesthetic value of landscapes.

Saving Your Streambanks Workshop participants will learn about local watershed issues and water quality, the benefits of streamside buffers, how to plant and maintain a buffer, how to identify invasive species and methods for removal, and financial assistance options available for streamside improvements. Financial assistance opportunities include but are not limited to the Bluegrass Greensource mini cost-share grant, State Cost Share funding through the Conservation District, and EQIP funding through the Natural Resource Conservation Service.

Through a grant from the Kentucky Division of Water, Bluegrass Greensource is able to offer an 80/20 cost-share program (Up to $2,000) for establishment of riparian buffers to eligible landowners in the Hinkston Creek, Clarks Run and Hanging Fork Watersheds as part of the Watershed Improvement Program for these areas. Applications will only be available to workshop participants, and grant funds will support the planting of native trees, shrubs, grasses, and perennials along your backyard stream and the removal of invasive plants (if necessary). More information and registration can be found at bggreensource.org/riparian-buffers/.

  • Boyle County, Tuesday, Oct 2nd, 2018, 6-7:30 pm
    • Extension Office Meeting Room, 99 Corporate Dr, Danville, KY 40422
  • Nicholas County, Tuesday, Oct 9th, 2018, 6-7:30 pm
    • Neal Welcome Center, 108 W Main St, Carlisle, KY 40311
  • Bourbon County, Tuesday, Oct 16th, 2018, 6-7:30 pm
    • Millersburg City Hall Civic Center, 1113 Main St, Millersburg, KY 40348
  • Lincoln County, Thursday, Oct 18th, 2018, 6-7:30 pm
    • Extension Office Meeting Room, 104 Metker Trail, Stanford, KY 40484
  • Montgomery County, Monday, Oct 22nd, 2018, 6-7:30 pm
    • Extension Office Meeting Room, 106 E Locust St, Mt Sterling, KY 40353
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New Pollinator Garden at Garden Springs Park is Blooming!

By Kara Sayles, Environmental Educator & Rain Garden Project Coordinator

Garden Springs Park recently installed a pollinator garden at the park entrance off of Garden Springs Drive. The pollinator garden is designed with native perennials to help attract pollinators like bees, butterflies, and birds.

Not only is the garden beautiful but it serves as an example to help educate residents about what they can do to protect native pollinator species. Pollinators are in decline due to factors like habitat alterations, encroaching invasive species and overuse of pesticides. Planting pollinator gardens can help slow the decline in population by providing pollinators crucial habitat.

Work on the pollinator garden at Garden Springs Park began in October 2017. Once the site was approved, underground utilities were identified by calling 811, and Lexington Parks & Recreation began removing the sod. Members of the neighborhood, Lisa Fernandez and Wendy Devier, along with Bluegrass Greensource, began amending the soil to plant pollinator-friendly plants.

The plants started to re-emerge and bloom throughout spring, and now bees and butteries can be seen flying from flower to flower drinking nectar and pollinating the plants. 

For more information, visit the pollinator garden and scan the QR code or visit Bluegrass Greensources’s web page to learn all about planting for pollinators

 

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Resource Society

By Chris Porter, Development Director, Bluegrass Greensource

Throughout our history, one thing has been central to Bluegrass Greensource’s mission: providing the resources—be they knowledge, tools, or money—that communities need to take the small steps that will lead to big impacts on our shared environment.

We are very excited to launch the next phase of our outreach and community engagement – the Resource Society.

What is the Resource Society?

The Resource Society is a group of individuals who go the extra mile to increase sustainability in Central Kentucky. Members recognize that working in communities to provide needed resources requires resources, and they work alongside the Bluegrass Greensource staff, board, and volunteers towards the goal of creating an empowered, sustainable Central Kentucky.

Do you want to join us in creating a Central Kentucky that understands and values the benefits of a healthy and protected environment? Consider setting up a recurring monthly donation to help sustain Bluegrass Greensource’s work throughout the year.

Why should you join the Resource Society?

