Mission Statement
Our mission is to provide viewers of this
web site with relevant, zone specific, up-to-date information
on alternatives to
pesticides, so that you can begin to practice pesticide-free
yard care. We hope those who view it will choose to move toward
eliminating the use of pesticides on lawns and gardens. Changing
yard care practices really is about changing your attitude.
We promote sustainable gardening practices to protect our
environment and our natural resources:
1. We encourage lawns and gardens which will thrive in our
dry Southern Alberta climate, therefore dramatically reducing
the need to use our precious water resources to maintain our
lawns. This includes replacing
your lawn with native species plants.
2. We encourage people with lawns to consider a push mower
instead of a motorized 2-stroke engine mower.
3. We encourage people to mulch their grass clippings - important
because it provides some fertilizer for your lawn, holds moisture
and keeps them out of the landfill. You can refit most existing
mowers with mulching blades.
4. We encourage composting to create healthy soil and reduce
organics in our landfills.
As well, this web site will tell you why it is important to
move toward pesticide-free yard care. It will provide information
on scientific evidence,
professional opinions,
news releases, and
physicians' information supporting
a move away from pesticide use.
Why move away from our dependence on pesticides? Pesticides
are poisons, designed to kill, and they are not without risk.
While pesticides may keep your lawn looking like a golf course,
you must ask yourself, is it worth the risk?
There is increasing evidence to indicate that pesticides pose
a risk to our health,
our children's health, our
pets' health and the
health of the environment. Young children, because of
their size and under-developed immune systems are especially
at risk. Although the effects of pesticide use over several
years or a lifetime of exposure are not fully understood,
the immediate health effects on people who are accidentally
over-exposed to pesticides may include symptoms commonly mistaken
as the flu:
- nausea
- tiredness
- stomach cramps
- headaches
- skin and eye irritation
- dizziness
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