_mygardenguide.com  - Wednesday What's New: No to Cypress Mulch_ 
(http://mygardenguide.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1046&Itemid=27)
  
 
 
Wednesday What's New: No to Cypress  Mulch   
(http://mygardenguide.com/index2.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1046&pop=1&page=0&Itemid=27)
   
(http://mygardenguide.com/index2.php?option=com_content&task=emailform&id=1046&itemid=27)
     Written  by Heleigh Bostwick    Wednesday, 02 April 2008   

While those naturally insect resistant cedar trees make  an excellent mulch 
for the garden, pine is a much more environmentally  friendly alternative. Why? 
For the simple reason that pine trees are grown  on plantations and cedars 
are not. Cedars are also known as bald cypress  (Taxodium distichum). Native to 
the southeastern US bald cypress  are found as far north as the coast of 
Delaware, and typically grow in  wetlands like the one pictured above. They 
also do 
fine when they don’t  have “wet feet”, but I’ll save that for another 
edition of The Daily Dirt.  Logging these trees for mulch creates big problems. 
Here
’s why. 

As  we know, wetlands are extremely valuable ecosystems--particularly in  
places like Louisiana and Florida where hurricanes can cause significant  
damage. 
Cypress wetlands like these filter pollutants from water, provide  habitats 
for wildlife, and recharge groundwater. More importantly (from a  human 
viewpoint), they protect the coastline from storm surges by  retaining storm 
water 
during hurricanes and buffering the effects.  

It seems that in the past ten years or so cypress logging as an  industry has 
taken off. In a _recent article in Mother Jones_ 
(http://www.motherjones.com/news/feature/2008/03/louisianas-mulch-madness.html) 
, it was reported that  
according to the Louisiana Forestry Association, loggers are razing up to  
20,000 acres of cypress every year, most of it not for wood for furniture  or 
houses, but for …mulch. And, it is all above board. Supporters say  logging 
provides desperately needed jobs. But at what expense? If the  present logging 
trend 
continues, it is only a matter of decades before  southern Louisiana is 
obliterated. Then what? 

To see what’s  happening to the Louisiana coastline visit _Louisiana’s  
Disappearing Wetlands_ 
(http://mygardenguide.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=876&Itemid=112)
 , one of the April MGG video selections.  

To take action against big box stores that sell cedar mulch _click here_ 
(http://www.actionstudio.org/public/page_view_all.cfm?option=begin&pageid=7467) 
. 

Article reference: _Mulch Ado About Something_ 
(http://www.theledger.com/article/20080401/NEWS/355542912/1036) Peace,  Hugs, 
and Purrs,
Carolyn Rose Goyda
Missouri, USA
[EMAIL PROTECTED]















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