Monthly giving is an easy way to increase the support you provide without impacting your monthly budget. It’s a way to provide a foundation for work that you deeply believe in to survive and to grow. For Bluegrass Greensource, monthly gifts provide us with steady, much needed income that we can plan around, rather than having the uncertainty and guesswork that comes with end-of-year giving campaigns.

The Resource Society is a community of monthly givers whose support allows us to plan better and allocate resources in advance. It helps us give another student the opportunity to be a part of our Kentucky Energy for Youth program, to support the planting of more rain gardens, and to organize more litter clean ups in Central Kentucky communities.

How can you join the Resource Society?

Becoming a member is easy. The Resource Society includes friends of Bluegrass Greensource of all sizes, big and small. Whether you give $10 a month or $1,000, you are valued member of our family. Anything you can commit helps secure our work. Just click on the link below to sign up:

[maxbutton id=”2″ url=”https://bggreensource.z2systems.com/np/clients/bggreensource/donation.jsp?campaign=32&” text=”Join ” ]

 

BENEFITS INCLUDE:

  • Exclusive YETI lowball with the Resource Society logo for the first 50 Founding Members.
  • Invitations to the Greensource annual meeting.
  • Early access to Green Living Labs
  • Invitations to special partner events and volunteer opportunities.
  • More to come!

 

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Students and Parents Have a Wonderful Time at Kentucky Energy for Youth Program Field Trip

 

 

 

By Chris Porter, Development Director, Bluegrass Greensource

 

 

Conundrum – noun

  1. a kind of riddle based upon some fanciful or fantastic resemblance between things quite unlike; a puzzling question, of which the answer is or involves a pun
  2. a question to which only a conjectural answer can be made.

(From Mary Knight’s Saving Wonder)

The Thursday morning was cold and the sky spit snow as we gathered at the entrance of Portal 31 Mine in Lynch, Kentucky. My daughter was ecstatic as we climbed into the rail cart and began our descent into the mine. It was a new experience for us both. As our car wound its way through the mine’s exhibit, we learned about the men who had worked in that mine and the community that grew up around it in Harlan County.

We were taking part in the culminating field trip of Bluegrass Greensource’s Kentucky Energy for Youth program. This overnight field trip presented students from Central Kentucky with the opportunity to learn about coal’s economic, cultural, and environmental impacts on Kentucky’s past, present, and future. Benham and Lynch are neighboring towns that were both former coal camps and are now in the midst of a difficult transition to a new way of life. For many Central Kentuckians, what little they know about coal communities comes from media and partisan campaigns. We are all familiar with “Friends of Coal” and “I Love Mountains,” but we don’t often take the time to become familiar with the people whose lives exist between these two opposing viewpoints. The history and reality of life in the mountains is far more complex than any particular slogan can convey.

As my daughter and the other children bustled about Lynch and Benham, it was so humbling to watch them grapple with these complexities – with the hard work, sweat, and pride that built these communities, and with the economic and environmental struggles that they face in the wake of coal’s decline. Much has recently been said about the solar panels that sit atop the Coal Museum in Benham, but it was inside the museum where students learned just how dangerous the job of underground coal mining is. At the Catholic Church in Lynch, students learned about the diversity of languages and nationalities that worked in the mines and built these communities. Visits to former bath houses that are being converted into shops and a mushroom growing business illustrated the ingenuity and hard work that residents are pouring into forging a new future.

That Thursday night, in the former gymnasium in the Benham Schoolhouse Inn, 60 Central Kentucky students gathered around Mary Knight, the author of the young adult novel Saving Wonder, a book about an Eastern Kentucky boy who fights to save his family’s land from mountain top removal. Each child had received and read the book as part of the program. In their conversation with the author, they wrestled with the conundrum—an issue to which there is no easy or certain answer—that coal mining represents for many communities in Eastern Kentucky.

The next day, the sky was clear and cold, and the sun shone as my daughter and I ascended to the top of Black Mountain at the Kentucky/Virginia line. On a clear day you can see all the way into Virginia to what used to be a mountain but is now a massive brown scrape in the ground – a mountain top removal site. It was quiet at the top of the mountain as I described the process by which MTR coal mining works.

