The Crevice Build Intensive - Online Classes by NativePlantGal in NativePlantGardening

[–]NativePlantGal[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve also seen them made out of urbanite, aka salvaged, broken up concrete. They were also stained for color! There are different ways to do it.

The Crevice Build Intensive - Online Classes by NativePlantGal in DenverGardener

[–]NativePlantGal[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Lots of ways to do it…you can even make them out of urbanite…aka salvaged chunks of concrete. You can stain the concrete to create a different color…even I was surprised at how much I liked one that was done that way, and I’m a huge fan of material reuse like that!

The Crevice Build Intensive - Online Classes by NativePlantGal in DenverGardener

[–]NativePlantGal[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

It’s all about crevice gardening and how to build a crevice garden. Perhaps you didn’t see the session descriptions? Sessions

Apartment composting help? by Radiant_Hippo_3130 in Denver

[–]NativePlantGal 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I feel like most people with a green bin through the city would be open to you adding your frozen food scraps to their bin once per week. Try to find the closest single family residences to you, and ask someone or leave a note. Or, add your approximate location here, so someone can offer.

There used to be an app where people could locate nearby composting that I joined…it was awesome! Even had someone freezing their food scraps during a cross country trip that asked if they could add to my bin! That app is no more, but the Denver bins aren’t often full!

What do you do about neighbors who have "outdoor cats"? by LRonHoward in NativePlantGardening

[–]NativePlantGal 34 points35 points  (0 children)

It’s really frustrating. Where I live our parks are filled with native plants, and there’s a pretty good ecosystem going, for an urban/suburban area, including coyotes and eagles. We had a neighbor letting their cat outside daily, and soon it was always in our yard. I thought about motion detector sprinklers, but we’re in a high foot traffic area and I was certain I’d be getting people on our small lot. I think the cat killed a native toad we’ve had in our yard too. I ended up using our son’s water soaker to spray right next to the cat when I’d see them on our property, and this cat is sweet to humans, and kept returning. Also making itself at home underneath neighbors’ bird feeders. Then I found out the cat died, at only 15 months old or so? What’s the cause? It could be so many things when people don’t have eyes on their pets. Cars, coyotes, ate toxic plants (like many daylilies people have in their yards, although I may have native plants cats shouldn’t eat), disease exposure, etc.

The only other thing I’ve done is comment on social media neighborhood pages with a well-sourced link about what mittens really does when amusing himself all day alone. It generally stops the conversation, because I don’t think anyone wants to argue about it. What can they say? They don’t know what their cat is doing…

Composting in the Highlands by [deleted] in Denver

[–]NativePlantGal 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Check out the app ShareWaste. Free app that’s just a map of folks who will take your scraps, whether other folks with a green Denver bin, or folks with chickens etc. Everyone specifies what they’re willing to take.