“Who takes care of it after they’re done?” my daughter asked. “What happens now?”

“That’s what we’re trying to figure out,” I said.

The Kentucky Energy for Youth Program is funded through the Kentucky Department for Energy Development and Independence. 

 

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Franklin County Litter Map

 

By Kyle Hager, AmeriCorps VISTA Member at Bluegrass Greensource

Franklin County folks looking to publicize their litter clean-up efforts, or to show their students or community members how proud they are of their hard work, now have a new medium to do so. The Franklin County Litter Map showcases litter abatement endeavors in an interactive fashion and lets fellow community members see volunteer efforts going on around them.

Those who participate in a clean-up are invited to take a picture and upload it and a story about how their efforts made an impact on their community. Each story and snapshot will get a data point on a map of Franklin County that fellow community members can then check out. The app can be accessed using a computer, tablet, or smart phone.

In the future, the application will be accompanied by an instructional video and will include lesson plans for teachers to incorporate into their classroom activities on waste reduction and litter abatement. The app is made possible by Franklin County Solid Waste Management and Bluegrass Greensource.

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2018 Main Street Clean Sweep

By: Ashley Bryant Cheney, Program Specialist/Volunteer Coordinator, Bluegrass Greensource  

April is Earth Month! Every year around Earth Day volunteers throughout the Bluegrass get out and clean up their communities as part of Main Street Clean Sweep. Join us in your community around Earth Day for our fifth annual Main Street Clean Sweep presented by Commonwealth Credit Union! 

Community Details are available here!

Main Street Clean Sweep is a volunteer-led, community-based litter clean up that takes place in 20 Central Kentucky communities. Last year over 1,000 people across Central Kentucky came together to collect four tons of litter, beautify their community, and show their pride-in-place! Event participants will receive clean-up supplies including bags and gloves. Water will be provided, and each participant will receive a t-shirt (t-shirts are first come, first serve!).

Main Street Clean Sweep is presented by Commonwealth Credit Union with partnership from PNC Bank, Valvoline, Republic Waste Haulers, and Betchel Parsons. Community sponsors include the City of Wilmore, City of Winchester, Farmers National Bank, Apollo Pizza, and Mike’s Hike and Bike.

For more information about location kick-off sites or to register to volunteer in your community, please visit our website or email Ashley@bggreensource.org.

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Watershed Improvements–Financial Assistance Available for Septic

By: Lindsie Nicholas, Watershed Coordinator, Bluegrass Greensource

Did you know that a failing septic system can require expensive repairs, pose a serious health risk to your family and neighbors, and have negative impacts on water quality? Leaking/failing systems deliver raw sewage into our watersheds, endangering people and livestock in the area with increased bacteria (E. coli) inputs into waterways. There are many serious health issues that can occur from coming into contact with untreated septic waste.  Proper maintenance is essential to keeping your system working efficiently and preventing risks of costly failure.

Bluegrass Greensource is offering a series of free workshops over the next two years to provide education on how to properly maintain your septic system and protect the value of your home and the environment.

Workshop participants are eligible to apply for funding assistance including a cost-share grant for septic system repairs/installation, or a free septic tank pumpout (a regular maintenance task that is recommended every 3 to 5 years).

Each cost-share grant will pay 80% of the repair or installation cost, while the homeowner is responsible for the remaining 20%. Free septic tank pumpouts are available by application for those that attend a workshop.

The first round of free septic system workshops will be held on:

 -Monday, April 9th at 6 PM at the Nicholas County Health Department (2320 Concrete Rd, Carlisle, KY)

-Thursday, April 12th at 6 PM at the Montgomery County Health Department (108 E Locust St, Mount Sterling, KY)

-Tuesday, April 17th at 6 PM at the Millersburg City Hall (1113 Main Street, Millersburg, KY)

-Saturday, April 21st at the BCTC Danville Campus (59 Corporate Dr, Danville, KY 40422) during the Boyle County Earth Day Festival; Septic Solutions Mini Sessions offered at 12PM and 1:30PM

-Tuesday, April 24th at 6PM at the Lincoln County Public Library (201 Lancaster St, Stanford, KY)

Please contact Lindsie Nicholas at Lindsie@bggreensource.org or (859) 266-1572 with questions. Registration is encouraged but not required at bggreensource.org/septic-care-workshops/.

 

This program, funded by a grant from the US Environmental Protection Agency through Kentucky Division of Water, focuses on water quality improvements in the Hinkston Creek, Clarks Run and Hanging Fork watersheds. To be eligible for grants, homeowners must reside within the Hinkston Creek watershed in Bourbon, Nicholas, or Montgomery County or within the Clarks Run or Hanging Fork watersheds in Boyle or Lincoln County. Bluegrass Greensource will be participating in community events in each county to raise awareness of local water quality issues and promote the financial assistance opportunities available for residents

Later this summer, Bluegrass Greensource will be offering mini reimbursable grants for streambank buffer plantings and improvements along Hinkston Creek, Clarks Run, Hanging Fork, and their tributaries. The process will be similar with workshops where residents will learn about revegetation along streams, erosion control, and livestock exclusion. Landowners and homeowners will receive instruction on how to apply for cost-share assistance through local and federal programs (through the local Conservation District and Natural Resource Conservation Service), as well as assistance for streamside buffer establishment and applying for mini grants available through Bluegrass Greensource.

Be sure to attend a workshop for more information about the program and to find out if you are eligible for financial assistance.

Septic System Information and Tips:

Four main components of a septic system:

  1. A pipe leaving your home that carries wastewater to your tank
  2. A septic tank that is buried and watertight, where specific bacteria begin to break down the materials in wastewater
  3. A drain field where wastewater exits through drainpipes and into the soil for further breakdown
  4. The soil, where different bacteria help to treat contamination from your wastewater as it works its way into the groundwater

Tips for Protecting Your Septic System:

  • Arrange for a system pumpout every 3 to 5 years
  • Use water efficiently to reduce strain on the system
  • Don’t pour chemicals and non-biodegradable materials down drains or into toilets
  • Flush only sanitary waste
  • Do not flush garbage (floss, paper towels, feminine hygiene products, etc.)
  • Reduce or eliminate use of garbage disposals
  • Choose low-phosphate or phosphate-free detergents
  • Avoid driving heavy equipment, including vehicles, over the system and drainfield
  • Redirect surface water flow away from your systems leach field.
  • Keep records of septic system pumping and maintenance, including a map of septic system and drainfield locations
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Reliable Hens

By Anna Ackerman, writer, Bluegrass Greensource Blog 

Spring is bursting forth around our house. The daffodils are blooming, the roses are budding, the bush and tree branches are swelling at the tips, and the hens are laying again. We allow our hens to take a much needed break from laying during the short days of winter by not adding artificial light to their coop. It seems more natural for them, and we have plenty of eggs to hold us over. Plus, we want them well rested for the work we expect them to do in the spring: garden prep.

Every winter, we plant a cover crop in the garden, usually winter rye. It adds nitrogen back to the soil, and its roots penetrate the soil, keeping it light and fluffy. Then, every spring, we mow the rye down and till it under to replenish the soil. My dad has a 50-year old tiller that is always in some state of “repair” (usually in pieces on his workbench) – so depending on it to get the garden ready can be a gamble. The hens, however, are always reliable. They are anxious to stretch their legs and scratch for worms and hibernating bugs in the cold soil.

In just a couple afternoons, our three hens can turn a 10×4 foot plot. We have an open bottom pen, called a tractor. We put them in to keep them contained in one area, and also to protect them from the hawks in our neighborhood. They will spend several afternoons in one area of the garden before we move them to a fresh plot.

The best part is, while the hens are happily working for us in the garden, we can spend our time looking through seed catalogs and planning the summer crop; Heirloom Ground Cherries are looking like a good possibility in the garden this year!

 

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